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Dutch invasions of Brazil

Dutch invasions of Brazil
Part of the Dutch–Portuguese War

The Battle of Guararapes
Date1624–1654
Location
Result Treaty of The Hague
Belligerents

 Portugal[a]

 Dutch Republic

Commanders and leaders
Olinda, then the richest city in colonial Brazil, was sacked and destroyed by the Dutch, who chose Recife as the capital of New Holland. Nicolaes Visscher's map shows the siege of Olinda and Recife in 1630.[1]

The Dutch invasions in Brazil, ordered by the Dutch West India Company (WIC), occurred during the 17th century.[2]

Considered the biggest political-military conflict in the colony, the invasions were centered on the control of sugar and slave supply sources. Although they were concentrated in the Northeast, they were not just a regional episode. There were two interconnected, albeit distant, fronts: Brazil and Africa.[2]

The resistance was characterized by a financial and military effort based on local and external resources. The funds raised in the colony accounted for two thirds of the expenditure between 1630 and 1637, with mostly European troops, and almost all of the expenditure between 1644 and 1654, with soldiers mainly from Pernambuco.[2]

History edit

Background edit

 
Dutch colonial empire with the possessions of the Dutch West India Company marked in dark green.

The conflict began during the Philippine Dynasty, known in Brazil as the Iberian Union, a period between 1580 and 1640 when Portugal and its colonies were under the rule of the Spanish Crown.[2]

At the time, the Dutch were fighting for their emancipation from Spanish rule. Although some provinces proclaimed their independence in 1581, the Republic of the Seven United Provinces, based in Amsterdam, only had its independence recognized in 1648, after the peace agreement of Münster.[3]

During the conflict, one of the measures adopted by Philip II was the prohibition of Spanish trade with Dutch ports, which directly affected the Brazilian sugar business, since they were traditional investors in sugar agro-manufacturing.[4]

Faced with this restriction, the Dutch focused on trade in the Indian Ocean and, in 1602, set up the Dutch East India Company, which had a monopoly on eastern commerce, assuring the company's profitability.[5]

The success of this project led to the founding of the Dutch West India Company in 1621, which was responsible for the monopoly of the slave trade for twenty-four years in the Americas and Africa. However, the new firm's main objective was to take over the commerce in sugar produced in the Northeast of Brazil.[5]

Capture of Recife edit

 
The English privateer James Lancaster seized the richest treasure in the history of Elizabethan English privateering in Recife with Dutch help during the Anglo-Spanish War.[6]
 
Flag of Dutch Brazil.

The Capture of Recife, also known as Lancaster's Pernambucan expedition, was an episode in the Anglo-Spanish War that took place in 1595 in the port of Recife, Pernambuco. Led by the English admiral James Lancaster, it was the only British expedition whose main target was Brazil. It represented the richest heist in the history of shipping in the Elizabethan era.[6]

The Iberian Union placed Brazil in conflict with European nations that were friendly to Portugal but enemies of Spain, such as England and the Netherlands. The Captaincy of Pernambuco, the richest of all Portuguese territories, became a target for conquest.[6][7]

In 1588, a few years after defeating the Spanish Armada, the English had access to Portuguese and Spanish manuscripts detailing the coast of Brazil. One of them, written by the Portuguese merchant Lopes Vaz, emphasized the qualities of the wealthy town of Olinda by saying that "Pernambuco is the most important city on the entire coast". The opulence of Pernambuco had impressed Father Fernão Cardim, who was surprised by "the larger and richer estates than those of Bahia, the banquets of extraordinary delicacies, the beds of crimson damask, fringed with gold and the rich Indian quilts", and summed up his impressions in an anthological phrase: "Finally, in Pernambuco one finds more vanity than in Lisbon". Soon the captaincy would be seen by the English as a "soft and succulent" piece of Philip II's Empire.[6][7]

James Lancaster's expedition left Blackwall in October 1594 and sailed across the Atlantic capturing numerous ships before reaching Pernambuco. When he arrived, Lancaster confronted the local resistance, but was met at the entrance to the port by three Dutch hulks, from which he expected a negative reaction, which didn't happen: the previously peaceful Dutch raised anchor and left the way clear for the English invasion. As well as not resisting the action, they eventually joined forces with the English, hiring their ships to transport the assets stolen in Pernambuco. Lancaster took Recife and remained there for almost a month. During this time, he joined up with the French who had arrived in the port and defeated a series of Portuguese counter-attacks. The fleet left with a hefty amount of sugar, brazilwood, cotton and high-priced products; only one small ship didn't reach its destination. The profit for the investors, including Thomas Cordell, then mayor of London, and John Wattas, a city councilor, was estimated at more than 51,000 pounds sterling. Of the total, £6,100 stayed with Lancaster and £3,050 went to the Queen. With such an achievement, the expedition was considered an absolute military and financial success.[6][7]

After Lancaster's visit, the Captaincy of Pernambuco organized two armed companies to defend the region, each with 220 musketeers and arquebusiers, one based in Olinda and the other in Recife. Years later, the then governor Matias de Albuquerque sought to establish fortified positions in the port of Recife.[6][7]

Olivier van Noort's expedition edit

According to some authors, while passing along the coast of Brazil, Admiral Olivier van Noort, leading his expedition, attempted an invasion of Guanabara Bay. His fleet left Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, on September 13, 1598, consisting of four ships and 248 men.[8][9]

With the crew sick with scurvy, the fleet asked for permission to obtain fresh supplies in Guanabara Bay, which was denied by the captaincy's government, in accordance with instructions received from the Portuguese Crown. An attempt to disembark was repelled by indigenous people and the artillery of the Fortress of Santa Cruz da Barra.[9]

