Having discovered
the sea route to India, Manuel organized successive fleets
to that region in order to establish Portuguese commercial
hegemony. In 1505 Francisco de Almeida left Lisbon with a
fleet of 22 ships and 2,500 men, 1,500 of whom were
soldiers. Invested with the title of viceroy of India,
Almeida was instructed to conclude alliances with Indian
rulers, set up factories, and build forts on the east coast
of Africa, which he did at Mombasa and at Kilwa in
present-day Tanzania before arriving in India. After his
arrival, he fortified the island of Angediva and Cochin. He
imposed a system of licenses on trading vessels that
threatened to ruin the Muslim traders, who reacted by
seeking spices in Malacca in present-day Malaysia and the
Sunda Islands in the Malay Archipelago and sailing directly
to the Persian Gulf, bypassing India. Almeida sought to
suppress this trade and secure Portuguese commercial
hegemony. He was joined in this effort by two more fleets
sent from Lisbon, one under the command of Tristão da
Cunha and the other under Afonso de Albuquerque, who had
been appointed Almeida's successor as viceroy. Cunha
explored Madagascar and the coast of east Africa, occupied
the island of Socotra (now part of Yemen), and built a fort
at the mouth of the Red Sea, before sailing to India.
Albuquerque ravaged the Oman coast and attacked Ormuz, the
great entrepôt at the mouth of the Persian Gulf, where
he began constructing a fort. The activities of
the Portuguese motivated the Muslims to take military
action. The sultan of Egypt, allied with the Venetians and
Turks, organized a large armada that crossed the Indian
Ocean to Diu, where it was engaged by a Portuguese fleet. On
February 2, 1509, a great sea battle was fought and the
sultan's armada destroyed. This victory assured Portuguese
commercial and military hegemony over India and allowed
Portugal to extend its empire to the Far East. Albuquerque
established his capital at Goa, which he attacked and
occupied in 1510. In 1511 he departed for the conquest of
Malacca, the emporium for the spice trade and trade with
China, which he accomplished in August of that year. After
returning to Goa, Albuquerque made plans to occupy strategic
positions in the Persian Gulf and Red Sea. On his first
expedition, he failed to take Aden and returned to Goa. His
second expedition, which was to be his last, attempted to
reduce Ormuz and Aden, as well as conquer Mecca. During this
expedition, Albuquerque fell ill and returned to Goa, where
he died in 1515. When Manuel I
died in 1521, his son and heir, João III, sent
expeditions to the islands of Celebes, Borneo, Java, and
Timor, all part of the Malay Archipelago. Relations were
established with Japan after the visits of Francisco Xavier
and Fernão Mendes Pinto in 1549. Portuguese captains
founded factories in China and took possession of Macau in
1557.
Library of Congress Country StudyEmpire in
Asia
Library of Congress Country Study
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