The Sultan of Brunei is the head of state of Brunei. Brunei Darussalam, (bruːˈnaɪ in English officially the State of Brunei Abode of Peace (Negara Brunei Darussalam Jawi: برني دارالسلام The politics of Brunei take place in a framework of an Absolute monarchy, whereby the Sultan of Brunei is both Head of state and Head of The politics of Brunei take place in a framework of an Absolute monarchy, whereby the Sultan of Brunei is both Head of state and Head of The Prime Minister of Brunei is a title held by the Sultan of Brunei. Hassanal Bolkiah Mu'izzaddin Waddaulah, the Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam GCB GCMG (born July 15, 1946 As of May 24 2005, the Cabinet consists of the following Non-Minister Member with Ministerial Rank See also Cabinet The Syariah Court system is one of the two separate system of courts which exists in Malaysian legal system. Legislative Council of Brunei (Malay Dewan Undangan Negara Brunei is the Parliament in Brunei. |||} The districts of Brunei are subdivided into 38 mukims (wards Brunei joined ASEAN on January 7 1984 --1 week after resuming full independence --and gives its ASEAN membership the highest priority in its foreign relations Information on politics by country is available for every Country, including both De jure and De facto independent The royal lineage can be traced back to the 15th century. The 29 Sultans of Brunei (and their respective reigns) are:[1]
- Muhammad Shah (1405–1415)
- Ahmad (1415–1425)
- Sharif Ali (1425–1433)
- Sulaiman (1433–1473)
- Bolkiah (1473–1521)
- Abdul Kahar (1521–1575)
- Saiful Rijal (1575–1600)
- Shah Berunai (1600–1605)
- Hassan (1605–1619)
- Abdul Jailul Akbar (1619–1649)
- Abdul Jailul Jabbar (1649–1652)
- Muhammad Ali (1652–1660)
- Abdul Mubin (1660–1673)
- Muhyiddin (1673–1690)
- Nassaruddin (1690–1705)
- Hussin Kamaluddin (1705–1730) (1745–1762)
- Muhammad Alauddin (1730–1745)
- Omar Ali Saifuddin I (1762–1795)
- Muhammad Tajuddin (1796–1807)
- Muhammad Jamalul Alam I (1806–1807)
- Muhammad Kanzul Alam (1807–1829)
- Muhammad Alam (1825–1828)
- Omar Ali Saifuddin II (1829–1852)
- Abdul Momin (1852–1885)
- Hashim Jalilul Alam Aqamaddin (1885–1906)
- Muhammad Jamalul Alam II (1906–1924)
- Ahmad Tajuddin (1924–1950)
- Omar Ali Saifuddien III (1950–1967)
- Hassanal Bolkiah (1967–present)
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