Reports say that the expedition pillaged and burned cities and ships off the coasts of Chile, Peru and the Philippines. However, it suffered heavy losses in an attack by the indigenous people of Patagonia (now Chile) and the Spanish forces in Peru. Some authors believe that van Noort discovered Antarctica on this voyage. The expedition returned to port on August 26, 1601, with only one ship, manned by 45 survivors.[9]

Joris van Spielbergen's expedition edit

A similar incident occurred with the expedition of Admiral Joris van Spielbergen, who was making the second Dutch circumnavigation voyage between 1614 and 1618. In 1615, his ships docked at Cabo Frio, Ilha Grande and São Vicente, facing Portuguese resistance when trying to resupply.[9]

In the 1648 edition of Miroir Oost & West-Indical (originally published in Amsterdam in 1621 by Ian Ianst), Spielbergen's narrative is illustrated by an engraving of São Vicente, which portrays the incident in Santos. Despite its inaccuracies, this iconography describes the contours of the bay, the rivers, the forts and the houses.[10]

Dutch Amazon edit

In the vicinity of Almeirim (formerly Aldeia de Paru), the Dutch, accompanied by some Englishmen and led by Pieter Ita, made an attempt to settle with the construction of the Morro da Velha Pobre Fort in 1623. They were repelled by the Portuguese incursion headed by Bento Maciel Parente, who expelled them back to Zeeland, in the Netherlands. The Dutch fort was destroyed.[11]

Periodization edit

Overall, the Dutch invasions in Brazil can be divided into two main periods:[2]

  • 1624-1625 - Invasion of Salvador, Bahia;
  • 1630-1654 - Invasion of Olinda and Recife, in Pernambuco:

Invasion of Salvador (1624-1625) edit

 
Map showing the recapture of Bahia from the Dutch (João Teixeira Albernaz, the Elder, 1631): in the foreground, the Spanish Armada.
 
A painting depicting the reconquest of Salvador by Spanish and Portuguese troops (1635).

Aware of the vulnerability of the Portuguese settlements on the Northeast coast of Brazil, the administrators of the Dutch West India Company (WIC) decided to attack the city of Salvador, then the capital of Brazil, in the Captaincy of Bahia.[2]

On May 10, 1624, a WIC expedition with twenty-six ships carrying around 1,700 men under the command of Admiral Jacob Willekens attacked and conquered the city. Terrified, the inhabitants retreated inland. The governor-general, Diogo de Mendonça Furtado, tried to hide in the palace, but he, his son and some officers were imprisoned and sent to the Netherlands. The Dutch nobleman Johan van Dorth took over the administration of the city. The governor of the Captaincy of Pernambuco, Matias de Albuquerque, was appointed governor-general and began to administer the colony from Olinda and send significant reinforcements to the resistance based in Arraial do Rio Vermelho and Recôncavo.[12]

In 1625, Spain sent a powerful brigade of fifty-two ships with around twelve thousand men as reinforcements, under the command of Fadrique de Toledo Osório, Marquis of Villanueva de Valduesa, and Manuel de Meneses, general of the navy on the coast of Portugal. This expedition, which became known as the Recapture of Bahia, defeated and expelled the Dutch invaders on May 1 of that same year.[12]

The huge cost of the invasion of the lands of Bahia was recovered four years later in an act in the Caribbean Sea, when Admiral Piet Heyn, in the service of the WIC, intercepted and sacked the Spanish fleet that was carrying the annual shipment of silver mined from the American colonies.[12]

Invasion of Olinda and Recife (1630-1654) edit

 
Siege of Olinda and Recife.
 
View of Mauritsstad (Recife) in 1645.
 
Recife was the most cosmopolitan city in America during Nassau's rule. In the picture, the Palace of Fribourg, demolished in the 18th century.

In possession of the resources obtained from the sacking of the silver fleet, the Dutch launched a new expedition. Their declared aim was to restore the sugar trade with the Netherlands, which had been banned by the Spanish Crown. A new squadron of sixty-seven ships and around seven thousand men - the largest ever seen in the colony - under the command of Admiral Hendrick Lonck, invaded Pernambuco and, in February 1630, conquered Olinda and then Recife. With the victory, the invaders were strengthened by an additional 6,000 men sent from Europe to secure the conquest.[2][13]

The acquisition of slave workforce became essential for the success of Dutch colonization. As a result, the WIC began trafficking slaves from Africa to Brazil.[14]

Resistance edit

The resistance, led by Matias de Albuquerque, was concentrated in Arraial do Bom Jesus, on the outskirts of Recife. Using indigenous combat tactics, such as guerrilla warfare, they confined the invaders inside the fortifications on the urban perimeter of Olinda and its port, Recife.[15]

The so-called "ambush tactics" were small groups of ten to forty highly mobile men who attacked the Dutch by surprise and then retreated at speed, regrouping for new battles.[15]

However, over time, some sugar cane plantation owners accepted the administration of the West India Company because they believed that an injection of capital and a more liberal administration would help their businesses develop. Their best representative was Domingos Fernandes Calabar, historiographically considered a traitor for supporting the occupying forces and the Dutch administration.[16]

Military leaders such as Martim Soares Moreno, Filipe Camarão, Henrique Dias and Francisco Rebelo (also known as Rebelinho) stood out during this phase of Luso-Brazilian resistance.[15]

With the invasion of Paraíba in 1634, and the conquests of Arraial do Bom Jesus and Cabo de Santo Agostinho in 1635, the forces commanded by Matias de Albuquerque collapsed and were forced to retreat towards the São Francisco river. Important figures in this context were Calabar and Colonel Krzysztof Arciszewski.[16]

