Sultan Salehuddin Shah
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Raja Lumu, son of the famous Bugis warrior prince Daeng Chelak, took on the title of Sultan Salahuddin of Selangor in 1742. The Bugis had already begun to settle on the West coast of the Malayan Peninsula towards the end of the 17th century. Following Raja Lumu, two other Bugis Chiefs settled in the Selangor area: Raja Tua in Klang and Daeng Kemboja in Linggi, south of Lukut. Raja Lumu originally met with opposition from the Sultans of Perak and Johor, as well as from the Dutch, but eventually managed to consolidate his position as sovereign. By 1770, his legitimacy was strengthened by marriage to the niece of the Sultan of Perak. The latter, Sultan Muhammad "invested Salehuddin with the insignia of Malay royalty and also attended the subsequent installation ceremony in Selangor". To this alliance, he soon added another, by marrying his own daughter to the Sultan of Kedah, the most northerly of the Western Malay Sultanates.
Sources
John Michael Gullick, A History of Selangor: 1742-1957 (Singapore, Eastern University Press, 1970)
See also, R.O. Winstedt, "A History of Selangor (1680-1874)", Journal of the Malayan British Royal Asiatic Society (JMBRAS)12(3), October 1934, pp.1-34