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Afonso de Albuquerque

Afonso de Albuquerque, 1st Duke of Goa (Portuguese: [ɐˈfõsu ði aɫβuˈkɛɾk(ɨ)]; c. 1453 – 16 December 1515) was a Portuguese general, admiral, and statesman. He served as viceroy of Portuguese India from 1509 to 1515, during which he expanded Portuguese influence across the Indian Ocean and built a reputation as a fierce and skilled military commander.[1][2][3]

Afonso de Albuquerque
Captain-Major of the Seas of Arabia
Governor of Portuguese India
In office
4 November 1509 – September 1515
MonarchManuel I
Preceded byFrancisco de Almeida
Succeeded byLopo Soares de Albergaria
Personal details
Born
Afonso de Albuquerque

c. 1453
Alhandra, Kingdom of Portugal
Died16 December 1515 (aged c. 62)
Goa, Portuguese India
ChildrenBrás de Albuquerque [pt]
Parents
  • Gonçalo de Albuquerque (father)
  • Leonor de Menezes (mother)
OccupationAdmiral
Governor of India
Signature

Albuquerque advanced the three-fold Portuguese grand scheme of combating Islam, spreading Christianity, and securing the trade of spices by establishing a Portuguese Asian empire.[4] Among his achievements, Albuquerque managed to conquer Goa and was the first European of the Renaissance to raid the Persian Gulf, and he led the first voyage by a European fleet into the Red Sea.[5] He is generally considered a highly effective military commander,[6] and "probably the greatest naval commander of the age",[7] given his successful strategy — he attempted to close all the Indian Ocean naval passages to the Atlantic, Red Sea, Persian Gulf, and to the Pacific, transforming it into a Portuguese mare clausum.[8] He was appointed head of the "fleet of the Arabian and Persian sea" in 1506.[9]

Many of the conflicts in which he was directly involved took place in the Indian Ocean, in the Persian Gulf regions for control of the trade routes, and on the coasts of India. His military brilliance in these initial campaigns enabled Portugal to become the first global empire in history.[10] He led the Portuguese forces in numerous battles, including the conquest of Goa in 1510 and the capture of Malacca in 1511.

During the last five years of his life, he turned to administration,[11] where his actions as the second governor of Portuguese India were crucial to the longevity of the Portuguese Empire. He oversaw expeditions that resulted in the establishing diplomatic contacts: with Thailand through his envoy Duarte Fernandes, with Pegu in Myanmar, and Timor and the Moluccas through a voyage headed by António de Abreu and Francisco Serrão. He laid the path for European trade with Ming China through Rafael Perestrello. He also aided in establishing diplomatic relations with Ethiopia,[12][13][14] and established diplomatic ties with Persia during the Safavid dynasty.[15]

Throughout his career, he received epithets such as "the Terrible",[16] "the Great",[2] "the Lion of the Seas",[17] "the Portuguese Mars",[8] and "the Caesar of the East".[17]

Early life

 
Coat of arms of Albuquerque

Afonso de Albuquerque was born in 1453 in Alhandra, near Lisbon.[18] He was the second son of Gonçalo de Albuquerque, Lord of Vila Verde dos Francos, and Dona Leonor de Menezes. His father held an important position at court and was connected by remote illegitimate descent with the Portuguese monarchy. He was a descendant of King Denis’s illegitimate son, Afonso Sanches, Lord of Albuquerque. He was educated in mathematics and Latin at the court of Afonso V of Portugal, where he befriended Prince John, the future King John II of Portugal.[19][20]

Early military service

In 1471, under the command of Afonso V, he was present at the conquest of Tangier and Arzila in Morocco,[21] and he served there as an officer for some years. In 1476 he accompanied Prince John in wars against Castile, including the Battle of Toro. He participated in the campaign on the Italian peninsula in 1480 to assist Ferdinand I of Naples in repelling the Ottoman invasion of Otranto.[11] On his return in 1481, when Prince John was crowned as King John II, Albuquerque was made Master of the Horse and chief equerry (estribeiro-mor) to the King, a post which he held throughout John's reign.[21][20] In 1489 he returned to military campaigning in North Africa, as commander of defense in the Graciosa fortress, an island in the river Luco near the city of Larache. In 1490 Albuquerque was part of the guard of King John II. He returned to Arzila in 1495, where his younger brother Martim died fighting by his side.[citation needed]

First expedition to India, 1503

When King Manuel I of Portugal ascended to the throne following the death of his cousin John II, he held a cautious attitude towards Albuquerque, who was a close friend of his predecessor and seventeen years Manuel's senior. Eight years later, on 6 April 1503 Albuquerque was sent on his first expedition to India together with his cousin Francisco de Albuquerque. Each commanded three ships, sailing with Duarte Pacheco Pereira and Nicolau Coelho. They engaged in several battles against the forces of the Zamorin of Calicut (Calecute, Kozhikode) and succeeded in establishing the King of Cochin (Cohim, Kochi) securely on his throne. In return, the King of Cochin gave the Portuguese permission to build the Portuguese fort Immanuel (Fort Kochi) and establish trade relations with Quilon (Coulão, Kollam). This laid the foundation for the eastern Portuguese Empire.[8]

Second expedition to India, 1506

 
Map of the Arabian Peninsula showing the Red Sea with Socotra island (red) and the Persian Gulf (blue) with the Strait of Hormuz (Cantino planisphere, 1502)

Albuquerque returned home in July 1504 and was well received by King Manuel I. After he assisted with the creation of a strategy for the Portuguese efforts in the east, King Manuel entrusted him with the command of a squadron of five vessels in the fleet of sixteen sailing for India in early 1506, headed by Tristão da Cunha.[8] The aim of the expedition was to conquer Socotra and build a fortress there, hoping to close the trade in the Red Sea.

Albuquerque went as "chief-captain for the Coast of Arabia", sailing under da Cunha's orders until reaching Mozambique.[22] He carried a sealed letter with a secret mission ordered by the King: after fulfilling the first mission, he was to replace the first viceroy of India, Francisco de Almeida, whose term ended two years later.[6] Before departing, he legitimized his son Brás ("Braz" in the old Portuguese spelling), born to a common Portuguese woman named Joana Vicente in 1500.[23]

First conquest of Socotra and Ormuz, 1507

The fleet left Lisbon on 6 April 1506. Albuquerque piloted his ship himself, having lost his appointed pilot on departure. In Mozambique Channel, they rescued Captain João da Nova, who had encountered difficulties on his return from India; da Nova and his ship, the Frol de la mar, joined da Cunha's fleet.[24] From Malindi, da Cunha sent envoys to Ethiopia, which at the time was thought to be closer to India than it actually is, under the aegis of Albuquerque. After failing to reach Ethiopia, he managed to land the envoys in Filuk.[25] After successful attacks on Arab cities on the East African coast, the expedition conquered the island of Socotra and built a fortress at Suq, hoping to establish a base to stop the Red Sea commerce to the Indian Ocean. However, Socotra was abandoned four years later, as it was eventually realised to be a poor location for a base.[6]

At Socotra, they parted ways: Tristão da Cunha sailed for India, where he would relieve the Portuguese besieged at Cannanore, while Afonso took seven ships and 500 men to Ormuz in the Persian Gulf, one of the chief eastern centers of commerce. On his way, he conquered the cities of Curiati (Kuryat), Muscat in July 1507, and Khor Fakkan, accepting the submission of the cities of Kalhat and Sohar. He arrived at Hormuz on 25 September and soon captured the city, which agreed to become a tributary state of the Portuguese king.[26]

 
Statue of Afonso de Albuquerque, symbolically standing on a stack of weapons, referencing his reply in Hormuz

Ormuz was then a tributary state of Shah Ismail of Persia. In a famous episode, shortly after its conquest, Albuquerque was confronted by Persian envoys, who demanded the payment of the due tribute from him instead. He ordered them to be given a stock of cannonballs, arrows and weapons, retorting that "such was the currency struck in Portugal to pay the tribute demanded from the dominions of King Manuel".[27] According to Brás de Albuquerque, it was Shah Ismael who first addressed Albuquerque as "Lion of the seas".[24]

Afonso began building the Fort of Our Lady of Victory (later renamed Fort of Our Lady of the Conception)[28] on Hormuz Island, engaging his men of all ranks in the work.[29] However, some of his officers, claiming that Afonso was exceeding his orders, revolted against the heavy work and climate and departed for India. With his fleet reduced to two ships and left without supplies, he was unable to maintain his position. In January 1508, he was forced to abandon Ormuz. He raided coastal villages to resupply the settlement of Socotra, returned to Ormuz, and then headed to India.[30]

Arrest at Cannanore, 1509

Afonso arrived at Cannanore on the Malabar coast in December 1508, where he opened the sealed letter that he had received from the King before the viceroy, Dom Francisco de Almeida, which named him as governor to succeed Almeida.[6] The viceroy, supported by the officers who had abandoned Afonso at Ormuz, had a matching royal order but declined to yield. He protested that his term ended only in January and stated his intention to avenge his son's death by fighting the Mamluk fleet of Mirocem, refusing Afonso's offer to fight the Mamluk fleet himself. Afonso avoided confrontation, which could have led to civil war, and moved to Kochi, India, to await further instruction from the King. Increasingly isolated, he wrote to Diogo Lopes de Sequeira, who arrived in India with a new fleet, but was ignored as Sequeira joined Almeida. At the same time, Afonso refused approaches from opponents of Almeida who encouraged him to seize power.[31]

On 3 February 1509, Almeida fought the naval Battle of Diu against a joint fleet of Mamluks, Ottomans, the Zamorin of Calicut, and the Sultan of Gujarat. His victory was decisive: the Ottomans and Mamluks abandoned the Indian Ocean, easing the way for Portuguese rule there for the next century. In August, after a petition from Afonso's former officers with the support of Diogo Lopes de Sequeira claiming him unfit for governance, Afonso was sent in custody to St. Angelo Fort in Cannanore.[32][33] There he remained under what he considered as imprisonment.