Administration of Maurice of Nassau edit

Once the Luso-Brazilian resistance had been overcome, with the help of Calabar, the WIC appointed Count Maurice of Nassau to administer the land. A cultured and liberal man, Nassau accepted the immigration of Jews and Protestants, who supported him against the Kingdom of Portugal in its conquest of Brazilian territory, and brought with him artists and scientists to study the potential of the territory. He was concerned with the recovery of the sugar industry, which had been damaged by the battles, granting credits and selling the conquered sugar mills at public auction. He also took care of supply, labor and administration issues and promoted extensive urban reform in Recife (Mauritsstad). He granted religious freedom; under his government, the first synagogue on the American continent was founded in Recife.[17]

In November 1640, a WIC expedition led by Jan Cornelisz Lichthart and Hans Koin occupied the island of São Luís. Portuguese settlers and Jesuit missionaries established themselves in Tapuitapera. The main leader of the resistance was Antônio Muniz Barreiros. In 1643, reinforcements arrived from Pará, led by João Vale do Velho and Bento Maciel Parente. The battles to expel the invaders lasted until February 28, 1644.[18]

On December 1, 1640, Portugal separated from Spain, which made it possible to form an alliance with England to fight the Netherlands.[19]

Insurrection of Pernambuco edit

 
The Battles of Guararapes, decisive episodes in the Insurrection of Pernambuco, are considered to be the origin of the Brazilian Army.

Also known as the War of Divine Light, the movement that expelled the Dutch from Brazil was led by the plantation owners André Vidal de Negreiros and João Fernandes Vieira, the Afro-descendant Henrique Dias[20] and the native Filipe Camarão.[21]

The Restoration of Portuguese Independence in 1640 led to the signing of a ten-year truce between Portugal and the Netherlands. Faced with this setback to Spanish rule, the Dutch war of independence continued.[19]

In America, Brazil spoke out in favor of John IV. In the Northeast, under WIC domination, Maurice of Nassau was replaced in the administration. Contrary to what he had advocated in his political "testament", the company's new managers began to demand the liquidation of debts owed to defaulting plantation owners, a policy that led to the Insurrection of Pernambuco in 1645 and culminated in the extinction of Dutch rule after the second Battle of Guararapes.[20]

Formally, the surrender was signed on January 26, 1654, in the Taborda Hill, but it only became fully effective on August 6, 1661, with the signing of the Treaty of The Hague, in which Portugal agreed to compensate the Netherlands with two colonies, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and the Maluku Islands (part of present-day Indonesia), and eight million guilders, equivalent to sixty-three tons of gold, paid in installments over forty years under the threat of invasion by the Navy. According to a traditional historiographical current in the military history of Brazil, the movement also marked the germ of Brazilian nationalism, as whites, Africans and indigenous people merged their interests in expelling the invader.[22]

The Dutch surrender edit

The Dutch surrender in Brazil, better known as the Capitulação do Campo do Taborda, was signed on January 26, 1654, and established the terms and clauses that sought to resolve the existing conditions of the Dutch in Brazilian lands, especially those related to the abdication of land and possessions. It also addressed marriages between Dutchmen and Brazilian or Portuguese women and their different properties. Through this treaty, the Dutch committed to delivering not only Recife and Mauritsstad (today Antônio Vaz Island), but also the forts they still occupied on Itamaracá Island, Paraíba, Rio Grande do Norte and Ceará.[23]

Consequences edit

 
Today's Sri Lanka, an Asian country, was one of the territories ceded by Portugal to the Netherlands in order to prevent another attempt to invade Pernambuco.

As a result of the invasions of the Northeast of Brazil, Dutch power became dominant in all stages of sugar production, from planting to refining and distribution. With control of the market for African slaves, it began to invest in the Antilles region. The sugar produced in this region had a lower production cost due to the tax exemption on labor ( tributed by the Portuguese Crown) and the lower price of transport. With difficulties in acquiring labor and without mastering the refining and distribution process and capital to invest, Portuguese sugar was unable to compete on the international market, immersing Brazil's economy (and Portugal's) in a crisis that would last through the second half of the 17th century until the discovery of gold in Minas Gerais.[4]

Due to the First Anglo-Dutch War, the Dutch Republic was unable to help the WIC in Brazil. With the end of the conflict with the English, the Netherlands demanded the return of the colony in May 1654. Under threat of a new invasion of northeastern Brazil and Dutch fleets which blockaded the Portuguese coast and brought maritime trade to a standstill, Portugal signed an agreement with the Dutch and compensated them with eight million guilders and the colonies of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and the Maluku Islands (part of present-day Indonesia). On August 6, 1661, the Netherlands formally ceded the region to the Portuguese Empire through the Treaty of The Hague.[22][24]

Genetic inheritance edit

According to a genetic study carried out by the Federal University of Minas Gerais in 2000, 19% of the northeastern Brazilians surveyed had a genetic marker of the Y chromosome (haplogroup 2), which is common in Europe. Since this haplogroup is more common in northeastern Brazil (19%) than in Portugal (13%), the researchers hypothesized that this "excess" could be due to the genetic influence of the Dutch colonizers who came to the region in the 17th century. Something similar occurs in southern Brazil, where there has been a lot of immigration from northern Europe and an excess of haplogroup 2 (28%) compared to Portugal.[25]

