Hamengkubuwono VI


Sri Sultan Hamengkubuwono VI, also spelled Hamengkubuwana VI, was the sixth Sultan of Yogyakarta of the Yogyakarta Sultanate, who reigned from 1855 until 1877. He succeeded his older brother, Hamengkubuwono V, who died in the midst of political instability within the Yogyakarta Palace.

Reign

Sultan Hamengkubuwana VI was born under the name Raden Mas Mustojo, the son of Sultan Hamengkubuwana II, born in 1821 to a concubine.
Hamengkubuwana VI ascended the throne in 1855, succeeding Hamengkubuwana V after the latter died suddenly. During his reign, a major earthquake struck the region, destroying large parts of the Keraton Yogyakarta, Taman Sari, the Golong Gilig Monument, the Masjid Gedhe Kauman, the Loji Kecil, as well as several other important buildings within the Yogyakarta Sultanate.
During the reign of Hamengkubuwana V, Raden Mas Mustojo was a strong opponent of the Sultan’s cooperative political stance toward the colonial government of the Dutch East Indies under the Kingdom of the Netherlands. However, after Hamengkubuwana V’s death and his own coronation, Hamengkubuwana VI continued a cooperative policy, though with less compliance than his predecessor.
Throughout the reign of Hamengkubuwana VI, diplomatic relations were established with various kingdoms, particularly after his marriage to a princess of the Brunei Sultanate. Although several disputes arose with other kingdoms, Sultan Hamengkubuwana VI was recorded as resolving them with prudence and wisdom. Nevertheless, relations with the Dutch East Indies government gradually deteriorated, especially because the Yogyakarta court maintained close ties with kingdoms considered hostile by the Dutch colonial authorities.
The reign of Hamengkubuwana VI ended with his death on 20 July 1877. He was succeeded by his eldest son, GRM Murteja, who ascended the throne as Sultan Hamengkubuwana VII.
The accession of Hamengkubuwana VII was met with dissatisfaction from the consort of the late Hamengkubuwana V, GKR Sekar Kedhaton, and GRM Timur Muhammad. They argued that GRM Timur Muhammad was more entitled to inherit the throne. Both were subsequently arrested on charges of rebellion against the Sultan and the palace. GKR Sekar Kedhaton and GRM Timur Muhammad were exiled to Manado, North Sulawesi, where both later died.

Personal life

In 1848, he married a Surakarta princess, the eldest daughter of Pakubuwana VIII, as his queen consort by the title Gusti Kanjeng Ratu Kencana. However, Ratu Kencana couldn't produce male children, her only child was Gusti Kanjeng Ratu Sasi. In 1872, he installed a new queen consort, Gusti Kanjeng Ratu Sultan, and appointed his eldest son, Gusti Raden Mas Murtejo as the crown prince. The crown prince was biologically born to Ratu Sultan before his father's first marriage, so that he was possibly adopted by Ratu Kencana.