Pre-colonial period The sultanate was originally named the Kingdom of Gapi, According to another version, the ancestor of the Malukan kings was an Arab descendant of the Prophet called Jafar Sadik. Coming to Ternate, he encountered a nymph (
bidadari) from heaven (
kayangan) called Nurus Safa. Their four sons were the dynastic ancestors of
Bacan,
Jailolo,
Tidore, and Ternate. The idea of a genealogical unity of the four realms of Maluku has had a large cultural significance that persists until the present. According to Ternatan legend, the youngest of the four sons, Baab Mashur Malamo, was born in heaven, and therefore enjoyed a special status. His descendants were sometimes known as Alam-ma-Kolano, "ruler of all [Maluku]". Ternate along with neighbouring
Tidore were the world's single major producer of cloves, due to which their rulers became among the wealthiest and most powerful sultans in the Indonesian region. Much of their wealth, however, was spent fighting each other. Until the
Dutch completed the
colonisation of
Maluku in the 19th century, the Sultans of Ternate ruled realms that claimed at least nominal influence as far as
Ambon,
Sulawesi and
Papua. In part due to its trade-dependent culture, Ternate was one of the earliest places in the region to which
Islam spread from
Java in the late 15th century. However, Islamic influence in the area can be traced further back to the late 14th century. Initially, the faith was restricted to Ternate's small ruling family, and spread slowly to the rest of the population. . The peak of Ternate's power came near the end of the 16th century, under Sultan
Baabullah (1570–1583), when it had influence over most of the eastern part of
Sulawesi, the Ambon and
Seram area,
Timor island, parts of southern
Mindanao and
Papuan Islands. It frequently engaged in fierce competition for control of its periphery with the nearby Sultanate of Tidore. According to historian
Leonard Y. Andaya, Ternate's "dualistic" rivalry with Tidore is a dominant theme in the early history of the Maluku Islands. Ternate was also often a part of the political affairs of Philippine kingdoms. In a punitive expedition, it once destroyed
Bo-ol in the
Central Visayas region, forcing the Boholanos to re-establish their kingdom in
Northern Mindanao.
16th century to the present (palace) of the Sultan of Ternate The first Europeans to stay on Ternate were part of the
Portuguese expedition of
Francisco Serrão out of
Malacca, which was shipwrecked near
Seram and rescued by local residents. Sultan
Bayan Sirrullah of Ternate (1500–1522) heard of their stranding and, seeing a chance to ally himself with a powerful foreign nation, he brought them to Ternate in 1512. The Portuguese were permitted to build a fort on the island, today known as
Kastella, construction of which began in 1522, but relations between the Ternateans and Portuguese were strained from the start. Ternate developed closer relations with the
Ottomans as a result. An outpost far from Europe generally only attracted the most desperate and avaricious, so that the generally poor behaviour of the Portuguese, combined with feeble attempts at
Christianisation, strained relations with Ternate's Muslim ruler. In 1535 Sultan
Tabariji was deposed and sent to
Goa by the Portuguese. He converted to Christianity and changed his name to Dom Manuel. After being declared innocent of the charges against him he was sent back to re-assume his throne; however, he died en route in
Malacca in 1545. He had though bequeathed the island of
Ambon to his Portuguese godfather, Jordão de Freitas. Following the murder of Sultan
Hairun at the hands of the Portuguese, the Ternatans
expelled the Portuguese in 1575 after a five-year siege. Ambon became the new centre for Portuguese activities in Maluku. European power in the region was weak and Ternate became an expanding, fiercely Islamic and anti-Portuguese state under the rule of Sultan
Baab Ullah (r. 1570–1583) and his son Sultan
Saidi Berkat.
