also called (after 1350) Rajasanagara ruler of the Javan
Hindu state of Majapahit at the time of its greatest power. Hayam Wuruk inherited the throne in 1350 at the age
of 16, when the great patih ("prime minister") Gajah Mada was at the height of his career. Under the two
leaders, Majapahit extended its power throughout the Indonesian archipelago. Its core area
was directly administered by Hayam Wuruk, and the vast outlying territory acknowledged his
supremacy, but he exerted little direct control over it. Javanese sea power was supreme,
and Hayam Wuruk enjoyed an effective monopoly of trade in the region.
Hayam Wuruk had no heir by his
official queen, so he arranged to divide his kingdom between a nephew (married to his
daughter by the queen) and his son by a lesser wife. In so doing he broke the unity of the
state and allowed local potentates to seize control of portions of Majapahit's territory.
After his death Majapahit rapidly declined and, along with it, the last great
manifestation of Hindu civilization in Java. |