Governor of Portuguese India, 1509–1515

 
Afonso de Albuquerque as Governor of India

Afonso was released after three months' confinement, on the arrival at Cannanore of the Marshal of Portugal Fernando Coutinho with a large fleet sent by the King.[8] Coutinho was the most important Portuguese noble to visit India up to that point. He brought an armada of fifteen ships and 3,000 men to defend Afonso's rights, and to take Calicut.[34]

On 4 November 1509, Afonso became the second Governor of Portuguese India, a position he would hold until his death. Almeida set off to return to Portugal, but he was killed before he got there in a skirmish with the Khoekhoe.[35] Upon his assuming office, Afonso intended to dominate the Muslim world and control the Spice trade.[36]

Initially, King Manuel I and his council in Lisbon tried to distribute the power by outlining three areas of jurisdiction in the Indian Ocean.[6] In 1509, the nobleman Diogo Lopes de Sequeira was sent with a fleet to Southeast Asia, to seek an agreement with Sultan Mahmud Shah of Malacca, but failed and returned to Portugal. To Jorge de Aguiar was given the region between the Cape of Good Hope and Gujarat. He was succeeded by Duarte de Lemos, but left for Cochin and then for Portugal, leaving his fleet to Afonso.

Conquest of Goa, 1510

 
Illustration depicts the aftermath of the Portuguese conquest of Goa, from the forces of Yusuf Adil Shah.

In January 1510, obeying the orders from the King and aware of the absence of the Zamorin, Afonso advanced on Calicut. The attack was initially successful, but unravelled when Marshal Coutinho, infuriated by Albuquerque's success against Calicut and desiring glory for himself, attacked the Zamorin's palace against Albuquerque's advice, and was ambushed. During the retreat, Afonso was badly wounded and was forced to flee to the ships, barely escaping with his life, while Coutinho was killed.[6][37]

Soon after the failed attack, Afonso assembled a fleet of 23 ships and 1200 men. Contemporary reports state that he wanted to fight the Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate fleet in the Red Sea or return to Hormuz. However, he had been informed by Timoji (a privateer in the service of the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire) that it would be easier to fight them in Goa, where they had sheltered after the Battle of Diu,[38] and also of the illness of the Sultan Yusuf Adil Shah, and war between the Deccan sultanates.[38] So he relied on surprise in the capture of Goa from the Sultanate of Bijapur.

A first assault took place in Goa from 4 March to 20 May 1510. After the initial occupation, feeling unable to hold the city given the poor condition of its fortifications, the cooling of Hindu residents' support and insubordination among his ranks following an attack by Ismail Adil Shah, Afonso refused a truce offered by the Sultan and abandoned the city in August. His fleet was scattered, and a palace revolt in Kochi hindered his recovery, so he headed to Fort Anjediva. New ships arrived from Portugal, which were intended for the nobleman Diogo Mendes de Vasconcelos at Malacca, who had been given a rival command of the region.

Three months later, on 25 November Afonso reappeared at Goa with a renovated fleet. Diogo Mendes de Vasconcelos was compelled to accompany him with the reinforcements for Malacca[6] and about 300 Malabari reinforcements from Cannanore. In less than a day, they took Goa from Ismail Adil Shah and his Ottoman allies, who surrendered on 10 December. It is estimated that 6000 of the 9000 Muslim defenders of the city died, either in the fierce battle in the streets or by drowning while trying to escape.[39] Afonso regained the support of the Hindu population, although he frustrated the initial expectations of Timoji, who aspired to become governor. Afonso rewarded him by appointing him chief "Aguazil" of the city, an administrator and representative of the Hindu and Muslim people, as a knowledgeable interpreter of the local customs.[38] He then made an agreement to lower the yearly tribute.

 
Coining of money for d'Albuquerque at Goa (1510)

In Goa, Afonso established the first Portuguese mint in the East, after Timoja's merchants had complained of the scarcity of currency, taking it as an opportunity to solidify the territorial conquest.[40] The new coin, based on the existing local coins, showed a cross on the obverse and an armillary sphere (or "esfera"), King Manuel's badge, on the reverse. Gold cruzados or manueis, silver esferas and alf-esferas, and bronze "leais" were issued.[41]

Albuquerque founded at Goa the Hospital Real de Goa or Royal Hospital of Goa, by the Church of Santa Catarina. Upon hearing that the doctors were extorting the sickly with excessive fees, Albuquerque summoned them, declaring that "You charge a physician's pay and don't know what disease the men who serve our lord the King suffer from. Thus, I want to teach you what is it that they die from"[42] and put them to work building the city walls all day till nightfall before releasing them.[43]

Despite constant attacks, Goa became the center of Portuguese India, with the conquest triggering the compliance of neighbouring kingdoms: the Sultan of Gujarat and the Zamorin of Calicut sent embassies, offering alliances and local grants to fortify.

Afonso then used Goa to secure the Spice trade in favor of Portugal and sell Persian horses to Vijayanagara and Hindu princes in return for their assistance.[21]

Conquest of Malacca, 1511

 
Map of the mare clausum claims made by Spanish Empire and Portuguese Empire, with Afonso's "Strait Controlling" strategy marked in blue circles.

Afonso explained to his armies why the Portuguese wanted to capture Malacca:

"The King of Portugal has often commanded me to go to the Straits, because...this was the best place to intercept the trade which the Moslems...carry on in these parts. So it was to do Our Lord's service that we were brought here; by taking Malacca, we would close the Straits so that never again would the Moslems be able to bring their spices by this route.... I am very sure that, if this Malacca trade is taken out of their hands, Cairo and Mecca will be completely lost." (The Commentaries of the Great Afonso de Albuquerque)

In February 1511, through a friendly Hindu merchant, Nina Chatu, Afonso received a letter from Rui de Araújo, one of the nineteen Portuguese held at Malacca since 1509. It urged moving forward with the largest possible fleet to demand their release, and gave details of the fortifications. Afonso showed it to Diogo Mendes de Vasconcelos, as an argument to advance as a joint fleet. In April 1511, after fortifying Goa, he gathered a force of about 900 Portuguese, 200 Hindu mercenaries and about eighteen ships.[44] He then sailed to Malacca against orders and despite the protest of Diogo Mendes, who claimed command of the expedition. Afonso eventually centralized the Portuguese government in the Indian Ocean. After the Malaccan conquest, he wrote a letter to the King to explain his disagreement with Diogo Mendes, suggesting that further divisions could be harmful to the Portuguese in India.[6] Under his command was Ferdinand Magellan, who had participated in the failed embassy of Diogo Lopes de Sequeira in 1509.

 
"Conquest of Malacca", study painting by Ernesto Condeixa

After a false start towards the Red Sea, they sailed to the Strait of Malacca. It was the richest city that the Portuguese tried to take, and a focal point in the trade network where Malay traders met Gujarati, Chinese, Japanese, Javanese, Bengali, Persian and Arabic, among others, described by Tomé Pires as of invaluable richness. Despite its wealth, it was mostly a wooden-built city, with few masonry buildings but was defended by a mercenary force estimated at 20,000 men and more than 2000 pieces of artillery. Its greatest weakness was the unpopularity of the government of Sultan Mahmud Shah, who favoured Muslims, arousing dissatisfaction amongst other merchants.

Afonso made a bold approach to the city, his ships decorated with banners, firing cannon volleys. He declared himself lord of all the navigation, demanded the Sultan release the prisoners and pay for damages, and demanded consent to build a fortified trading post. The Sultan eventually freed the prisoners, but was unimpressed by the small Portuguese contingent. Afonso then burned some ships at the port and four coastal buildings as a demonstration. The city being divided by the Malacca River, the connecting bridge was a strategic point, so at dawn on 25 July, the Portuguese landed and fought a tough battle, facing poisoned arrows, taking the bridge in the evening. After fruitlessly waiting for the Sultan's reaction, they returned to the ships and prepared a junk (offered by Chinese merchants), filling it with men, artillery and sandbags. Commanded by António de Abreu, it sailed upriver at high tide to the bridge. The day after, all had landed. After a fierce fight during which the Sultan appeared with an army of war elephants, the defenders were dispersed and the Sultan fled.[6] Afonso waited for the reaction of the Sultan. Merchants approached, asking for Portuguese protection. They were given banners to mark their premises, a sign that they would not be looted. On 15 August, the Portuguese attacked again, but the Sultan had fled the city. Under strict orders, they looted the city, but respected the banners.[45]

 
An illustration of the keep of the fortress of Malacca, which included a stone relief of Afonso de Albuquerque, by Manuel Godinho de Erédia (1613)
 
Malacca, with A Famosa, depicted by Albuquerque's scrivener, Gaspar Correia.

Afonso prepared Malacca's defenses against a Malay counterattack,[44] building a fortress, assigning his men to shifts and using stones from the mosque and the cemetery. Despite the delays caused by heat and malaria, it was completed in November 1511, its surviving door now known as "A Famosa" ('the famous'). It was possibly then that Afonso had a large stone engraved with the names of the participants in the conquest. To quell disagreements over the order of the names, he had it set facing the wall, with the single inscription Lapidem quem reprobaverunt aedificantes (Latin for "The stone the builders rejected", from David's prophecy, Psalm 118:22–23) on the front.[46]

He settled the Portuguese administration, reappointing Rui de Araújo as factor, a post assigned before his 1509 arrest, and appointing rich merchant Nina Chatu to replace the previous Bendahara. Besides assisting in the governance of the city and the first Portuguese coinage, he provided the junks for several diplomatic missions.[47] Meanwhile, Afonso arrested and had executed the powerful Javanese merchant Utimuti Raja who, after being appointed to a position in the Portuguese administration as representative of the Javanese population, had maintained contacts with the exiled royal family.

Shipwreck on the Flor de la mar, 1511

 
Replica of a Portuguese carrack at the Maritime Museum of Malacca, made in reference to the Flor do Mar

On 20 November 1511 Afonso sailed from Malacca to the coast of Malabar on the old Flor de la Mar carrack that had served to support the conquest of Malacca. Despite its unsound condition, he used it to transport the treasure amassed in the conquest, given its large capacity.[6] He wanted to give the court of King Manuel a show of Malaccan treasures. There were also offerings from the Kingdom of Siam (Thailand) to the King of Portugal, and all his own fortune. On the voyage, the Flor de la Mar was wrecked in a storm, and Afonso barely escaped drowning.[44]

Missions from Malacca

Embassies to Pegu, Sumatra and Siam, 1511

Most Muslim and Gujarati merchants having fled the city, Afonso invested in diplomatic efforts demonstrating generosity to Southeast Asian merchants, like the Chinese, to encourage good relations with the Portuguese. Trade and diplomatic missions were sent to continental kingdoms: Rui Nunes da Cunha was sent to Pegu (Burma), from where King Binyaram sent back a friendly emissary to Kochi in 1514[48][49] and Sumatra, Sumatran kings of Kampar and Indragiri sending emissaries to Afonso accepting the new power, as vassal states of Malacca.[50] Knowing of Siamese ambitions over Malacca, Afonso sent Duarte Fernandes in a diplomatic mission to the Kingdom of Siam (Thailand), returning in a Chinese junk. He was one of the Portuguese who had been arrested in Malacca, having gathered knowledge about the culture of the region. There he was the first European to arrive, establishing amicable relations between the kingdom of Portugal and the court of the King of Siam Ramathibodi II, returning with a Siamese envoy bearing gifts and letters to Afonso and the King of Portugal.[50]

Expedition to the "spice islands" (Maluku islands), 1512

 
Depiction of Ternate with São João Baptista Fort, built in 1522

In November, after having secured Malacca and learning the location of the then secret "spice islands", Afonso sent three ships to find them, led by trusted António de Abreu with deputy commander Francisco Serrão.[51] Malay sailors were recruited to guide them through Java, the Lesser Sunda Islands and the Ambon Island to Banda Islands, where they arrived in early 1512.[52] There they remained for a month, buying and filling their ships with nutmeg and cloves. António de Abreu then sailed to Amboina whilst Serrão sailed towards the Moluccas, but he was shipwrecked near Seram. Sultan Abu Lais of Ternate heard of their stranding, and, seeing a chance to ally himself with a powerful foreign nation, brought them to Ternate in 1512 where they were permitted to build a fort on the island, the Forte de São João Baptista de Ternate [pt], built in 1522.