However, it is unknown how many Dutch lived in Brazil or how many remained after the Portuguese retook the territory. Historical records show that the Portuguese were the only registered and significant source of European immigrants in Brazil until 1808, when the ports were opened. Only after that date were non-Portuguese immigrants allowed to enter Brazil more freely.[26][27]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Under Spanish rule from 1580 to 1640.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Silva, Luiz Geraldo (2001). A faina, a festa e o rito: uma etnografia histórica sobre as gentes do mar (sécs. XVII ao XIX). Papirus Editora. ISBN 9788530806354.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Invasões holandesas no Brasil". UOL. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  3. ^ "1581: Holanda se liberta da Espanha". Terra. 2015-07-26. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  4. ^ a b "Os holandeses e a economia açucareira". UOL. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  5. ^ a b "Companhia das Índias Ocidentais". Toda Matéria. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  6. ^ a b c d e f França, Jean Marcel Carvalho; Hue, Sheila (2014). Piratas no Brasil: As incríveis histórias dos ladrões dos mares que pilharam nosso litoral. Globo Livros.
  7. ^ a b c d Gouvea, Hilton (2022-07-24). "HÁ 427 ANOS, CORSÁRIO INGLÊS SAQUEAVA RECIFE, "ABRINDO AS PORTAS" PARA QUE, MAIS TARDE, OS HOLANDESES OCUPASSEM PERNAMBUCO E INVADISSEM A PARAÍBA". A União. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  8. ^ Prado, J. F. de Almeida (1950). A Bahia e as Capitanias do Centro do Brasil (5 ed.). Companhia Editora Nacional.
  9. ^ a b c d Araújo, Felipe. "Descobrimentos e Navegações Holandesas". InfoEscola. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  10. ^ Nogueira, Adeilson (2020). Guerras Brasileiras. Clube de Autores.
  11. ^ Donato, Hernâni (1996). Dicionário das batalhas brasileiras. IBRASA. ISBN 9788534800341.
  12. ^ a b c Jaccoud, Carlos Eduardo Maroja. "VIAJANTES NA AMÉRICA DOS FILIPES: IMPRESSÕES E INTERPRETAÇÕES DO BRASIL COLÔNIA; (C.1580-C.1640)" (PDF). UNIRIO.
  13. ^ "A CONQUISTA FLAMENGA". City Hall of Recife. Retrieved 2015-04-14.
  14. ^ Postma, Johannes Menne (1990). The Dutch in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1600-1815. Cambridge University Press.
  15. ^ a b c "CAMPANHAS MILITARES CONTRA OS HOLANDESES". 2018-06-26. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  16. ^ a b Schalkwijk, Frans Leonard. ""POR QUE, CALABAR?" O MOTIVO DA TRAIÇÃO". Mackenzie.
  17. ^ "Maurício de Nassau". UOL. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  18. ^ Magalhães, Pablo Antonio Igleasias (2011). "A palavra e o império: a arte da lingua brasilica e a conquista do Maranhão". Revista de História. 165 (165): 367–401. doi:10.11606/issn.2316-9141.v0i165p367-401.
  19. ^ a b "A Restauração: o fim da União Ibérica e as consequências para a colônia". MultiRio. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  20. ^ a b "Insurreição pernambucana: a pátria restaurada". Radio Peão Brasil. 2020-11-08. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  21. ^ Silva, Misleine Neris de Souza. "Insurreição Pernambucana". InfoEscola. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  22. ^ a b "Assinatura do Tratado de Haia oficializa devolução de território brasileiro a Portugal". UOL. 2019-06-26. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  23. ^ Barros, Marcelo (2022-01-27). "Dia 26 de janeiro de 1654 – Rendição dos Holandeses no Recife". Defesa em Foco. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  24. ^ Blok 1928, p. 147.
  25. ^ Pena, Sérgio; Carvalho-Silva, Denise; Alves-Silva, Juliana; Prado, Vânia; Santos, Fabricio. Retrato Molecular do Brasil (PDF). Vol. 27 (259 ed.). Ciência Hoje.
  26. ^ Corrêa, Lucelinda Schramm (2005). "As políticas públicas de imigração européia não-portuguesa para o Brasil – de Pombal à República". Revista geo-paisagem. 4 (8).
  27. ^ Silva, Denise Carvalho; Santos, Fabricio; Rocha, Jorge; Pena, Sérgio (2000). "The Phylogeography of Brazilian Y-Chromosome Lineages". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 68 (1): 281–286. doi:10.1086/316931. PMC 1234928. PMID 11090340.

Bibliography edit

  • Barléu, Gaspar (1974). História dos feitos recentemente praticados durante oito anos no Brasil. Belo Horizonte: Itatiaia.
  • Bento, Cláudio Moreira (1971). As Batalhas dos Guararapes - Descrição e Análise Militar. Recife: UFPE.
  • Blok, P.J. (1928). Michiel de Ruyter (PDF) (in Dutch). Martinus Nijhof.
  • Boxer, Charles (1961). Os holandeses no Brasil (1624-1654). São Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional.
  • Mello, Evaldo Cabral de (1981). O Negócio do Brasil. Portugal, os Países Baixos e o Nordeste, 1641-1669. Rio de Janeiro: Topbooks.
  • Mello, José Antônio Gonsalves de (1981). Fontes para a História do Brasil Holandês (Vol. 1 - A Economia Açucareira). Recife: Parque Histórico Nacional dos Guararapes.
  • Rosty, Claudio Skora (2002). As Invasões Holandesas (Insurreição Pernambucana): A Batalha do Monte das Tabocas, o Inicio do Fim. Recife.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Di Pace, Viottorio (1991). Napoletani in Brasile nella guerra di liberazione dall'invasione olandese (1625 - 1640). Nápoles: Fausto Fiorentino.
  • Van Groesen, Michiel (2014). The Legacy of Dutch Brazil. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Varnhagen, Francisco Adolfo de (1871). Historia das lutas com os Hollandezes no Brazil desde 1624 a 1654. Viena: C. Finsterbeck.

