Conclusion
Although the other states of the peninsula were not directly subordinate to London, the sultans had British advisors at their court. The four northern states of Perlis, Kedah, Kelantan and Terengganu were under the control of Thailand until 1909. The territory of the present state of Sabah was a British protectorate, which had originally belonged to the Sultanate of Brunei and Sultanate Sulu and was administered under the name Norborne by the British Norborne Company. Sarawak's vast forest area was the personal property of the British Brooke family, which had received the land as a fief from the Sultan of Brunei and ruled it as White Rajas for nearly a century. During the Second World War, today's Malaysia was occupied by Japan. During this time, support for the country's independence grew from the European colonial power. The British plans to establish a Malayan Union were rejected by many Malays. They demanded a system that more closely accommodated the wishes of the Malays, excluded Singapore from the Sinification of the country, and denied immigrants double citizenship. On August 31, 1957, the Federation of Malaya, consisting of the nine Malay Sultanates and the two Straits Settlements Penang and Malacca, gained their independence. On September 16, 1963, a new federation was founded under the name Malaysia, which included the Federation of Malaya, the British crown colony of Singapore and the protectorates of North Borneo (now Sabah) and Sarawak. The early years were dictated by territorial claims by neighbours, notably Indonesia's confrontation, [9] [10] Singapore's withdrawal from the federation in 1965, and the Sabah dispute, in which the Philippines defeated the Claim to Sabah