Return to Cochin and Goa

Afonso returned from Malacca to Cochin, but could not sail to Goa as it faced a serious revolt headed by the forces of Ismael Adil Shah, the Sultan of Bijapur, commanded by Rasul Khan and his countrymen. During Afonso's absence from Malacca, the Portuguese who opposed the taking of Goa had waived its possession, even writing to the King that it would be best to let it go. Held up by the monsoon and with few forces available, Afonso had to wait for the arrival of reinforcement fleets headed by his nephew D. Garcia de Noronha, and Jorge de Mello Pereira.

While at Cochin, Albuquerque started a school. In a private letter to King Manuel I, he stated that he had found a chest full of books with which to teach the children of married Portuguese settlers (casados) and Christian converts, of which there were about a hundred, to read and write.[53]

On 10 September 1512, Afonso sailed from Cochin to Goa with fourteen ships carrying 1,700 soldiers. Determined to recapture the fortress, he ordered trenches dug and a wall breached. But on the day of the planned final assault, Rasul Khan surrendered. Afonso demanded the fort be handed over with its artillery, ammunition and horses, and the deserters to be given up. Some had joined Rasul Khan when the Portuguese were forced to flee Goa in May 1510, others during the recent siege. Rasul Khan consented, on condition that their lives be spared. Afonso agreed and he left Goa. He did spare the lives of the deserters, but had them horribly mutilated. One such renegade was Fernão Lopes, bound for Portugal in custody, who escaped at the island of Saint Helena and led a 'Robinson Crusoe' life for many years. After such measures the town became the most prosperous Portuguese settlement in India.

Campaign in the Red Sea, 1513

 
Attempted Portuguese scaling of the walls of Aden

In December 1512 an envoy from Ethiopia arrived at Goa. Mateus was sent by the regent queen Eleni, following the arrival of the Portuguese from Socotra in 1507, as an ambassador for the king of Portugal in search of a coalition to help face growing Muslim influence. He was received in Goa with great honour by Afonso, as a long-sought "Prester John" envoy. His arrival was announced by King Manuel to Pope Leo X in 1513. Although Mateus faced the distrust of Afonso's rivals, who tried to prove he was some impostor or Muslim spy, Afonso sent him to Portugal.[54] The King is described as having wept with joy at their report.

In February 1513, while Mateus was in Portugal, Afonso sailed to the Red Sea with a force of about 1000 Portuguese and 400 Malabaris. He was under orders to secure that channel for Portugal. Socotra had proved ineffective to control the Red Sea entrance and was abandoned, and Afonso's hint that Massawa could be a good Portuguese base might have been influenced by Mateus' reports.[6]

Knowing that the Mamluks were preparing a second fleet at Suez, he wanted to advance before reinforcements arrived in Aden, and accordingly laid siege to the city.[55] Aden was a fortified city, but although he had scaling ladders they broke during the chaotic attack. After half a day of fierce battle, Afonso was forced to retreat. He cruised the Red Sea inside the Bab al-Mandab, with the first European fleet to have sailed this route. He attempted to reach Jeddah, but the winds were unfavourable and so he sheltered at Kamaran island in May, until sickness among the men and lack of fresh water forced him to retreat. In August 1513, after a second attempt to reach Aden, he returned to India with no substantial results. In order to destroy the power of Egypt, he wrote to King Manuel of the idea of diverting the course of the Nile river to render the whole country barren.[8] He also intended to steal the body of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad, and hold it for ransom until all Muslims had left the Holy Land.[56]

 
Portrait of Afonso de Albuquerque, governor of Portuguese Indies (1509-1515), from Pedro Barretto de Resende's Livro de Estado da India Oriental

Although Albuquerque's expedition failed to reach Suez, such an incursion into the Red Sea by a Christian fleet for the first time in history stunned the Muslim world, and panic spread in Cairo.[57]

Submission of Calicut

 
The Portuguese fort at Calicut

Albuquerque achieved during his term a favourable end to hostilities between the Portuguese and the Zamorin of Calicut, which had lasted since the massacre of the Portuguese in Calicut in 1502. As naval trade faltered and vassals defected, with no foreseeable solutions to the conflict with the Portuguese, the court of the Zamorin fell to in-fighting. The ruling Zamorin was assassinated and replaced by a rival, under the instigation of Albuquerque, permitting peace talks to commence. The Portuguese were allowed to build a fortress in Calicut itself, and acquired rights to obtain as much pepper and ginger as they wished, at stipulated prices, and half the customs duties of Calicut as yearly tribute.[58] Construction of the fortress began immediately, under the supervision of chief architect Tomás Fernandes.

Administration and diplomacy in Goa, 1514

 
Christian maidens of Goa, meeting with a Portuguese nobleman seeking a wife (depicted in the Códice Casanatense, c. 1540)

With peace concluded, in 1514 Afonso devoted himself to governing Goa and receiving embassies from Indian governors, strengthening the city and encouraging marriages of Portuguese men and local women. At that time, Portuguese women were barred from traveling overseas in order to maintain discipline among the men on board the ships. In 1511 under a policy which Afonso promulgated, the Portuguese government encouraged their explorers to marry local women. To promote settlement, the King of Portugal granted freeman status and exemption from Crown taxes to Portuguese men (known as casados, or "married men") who ventured overseas and married local women. With Afonso's encouragement, mixed marriages flourished, giving birth to Portuguese-Indians or mestiços. He appointed local people for positions in the Portuguese administration and did not interfere with local traditions (except "sati", the practice of immolating widows, which he banned).

In March 1514 King Manuel sent to Pope Leo X a huge and exotic embassy led by Tristão da Cunha, who toured the streets of Rome in an extravagant procession of animals from the colonies and wealth from the Indies. His reputation reached its peak, laying foundations of the Portuguese Empire in the East.

In early 1514, Afonso sent ambassadors to Gujarat's Sultan Muzaffar Shah II, ruler of Cambay, to seek permission to build a fort on Diu, India. The mission returned without an agreement, but diplomatic gifts were exchanged, including an Indian rhinoceros,[59] Afonso sent the rhino to King Manuel, making it the first living example of a rhinoceros seen in Europe since the Roman Empire.[60]

Conquest of Ormuz and Illness

 
Portrait of Afonso de Albuquerque, from the Livro de Lisuarte de Abreu (c. 1565)

In 1513, at Cannanore, Afonso was visited by a Persian ambassador from Shah Ismail I, who had sent ambassadors to Gujarat, Ormuz and Bijapur. The shah's ambassador to Bijapur invited Afonso to send back an envoy to Persia. Miguel Ferreira was sent via Ormuz to Tabriz, where he had several interviews with the shah about common goals of defeating the Mamluk sultan.

At the same time, Albuquerque decided to conclude the effective conquest of Hormuz. He had learned that after the Portuguese retreat in 1507, a young king was reigning under the influence of a powerful Persian vizier, Reis Hamed, whom the king greatly feared. At Ormuz in March 1515, Afonso met the king and asked the vizier to be present. He then had him immediately stabbed and killed by his entourage, thus "freeing" the terrified king, so the island in the Persian Gulf yielded to him without resistance and remained a vassal state of the Portuguese Empire. Ormuz itself would not be Persian territory for another century, until an English-Persian alliance finally expelled the Portuguese in 1622.[61] At Ormuz, Afonso met with Miguel Ferreira, returning with rich presents and an ambassador, carrying a letter from the Persian potentate Shah Ismael, inviting Afonso to become a leading lord in Persia.[62] There he remained, engaging in diplomatic efforts, receiving envoys and overseeing the construction of the new fortress, while becoming increasingly ill. His illness was reported as early as September 1515.[63] In November 1515, he embarked on a journey back to Goa.

Death

At this time, his political enemies at the Portuguese court were planning his downfall. They had lost no opportunity in stirring up the jealousy of King Manuel against him, insinuating that Afonso intended to usurp power in Portuguese India.[17] While on his return voyage from Ormuz in the Persian Gulf, near the harbor of Chaul, he received news of a Portuguese fleet arriving from Europe, bearing dispatches announcing that he was to be replaced by his personal foe, Lopo Soares de Albergaria. Realizing the plot that his enemies had moved against him, profoundly disillusioned, he voiced his bitterness: "Grave must be my sins before the King, for I am in ill favor with the King for love of the men, and with the men for love of the King."[64]

Feeling himself near death, he donned the surcoat of the Order of Santiago, of which he was a knight, and drew up his will, appointed the captain and senior officials of Ormuz, and organized a final council with his captains to decide the main matters affecting the Portuguese State of India.[63] He wrote a brief letter to King Manuel, asking him to confer onto his natural son "all of the high honors and rewards" that Afonso had received, and assuring Manuel of his loyalty.[61][65]

On 16 December 1515, Afonso de Albuquerque died within sight of Goa. As his death was known, in the city "great wailing arose",[66] and many took to the streets to witness his body carried on a chair by his main captains, in a procession lit by torches amidst the crowd.[67] Afonso's body was buried in Goa, according to his will, in the Church of Nossa Senhora da Serra (Our Lady of the Hill), which he had been built in 1513 to thank the Madonna for his escape from Kamaran island.[a] That night, the population of Goa, both Hindu and Portuguese, gathered to mourn his death.[66]

In Portugal, King Manuel's zigzagging policies continued, still trapped by the constraints of real-time medieval communication between Lisbon and India and unaware that Afonso was dead. Hearing rumours that the Mamluk Sultan of Egypt was preparing a magnificent army at Suez to prevent the conquest of Ormuz, he repented of having replaced Afonso, and in March 1516 urgently wrote to Albergaria to return the command of all operations to Afonso and provide him with resources to face the Egyptian threat. He organized a new Portuguese navy in Asia, with orders that Afonso (if he was still in India), be made commander-in-chief against the Sultan of Cairo's armies. Manuel would afterwards learn that Afonso had died many months earlier, and that his reversed decision had been delivered many months too late.[63][17]

After 51 years, in 1566, his body was moved to Nossa Senhora da Graça church in Lisbon,[69] which was ruined and rebuilt after the 1755 Great Lisbon earthquake.