dutch, invasions, brazil, part, dutch, portuguese, warthe, battle, guararapesdate1624, 1654locationnortheastern, brazilresulttreaty, haguebelligerents, portugal, state, brazil, dutch, republic, west, india, companycommanders, leadersf, mascarenhas, albuquerque. Dutch invasions of BrazilPart of the Dutch Portuguese WarThe Battle of GuararapesDate1624 1654LocationNortheastern BrazilResultTreaty of The HagueBelligerents Portugal a State of Brazil Dutch Republic West India CompanyCommanders and leadersF de Mascarenhas M de Albuquerque Salvador de Sa F de Meneses Andre de Negreiros Henrique Dias Filipe Camarao Joao F Vieira pt A de MenesesMaurice of Nassau Jacob Willekens Piet Hein Jan Lichthart S van Schkoppe pt Olinda then the richest city in colonial Brazil was sacked and destroyed by the Dutch who chose Recife as the capital of New Holland Nicolaes Visscher s map shows the siege of Olinda and Recife in 1630 1 The Dutch invasions in Brazil ordered by the Dutch West India Company WIC occurred during the 17th century 2 Considered the biggest political military conflict in the colony the invasions were centered on the control of sugar and slave supply sources Although they were concentrated in the Northeast they were not just a regional episode There were two interconnected albeit distant fronts Brazil and Africa 2 The resistance was characterized by a financial and military effort based on local and external resources The funds raised in the colony accounted for two thirds of the expenditure between 1630 and 1637 with mostly European troops and almost all of the expenditure between 1644 and 1654 with soldiers mainly from Pernambuco 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 1 1 Capture of Recife 1 1 2 Olivier van Noort s expedition 1 1 3 Joris van Spielbergen s expedition 1 1 4 Dutch Amazon 1 2 Periodization 1 2 1 Invasion of Salvador 1624 1625 1 2 2 Invasion of Olinda and Recife 1630 1654 1 2 3 Resistance 1 2 4 Administration of Maurice of Nassau 1 2 5 Insurrection of Pernambuco 1 2 6 The Dutch surrender 1 3 Consequences 2 Genetic inheritance 3 Notes 4 See also 5 References 5 1 BibliographyHistory editBackground edit Main article Dutch Portuguese War nbsp Dutch colonial empire with the possessions of the Dutch West India Company marked in dark green The conflict began during the Philippine Dynasty known in Brazil as the Iberian Union a period between 1580 and 1640 when Portugal and its colonies were under the rule of the Spanish Crown 2 At the time the Dutch were fighting for their emancipation from Spanish rule Although some provinces proclaimed their independence in 1581 the Republic of the Seven United Provinces based in Amsterdam only had its independence recognized in 1648 after the peace agreement of Munster 3 During the conflict one of the measures adopted by Philip II was the prohibition of Spanish trade with Dutch ports which directly affected the Brazilian sugar business since they were traditional investors in sugar agro manufacturing 4 Faced with this restriction the Dutch focused on trade in the Indian Ocean and in 1602 set up the Dutch East India Company which had a monopoly on eastern commerce assuring the company s profitability 5 The success of this project led to the founding of the Dutch West India Company in 1621 which was responsible for the monopoly of the slave trade for twenty four years in the Americas and Africa However the new firm s main objective was to take over the commerce in sugar produced in the Northeast of Brazil 5 Capture of Recife edit Main articles Capture of Recife 1595 and Anglo Spanish War 1585 1604 nbsp The English privateer James Lancaster seized the richest treasure in the history of Elizabethan English privateering in Recife with Dutch help during the Anglo Spanish War 6 nbsp Flag of Dutch Brazil The Capture of Recife also known as Lancaster s Pernambucan expedition was an episode in the Anglo Spanish War that took place in 1595 in the port of Recife Pernambuco Led by the English admiral James Lancaster it was the only British expedition whose main target was Brazil It represented the richest heist in the history of shipping in the Elizabethan era 6 The Iberian Union placed Brazil in conflict with European nations that were friendly to Portugal but enemies of Spain such as England and the Netherlands The Captaincy of Pernambuco the richest of all Portuguese territories became a target for conquest 6 7 In 1588 a few years after defeating the Spanish Armada the English had access to Portuguese and Spanish manuscripts detailing the coast of Brazil One of them written by the Portuguese merchant Lopes Vaz emphasized the qualities of the wealthy town of Olinda by saying that Pernambuco is the most important city on the entire coast The opulence of Pernambuco had impressed Father Fernao Cardim who was surprised by the larger and richer estates than those of Bahia the banquets of extraordinary delicacies the beds of crimson damask fringed with gold and the rich Indian quilts and summed up his impressions in an anthological phrase Finally in Pernambuco one finds more vanity than in Lisbon Soon the captaincy would be seen by the English as a soft and succulent piece of Philip II s Empire 6 7 James Lancaster s expedition left Blackwall in October 1594 and sailed across the Atlantic capturing numerous ships before reaching Pernambuco When he arrived Lancaster confronted the local resistance but was met at the entrance to the port by three Dutch hulks from which he expected a negative reaction which didn t happen the previously peaceful Dutch raised anchor and left the way clear for the English invasion As well as not resisting the action they eventually joined forces with the English hiring their ships to transport the assets stolen in Pernambuco Lancaster took Recife and remained there for almost a month During this time he joined up with the French who had arrived in the port and defeated a series of Portuguese counter attacks The fleet left with a hefty amount of sugar brazilwood cotton and high priced