SUNGAI UJONG. 
125 
the petrified properties of this ancient saint, his sword, his stocks, 
his spoon and his buckler lying round his tomb at Pengkalan 
Kempas. 
In those early years the seat of power was not where it is now. 
Oiling, Beranang, Pajam, Gibok, Kechau, Langlang, Langkap Ber- 
juntai, Lubok Bergoyang, Subang Hilang, Merbok Kerawang, 
Tunggul Si-jaga, are the places to which tradition gives import- 
ance. Few of them are to be found on maps of the State ; some 
lie outside the Xegri Sembilan in the Ivajang district of Selangor. 
Doubtless they were old Biduanda communities. The names of one 
or two are explained in the native way so common to folklore: 
Tunggul Si-jaga was the place where a small Bugis force frightened 
the people out of the country by putting torches on tree-slumps 
and creating the impression that they were a huge camp surrounded 
by thousands of sentries; Subang Hilang was a place where a 
Biduanda princess lost her earring. All that we can infer is that 
the ancient Biduanda or Belanda tribe — now represented by a few 
Mantra in Malacca and a few wandering Kenaboi in the Jelebu 
mountains — was once important in that part of the Xegri Sembilan 
which lies between the modern settlements of Ivajang and Seremban. 
The following is the genealogy of these early heroes as adapted 
and arranged by tradition. 
Batin Sri A lam . 
1 
1 
Batin Berchanggai 
To’ Jelundong 
1 
Nenek Kerbau. 
Be si 
(founder of Jelebu.) 
(founder of Johol.) 
(of Sungai Ujong.) 
1 
To' Dara Derani. 
1 
1 
(by adoption.) 
Puteri Magang Selida 
m. the Sultan of Johore. 
Batin Sibil) To' Engku Kelang To’ Manteri To’ Johan 
Jaya. \nr.J3endahara 
Akhir-zaman. Pah law an. 
| Sekudai. 
1 | 
the Rulers of Sungai 
the Rulers of 
the Rulers the Johol 
Ujong. 
Klang. 
of Jelebu. rulers (by 
his marriage 
with Puterx 
Setiatcan of 
Johol.) 
It will be seen presently that by a similar arrangement of 
parallel lines all the principal titles of Sungai Ujong trace back 
to the children of a common ancestor. This, of course, is tradi- 
tion ; history does not work with mathematical exactitude. 
R. A. Soc., No. 83. 1921. 