Legacy

 
Albuquerque Monument on Afonso de Albuquerque Square in Lisbon (1902)
 
Allegorical fresco dedicated to Afonso de Albuquerque, present at the Palace of Justice of Vila Franca de Xira, in Portugal. Executed by Jaime Martins Barata
 
Afonso de Albuquerque as governor of India

King Manuel I of Portugal was belatedly convinced of Afonso's loyalty, and endeavoured to atone for his lack of confidence in Afonso by heaping honours upon his son, Brás de Albuquerque (1500–1580),[70] whom he renamed "Afonso" in memory of the father. Afonso de Albuquerque was a prolific writer, having sent numerous letters during his governorship, covering topics from minor issues to major strategies. In 1557 his son published his biography under the title Commentarios do Grande Affonso d'Alboquerque.[71]

In 1572, Afonso's actions were described in The Lusiads, the Portuguese main epic poem by Luís Vaz de Camões (Canto X, strophes 40–49). The poet praises his achievements, but has the muses frown upon the harsh rule of his men, of whom Camões was almost a contemporary fellow. In 1934, Afonso was celebrated by Fernando Pessoa in Mensagem, a symbolist epic. In the first part of this work, called "Brasão" (Coat-of-Arms), he relates Portuguese historical protagonists to each of the fields in the Portuguese coat-of-arms, Afonso being one of the wings of the griffin headed by Henry the Navigator, the other wing being King John II.

A variety of mango, which was created by Portuguese Jesuits in Goa via grafting techniques, was named in his honour.[72][73]

Numerous homages have been paid to Afonso; he is featured in the Padrão dos Descobrimentos monument; there is a square named after him in Lisbon, which also features a bronze statue, and two Portuguese Navy ships have been named in his honour: the sloop NRP Afonso de Albuquerque (1884) and the warship NRP Afonso de Albuquerque.

Titles and honours

Notes

  1. ^ This Church was later demolished between 1811 and 1842.[68]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Ooi 2004, p. 137
  2. ^ a b Stephens 1897, p. 1
  3. ^ Butt 2005, p. 10
  4. ^ Ooi 2004, p. 17
  5. ^ Stevens 1711, p. 113
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Diffie, Winius & Shafer 1977, pp. 239–260
  7. ^ Ricklefs 2002, p. 26
  8. ^ a b c d e f Chisholm 1911, p. 526
  9. ^ Aubin, J (15 December 1985). "Albuquerque, Alfonso De". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. 1 (8 ed.). pp. 823–824.
  10. ^ Erickson & Goldstein 2012, p. 403
  11. ^ a b Bandelier 1907.
  12. ^ Vilhena, Maria da Conceição (2001). "O Preste João: mito, literatura e história" [The Prester John: myth, literature and history] (PDF). Arquipélago: História Revista da Universidade Dos Açores (2 ed.). Universidade dos Açores. 5: 14–15. ISSN 0871-7664. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  13. ^ Hespeler-Boultbee 2011, p. 186
  14. ^ Clough 1994, p. 85
  15. ^ Couto & Loureiro 2008, p. 219
  16. ^ Subrahmanyam 1998, p. 365
  17. ^ a b c d Albuquerque, Brás de (1774). Commentarios do grande Afonso Dalboquerque, parte IV, pp. 200–206
  18. ^ Cowley, Robert; Parker, Geoffrey (1 December 1996). The Reader's Companion to Military History. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 9780395669693.
  19. ^ Stephens 1897.
  20. ^ a b Jayne, Kingsley Garland (1970). Vasco Da Gama and His Successors, 1460-1580. Taylor & Francis. pp. 78–79. ISBN 9780389039655.
  21. ^ a b c "Afonso de Albuquerque". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  22. ^ Diogo do Couto, Décadas da Ásia, década X, livro I
  23. ^ Sanceau, Elaine (1936). Indies Adventure: The Amazing Career of Afonso de Albuquerque, Captain-general and Governor of India (1509–1515). Blackie.
  24. ^ a b de Albuquerque, Afonso; Birch, Walter de Gray (2000). Commentaries of the Great Afonso. Vol. 1–4. ISBN 978-81-206-1514-4.
  25. ^ Hespeler-Boultbee 2006, p. 178
  26. ^ Crowley 2015, p. 195–199
  27. ^ In Portuguese: [...]mandando-lhe dizer que aquela era a moeda que se lavrava em Portugal pera pagar páreas àqueles que as pediam aos lugares e senhorios del-rei Dom Manuel, rei de Portugal e senhor das Índias e do reino de Ormuz. in Fernão Lopes de Castanheda (1554) Historia do descobrimento e conquista de India pelos Portugueses Volume II, pg.211
  28. ^ Carter, Laraine Newhouse (1 January 1991). Persian Gulf States: Chapter 1B. The Gulf During the Medieval Period. Countries of the World. Bureau Development, Inc.
  29. ^ Crowley 2015, pp. 199–200
  30. ^ Crowley 2015, pp. 200–201
  31. ^ de Castanheda, Fernão Lopes (1833). Historia do Descobrimento e Conquista da India pelos Portugueses. Typographia Rollandiana.
  32. ^ Stephens 1897, pp. 61–62
  33. ^ Whitewayy 1995, p. 126
  34. ^ Neto, Ricardo Bonalume. MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History p. 68. Cowles Enthusiast Media Spring. 1 April 2002 (Page news on 20 October 2006)
  35. ^ Crowley 2015, p. 240
  36. ^ Andaya & Andaya 1984
  37. ^ Crowley 2015, pp. 248–254
  38. ^ a b c Shastry & Borges 2000, pp. 34–36
  39. ^ Kerr 1824[page needed]
  40. ^ De Souza 1990, pp. 220–221
  41. ^ Dalgado 1982, p. 382
  42. ^ Gaspar Correia Lendas da Índia, book II tome II, part I pp.440–441, 1923 Edition
  43. ^ de Sousa, Germano (1 January 2013). História da Medicina Portuguesa Durante a Expansão (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Temes e Debates. ISBN 978-9896442194.
  44. ^ a b c Ricklefs 1991, p. 23
  45. ^ Bosworth 2007, p. 317
  46. ^ de Albuquerque, Afonso (1774). Commentarios do grande Afonso Dalboquerque: capitão geral que foi das Indias Orientaes em tempo do muito poderoso rey D. Manuel, o primeiro deste nome. Na Regia Officina Typografica.
  47. ^ De Souza 1985, p. 60
  48. ^ Teixeira, Manuel (1963). The Portuguese Missions in Malacca and Singapore (1511–1958). Agência Geral do Ultramar.
  49. ^ Cortesão, Armando, ed. (2005) [1512–1515]. The Suma Oriental of Tomé Pires: An Account of the East from the Red Sea to Japan, Written in Malacca and India in 1512-1515; and, the Book of Francisco Rodrigues, Rutter of a Voyage in the Red Sea, Nautical Rules, Almanack and Maps Written and Drawn in the East Before 1515. Vol. 1–2. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services. ISBN 81-206-0535-7.
  50. ^ a b Lach, Donald F. (1994). Asia in the Making of Europe. Vol. I: The Century of Discovery. University of Chicago Press. pp. 520–521, 571. ISBN 978-0-226-46731-3.
  51. ^ Ricklefs 1991, p. 24
  52. ^ Hannard (1991), page 7;Milton, Giles (1999). Nathaniel's Nutmeg. London: Sceptre. pp. 5, 7. ISBN 978-0-340-69676-7.
  53. ^ Afonso de Albuquerque Cartas para El-Rei D. Manuel I edited by António Baião (1942). Letter of 1 April 1512
  54. ^ Rogers 1962, p. 1
  55. ^ Newitt 2005, p. 87
  56. ^ McGregor 2006, p. 20
  57. ^ Crowley 2015, p. 335
  58. ^ Sanceau, Elaine (1936). Indies Adventure: The Amazing Career of Afonso de Albuquerque, Captain-general and Governor of India (1509–1515). p. 227.
  59. ^ Bedini 1997, p. 112
  60. ^ Crowley 2015, pp. 319–320
  61. ^ a b Toorani, Mohamed (July 2012). "Afonso de Albuquerque: History Figure of the Month". International History Blog.
  62. ^ Rose, John Holland; Benians, Ernest Alfred; Newton, Arthur Percival (1928). The Cambridge History of the British Empire. CUP Archive. p. 12.
  63. ^ a b c Muchembled & Monter 2007, p. 238
  64. ^ Correia 1860, p. 458
  65. ^ Rinehart, Robert (1 January 1991). Portugal: Chapter 2B. The Expansion of Portugal. Countries of the World. Bureau Development, Inc.
  66. ^ a b Correia 1860, p. 459
  67. ^ Correia 1860, p. 460
  68. ^ Saldanha, Manoel José Gabriel (1990). História de Goa: (Política e arqueológica) (in Portuguese). Asian Educational Services. p. 145. ISBN 81-206-0590-X.
  69. ^ Barbosa Machado, Diogo (1741). Bibliotheca Lusitana (in Portuguese). Vol. 1. p. 23.
  70. ^ Stier, Hans Erich (1942). Die Welt als Geschichte: Zeitschrift für Universalgeschichte (in German). Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag.
  71. ^ Forbes, Jack D. (1993). Africans and Native Americans. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-06321-X.[page needed]
  72. ^ Sukhadwala, Sejal (27 April 2012). "Do You Know Alphonso Mango?". The Guardian.
  73. ^ Alvares, Patricia Ann (15 April 2019). "The Jesuits and the Mango". The Times of India.