products only one small ship didn t reach its destination The profit for the investors including Thomas Cordell then mayor of London and John Wattas a city councilor was estimated at more than 51 000 pounds sterling Of the total 6 100 stayed with Lancaster and 3 050 went to the Queen With such an achievement the expedition was considered an absolute military and financial success 6 7 After Lancaster s visit the Captaincy of Pernambuco organized two armed companies to defend the region each with 220 musketeers and arquebusiers one based in Olinda and the other in Recife Years later the then governor Matias de Albuquerque sought to establish fortified positions in the port of Recife 6 7 Olivier van Noort s expedition edit According to some authors while passing along the coast of Brazil Admiral Olivier van Noort leading his expedition attempted an invasion of Guanabara Bay His fleet left Rotterdam in the Netherlands on September 13 1598 consisting of four ships and 248 men 8 9 With the crew sick with scurvy the fleet asked for permission to obtain fresh supplies in Guanabara Bay which was denied by the captaincy s government in accordance with instructions received from the Portuguese Crown An attempt to disembark was repelled by indigenous people and the artillery of the Fortress of Santa Cruz da Barra 9 Reports say that the expedition pillaged and burned cities and ships off the coasts of Chile Peru and the Philippines However it suffered heavy losses in an attack by the indigenous people of Patagonia now Chile and the Spanish forces in Peru Some authors believe that van Noort discovered Antarctica on this voyage The expedition returned to port on August 26 1601 with only one ship manned by 45 survivors 9 Joris van Spielbergen s expedition edit A similar incident occurred with the expedition of Admiral Joris van Spielbergen who was making the second Dutch circumnavigation voyage between 1614 and 1618 In 1615 his ships docked at Cabo Frio Ilha Grande and Sao Vicente facing Portuguese resistance when trying to resupply 9 In the 1648 edition of Miroir Oost amp West Indical originally published in Amsterdam in 1621 by Ian Ianst Spielbergen s narrative is illustrated by an engraving of Sao Vicente which portrays the incident in Santos Despite its inaccuracies this iconography describes the contours of the bay the rivers the forts and the houses 10 Dutch Amazon edit In the vicinity of Almeirim formerly Aldeia de Paru the Dutch accompanied by some Englishmen and led by Pieter Ita made an attempt to settle with the construction of the Morro da Velha Pobre Fort in 1623 They were repelled by the Portuguese incursion headed by Bento Maciel Parente who expelled them back to Zeeland in the Netherlands The Dutch fort was destroyed 11 Periodization edit Overall the Dutch invasions in Brazil can be divided into two main periods 2 1624 1625 Invasion of Salvador Bahia 1630 1654 Invasion of Olinda and Recife in Pernambuco 1630 1637 Resistance to the invader 1637 1644 Administration of Maurice of Nassau 1644 1654 Insurrection of Pernambuco Invasion of Salvador 1624 1625 edit nbsp Map showing the recapture of Bahia from the Dutch Joao Teixeira Albernaz the Elder 1631 in the foreground the Spanish Armada nbsp A painting depicting the reconquest of Salvador by Spanish and Portuguese troops 1635 Aware of the vulnerability of the Portuguese settlements on the Northeast coast of Brazil the administrators of the Dutch West India Company WIC decided to attack the city of Salvador then the capital of Brazil in the Captaincy of Bahia 2 On May 10 1624 a WIC expedition with twenty six ships carrying around 1 700 men under the command of Admiral Jacob Willekens attacked and conquered the city Terrified the inhabitants retreated inland The governor general Diogo de Mendonca Furtado tried to hide in the palace but he his son and some officers were imprisoned and sent to the Netherlands The Dutch nobleman Johan van Dorth took over the administration of the city The governor of the Captaincy of Pernambuco Matias de Albuquerque was appointed governor general and began to administer the colony from Olinda and send significant reinforcements to the resistance based in Arraial do Rio Vermelho and Reconcavo 12 In 1625 Spain sent a powerful brigade of fifty two ships with around twelve thousand men as reinforcements under the command of Fadrique de Toledo Osorio Marquis of Villanueva de Valduesa and Manuel de Meneses general of the navy on the coast of Portugal This expedition which became known as the Recapture of Bahia defeated and expelled the Dutch invaders on May 1 of that same year 12 The huge cost of the invasion of the lands of Bahia was recovered four years later in an act in the Caribbean Sea when Admiral Piet Heyn in the service of the WIC intercepted and sacked the Spanish fleet that was carrying the annual shipment of silver mined from the American colonies 12 Invasion of Olinda and Recife 1630 1654 edit nbsp Siege of Olinda and Recife nbsp View of Mauritsstad Recife in 1645 nbsp Recife was the most cosmopolitan city in America during Nassau s rule In the picture the Palace of Fribourg demolished in the 18th century In possession of the resources obtained from the sacking of the silver fleet the Dutch launched a new expedition Their declared aim was to restore the sugar trade with the Netherlands which had been banned by the Spanish Crown A new squadron of sixty seven ships and around seven thousand men the largest ever seen in the colony under the command of Admiral Hendrick Lonck invaded Pernambuco and in February 1630 conquered Olinda and then Recife With the victory the invaders were strengthened by an additional 6 000 men sent from Europe to secure the conquest 2 13 The acquisition of slave workforce became essential for the success of Dutch colonization As a result the WIC began trafficking slaves from Africa to Brazil 14 Resistance edit The resistance led by Matias de Albuquerque was concentrated in Arraial do Bom Jesus on the outskirts of Recife Using indigenous combat