He reigned under the increasing pressure of Annamese domination and migration into Cham lands, but his time was peaceful apart from an incident in 1746.
[2] The French visitor Pierre Poivre wrote about the regular tributes that the Cham ruler, as well as the King of Cambodia and various uphill groups, were forced to dispatch to Phu Xuan every year.
A short-lived anti-Vietnamese rebellion was launched by two Cham leaders called Duong Bao Lai and Diêp Mã Lang in 1746.
On the map of eastern Asia by Covens & Mortier (1760), "Ciampa" is indicated as a polity between Cambodia and Cochinchina (the Nguyễn domain).
The map mainly has nautical information like capes and bays, indicating that European merchants seldom visited the port towns.