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In other languages

  • de Albuquerque, Afonso (1774). Commentarios do grande Afonso Dalboquerque: capitão geral que foi das Indias Orientaes em tempo do muito poderoso rey D. Manuel, o primeiro deste nome. Na Regia Officina Typografica.
  • Albuquerque, Afonso de, D. Manuel I, António Baião, "Cartas para el-rei d". Manuel I", Editora Livraria Sá de Costa (1957)

Primary sources

  • Kerr, Robert (1824). A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Arranged in Systematic Order. Edinburgh: William Blackwood. Volume 6, chapter I.

External links

  • Paul Lunde, , 2006, Saudi Aramco World

afonso, albuquerque, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citat. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Afonso de Albuquerque 1st Duke of Goa Portuguese ɐˈfosu di aɫbuˈkɛɾk ɨ c 1453 16 December 1515 was a Portuguese general admiral and statesman He served as viceroy of Portuguese India from 1509 to 1515 during which he expanded Portuguese influence across the Indian Ocean and built a reputation as a fierce and skilled military commander 1 2 3 Afonso de AlbuquerqueCaptain Major of the Seas of ArabiaGovernor of Portuguese IndiaIn office 4 November 1509 September 1515MonarchManuel IPreceded byFrancisco de AlmeidaSucceeded byLopo Soares de AlbergariaPersonal detailsBornAfonso de Albuquerquec 1453 Alhandra Kingdom of PortugalDied16 December 1515 aged c 62 Goa Portuguese IndiaChildrenBras de Albuquerque pt ParentsGoncalo de Albuquerque father Leonor de Menezes mother OccupationAdmiralGovernor of IndiaSignatureAlbuquerque advanced the three fold Portuguese grand scheme of combating Islam spreading Christianity and securing the trade of spices by establishing a Portuguese Asian empire 4 Among his achievements Albuquerque managed to conquer Goa and was the first European of the Renaissance to raid the Persian Gulf and he led the first voyage by a European fleet into the Red Sea 5 He is generally considered a highly effective military commander 6 and probably the greatest naval commander of the age 7 given his successful strategy he attempted to close all the Indian Ocean naval passages to the Atlantic Red Sea Persian Gulf and to the Pacific transforming it into a Portuguese mare clausum 8 He was appointed head of the fleet of the Arabian and Persian sea in 1506 9 Many of the conflicts in which he was directly involved took place in the Indian Ocean in the Persian Gulf regions for control of the trade routes and on the coasts of India His military brilliance in these initial campaigns enabled Portugal to become the first global empire in history 10 He led the Portuguese forces in numerous battles including the conquest of Goa in 1510 and the capture of Malacca in 1511 During the last five years of his life he turned to administration 11 where his actions as the second governor of Portuguese India were crucial to the longevity of the Portuguese Empire He oversaw expeditions that resulted in the establishing diplomatic contacts with Thailand through his envoy Duarte Fernandes with Pegu in Myanmar and Timor and the Moluccas through a voyage headed by Antonio de Abreu and Francisco Serrao He laid the path for European trade with Ming China through Rafael Perestrello He also aided in establishing diplomatic relations with Ethiopia 12 13 14 and established diplomatic ties with Persia during the Safavid dynasty 15 Throughout his career he received epithets such as the Terrible 16 the Great 2 the Lion of the Seas 17 the Portuguese Mars 8 and the Caesar of the East 17 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early military service 2 1 First expedition to India 1503 2 2 Second expedition to India 1506 2 2 1 First conquest of Socotra and Ormuz 1507 2 2 2 Arrest at Cannanore 1509 3 Governor of Portuguese India 1509 1515 3 1 Conquest of Goa 1510 3 2 Conquest of Malacca 1511 3 2 1 Shipwreck on the Flor de la mar 1511 3 3 Missions from Malacca 3 3 1 Embassies to Pegu Sumatra and Siam 1511 3 3 2 Expedition to the spice islands Maluku islands 1512 3 4 Return to Cochin and Goa 3 5 Campaign in the Red Sea 1513 3 6 Submission of Calicut 3 7 Administration and diplomacy in Goa 1514 3 8 Conquest of Ormuz and Illness 3 8 1 Death 4 Legacy 5 Titles and honours 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life Edit Coat of arms of Albuquerque Afonso de Albuquerque was born in 1453 in Alhandra near Lisbon 18 He was the second son of Goncalo de Albuquerque Lord of Vila Verde dos Francos and Dona Leonor de Menezes His father held an important position at court and was connected by remote illegitimate descent with the Portuguese monarchy He was a descendant of King Denis s illegitimate son Afonso Sanches Lord of Albuquerque He was educated in mathematics and Latin at the court of Afonso V of Portugal where he befriended Prince John the future King John II of Portugal 19 20 Early military service EditIn 1471 under the command of Afonso V he was present at the conquest of Tangier and Arzila in Morocco 21 and he served there as an officer for some years In 1476 he accompanied Prince John in wars against Castile including the Battle of Toro He participated in the campaign on the Italian peninsula in 1480 to assist Ferdinand I of Naples in repelling the Ottoman invasion of Otranto 11 On his return in 1481 when Prince John was crowned as King John II Albuquerque was made Master of the Horse and chief equerry estribeiro mor to the King a post which he held throughout John s reign 21 20 In 1489 he returned to military campaigning in North Africa as commander of defense in the Graciosa fortress an island in the river Luco near the city of Larache In 1490 Albuquerque was part of the guard of King John II He returned to Arzila in 1495 where his younger brother Martim died fighting by his side citation needed First expedition to India 1503 Edit Main article 5th Portuguese India Armada Albuquerque 1503 When King Manuel I of Portugal ascended to the throne following the death of his cousin John II he held a cautious attitude towards Albuquerque who was a close friend of his predecessor and seventeen years Manuel s senior Eight years later on 6 April 1503 Albuquerque was sent on his first expedition to India together with his cousin Francisco de Albuquerque Each commanded three ships sailing with Duarte Pacheco Pereira and Nicolau Coelho They engaged in several battles against the forces of the Zamorin of Calicut Calecute Kozhikode and succeeded in establishing the King of Cochin Cohim Kochi securely on his throne In return the King of Cochin gave the Portuguese permission to build the Portuguese fort Immanuel Fort Kochi and establish trade relations with Quilon Coulao Kollam This laid the foundation for the eastern Portuguese Empire 8 Second expedition to India 1506 Edit Map of the Arabian Peninsula showing the Red Sea with Socotra island red and the Persian Gulf blue with the Strait of Hormuz Cantino planisphere 1502 Albuquerque returned home in July 1504 and was well received by King Manuel I After he assisted with the creation of a strategy for the Portuguese efforts in the east King Manuel entrusted him with the command of a squadron of five vessels in the fleet of sixteen sailing for India in early 1506 headed by Tristao da Cunha 8 The aim of the expedition was to conquer Socotra and build a fortress there hoping to close the trade in the Red Sea Albuquerque went as chief captain for the Coast of Arabia sailing under da Cunha s orders until reaching Mozambique 22 He carried a sealed letter with a secret mission ordered by the King after fulfilling the first mission he was to replace the first viceroy of India Francisco de Almeida whose term ended two years later 6 Before departing he legitimized his son Bras Braz in the old Portuguese spelling born to a common Portuguese woman named Joana Vicente in 1500 23 First conquest of Socotra and Ormuz 1507 Edit Main article Capture of Ormuz 1507 The fleet left Lisbon on 6 April 1506 Albuquerque piloted his ship himself having lost his appointed pilot on departure In Mozambique Channel they rescued Captain Joao da Nova who had encountered difficulties on his return from India da Nova and his ship the Frol de la mar joined da Cunha s fleet 24 From Malindi da Cunha sent envoys to Ethiopia which at the time was thought to be closer to India than it actually is under the aegis of Albuquerque After failing to reach Ethiopia he managed to land the envoys in Filuk 25 After successful attacks on Arab cities on the East African coast the expedition conquered the island of Socotra and built a fortress at Suq hoping to establish a base to stop the Red Sea commerce to the Indian Ocean However Socotra was abandoned four years later as it was eventually realised to be a poor location for a base 6 The Fort of Our Lady of the Conception Hormuz Island Iran At Socotra they parted ways Tristao da Cunha sailed for India where he would relieve the Portuguese besieged at Cannanore while Afonso took seven ships and 500 men to Ormuz in the Persian Gulf one of the chief eastern centers of commerce On his way he conquered the cities of Curiati Kuryat Muscat in July 1507 and Khor Fakkan accepting the submission of the cities of Kalhat and Sohar He arrived at Hormuz on 25 September and soon captured the city which agreed to become a tributary state of the Portuguese king 26 Statue of Afonso de Albuquerque symbolically standing on a stack of weapons referencing his reply in Hormuz Ormuz was then a tributary state of Shah Ismail of Persia In a famous episode shortly after its conquest Albuquerque was confronted by Persian envoys who demanded the payment of the due tribute from him instead He ordered them to be given a stock of cannonballs arrows and weapons retorting that such was the currency struck in Portugal to pay the tribute demanded from the dominions of King Manuel 27 According to Bras de Albuquerque it was Shah Ismael who first addressed Albuquerque as Lion of the seas 24 Afonso began building the Fort of Our Lady of Victory later renamed Fort of Our Lady of the Conception 28 on Hormuz Island engaging his men of all ranks in the work 29 However some of his officers claiming that Afonso was exceeding his orders revolted against the heavy work and climate and departed for India With his fleet reduced to two ships and left without supplies he was unable to maintain his position In January 1508 he was forced to abandon Ormuz He raided coastal villages to resupply the settlement of Socotra returned to Ormuz and then headed to India 30 Arrest at Cannanore 1509 Edit Afonso arrived at Cannanore on the Malabar coast in December 1508 where he opened the sealed letter that he had received from the King before the viceroy Dom Francisco de Almeida which named him as governor to succeed Almeida 6 The viceroy supported by the officers who had abandoned Afonso at Ormuz had a matching royal order but declined to yield He protested that his term ended only in January and stated his intention to avenge his son s death by fighting the Mamluk fleet of Mirocem refusing Afonso s offer to fight the Mamluk fleet himself Afonso avoided confrontation which could have led to civil war and moved to Kochi India to await further instruction from the King Increasingly isolated he wrote to Diogo Lopes de Sequeira who arrived in India with a new fleet but was ignored as Sequeira joined Almeida At the same time Afonso refused approaches from opponents of Almeida who encouraged him to seize power 31 On 3 February 1509 Almeida fought the naval Battle