Lady Helen Ibrahim

Lady
Helen Ibrahim
Born Helen Bartholomew
(1899-12-21)21 December 1899
10 Belgrave Street, Glasgow, Scotland
Died 13 August 1977(1977-08-13) (aged 77)
Homelands Nursing Home, Cowfold Horsham, Sussex, England, United Kingdom
Residence England, United Kingdom
Nationality Scottish
Other names Helen Bartholomew Wilson (former)
Helen binti Abdullah (former)
Sultanah Helen Ibrahim (former)
Citizenship British
Occupation Physician
Known for Former Sultanah and ex-wife of Sultan Ibrahim of Johor
Home town Glasgow, Scotland
Spouse(s)
William Brockie Wilson
(m. 1914; div. 1925)
Awards King George V Silver Jubilee Medal (1935)
King George VI Coronation Medal (1937)
Her Highness Sultanah Helen Ibrahim 3rd wife of Sultan Ibrahim of Johor
Sultan Ibrahim of Johor and Sultanah Helen Ibrahim in Singapore, 1935.
Sultanah of Johor
Reign 15 October 1930 – 30 March 1938
Coronation 15 October 1930
Predecessor Sultanah Rogayah
Successor Sultanah Fawzia
Sultan
Ibrahim of Johor
(m. 1930; div. 1938)
Issue none

Lady Helen Ibrahim (née Helen Bartholomew; previously Wilson; 21 December 1899 – 13 August 1977), was the former (3rd) Sultanah to Sultan Sir Ibrahim Iskandar Al-Masyhur ibni Almarhum Sultan Sir Abu Bakar, the 22nd Sultan of Johor, in Malaysia.

Early life

Born in Glasgow, Scotland in 21 December 1899 and Scottish by birth, she was the daughter of a master saw-maker from Stirlingshire.

Her first marriage was to William Brockie Wilson, a Malayan-born Scot, they wed in Singapore in 14 March 1914. She was a physician by training. Bartholomew first met Sultan Ibrahim when Wilson became the Sultan's physician. Helen had followed her husband all the way from Scotland to then British Malaya. They later divorced in 1925.[1]

Marriage to the Sultan

Sultan Ibrahim was a known Anglophile and loved to spend his time travelling around Europe, especially to the United Kingdom. The Sultan enrolled his sons, by his two Malay wives, to be educated in Britain. It was during this time he renewed his acquaintance with the widow and asked her to keep an eye on his boys. Sultan Ibrahim visited Bartholomew and the boys from time to time and Bartholomew's relationship with the boys was very close.

Sultan Ibrahim and Bartholomew were married in a Surrey mosque in October 1930 and Bartholomew then became known as Her Highness Sultanah Helen Ibrahim.[2]

In 1935, her picture with Sultan Ibrahim was put on a Johor postage stamp as a gift to her from the Sultan on their fifth wedding anniversary.

Throughout the reign as Sultanah of Johor, Sultanah Helen was awarded the Darjah Kerabat Johor Yang Amat DiHormati (D.K.) and Johor Darjah Seri Paduka Mahkota Johor (S.P.M.J.) in Johor. Additionally, she was awarded with King George V Silver Jubilee Medal (1935) and King George VI Coronation Medal (1937). The couple divorced in 30 March 1938.[3] Even after the divorce, the Sultan reputedly gave her an emerald on her birthday and a diamond on their wedding anniversary.

Later life and death

Lady Helen briefly returned to Scotland and lived in Cambuslang and would later moved to London. She was last seen at the Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow in 1960s, where she was seen stepped out from a Rolls Royce car, after that, not further information is known about her later life. Later records shown that Lady Helen had since died in 13 August 1977 at age 77 at the Homelands Nursing Home, Cowfold, Sussex, England.[4]

Notes

  1. "Sultan of Johore to Marry in London: Ruler of Malay Dependency to Wed Mrs. Wilson, Divorced Wife of Singapore Doctor", The New York Times, 15 October 1930
  2. Mads Lange fra Bali: Og Hans Efterslaegt Sultanerne af Johor (1992), pg 97-8
  3. Malaya: The Malayan Union Experiment, 1942-1948 (1995), pg 140
  4. "Glasgow girl and the Sultan of Johore". Retrieved 2018-04-02.

References

  • Mads Lange fra Bali: Og Hans Efterslaegt Sultanerne af Johor, Paul Andresen, Odense Universitetsforlag, 1992, ISBN 87-7492-851-1
  • Malaya: The Malayan Union Experiment, 1942-1948, by A. J. Stockwell, University of London Institute of Commonwealth Studies, published by HMSO, 1995
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