Maguindanao genealogy records state that Kabungsuwan's father was an Arab and a sharif or a descendant of the Islamic prophet Mohammed through the Ba 'Alawiyya of Yemen while his mother was Malay. His recorded name "Kabungsuwan" in Maguindanao tradition means "youngest" and is said to be the youngest among three children. His eldest brother, Ahmad is said to have established the Bruneian Sultanate while his other brother Alawi is said to have set up the Sulu Sultanate.[6]
Mission work in Mindanao
The Sunni Shafi'i and Ash'ari scholar Kabungsuwan is generally regarded as the one who introduced Islam in the Lanao and Maguindanao areas in Mindanao arriving in the area in the early 16th century. There are several tarsilas or written genealogy on Kabungsuwan though most of these state that he brought in men when he landed in Mindanao, his group are composed of seafarers, there was initial force with his group's interaction with the locals and that there were already Muslims in Mindanao when his Kangungsuwan and his men landed near the mouth of the Pulangi River. Kabungsuwan formed alliances with influential royal families of Sulu, Borneo, and Ternate. This led to Islam becoming the dominant religion around Lake Lanao by the 19th century.[7]
Kabungsuwan was of Arab-Malay ethnicity. He married a local princess and established the Sultanate of Maguindanao in the 16th century.[4] The sultanate was usually centered in the valley of Cotabato.
^Nathan, K.S.; Kamali, Mohammad Hashim (2005). "Islam in the Phililippines". In Abubakar, Carmen (ed.). Islam in Southeast Asia: Political, Social and Strategic Challenges for the 21st Century (reprint ed.). Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. pp. 49–50. ISBN9812302832.