of Diu against a joint fleet of Mamluks Ottomans the Zamorin of Calicut and the Sultan of Gujarat His victory was decisive the Ottomans and Mamluks abandoned the Indian Ocean easing the way for Portuguese rule there for the next century In August after a petition from Afonso s former officers with the support of Diogo Lopes de Sequeira claiming him unfit for governance Afonso was sent in custody to St Angelo Fort in Cannanore 32 33 There he remained under what he considered as imprisonment Governor of Portuguese India 1509 1515 Edit Afonso de Albuquerque as Governor of India Afonso was released after three months confinement on the arrival at Cannanore of the Marshal of Portugal Fernando Coutinho with a large fleet sent by the King 8 Coutinho was the most important Portuguese noble to visit India up to that point He brought an armada of fifteen ships and 3 000 men to defend Afonso s rights and to take Calicut 34 On 4 November 1509 Afonso became the second Governor of Portuguese India a position he would hold until his death Almeida set off to return to Portugal but he was killed before he got there in a skirmish with the Khoekhoe 35 Upon his assuming office Afonso intended to dominate the Muslim world and control the Spice trade 36 Initially King Manuel I and his council in Lisbon tried to distribute the power by outlining three areas of jurisdiction in the Indian Ocean 6 In 1509 the nobleman Diogo Lopes de Sequeira was sent with a fleet to Southeast Asia to seek an agreement with Sultan Mahmud Shah of Malacca but failed and returned to Portugal To Jorge de Aguiar was given the region between the Cape of Good Hope and Gujarat He was succeeded by Duarte de Lemos but left for Cochin and then for Portugal leaving his fleet to Afonso Conquest of Goa 1510 Edit Main article Portuguese Conquest of Goa 1510 Illustration depicts the aftermath of the Portuguese conquest of Goa from the forces of Yusuf Adil Shah In January 1510 obeying the orders from the King and aware of the absence of the Zamorin Afonso advanced on Calicut The attack was initially successful but unravelled when Marshal Coutinho infuriated by Albuquerque s success against Calicut and desiring glory for himself attacked the Zamorin s palace against Albuquerque s advice and was ambushed During the retreat Afonso was badly wounded and was forced to flee to the ships barely escaping with his life while Coutinho was killed 6 37 Soon after the failed attack Afonso assembled a fleet of 23 ships and 1200 men Contemporary reports state that he wanted to fight the Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate fleet in the Red Sea or return to Hormuz However he had been informed by Timoji a privateer in the service of the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire that it would be easier to fight them in Goa where they had sheltered after the Battle of Diu 38 and also of the illness of the Sultan Yusuf Adil Shah and war between the Deccan sultanates 38 So he relied on surprise in the capture of Goa from the Sultanate of Bijapur A first assault took place in Goa from 4 March to 20 May 1510 After the initial occupation feeling unable to hold the city given the poor condition of its fortifications the cooling of Hindu residents support and insubordination among his ranks following an attack by Ismail Adil Shah Afonso refused a truce offered by the Sultan and abandoned the city in August His fleet was scattered and a palace revolt in Kochi hindered his recovery so he headed to Fort Anjediva New ships arrived from Portugal which were intended for the nobleman Diogo Mendes de Vasconcelos at Malacca who had been given a rival command of the region Three months later on 25 November Afonso reappeared at Goa with a renovated fleet Diogo Mendes de Vasconcelos was compelled to accompany him with the reinforcements for Malacca 6 and about 300 Malabari reinforcements from Cannanore In less than a day they took Goa from Ismail Adil Shah and his Ottoman allies who surrendered on 10 December It is estimated that 6000 of the 9000 Muslim defenders of the city died either in the fierce battle in the streets or by drowning while trying to escape 39 Afonso regained the support of the Hindu population although he frustrated the initial expectations of Timoji who aspired to become governor Afonso rewarded him by appointing him chief Aguazil of the city an administrator and representative of the Hindu and Muslim people as a knowledgeable interpreter of the local customs 38 He then made an agreement to lower the yearly tribute Coining of money for d Albuquerque at Goa 1510 In Goa Afonso established the first Portuguese mint in the East after Timoja s merchants had complained of the scarcity of currency taking it as an opportunity to solidify the territorial conquest 40 The new coin based on the existing local coins showed a cross on the obverse and an armillary sphere or esfera King Manuel s badge on the reverse Gold cruzados or manueis silver esferas and alf esferas and bronze leais were issued 41 Albuquerque founded at Goa the Hospital Real de Goa or Royal Hospital of Goa by the Church of Santa Catarina Upon hearing that the doctors were extorting the sickly with excessive fees Albuquerque summoned them declaring that You charge a physician s pay and don t know what disease the men who serve our lord the King suffer from Thus I want to teach you what is it that they die from 42 and put them to work building the city walls all day till nightfall before releasing them 43 Despite constant attacks Goa became the center of Portuguese India with the conquest triggering the compliance of neighbouring kingdoms the Sultan of Gujarat and the Zamorin of Calicut sent embassies offering alliances and local grants to fortify Afonso then used Goa to secure the Spice trade in favor of Portugal and sell Persian horses to Vijayanagara and Hindu princes in return for their assistance 21 Conquest of Malacca 1511 Edit Map of the mare clausum claims made by Spanish Empire and Portuguese Empire with Afonso s Strait Controlling strategy marked in blue circles Main article Portuguese Empire in the East Main article Capture of Malacca 1511 Afonso explained to his armies why the Portuguese wanted to capture Malacca The King of Portugal has often commanded me to go to the Straits because this was the best place to intercept the trade which the Moslems carry on in these parts So it was to do Our Lord s service that we were brought here by taking Malacca we would close the Straits so that never again would the Moslems be able to bring their spices by this route I am very sure that if this Malacca trade is taken out of their hands Cairo and Mecca will be completely lost The Commentaries of the Great Afonso de Albuquerque In February 1511 through a friendly Hindu merchant Nina Chatu Afonso received a letter from Rui de Araujo one of the nineteen Portuguese held at Malacca since 1509 It urged moving forward with the largest possible fleet to demand their release and gave details of the fortifications Afonso showed it to Diogo Mendes de Vasconcelos as an argument to advance as a joint fleet In April 1511 after fortifying Goa he gathered a force of about 900 Portuguese 200 Hindu mercenaries and about eighteen ships 44 He then sailed to Malacca against orders and despite the protest of Diogo Mendes who claimed command of the expedition Afonso eventually centralized the Portuguese government in the Indian Ocean After the Malaccan conquest he wrote a letter to the King to explain his disagreement with Diogo Mendes suggesting that further divisions could be harmful to the Portuguese in India 6 Under his command was Ferdinand Magellan who had participated in the failed embassy of Diogo Lopes de Sequeira in 1509 Conquest of Malacca study painting by Ernesto Condeixa After a false start towards the Red Sea they sailed to the Strait of Malacca It was the richest city that the Portuguese tried to take and a focal point in the trade network where Malay traders met Gujarati Chinese Japanese Javanese Bengali Persian and Arabic among others described by Tome Pires as of invaluable richness Despite its wealth it was mostly a wooden built city with few masonry buildings but was defended by a mercenary force estimated at 20 000 men and more than 2000 pieces of artillery Its greatest weakness was the unpopularity of the government of Sultan Mahmud Shah who favoured Muslims arousing dissatisfaction amongst other merchants Afonso made a bold approach to the city his ships decorated with banners firing cannon volleys He declared himself lord of all the navigation demanded the Sultan release the prisoners and pay for damages and demanded consent to build a fortified trading post The Sultan eventually freed the prisoners but was unimpressed by the small Portuguese contingent Afonso then burned some ships at the port and four coastal buildings as a demonstration The city being divided by the Malacca River the connecting bridge was a strategic point so at dawn on 25 July the Portuguese landed and fought a tough battle facing poisoned arrows taking the bridge in the evening After fruitlessly waiting for the Sultan s reaction they returned to the ships and prepared a junk offered by Chinese merchants filling it with men artillery and sandbags Commanded by Antonio de Abreu it sailed upriver at high tide to the bridge The day after all had landed After a fierce fight during which the Sultan appeared with an army of war elephants the defenders were dispersed and the Sultan fled 6 Afonso waited for the reaction of the Sultan Merchants approached asking for Portuguese protection They were given banners to mark their premises a sign that they would not be looted On 15 August the Portuguese attacked again but the Sultan had fled the city Under strict orders they looted the city but respected the banners 45 An illustration of the keep of the fortress of Malacca which included a stone relief of Afonso de Albuquerque by Manuel Godinho de Eredia 1613 Malacca with A Famosa depicted by Albuquerque s scrivener Gaspar Correia Afonso prepared Malacca s defenses against a Malay counterattack 44 building a fortress assigning his men to shifts and using stones from the mosque and the cemetery Despite the delays caused by heat and malaria it was completed in November 1511 its surviving door now known as A Famosa the famous It was possibly then that Afonso had a large stone engraved with the names of the participants in the conquest To quell disagreements over the order of the names he had it set facing the wall with the single inscription Lapidem quem reprobaverunt aedificantes Latin for The stone the builders rejected from David s prophecy Psalm 118 22 23 on the front 46 He settled the Portuguese administration reappointing Rui de Araujo as factor a post assigned before his 1509 arrest and appointing rich merchant Nina Chatu to replace the previous Bendahara Besides assisting in the governance of the city and the first Portuguese coinage he provided the junks for several diplomatic missions 47 Meanwhile Afonso arrested and had executed the powerful Javanese merchant Utimuti Raja who after being appointed to a position in the Portuguese administration as representative of the Javanese population had maintained contacts with the exiled royal family Shipwreck on the Flor de la mar 1511 Edit Replica of a Portuguese carrack at the Maritime Museum of Malacca made in reference to the Flor do Mar On 20 November 1511 Afonso sailed from Malacca to the coast of Malabar on the old Flor de la Mar carrack that had served