Tangkwag begot Mukarna and Buntang, who was the son of a concubine.
Kdaw was married to Makadūlū and begot Baratamay and Bāni. Makadūlū begot also Undung and Nawang by a concubine.
Baratamay married Gimbulānan and begot Lalanū, entitled Baya Budtung, who married Sultan Barahamān and died without offspring; she was overshadowed by Panabwan, a lady of Tajiman.
Baratamay and Bāni were both born of a princess; so one day Baratamay said to Bāni, “You rule Bwayan, for I am going away and shall be absent,” and Baratamay left for Sūlug. There he married a lady of Sūlug and begot Pangyan Ampay. Some time after that Baratamay returned to the land of Bwayan and went up as far as Bagu Ingŭd. There he married a lady of Bagu Ingŭd and begot Munāwal and Gangga. Munāwal married Mupāt Batwa and begot Manuk, Raja Bwayan in Bagu Ingŭd. Manuk begot Manman, Tapūdi, and Raja Mūda of Matingawan. Manman was sultan of Bagu Ingŭd.
Baratamay begot also Tuntū, who begot Dungkŭlang, a datu of Kabulūkan, and Ambuludtu, and Ugu Nīga; also Pandalīgŭn, Anib, Kābaw, Manabū, Talibūbū, Dānaw, and the daughters Gāyang and Tŭndwan. These were all the children of Baratamay—in all, fourteen.
[The End]
Manuscript No. III
The Genealogy of Bwayan
Introduction
This manuscript is copied from a scroll written for the sultan of Kudarangan by Twan Kali, a noted Moro judge who was in the service of the sultan. It was obtained through the favor of Sharif Afdal, the son-in-law of the late sultan.