Mahmud Shah (died 1528, Kampar, Sumatra) was the sultan of Malacca (now Melaka) from 1488 until the capture of the city by the Portuguese in 1511, after which he founded the kingdom of Johor (Johore).
At the time of Mahmud Shah’s accession the city-state of Malacca was at the peak of its power and was the preeminent trade centre of Southeast Asia because of its strategic location on the Malay Peninsula, commanding the strait between it and the island of Sumatra. The bendahara (“chief minister”) Tun Perak, architect of Malacca’s greatness, was an old man, and the Malaccan court under Mahmud Shah apparently was rife with intrigue and favoritism. Mahmud Shah was not an effective ruler, but he was also a victim of circumstances. Portugal in the early 16th century was in the midst of establishing its authority overseas. Portuguese ships were in Malacca’s waters before 1510, and on Aug. 15, 1511, troops commanded by Afonso de Albuquerque succeeded in capturing the city. Mahmud Shah fled across the Malay Peninsula to Pahang on the east coast, where he made a futile effort to enlist Chinese aid.
Mahmud Shah then moved south and founded the kingdom of Johor as a rival trade centre to Malacca. With his capital on the island of Bintan (now part of Indonesia), southeast of Singapore, he continued to receive the tribute and allegiance from surrounding states that had been rendered him as ruler of Malacca. He became the leader of a Malay and Muslim confederacy and launched several unsuccessful attacks against Malacca. In 1526 the Portuguese responded to the threat of Mahmud Shah’s forces by destroying his capital at Bintan. Mahmud Shah fled to Sumatra, but his successors went on to build Johor into a substantial empire whose power culminated in the 18th and 19th centuries.