to support the conquest of Malacca Despite its unsound condition he used it to transport the treasure amassed in the conquest given its large capacity 6 He wanted to give the court of King Manuel a show of Malaccan treasures There were also offerings from the Kingdom of Siam Thailand to the King of Portugal and all his own fortune On the voyage the Flor de la Mar was wrecked in a storm and Afonso barely escaped drowning 44 Missions from Malacca Edit Embassies to Pegu Sumatra and Siam 1511 Edit Most Muslim and Gujarati merchants having fled the city Afonso invested in diplomatic efforts demonstrating generosity to Southeast Asian merchants like the Chinese to encourage good relations with the Portuguese Trade and diplomatic missions were sent to continental kingdoms Rui Nunes da Cunha was sent to Pegu Burma from where King Binyaram sent back a friendly emissary to Kochi in 1514 48 49 and Sumatra Sumatran kings of Kampar and Indragiri sending emissaries to Afonso accepting the new power as vassal states of Malacca 50 Knowing of Siamese ambitions over Malacca Afonso sent Duarte Fernandes in a diplomatic mission to the Kingdom of Siam Thailand returning in a Chinese junk He was one of the Portuguese who had been arrested in Malacca having gathered knowledge about the culture of the region There he was the first European to arrive establishing amicable relations between the kingdom of Portugal and the court of the King of Siam Ramathibodi II returning with a Siamese envoy bearing gifts and letters to Afonso and the King of Portugal 50 Expedition to the spice islands Maluku islands 1512 Edit Depiction of Ternate with Sao Joao Baptista Fort built in 1522 In November after having secured Malacca and learning the location of the then secret spice islands Afonso sent three ships to find them led by trusted Antonio de Abreu with deputy commander Francisco Serrao 51 Malay sailors were recruited to guide them through Java the Lesser Sunda Islands and the Ambon Island to Banda Islands where they arrived in early 1512 52 There they remained for a month buying and filling their ships with nutmeg and cloves Antonio de Abreu then sailed to Amboina whilst Serrao sailed towards the Moluccas but he was shipwrecked near Seram Sultan Abu Lais of Ternate heard of their stranding and seeing a chance to ally himself with a powerful foreign nation brought them to Ternate in 1512 where they were permitted to build a fort on the island the Forte de Sao Joao Baptista de Ternate pt built in 1522 Return to Cochin and Goa Edit Afonso returned from Malacca to Cochin but could not sail to Goa as it faced a serious revolt headed by the forces of Ismael Adil Shah the Sultan of Bijapur commanded by Rasul Khan and his countrymen During Afonso s absence from Malacca the Portuguese who opposed the taking of Goa had waived its possession even writing to the King that it would be best to let it go Held up by the monsoon and with few forces available Afonso had to wait for the arrival of reinforcement fleets headed by his nephew D Garcia de Noronha and Jorge de Mello Pereira While at Cochin Albuquerque started a school In a private letter to King Manuel I he stated that he had found a chest full of books with which to teach the children of married Portuguese settlers casados and Christian converts of which there were about a hundred to read and write 53 On 10 September 1512 Afonso sailed from Cochin to Goa with fourteen ships carrying 1 700 soldiers Determined to recapture the fortress he ordered trenches dug and a wall breached But on the day of the planned final assault Rasul Khan surrendered Afonso demanded the fort be handed over with its artillery ammunition and horses and the deserters to be given up Some had joined Rasul Khan when the Portuguese were forced to flee Goa in May 1510 others during the recent siege Rasul Khan consented on condition that their lives be spared Afonso agreed and he left Goa He did spare the lives of the deserters but had them horribly mutilated One such renegade was Fernao Lopes bound for Portugal in custody who escaped at the island of Saint Helena and led a Robinson Crusoe life for many years After such measures the town became the most prosperous Portuguese settlement in India Campaign in the Red Sea 1513 Edit Attempted Portuguese scaling of the walls of Aden In December 1512 an envoy from Ethiopia arrived at Goa Mateus was sent by the regent queen Eleni following the arrival of the Portuguese from Socotra in 1507 as an ambassador for the king of Portugal in search of a coalition to help face growing Muslim influence He was received in Goa with great honour by Afonso as a long sought Prester John envoy His arrival was announced by King Manuel to Pope Leo X in 1513 Although Mateus faced the distrust of Afonso s rivals who tried to prove he was some impostor or Muslim spy Afonso sent him to Portugal 54 The King is described as having wept with joy at their report In February 1513 while Mateus was in Portugal Afonso sailed to the Red Sea with a force of about 1000 Portuguese and 400 Malabaris He was under orders to secure that channel for Portugal Socotra had proved ineffective to control the Red Sea entrance and was abandoned and Afonso s hint that Massawa could be a good Portuguese base might have been influenced by Mateus reports 6 Knowing that the Mamluks were preparing a second fleet at Suez he wanted to advance before reinforcements arrived in Aden and accordingly laid siege to the city 55 Aden was a fortified city but although he had scaling ladders they broke during the chaotic attack After half a day of fierce battle Afonso was forced to retreat He cruised the Red Sea inside the Bab al Mandab with the first European fleet to have sailed this route He attempted to reach Jeddah but the winds were unfavourable and so he sheltered at Kamaran island in May until sickness among the men and lack of fresh water forced him to retreat In August 1513 after a second attempt to reach Aden he returned to India with no substantial results In order to destroy the power of Egypt he wrote to King Manuel of the idea of diverting the course of the Nile river to render the whole country barren 8 He also intended to steal the body of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and hold it for ransom until all Muslims had left the Holy Land 56 Portrait of Afonso de Albuquerque governor of Portuguese Indies 1509 1515 from Pedro Barretto de Resende s Livro de Estado da India Oriental Although Albuquerque s expedition failed to reach Suez such an incursion into the Red Sea by a Christian fleet for the first time in history stunned the Muslim world and panic spread in Cairo 57 Submission of Calicut Edit The Portuguese fort at Calicut Albuquerque achieved during his term a favourable end to hostilities between the Portuguese and the Zamorin of Calicut which had lasted since the massacre of the Portuguese in Calicut in 1502 As naval trade faltered and vassals defected with no foreseeable solutions to the conflict with the Portuguese the court of the Zamorin fell to in fighting The ruling Zamorin was assassinated and replaced by a rival under the instigation of Albuquerque permitting peace talks to commence The Portuguese were allowed to build a fortress in Calicut itself and acquired rights to obtain as much pepper and ginger as they wished at stipulated prices and half the customs duties of Calicut as yearly tribute 58 Construction of the fortress began immediately under the supervision of chief architect Tomas Fernandes Administration and diplomacy in Goa 1514 Edit Christian maidens of Goa meeting with a Portuguese nobleman seeking a wife depicted in the Codice Casanatense c 1540 With peace concluded in 1514 Afonso devoted himself to governing Goa and receiving embassies from Indian governors strengthening the city and encouraging marriages of Portuguese men and local women At that time Portuguese women were barred from traveling overseas in order to maintain discipline among the men on board the ships In 1511 under a policy which Afonso promulgated the Portuguese government encouraged their explorers to marry local women To promote settlement the King of Portugal granted freeman status and exemption from Crown taxes to Portuguese men known as casados or married men who ventured overseas and married local women With Afonso s encouragement mixed marriages flourished giving birth to Portuguese Indians or mesticos He appointed local people for positions in the Portuguese administration and did not interfere with local traditions except sati the practice of immolating widows which he banned In March 1514 King Manuel sent to Pope Leo X a huge and exotic embassy led by Tristao da Cunha who toured the streets of Rome in an extravagant procession of animals from the colonies and wealth from the Indies His reputation reached its peak laying foundations of the Portuguese Empire in the East In early 1514 Afonso sent ambassadors to Gujarat s Sultan Muzaffar Shah II ruler of Cambay to seek permission to build a fort on Diu India The mission returned without an agreement but diplomatic gifts were exchanged including an Indian rhinoceros 59 Afonso sent the rhino to King Manuel making it the first living example of a rhinoceros seen in Europe since the Roman Empire 60 Conquest of Ormuz and Illness Edit Portrait of Afonso de Albuquerque from the Livro de Lisuarte de Abreu c 1565 Durer s Rhinoceros woodcut 1515 In 1513 at Cannanore Afonso was visited by a Persian ambassador from Shah Ismail I who had sent ambassadors to Gujarat Ormuz and Bijapur The shah s ambassador to Bijapur invited Afonso to send back an envoy to Persia Miguel Ferreira was sent via Ormuz to Tabriz where he had several interviews with the shah about common goals of defeating the Mamluk sultan At the same time Albuquerque decided to conclude the effective conquest of Hormuz He had learned that after the Portuguese retreat in 1507 a young king was reigning under the influence of a powerful Persian vizier Reis Hamed whom the king greatly feared At Ormuz in March 1515 Afonso met the king and asked the vizier to be present He then had him immediately stabbed and killed by his entourage thus freeing the terrified king so the island in the Persian Gulf yielded to him without resistance and remained a vassal state of the Portuguese Empire Ormuz itself would not be Persian territory for another century until an English Persian alliance finally expelled the Portuguese in 1622 61 At Ormuz Afonso met with Miguel Ferreira returning with rich presents and an ambassador carrying a letter from the Persian potentate Shah Ismael inviting Afonso to become a leading lord in Persia 62 There he remained engaging in diplomatic efforts receiving envoys and overseeing the construction of the new fortress while becoming increasingly ill His illness was reported as early as September 1515 63 In November 1515 he embarked on a journey back to Goa Death Edit At this time his political enemies at the Portuguese court were planning his downfall They had lost no opportunity in stirring up the jealousy of King Manuel against him insinuating that Afonso intended to usurp power in Portuguese India 17 While on his return voyage from Ormuz in the Persian Gulf near the harbor of Chaul he received news of a Portuguese fleet arriving from Europe bearing dispatches announcing that he was to be replaced by his personal foe Lopo Soares de Albergaria Realizing the plot that his enemies had moved against him profoundly disillusioned he voiced his bitterness Grave must be my sins before the