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In Islamic tradition, the salsilah (genealogical chain) is sacred proof of lineage. For the Iranūn, these records trace unbroken descent from pre-colonial maritime lords—establishing legal title to ancestral waters.
What is a ?
The salsilah (Arabic: سلسلة, "chain") is a genealogical record used throughout the Muslim world to document family lineages. In Southeast Asia, particularly among the Sultanates of Sulu, Mindanao, and Brunei, the salsilah serves as legal proof of hereditary authority.
Unlike Western genealogies (which emphasize primogeniture), the salsilah tracks multiple descent lines—including maternal and collateral branches. This ensures that sovereignty is not lost if a direct male line ends.
Legal Recognition
Courts in Malaysia, the Philippines, and Indonesia have accepted salsilah as admissible evidence in property and succession disputes. The 2022 Sulu heirs case relied heavily on documented salsilah to prove genealogical standing.
The Iranūn
Simplified Genealogical Chain
The following is a condensed representation of the Iranūn salsilah, connecting modern heirs to pre-colonial maritime authority:
Why Matter
The "Collateral Descent" Principle
When colonial authorities dissolved the Sultanate of Sulu (1940), they assumed hereditary claims ended. They were wrong. Under Islamic law, collateral descendants(cousins, nephews, maternal lines) retain rights.
Court Recognition: The 2022 Sulu heirs ruling acknowledged that even distant cousins—if proven through salsilah—have legal standing to assert territorial claims.
Addressing Skepticism
Challenge: "Oral genealogies are unreliable"
Critics dismiss oral traditions as fabrications. However:
- ✓ Oral genealogies are cross-verified with colonial archives
- ✓ Multiple independent family lines corroborate the same names/dates
- ✓ Courts worldwide now accept oral evidence in indigenous rights cases
Challenge: "Too many claimants dilute legitimacy"
With multiple descendants, who speaks for the heirs?
- ✓ Islamic law allows for collective inheritance
- ✓ Heirs can designate representatives (as in 2023 Declaration)
- ✓ Co-sovereignty is recognized in international law (e.g. tribal councils)