Mochamat Asim1

M, #14855, b. 1716, d. after 1720
Father*Rajah of Tambora Albubasi Sultan1 b. c 1670, d. 1719
Mother*Sitina Sara Marouff1 b. c 1679

Copyright / Terms of Use Notice


The material on this website is subject to copyright.
Facts (names, dates, and places) are not copyright. You are free to transcribe them but not cut and paste into your data provided you use the correct attribution and citation.
I have created the narratives, sentences, and citations; they are copyright and may not be used.
You may not add them to your genealogy, your personal documents, your tree on Ancestry, nor in the data or profile sections on Geni, nor anywhere else.
Many of the images are also copyright. You may not copy them without the consent of the copyright holders.
You must use the correct attribution and citation, viz.: Robertson, Delia. The First Fifty Years Project. Here you add the page URL.

Last Edited27/07/2014
Birth*Mochamat Asim was born in 1716 in de Caep de Goede Hoop.1
 
DiedYoung*He appears to have died young. I have thus far not found him in the record after 1720. 
(Witness) Requesten In 1720 Sitina Sara Marouff, following the death in 1719 of her husband Rajah of Tambora Albubasi Sultan, requested to return to Batavia with her children Mochamat Asim, Ibraim Adehan, Maria Dorothea Sultania, David Sultania and Isaak Sultania because the family was exceedingly poor. However the family remained at the Cape, so it seems her request was denied.2 

Citations

  1. [S727] Dr. J. Hoge 'The family of the Rajah of Tambora at the Cape', Africana Notes and News, Vol IX, No 1, December 1951, 27-29 "In her request she calls herself Care Sals; her children were Ibraim Adahan (aged 21), Mochamat Aserk (aged 9), Mochamat Dayan (aged 7), Mochamat Asim (aged 4) and a daughter, Sitina Asia (aged 17)."
  2. [S727] Dr. J. Hoge 'The family of the Rajah of Tambora at the Cape' "A year after her huband's death, his widow requested the Cape government to send her and her five children back to Batavia, declaring that she was 41 years old and so poor that she was scarcely able to support her children. In her request she calls herself Care Sals; her children were Ibraim Adahan (aged 21), Mochamat Aserk (aged 9), Mochamat Dayan (aged 7), Mochamat Asim (aged 4) and a daughter, Sitina Asia (aged 17). It appears that her request was not granted, for she was still living at the Cape in 1740."
 

Bookmark and Share