Maynila (historical polity)

Maynila
Bayan ng Maynila (Tagalog)
ᜊᜌᜈ᜔ ᜈᜅ᜔ ᜋᜌ᜔ᜈᜒᜎ (Baybayin)
کراجاءن مانيلا (Malay)
c. 1500–1571
Location of the fortified bayan of Maynila (colored yellow) by 1570.
Location of the Lusong area, under the sphere of influence of Maynila (colored yellow) by 1570.
CapitalManila
Common languagesOld Tagalog, Malay
Religion
Islam, Hinduised Tagalog polytheism
GovernmentMonarchy
Rajah 
• c. 1500s – c. 1521
Salalila
• c. 1521 – August 1572
Ache
• 1571–1575
Sulayman III
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Establishment of Maynila and conversion to Islam
c. 1500
• Death of Rajah Salalila and territorial conflicts with Tondo
c. before 1521
• Marriage between Prince Ache and a princess of Brunei
1521
• Capture and release of Prince Ache by the first Castilian expedition to the Moluccas
1521
1570
• Rajah Ache's allegiance to the Kingdom of Spain
1571
CurrencyGold coin
Preceded by
Succeeded by

Pasig

Captaincy General of the Philippines
Manila (province)
Today part ofPhilippines

Maynila, also known commonly as Manila and as the Kingdom of Maynila, was a major Tagalog bayan ("country" or "city-state") situated along the modern-day district of Intramuros in the city of Manila, at the southern bank of the Pasig River. It was considered to be one of the most cosmopolitan of the early historic settlements on the Philippine archipelago, fortified with a wooden palisade which was appropriate for the predominant battle tactics of its time. At the northern bank of the river lies the separately-led polity of Tondo.

Maynila was led by paramount rulers who were referred to using the Malay title of "Raja". Maynila is sometimes interpreted to be the Kingdom of Luzon, although some historians suggest that this might rather refer to the Manila Bay region as a whole, expanding the possible dominion of the kingdom.

The earliest oral traditions suggest that Maynila was founded as a Muslim settlement as early as the 1250s, supposedly supplanting an even older pre-Islamic settlement. However, the earliest archeological findings for organized human settlements in the area dates to around 1500s. By the 16th century, it was already an important trading center, with extensive political ties with the Sultanate of Brunei and extensive trade relations with traders from the Ming dynasty. With Tondo, the polity on the northern part of the Pasig River delta, it established a duopoly on the intraarchipelagic trade of Chinese goods.

For political reasons, the historical rulers of Maynila maintained close cognatic ties through intermarriage with the ruling houses of the Sultanate of Brunei, but Brunei's political influence over Maynila is not considered to have extended to military or political rule. Intermarriage was a common strategy for large thalassocratic states such as Brunei to extend their influence, and for local rulers such as those of Maynila to help strengthen their family claims to nobility. Actual political and military rule over the large distances characteristic of Maritime Southeast Asia was not possible until relatively modern times.

By 1570, Maynila was under the rule of two paramount rulers (the more senior Rajah Matanda and the younger Rajah Sulayman), who in turn had several lower-ranked rulers ("datu") under them. This was the political situation encountered by Martin de Goiti when he attacked Maynila in May of that year. This "Battle of Maynila" ended with a fire that destroyed the fortified settlement of Maynila, although it is not clear whether the fire was set by Goiti or by the inhabitants themselves as part of the scorched earth tactics typically used in the archipelago during that era.

Maynila had been partially rebuilt by the following year, 1571, when the full forces of de Goiti's superior, Miguel López de Legazpi, arrived in the city to claim it as a territory of New Spain. After extensive negotiations with the leaders of Maynila and those of the neighboring settlement in Tondo, Maynila was declared as the new Spanish city of Manila on June 24, 1571, effectively ending Maynila's history as an independent polity.