Amangkurat I (son-in-law), Amangkurat II (grandson)
Family
House of Surabaya
Pangeran Pekik (or Prince Pekik, died in 1659) was a Javanese prince, and son of the last Duke of Surabaya, Jayalengkara.[2][3] After the Mataram conquest of Surabaya, he was forced to live in Mataram court.[1] He was executed in 1659 under the orders of Mataram's King Amangkurat I, who suspected him of conspiracy.[1]
PangeranPekik (or Prince Pekik, died in 1659) was a Javanese prince, and son of the last Duke of Surabaya, Jayalengkara. After the Mataram conquest of...
grandfather, PangeranPekik of Surabaya, making Amangkurat I suspicious of a conspiracy among Surabayan factions to grab power in the capital by using Pekiks’ grandson's...
Sultan Agung assigned PangeranPekik, a descendant of Sunan Ampel (Sunan Giri's father-in-law), to suppress the rebellion. PangeranPekik himself had been...
PangeranPekik of Surabaya, making Amangkurat suspicious of a conspiracy among the Surabayan factions to grab power in the capital by using Pekiks’ grandson's...
was the son of Amangkurat I of Mataram and Ratu Kulon, daughter of PangeranPekik of Surabaya. Amangkurat II had many wives, but he only had one child...
was killed during the failed coup. In 1659 Amangkurat suspected that PangeranPekik, his father-in-law and the son of the conquered Duke of Surabaya who...
afterwards. His son PangeranPekik was exiled to an ascetic life at the grave of Sunan Ngampel-Denta near Surabaya. Later, PangeranPekik lived in the court...
this as a threat, so in 1630 he sent an army under his brother-in-law, PangeranPekik to capture Giri Kedaton. Giri Kedaton finally surrendered in 1636. Sunan...
brother-in-law, Prince Pekik, the son of Jayalengkara from Surabaya, to face Giri. The spirit of the Mataram troops rose because PangeranPekik was a descendant...
grudge against King Amangkurat I, the crown prince over the execution of PangeranPekik, the prince's maternal grandfather, and Trunajaya over his exile and...
at the fall of Surabaya in 1625 was already blind and aged. His son, PangeranPekik, was forced to live in Mataram after Mataram's victory. He later married...
[son] Pangeran Arya Balewot [son] Pangeran Sekar Tanjung [son] Pangeran Ngangsar [brother] Pangeran Arya Pamalad (fl. c. 1587) [son of Pangeran Sekar...
large plantation scale. In 1635 King Abu al-Mafakhir named his son Prince Pekik (Abu al-Ma'ali Ahmad) as his co-reign. In the next year a peace treaty with...
(1621–1626) Panembahan Mas Witana, Sultan (1626–1680) Pasuruan – Adipati Pekik, King (?–1614) Ki Gede Kapulungan, Regent (c.1614–1616/17) Surapati, Wiranegara...
noblemen for suspicion of treachery, including the entire family of PangeranPekik (the former ruling dynasty of Surabaya) in 1659 and many members of...
painter Basuki Abdullah, Indonesian realist and naturalist painter Djoko Pekik, painter and sculptor Guruh Sukarnoputra, choreographer Iwan Tirta, Indonesian...