tactics such as guerrilla warfare they confined the invaders inside the fortifications on the urban perimeter of Olinda and its port Recife 15 The so called ambush tactics were small groups of ten to forty highly mobile men who attacked the Dutch by surprise and then retreated at speed regrouping for new battles 15 However over time some sugar cane plantation owners accepted the administration of the West India Company because they believed that an injection of capital and a more liberal administration would help their businesses develop Their best representative was Domingos Fernandes Calabar historiographically considered a traitor for supporting the occupying forces and the Dutch administration 16 Military leaders such as Martim Soares Moreno Filipe Camarao Henrique Dias and Francisco Rebelo also known as Rebelinho stood out during this phase of Luso Brazilian resistance 15 With the invasion of Paraiba in 1634 and the conquests of Arraial do Bom Jesus and Cabo de Santo Agostinho in 1635 the forces commanded by Matias de Albuquerque collapsed and were forced to retreat towards the Sao Francisco river Important figures in this context were Calabar and Colonel Krzysztof Arciszewski 16 Administration of Maurice of Nassau edit Once the Luso Brazilian resistance had been overcome with the help of Calabar the WIC appointed Count Maurice of Nassau to administer the land A cultured and liberal man Nassau accepted the immigration of Jews and Protestants who supported him against the Kingdom of Portugal in its conquest of Brazilian territory and brought with him artists and scientists to study the potential of the territory He was concerned with the recovery of the sugar industry which had been damaged by the battles granting credits and selling the conquered sugar mills at public auction He also took care of supply labor and administration issues and promoted extensive urban reform in Recife Mauritsstad He granted religious freedom under his government the first synagogue on the American continent was founded in Recife 17 In November 1640 a WIC expedition led by Jan Cornelisz Lichthart and Hans Koin occupied the island of Sao Luis Portuguese settlers and Jesuit missionaries established themselves in Tapuitapera The main leader of the resistance was Antonio Muniz Barreiros In 1643 reinforcements arrived from Para led by Joao Vale do Velho and Bento Maciel Parente The battles to expel the invaders lasted until February 28 1644 18 On December 1 1640 Portugal separated from Spain which made it possible to form an alliance with England to fight the Netherlands 19 Insurrection of Pernambuco edit nbsp The Battles of Guararapes decisive episodes in the Insurrection of Pernambuco are considered to be the origin of the Brazilian Army Also known as the War of Divine Light the movement that expelled the Dutch from Brazil was led by the plantation owners Andre Vidal de Negreiros and Joao Fernandes Vieira the Afro descendant Henrique Dias 20 and the native Filipe Camarao 21 The Restoration of Portuguese Independence in 1640 led to the signing of a ten year truce between Portugal and the Netherlands Faced with this setback to Spanish rule the Dutch war of independence continued 19 In America Brazil spoke out in favor of John IV In the Northeast under WIC domination Maurice of Nassau was replaced in the administration Contrary to what he had advocated in his political testament the company s new managers began to demand the liquidation of debts owed to defaulting plantation owners a policy that led to the Insurrection of Pernambuco in 1645 and culminated in the extinction of Dutch rule after the second Battle of Guararapes 20 Formally the surrender was signed on January 26 1654 in the Taborda Hill but it only became fully effective on August 6 1661 with the signing of the Treaty of The Hague in which Portugal agreed to compensate the Netherlands with two colonies Ceylon now Sri Lanka and the Maluku Islands part of present day Indonesia and eight million guilders equivalent to sixty three tons of gold paid in installments over forty years under the threat of invasion by the Navy According to a traditional historiographical current in the military history of Brazil the movement also marked the germ of Brazilian nationalism as whites Africans and indigenous people merged their interests in expelling the invader 22 The Dutch surrender edit The Dutch surrender in Brazil better known as the Capitulacao do Campo do Taborda was signed on January 26 1654 and established the terms and clauses that sought to resolve the existing conditions of the Dutch in Brazilian lands especially those related to the abdication of land and possessions It also addressed marriages between Dutchmen and Brazilian or Portuguese women and their different properties Through this treaty the Dutch committed to delivering not only Recife and Mauritsstad today Antonio Vaz Island but also the forts they still occupied on Itamaraca Island Paraiba Rio Grande do Norte and Ceara 23 Consequences edit nbsp Today s Sri Lanka an Asian country was one of the territories ceded by Portugal to the Netherlands in order to prevent another attempt to invade Pernambuco As a result of the invasions of the Northeast of Brazil Dutch power became dominant in all stages of sugar production from planting to refining and distribution With control of the market for African slaves it began to invest in the Antilles region The sugar produced in this region had a lower production cost due to the tax exemption on labor tributed by the Portuguese Crown and the lower price of transport With difficulties in acquiring labor and without mastering the refining and distribution process and capital to invest Portuguese sugar was unable to compete on the international market immersing Brazil s economy and Portugal s in a crisis that would last through the second half of the 17th century until the discovery of gold in Minas Gerais 4 Due to the First Anglo Dutch War the Dutch Republic was unable to help the WIC in Brazil With the end of the