Battle of Tidore explained

Conflict:Battle of Tidore 1536
Partof:Portuguese Battle in the East
Date:21 December 1536.[1]
Place:Tidore, Moluccas
Result:Decisive Portuguese victory
Combatant1: Portuguese Empire
Ternate loyal to Hairun
Combatant2:Ternate loyal to Dayal
Sultanate of Tidore
Sultanate of Bacan
Sultanate of Jailolo
Kingdom of Vaigama
Kingdom of Vaigue
Kingdom of Quibibi
Kingdom of Mincibo[2]
Commander1: António Galvão
Sultan Hairun
Commander2:Dayal of Ternate
Mir of Tidore
Alauddin of Bacan
Katarabumi of Geilolo
4 unnamed Papuan kings
Strength1:6 ships.[3]
120 Portuguese soldiers[4]
  • 80 musketeers[5]
Strength2:30,000 men. 500-600 firearms.[6]
Casualties1:Few
Casualties2:Heavy

The Battle of Tidore in 1536 was a military engagement between the forces of the Portuguese Empire, and those of eight united rulers of the archipelago.

After conducting an amphibious attack on Tidore, the heavily outnumbered Portuguese led by António Galvão assaulted and razed the city of Tidore. The coalition fell apart shortly afterwards and the region submitted to Portuguese rule.[7]

Context

In 1535, the Portuguese captain of Ternate Tristão de Ataíde deposed Sultan Tabarija of Ternate under the accusation of persecuting Christians, plotting to assassinate him and to capture the fortress of Ternate. In his place, Ataíde installed Sultan Hairun on the throne. As a result, Ternate, Tidore, Geilolo and Bacan supported the claim of Sultan Dayal to the throne and united in a widespread revolt against the Portuguese. The Portuguese fort São João Baptista was sieged and the garrison was nearly driven to starvation.

On October 27, 1536, Ataídes successor António Galvão arrived with two ships and considerable aid in both supplies and reinforcements.[8] Galvão offered the rulers peace, but as they refused and attacked the Portuguese during a truce, after lending succour to the beleaguered garrison he moved with a small flotilla against Tidore, where four Mollucan monarchs and four Papuan ones had gathered with their forces in the expectation of a final assault on the fortress.

The battle

Galvão assembled a flotilla composed of 2 carracks, 1 brigantine, 1 kelulus and 2 prahus, with which he sailed in front of Tidore city, where the enemy forces were concentrated and which was bombarded.[9] He landed with his forces undetected, under the cover of darkness a little after midnight, at some distance from the city.[10] By sunrise they assaulted the city on the land-side and killed Dayal in a pitched battle in front of the city.[11] Its walls were then scaled, and the city was torched, with the exception of the mosque, which Galvão kept as his campaign quarters.[12] Galvão forbade his soldiers from harming women, children and elderly.

Aftermath

Various attempts at dislodging the Portuguese and kill Galvão failed.[13] Seeing no way to fight the Portuguese, the allied rulers began reembarking back to their islands. Sultan Mir therefore requested peace.[14] Alauddin of Bacan and Katarabumi of Geilolo soon followed, until the entire region was pacified under Portuguese suzerainty.

Although he razed the city of Tidore, Galvão lent his assistance in rebuilding it in exchange for peace. Galvãos judicious behavior helped quell the revolt in Ternate against the Portuguese and Hairun. A Portuguese fleet later defeated a large fleet dispatched from Java, Banda, Macassar and Ambon to obtain cloves in the region by force.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Jacobs, 1971, p. 251.
  2. Fernão Lopes de Castanheda, 1933, book VIII, p. 391.
  3. Jacobs, 1971, p. 241.
  4. Francisco de Santa Maria: [Anno historico, diario portuguez, noticia abreviada de pessoas grandes, e cousas notaveis de Portugal], book III, 1744, pp. 521-522.
  5. Jacobs, 1971, p. 245.
  6. Jacobs, 1971, p. 243.
  7. Frederick Charles Danvers: The Portuguese in India volume 1, W. H. Allen & Co. Limited, 1894, p. 424.
  8. Jacobs, 1971, pp. 231-233.
  9. Hubert Jacobs: A Treatise on the Moluccas, 1971, Jesuit Historical Institute, pp. 241-243.
  10. Jacobs, 1971, p. 247
  11. Jacobs, 1971, pp.249-251.
  12. Leonard Y. Andaya: The World of Maluku: Eastern Indonesia in the Early Modern Period, University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, 1993, p. 124.
  13. Jacobs, 1971, p. 253.
  14. Jacobs, 1971, p. 255.