King for I am in ill favor with the King for love of the men and with the men for love of the King 64 Feeling himself near death he donned the surcoat of the Order of Santiago of which he was a knight and drew up his will appointed the captain and senior officials of Ormuz and organized a final council with his captains to decide the main matters affecting the Portuguese State of India 63 He wrote a brief letter to King Manuel asking him to confer onto his natural son all of the high honors and rewards that Afonso had received and assuring Manuel of his loyalty 61 65 On 16 December 1515 Afonso de Albuquerque died within sight of Goa As his death was known in the city great wailing arose 66 and many took to the streets to witness his body carried on a chair by his main captains in a procession lit by torches amidst the crowd 67 Afonso s body was buried in Goa according to his will in the Church of Nossa Senhora da Serra Our Lady of the Hill which he had been built in 1513 to thank the Madonna for his escape from Kamaran island a That night the population of Goa both Hindu and Portuguese gathered to mourn his death 66 In Portugal King Manuel s zigzagging policies continued still trapped by the constraints of real time medieval communication between Lisbon and India and unaware that Afonso was dead Hearing rumours that the Mamluk Sultan of Egypt was preparing a magnificent army at Suez to prevent the conquest of Ormuz he repented of having replaced Afonso and in March 1516 urgently wrote to Albergaria to return the command of all operations to Afonso and provide him with resources to face the Egyptian threat He organized a new Portuguese navy in Asia with orders that Afonso if he was still in India be made commander in chief against the Sultan of Cairo s armies Manuel would afterwards learn that Afonso had died many months earlier and that his reversed decision had been delivered many months too late 63 17 After 51 years in 1566 his body was moved to Nossa Senhora da Graca church in Lisbon 69 which was ruined and rebuilt after the 1755 Great Lisbon earthquake Legacy Edit Albuquerque Monument on Afonso de Albuquerque Square in Lisbon 1902 Allegorical fresco dedicated to Afonso de Albuquerque present at the Palace of Justice of Vila Franca de Xira in Portugal Executed by Jaime Martins Barata Afonso de Albuquerque as governor of India King Manuel I of Portugal was belatedly convinced of Afonso s loyalty and endeavoured to atone for his lack of confidence in Afonso by heaping honours upon his son Bras de Albuquerque 1500 1580 70 whom he renamed Afonso in memory of the father Afonso de Albuquerque was a prolific writer having sent numerous letters during his governorship covering topics from minor issues to major strategies In 1557 his son published his biography under the title Commentarios do Grande Affonso d Alboquerque 71 In 1572 Afonso s actions were described in The Lusiads the Portuguese main epic poem by Luis Vaz de Camoes Canto X strophes 40 49 The poet praises his achievements but has the muses frown upon the harsh rule of his men of whom Camoes was almost a contemporary fellow In 1934 Afonso was celebrated by Fernando Pessoa in Mensagem a symbolist epic In the first part of this work called Brasao Coat of Arms he relates Portuguese historical protagonists to each of the fields in the Portuguese coat of arms Afonso being one of the wings of the griffin headed by Henry the Navigator the other wing being King John II A variety of mango which was created by Portuguese Jesuits in Goa via grafting techniques was named in his honour 72 73 Numerous homages have been paid to Afonso he is featured in the Padrao dos Descobrimentos monument there is a square named after him in Lisbon which also features a bronze statue and two Portuguese Navy ships have been named in his honour the sloop NRP Afonso de Albuquerque 1884 and the warship NRP Afonso de Albuquerque Titles and honours EditCaptain Major of the Sea of Arabia 2nd Governor of India 1st Duke of Goa A knight of the Portuguese Order of Saint James of the Sword Fidalgo of the Royal HouseholdNotes Edit This Church was later demolished between 1811 and 1842 68 References EditCitations Edit Ooi 2004 p 137 a b Stephens 1897 p 1 Butt 2005 p 10 Ooi 2004 p 17 Stevens 1711 p 113 a b c d e f g h i j k Diffie Winius amp Shafer 1977 pp 239 260 Ricklefs 2002 p 26 a b c d e f Chisholm 1911 p 526 Aubin J 15 December 1985 Albuquerque Alfonso De Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol 1 8 ed pp 823 824 Erickson amp Goldstein 2012 p 403 a b Bandelier 1907 Vilhena Maria da Conceicao 2001 O Preste Joao mito literatura e historia The Prester John myth literature and history PDF Arquipelago Historia Revista da Universidade Dos Acores 2 ed Universidade dos Acores 5 14 15 ISSN 0871 7664 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Hespeler Boultbee 2011 p 186 Clough 1994 p 85 Couto amp Loureiro 2008 p 219 Subrahmanyam 1998 p 365 a b c d Albuquerque Bras de 1774 Commentarios do grande Afonso Dalboquerque parte IV pp 200 206 Cowley Robert Parker Geoffrey 1 December 1996 The Reader s Companion to Military History Houghton Mifflin ISBN 9780395669693 Stephens 1897 a b Jayne Kingsley Garland 1970 Vasco Da Gama and His Successors 1460 1580 Taylor amp Francis pp 78 79 ISBN 9780389039655 a b c Afonso de Albuquerque Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 22 August 2010 Diogo do Couto Decadas da Asia decada X livro I Sanceau Elaine 1936 Indies Adventure The Amazing Career of Afonso de Albuquerque Captain general and Governor of India 1509 1515 Blackie a b de Albuquerque Afonso Birch Walter de Gray 2000 Commentaries of the Great Afonso Vol 1 4 ISBN 978 81 206 1514 4 Hespeler Boultbee 2006 p 178 Crowley 2015 p 195 199 In Portuguese mandando lhe dizer que aquela era a moeda que se lavrava em Portugal pera pagar pareas aqueles que as pediam aos lugares e senhorios del rei Dom Manuel rei de Portugal e senhor das Indias e do reino de Ormuz in Fernao Lopes de Castanheda 1554 Historia do descobrimento e conquista de India pelos Portugueses Volume II pg 211 Carter Laraine Newhouse 1 January 1991 Persian Gulf States Chapter 1B The Gulf During the Medieval Period Countries of the World Bureau Development Inc Crowley 2015 pp 199 200 Crowley 2015 pp 200 201 de Castanheda Fernao Lopes 1833 Historia do Descobrimento e Conquista da India pelos Portugueses Typographia Rollandiana Stephens 1897 pp 61 62 Whitewayy 1995 p 126 Neto Ricardo Bonalume MHQ The Quarterly Journal of Military History p 68 Cowles Enthusiast Media Spring 1 April 2002 Page news on 20 October 2006 Crowley 2015 p 240 Andaya amp Andaya 1984 Crowley 2015 pp 248 254 a b c Shastry amp Borges 2000 pp 34 36 Kerr 1824 page needed De Souza 1990 pp 220 221 Dalgado 1982 p 382 Gaspar Correia Lendas da India book II tome II part I pp 440 441 1923 Edition de Sousa Germano 1 January 2013 Historia da Medicina Portuguesa Durante a Expansao in Portuguese Lisbon Temes e Debates ISBN 978 9896442194 a b c Ricklefs 1991 p 23 Bosworth 2007 p 317 de Albuquerque Afonso 1774 Commentarios do grande Afonso Dalboquerque capitao geral que foi das Indias Orientaes em tempo do muito poderoso rey D Manuel o primeiro deste nome Na Regia Officina Typografica De Souza 1985 p 60 Teixeira Manuel 1963 The Portuguese Missions in Malacca and Singapore 1511 1958 Agencia Geral do Ultramar Cortesao Armando ed 2005 1512 1515 The Suma Oriental of Tome Pires An Account of the East from the Red Sea to Japan Written in Malacca and India in 1512 1515 and the Book of Francisco Rodrigues Rutter of a Voyage in the Red Sea Nautical Rules Almanack and Maps Written and Drawn in the East Before 1515 Vol 1 2 New Delhi Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 0535 7 a b Lach Donald F 1994 Asia in the Making of Europe Vol I The Century of Discovery University of Chicago Press pp 520 521 571 ISBN 978 0 226 46731 3 Ricklefs 1991 p 24 Hannard 1991 page 7 Milton Giles 1999 Nathaniel s Nutmeg London Sceptre pp 5 7 ISBN 978 0 340 69676 7 Afonso de Albuquerque Cartas para El Rei D Manuel I edited by Antonio Baiao 1942 Letter of 1 April 1512 Rogers 1962 p 1 Newitt 2005 p 87 McGregor 2006 p 20 Crowley 2015 p 335 Sanceau Elaine 1936 Indies Adventure The Amazing Career of Afonso de Albuquerque Captain general and Governor of India 1509 1515 p 227 Bedini 1997 p 112 Crowley 2015 pp 319 320 a b Toorani Mohamed July 2012 Afonso de Albuquerque History Figure of the Month International History Blog Rose John Holland Benians Ernest Alfred Newton Arthur Percival 1928 The Cambridge History of the British Empire CUP Archive p 12 a b c Muchembled amp Monter 2007 p 238 Correia 1860 p 458 Rinehart Robert 1 January 1991 Portugal Chapter 2B The Expansion of Portugal Countries of the World Bureau Development Inc a b Correia 1860 p 459 Correia 1860 p 460 Saldanha Manoel Jose Gabriel 1990 Historia de Goa Politica e arqueologica in Portuguese Asian Educational Services p 145 ISBN 81 206 0590 X Barbosa Machado Diogo 1741 Bibliotheca Lusitana in Portuguese Vol 1 p 23 Stier Hans Erich 1942 Die Welt als Geschichte Zeitschrift fur Universalgeschichte in German Stuttgart Kohlhammer Verlag Forbes Jack D 1993 Africans and Native Americans University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06321 X page needed Sukhadwala Sejal 27 April 2012 Do You Know Alphonso Mango The Guardian Alvares Patricia Ann 15 April 2019 The 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2002 A History of Modern Indonesia Since C 1200 ISBN 978 0 8047 4480 5 Ricklefs Merle Calvin 1991 A History of Modern Indonesia Since C 1300 2nd ed London MacMillan ISBN 0 333 57689 6 Rogers Francis Millet 1962 The Quest for Eastern Christians University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 0275 9 Rottman Gordon L 2002 World War Two Pacific Island Guide Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 31395 0 Shastry Bhagamandala Seetharama Borges Charles J 2000 Goa Kanara Portuguese relations 1498 1763 ISBN 978 8170228486 De Souza Teotonio R 1985 Indo Portuguese History Old Issues New Questions Concept Publishing Company ISBN 9788170220961 De Souza Teotonio R 1990 Goa Through the Ages An Economic History Concept Publishing Company ISBN 978 81 7022 226 2 Stephens Henry Morse 1897 Albuquerque Rulers of India series Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 81 206 1524 3 Stevens John 1711 A New Collection of Voyages and Travels Oxford University ISBN 978 0699168212 Subrahmanyam Sanjay 1998 The Career and Legend of Vasco Da Gama Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521646291 Whitewayy Richard Stephen 1995 The Rise of Portuguese Power in India 1497 1550 ISBN 978 81 206 0500 8 In other languages de Albuquerque Afonso 1774 Commentarios do grande Afonso Dalboquerque capitao geral que foi das Indias Orientaes em tempo do muito poderoso rey D Manuel o primeiro deste nome Na Regia Officina Typografica Albuquerque Afonso de D Manuel I Antonio Baiao Cartas para el rei d Manuel I Editora Livraria Sa de Costa 1957 Primary sources Kerr Robert 1824 A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels Arranged in Systematic Order Edinburgh William Blackwood Volume 6 chapter I External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Afonso de Albuquerque Paul Lunde The coming of the Portuguese 2006 Saudi Aramco WorldPreceded byFrancisco de Almeida Governor of Portuguese India1509 1515 Succeeded byLopo Soares de Albergaria Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Afonso de Albuquerque amp 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