conflict with the English the Netherlands demanded the return of the colony in May 1654 Under threat of a new invasion of northeastern Brazil and Dutch fleets which blockaded the Portuguese coast and brought maritime trade to a standstill Portugal signed an agreement with the Dutch and compensated them with eight million guilders and the colonies of Ceylon now Sri Lanka and the Maluku Islands part of present day Indonesia On August 6 1661 the Netherlands formally ceded the region to the Portuguese Empire through the Treaty of The Hague 22 24 Genetic inheritance editAccording to a genetic study carried out by the Federal University of Minas Gerais in 2000 19 of the northeastern Brazilians surveyed had a genetic marker of the Y chromosome haplogroup 2 which is common in Europe Since this haplogroup is more common in northeastern Brazil 19 than in Portugal 13 the researchers hypothesized that this excess could be due to the genetic influence of the Dutch colonizers who came to the region in the 17th century Something similar occurs in southern Brazil where there has been a lot of immigration from northern Europe and an excess of haplogroup 2 28 compared to Portugal 25 However it is unknown how many Dutch lived in Brazil or how many remained after the Portuguese retook the territory Historical records show that the Portuguese were the only registered and significant source of European immigrants in Brazil until 1808 when the ports were opened Only after that date were non Portuguese immigrants allowed to enter Brazil more freely 26 27 Notes edit Under Spanish rule from 1580 to 1640 See also editDutch Brazil Dutch Portuguese War Dutch Brazilians Military history of BrazilReferences edit Silva Luiz Geraldo 2001 A faina a festa e o rito uma etnografia historica sobre as gentes do mar secs XVII ao XIX Papirus Editora ISBN 9788530806354 a b c d e f g Invasoes holandesas no Brasil UOL Retrieved 2023 10 04 1581 Holanda se liberta da Espanha Terra 2015 07 26 Retrieved 2023 10 04 a b Os holandeses e a economia acucareira UOL Retrieved 2023 10 04 a b Companhia das Indias Ocidentais Toda Materia Retrieved 2023 10 04 a b c d e f Franca Jean Marcel Carvalho Hue Sheila 2014 Piratas no Brasil As incriveis historias dos ladroes dos mares que pilharam nosso litoral Globo Livros a b c d Gouvea Hilton 2022 07 24 HA 427 ANOS CORSARIO INGLES SAQUEAVA RECIFE ABRINDO AS PORTAS PARA QUE MAIS TARDE OS HOLANDESES OCUPASSEM PERNAMBUCO E INVADISSEM A PARAIBA A Uniao Retrieved 2023 10 04 Prado J F de Almeida 1950 A Bahia e as Capitanias do Centro do Brasil 5 ed Companhia Editora Nacional a b c d Araujo Felipe Descobrimentos e Navegacoes Holandesas InfoEscola Retrieved 2023 10 04 Nogueira Adeilson 2020 Guerras Brasileiras Clube de Autores Donato Hernani 1996 Dicionario das batalhas brasileiras IBRASA ISBN 9788534800341 a b c Jaccoud Carlos Eduardo Maroja VIAJANTES NA AMERICA DOS FILIPES IMPRESSOES E INTERPRETACOES DO BRASIL COLONIA C 1580 C 1640 PDF UNIRIO A CONQUISTA FLAMENGA City Hall of Recife Retrieved 2015 04 14 Postma Johannes Menne 1990 The Dutch in the Atlantic Slave Trade 1600 1815 Cambridge University Press a b c CAMPANHAS MILITARES CONTRA OS HOLANDESES 2018 06 26 Retrieved 2023 10 04 a b Schalkwijk Frans Leonard POR QUE CALABAR O MOTIVO DA TRAICAO Mackenzie Mauricio de Nassau UOL Retrieved 2023 10 04 Magalhaes Pablo Antonio Igleasias 2011 A palavra e o imperio a arte da lingua brasilica e a conquista do Maranhao Revista de Historia 165 165 367 401 doi 10 11606 issn 2316 9141 v0i165p367 401 a b A Restauracao o fim da Uniao Iberica e as consequencias para a colonia MultiRio Retrieved 2023 10 04 a b Insurreicao pernambucana a patria restaurada Radio Peao Brasil 2020 11 08 Retrieved 2023 10 04 Silva Misleine Neris de Souza Insurreicao Pernambucana InfoEscola Retrieved 2023 10 04 a b Assinatura do Tratado de Haia oficializa devolucao de territorio brasileiro a Portugal UOL 2019 06 26 Retrieved 2023 10 04 Barros Marcelo 2022 01 27 Dia 26 de janeiro de 1654 Rendicao dos Holandeses no Recife Defesa em Foco Retrieved 2023 10 04 Blok 1928 p 147 Pena Sergio Carvalho Silva Denise Alves Silva Juliana Prado Vania Santos Fabricio Retrato Molecular do Brasil PDF Vol 27 259 ed Ciencia Hoje Correa Lucelinda Schramm 2005 As politicas publicas de imigracao europeia nao portuguesa para o Brasil de Pombal a Republica Revista geo paisagem 4 8 Silva Denise Carvalho Santos Fabricio Rocha Jorge Pena Sergio 2000 The Phylogeography of Brazilian Y Chromosome Lineages The American Journal of Human Genetics 68 1 281 286 doi 10 1086 316931 PMC 1234928 PMID 11090340 Bibliography edit Barleu Gaspar 1974 Historia dos feitos recentemente praticados durante oito anos no Brasil Belo Horizonte Itatiaia Bento Claudio Moreira 1971 As Batalhas dos Guararapes Descricao e Analise Militar Recife UFPE Blok P J 1928 Michiel de Ruyter PDF in Dutch Martinus Nijhof Boxer Charles 1961 Os holandeses no Brasil 1624 1654 Sao Paulo Companhia Editora Nacional Mello Evaldo Cabral de 1981 O Negocio do Brasil Portugal os Paises Baixos e o Nordeste 1641 1669 Rio de Janeiro Topbooks Mello Jose Antonio Gonsalves de 1981 Fontes para a Historia do Brasil Holandes Vol 1 A Economia Acucareira Recife Parque Historico Nacional dos Guararapes Rosty Claudio Skora 2002 As Invasoes Holandesas Insurreicao Pernambucana A Batalha do Monte das Tabocas o Inicio do Fim Recife a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Di Pace Viottorio 1991 Napoletani in Brasile nella guerra di liberazione dall invasione olandese 1625 1640 Napoles Fausto Fiorentino Van Groesen Michiel 2014 The Legacy of Dutch Brazil New York Cambridge University Press Varnhagen Francisco Adolfo de 1871 Historia das lutas com os Hollandezes no Brazil desde 1624 a 1654 Viena C Finsterbeck nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dutch Brazil Portals nbsp Brazil nbsp History nbsp Portugal nbsp The Netherlands Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dutch invasions of Brazil amp oldid 1212558289, 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