Battle of Perlis River explained

Conflict:Battle of Perlis River
Partof:Acehnese–Portuguese conflicts
Date:6 December 1547[1]
Place:Perlis River
Result:Portuguese victory
Combatant1: Portuguese Empire
Commander1:Dom Francisco de Eça
Commander2:Bayaya Soora
Strength1:9 light galleys
230 Portuguese soldiers
Strength2:5,380 men
60 vessels
Casualties1:29 dead 147 wounded
Casualties2:4,000 men killed, captured, dead or missing
45 vessels captured, 10 sunk

The Battle of Perlis River was an armed engagement that took place in 1547 in the Perlis River between a Portuguese fleet and a fleet of the Sultanate of Aceh. The Portuguese achieved "a complete victory" over the Acehnese fleet, which was almost completely destroyed.

Context

At 2 am on 9 September 1547, an Acehnese fleet silently approached Portuguese Malacca in an attempt to assault it by surprise.[2] It numbered 3 galleys, 57 lancharas, 5,000 men (including both sailors and warriors, 300 hulubalangs, plus 80 mercenaries from the Ottoman Empire of which 20 were former Janissaries of Greek origin.[2] Command was entrusted to the former Sultan of Pedir, Bayaya Soora. The Sultan of Aceh was hoping to conquer territory across the Malacca Strait, on the Malay Peninsula.[2]

Acehnese attack on Malacca

Under cloudy or rainy and windy conditions, Bayaya Soora began landing his men, but they were unexpectedly counter-ambushed by the Portuguese, who were aware of their approach, and received them with matchlock fire, killing many.[2] [3] After quickly reembarking his men, Bayaya Soora sent the Portuguese captain of Malacca Simão de Melo a message, delivered by some fishermen he had captured and mutilated, written in their blood: he challended Melo to a single-duel, threatening among other things to "consider the King of Portugal as the lowliest vassal of Aceh" if he did not comply.[2] [4]

The message was received with amusement by the Portuguese command, but was ignored, and the Acehnese withdrew north.[2] [4]

Portuguese preparations

At that time, the Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier resided in the city, who publicly criticised the garrison for not chasing the enemy.[2] Nine light-galleys and 230 soldiers were then equipped to seek battle with the Acehnese, the supplies having been provided voluntarily by the people of Malacca.[2] On 25 October 25 Portuguese flottilla set sail, numbering 9 light galleys and 230 soldiers, besides an unrecorded number of rowers, sailors, Indian auxiliaries and slaves, under the command of Dom Francisco de Eça.[2]

The ruse of the Sultan of Johor

Sometime after the departure of Dom Francisco, a large fleet of over 300 vessels under the command of the Sultan of Johor anchored in the Muar River near Malacca.[2] Having been informed that a Portuguese fleet had recently left to fight the Acehnese, the sultan offered captain Simão de Melo his condolences for "the total destruction" of the Portuguese fleet, and requested permission to both drop anchor in the harbour and also to land forces to help protect the city from the Acehnese.[2] Suspecting treachery, Melo rejected the offer, claiming that "a great victory" had just been won and that he had enough soldiers to defend Malacca.[2] The sultan did not move from the Muar and disptached light vessels north to gather information.[2]

Battle

Dom Francisco was instructed not to sail north of Pulo Sambilão island.[2] Upon reaching those islands a storm prevented him from turning back, and after gathering a war-council with his captains they set sail to Tenasserim.[2]

The flottilla entered the Perlis River to take in water, but learned from local fishermen that by pure chance the Acehnese happened to be anchored upstream; they had already captured Perlis, sacked the surrounding towns, killed or enslaved thousands and were building a fort.[2] [5]

Once the Portuguese learned that the Acehnese were approaching, Dom Francisco ran through his fleet fortifying his men with spirited words.[2] The Aceh fleet sailed resolutely and in formation, but it lacked heavy caliber artillery, and as the river was narrow, they could not take advantage of their numerical superiority.[2] Acehnese gunners fired too early, and their shots fell short.[2] Once they were very close, the Portuguese fired a salvo of heavy guns, which severely damaged the three Turkish galleys in the vanguard, while the Acehnese flagship was sunk, which threw the following oarships into disarray.[2] The Portuguese unleashed volleys of artillery and matchlock fire or clay bombs into the compact Acehnese fleet before boarding the ships closest, and after an hour all Acehnese had jumped overboard, beached their ships or been killed in action.[2]

Aftermath

The Portuguese captured 45 vessels, of which 20 were burned, and 300 cannon, 800 arquebuses and a large but unrecorded number of personal weapons, many richly decorated with jewels.[2] The Portuguese lost 29 men, while thousands of Acehnese were killed.[2] The Sultan of Perlis, who had lost his capital to the Acehnese retreated to Patani, regrouped and counterattacked with 500 men, killed 200 Acehnese in the action, and recovered his sultanate.[2] [6] He later met Dom Francisco to sign an alliance with the Portuguese and became a tributary vassal of Portugal.[2] [6]

Dom Francisco and his force was met with triumphant celebrations in Malacca.[2] After learning that the Acehnese had been defeated, the Sultan of Johor assaulted the messenger who delivered the news in a fit of rage, and withdrew from the Muar.[2] [7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Volumes 19-20, 1941, p. 192.
  2. Saturnino Monteiro (1992): Batalhas e Combates da Marinha Portuguesa Volume III, p. 95-103.
  3. The Life of St. Francis Xavier, Apostle of the Indies and Japan by Daniello Bartoli, J. P. Maffei, Frederick William Faber, 1889, p. 244.
  4. Frederick Charles Danvers, (1894) The Portuguese in India: A.D. 1481-1571, W.H. Allen & Company, limited, Volume I p. 481.
  5. Daniello Bartoli, J. P. Maffei, Frederick William Faber, 1889, p. 260.
  6. Daniello Bartoli, J. P. Maffei, Frederick William Faber, 1889, p. 262.
  7. Daniello Bartoli, J. P. Maffei, Frederick William Faber, 1889, p. 268.