Siege of Cannanore (1507)

Siege of Cannanore (1507)

St. Angelo Fort in Cannanore
Date April–August 1507
Location Cannanore, India
Result Portuguese victory
Belligerents
Portuguese Empire Kōlattunād
Calicut
Commanders and leaders
Lourenço de Brito Kōlattiri
Samorin
Strength
2 ships
150 soldiers[1]
21 cannons
40,000 Nāyars
20,000 men from the Samorin.[2]

The Siege of Cannanore (1507) was a four-month siege, from April to August 1507, when troops of the local ruler (the Kōlattiri Raja of Cannanore), supported by the Zamorin of Calicut and Arabs, besieged the Portuguese garrison at St. Angelo Fort in Cannanore, in what is now the Indian state of Kerala. It followed the Battle of Cannanore (1506), in which the fleet of the Zamorin was defeated by the Portuguese.[3]

Contents

Background

In early 1501, shortly after the opening of hostilities between the Portuguese admiral Pedro Alvares Cabral and the Zamorin of Calicut, the Kōlattiri Raja of Cannanore invited the Portuguese to trade in the spice markets of Cannanore instead. Treaties were signed and a crown factory, defended by a small palisade, was established in 1502. In late 1505, D. Francisco de Almeida, the first Portuguese vice-roy of the Indies secured permission to erect the stone fortress of Santo Angelo in Cannanore. The fortress garrison of 150 men was placed under the command of D. Lourenço de Brito[4]

The old Kolathiri Raja who had energetically pursued the Portuguese alliance died sometime in 1506. As the succession was disputed, the Zamorin of Calicut, as formal suzerain of the Kerala coast, nominated an arbitrator to sort through the candidates. The new Kolathiri Raja of Cannanore was consequently indebted to the Zamorin and less inclined to the Portuguese.[5]

Hostilities were in large part due to the Portuguese sinking an Indian ship and killing the crew by stitching them into sails and throwing them into the sea, on the grounds that they were not carrying one of the Cartaz, the passes the Portuguese were imposing on all ships of the region.[6] Such passes had to be signed by either the commander of Cochin or Cannanore.[7] The population of the adjoining state of Kōlattunād was greatly angered by this event, and asked their ruler, the Kōlattiri, to attack the Portuguese.[7]

The siege

The siege started on 27 April 1507, and was to last for four months.[7]

The Kōlattiri had 40,000 Nāyars attack the position.[7] The Zamorin supplied the ruler of Cannanore with 21 pieces of artillery and 20,000 auxiliaries.[7][8]

The firepower of the garrison under Lourenço de Brito allowed it to repulse massive attacks involving thousands of men.[7] The siege soon entered a stalemate, with the Malabari trenches being protected from Portuguese cannonfire by walls of cotton bales, and the Portuguese being slowly forced into starvation.[7] Castanheda detailed report of the siege, states that they were then surprised- and saved- by a tidal wave of lobsters that washed ashore on August 15.[9] A major assault before the Onam festival nearly overcame the defenders, but was eventually repulsed. However, a large part of the garrison was wounded in the attempt.[7]

The Portuguese garrison was on the verge of being overwhelmed, when on 27 August a fleet of 11 ships under Tristão da Cunha, the 8th Armada, coming from Socotra, appeared. 300 Portuguese soldiers were landed, forcing the lifting of the siege and relieving the fortress.[7][8]

Peace was negotiated between the Portuguese and the Kōlattiri Raja, confirming the continued presence of the Portuguese in Cannanore and the resumption of their access to its spice markets.[7] These events would eventually be followed by the Portuguese defeat at the Battle of Chaul in 1508.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ K. M. Mathew (1988). History of the Portuguese navigation in India, 1497-1600. Mittal Publications. p. 165. ISBN 8170990467. http://books.google.com/books?id=Kl3IR3RJTIEC&pg=PA165. 
  2. ^ Malabar manual William Logan p.315
  3. ^ Malabar manual by William Logan p.314
  4. ^ Barros, Decadas da Asia, v.2, p.344-45.
  5. ^ Malabar manual William Logan p.314
  6. ^ Logan (p.314) identifies the offending captain as "Gonçalo Vaz" and suggests he was acting on his own, Cannnanore fort captain Lourenço de Brito protested his innocence, asserting he authorized no such action. Gonçalo Vaz was immediately dismissed by vice-roy Francisco de Almeida, but this did little to assuage the angered people of Cannanore.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Malabar manual William Logan p.314ff
  8. ^ a b Foundations of the Portuguese empire, 1415-1580 by Bailey Wallys Diffie p.233 [1]
  9. ^ Castanheda, Fernão Lopes de, "História do descobrimento e conquista da Índia pelos portugueses", p.158 (Full text in portuguese).