Spanish forces, aided by Filipinos mainly the
Boholanos of the destroyed state of
Bo-ol, who were formerly at war against Ternate, captured the former Portuguese fort from the Ternatans in 1606, deporting the Ternate Sultan and his entourage to
Manila in the
Spanish Philippines. The Spanish forced the Ternate ruler, Sultan
Said Din Berkat to settle in
Manila and pushed him to accept Christianity. In 1607 the Dutch came back to Ternate, where with the help of Ternatans they built a fort in Malayo. The island was divided between the two powers: the Spaniards were allied with Tidore and the Dutch with their Ternaten allies. For the Ternatan rulers, the Dutch were a useful, if not particularly welcome, presence that gave them military advantages against Tidore and the Spanish. Particularly under Sultan
Hamzah (1627–1648), Ternate expanded its territory and strengthened its control over the periphery. Dutch influence over the kingdom was limited, though Hamzah and his grandnephew and successor, Sultan
Mandar Syah (1648–1675) did concede some regions to the
Dutch East India Company (VOC) in exchange for help controlling rebellions there. The Spaniards abandoned Maluku in 1663. They took the aristocracy of Moluccan-Portuguese and Filipino-Mexican mixed descent and settled them in
Ternate, Cavite (Named after their homeland) in the Philippines, when they evacuated Ternate. Till this day, the Ternate community speak Ternateño
Chavacano, a creole language of Spanish with Ternatean and Portuguese influence. In attempts to frustrate Spain, the Ternateans militarily supported the Sultanates of Mindanao in the Southern Philippines by sending reinforcement, during the
Spanish-Moro Wars. Desiring to restore Ternate to its former glory and expel the western power, Sultan
Sibori Amsterdam (1675–1691) declared war to the Dutch, but the power of Ternate had greatly reduced over the years, he lost and was forced to concede more of his lands to the Dutch by a treaty in 1683. By this treaty, Ternate had lost its equal position with the Dutch and became a vassal. However, the Sultans of Ternate and its people were never fully under Dutch control until its annexation in 1914. In the 18th century Ternate was the site of a VOC governorship, which attempted to control all trade in the northern Moluccas. By the 19th century, the spice trade had declined substantially. Hence the region was less central to the Netherlands colonial state, but the Dutch maintained a presence in the region to prevent another colonial power from occupying it. After the VOC was
nationalised by the Dutch government in 1800, Ternate became part of the Government of the Moluccas (
Gouvernement der Molukken). Ternate
was seized and occupied by
British forces in 1810 before being returned to Dutch control in 1817. In 1824 it became the capital of a residency (administrative region) covering
Halmahera, the entire west coast of
New Guinea, and the central east coast of
Sulawesi. By 1867 all of Dutch-occupied
New Guinea had been added to the residency, but then its region was gradually transferred to
Ambon (Amboina) before being dissolved into that residency in 1922. Sultan
Haji Muhammad Usman (1902–1914) made a last attempt to oppose the Dutch by clandestinely endorsing revolts in the region; he failed and was dethroned, his wealth being confiscated, and he was exiled to
Bandung, where he lived until 1932. This spelt the end of the traditional Ternatan kingdom, since the administration and settlement pattern were forcibly changed by the Dutch. The throne of Ternate was left vacant from 1914 to 1929, until the board of ministers under the blessing of the Dutch created Crown Prince
Iskandar Muhammad Jabir the next Sultan. Muhammad Jabir reigned when the Japanese arrived in 1942 and began a hard rule. Two years later he was smuggled to Australia by the Allies. The Sultan played a political role during the
Indonesian Revolution, but the tense political situation pushed him to reside in
Jakarta after 1950. He made attempts to revive the old body of traditions (adat) in the 1960s, but the sultanate lapsed after his death in 1975. His son Mudaffar was enthroned as a titular head in 1986. He restored many of the old royal traditions, though Ternate society was temporarily disturbed by
sectarian violence in 1999. Sultan
Mudaffar Sjah II died in 2015. The male members of his wife's family, the Dutch Van Gelders, were named Prince of Ternate in 2012, and tried to control the sultanate after Mudaffar's death . ==Administration of the Sultanate==