Siege of Mozambique (1607) explained

Conflict:Siege of Mozambique (1607)
Partof:Dutch-Portuguese War
Date:29 March – 20 August 1607
Place:Island of Mozambique, Mozambique
Result:Portuguese victory
Combatant1: Portuguese Empire
Combatant2: Dutch East India Company
Commander1: Dom Estevão de Ataíde
Commander2: Paulus van Caerden
Strength1:2 galleons, 1 galiot
60 soldiers
60 Portuguese militia
Uncounted number of slaves.
Strength2:8 warships, 1 patache. 1060 men.
Casualties1:13 dead.
Casualties2:300 dead.

The siege of Mozambique of 1607 was an armed encounter between the forces of the Portuguese Empire and those of the Dutch East India Company or VOC, who attempted to capture the Portuguese Fort São Sebastião on Island of Mozambique. After a six-month campaign, the Dutch withdrew.

Context

The Island of Mozambique was occupied by Portugal in order to serve as an essential port of call between Europe and Asia for their India Armadas, and fortified it in the mid 16th century, building the strong fort São Sebastião. Ever since the capture of the carrack Santa Catarina in 1603 by the Dutch East India Company however, Portugal (then ruled by the Habsburg dynasty) was at war with the Dutch Republic.

The directors of the Dutch VOC sought to capture Mozambique in order to sever Portuguese communications with Asia. On 20 April 1606, Paulus van Caerden set sail from Texel with a force of 1060 men embarked on 8 warships (the Banda, Walcheren, Bantam, Ceylon, Ter Veere, China, Patane and Zierikzee[1]) and one patache. They arrived in Mozambique on 29 March 1607.

The Dutch had already besieged Mozambique before in 1604.[2]

The siege

On 30 March Caerden forced his ships through into the harbour of Mozambique, suffering about 100 dead from cannonfire from the Portuguese fortress. They then manned the launches and managed to capture a Portuguese galliot anchored in the harbour and cut the mooring lines of two poorly defended galleons, which ran aground and were torched.

Bombardment of the fortress began on 1 April. The Portuguese commander Dom Estevão de Ataíde was greatly outnumbered, having only 60 soldiers, 60 resident Portuguese militiamen and a number of slave auxiliaries, however they were well acquainted with the region and veterans of African campaigns.

After 18 days, van Caerden offered the Portuguese the change to surrender honourably which Dom Estevão rejected. The Portuguese then challenged 50 Dutch to duel against 25 Portuguese, which the Dutch rejected.[3] This story was not recorded by the Dutch, however. On the night of 29 April, 25 Portuguese conducted a sally on Dutch siege works under the rain, when muskets could not be used and killed 30 sailors, though they were repulsed.[3] During the siege, the local African tribes kept the Portuguese fortress supplied, and refused to provide any to the Dutch at the behest of the Portuguese. Nevertheless, the Portuguese suffered greatly from thirst owing to the number of people who sought refuge within the fortress.[4]

After two months of siege, van Caerden set fire to the Portuguese town and set sail for the Comoros on 29 May, where he expected to acquire supplies, suffering more losses to cannonfire as the Dutch fleet passed once more close to the Portuguese fortress to exit the harbour.

On 22 June the Portuguese were reinforced by three carracks under the command of Dom Jerónimo Coutinho. Van Caerden returned to Mozambique on 4 August, however he remained at bay hoping to capture any passing Portuguese tradeship. By 20 August van Caerden withdrew.[5]

Aftermath

Dom Jerónimo sailed to Goa shortly after the Dutch had left.[5] The 1607 siege of Mozambique demonstrated the viability of resisting powerful Dutch attacks with very limited garrisons.[5]

The Dutch VOC would again attempt to capture Mozambique in 1608 and 1662.

See also

Notes and References

  1. George McCall Theal: Willem Adriaan Van Der Stel, and Other Historical Sketches, DigiCat, 2022.
  2. Book: Theal, George McCall . History and Ethnography of Africa South of the Zambesi, from the Settlement of the Portuguese at Sofala in September 1505 to the Conquest of the Cape Colony by the British in September 1795 . 2010-12-02 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-108-02332-0 . 411 . en.
  3. Frederick Charles Danvers: The Portuguese in India volume II, W.H. Allen & Company, limited, 1894, pp. 138-139.
  4. Works Issued by the Hakluyt Society, no. LXXVII: The Voyage of François Pyrard of Laval volume II, part I, London, 1888, p. 225.
  5. Saturnino Monteiro: Batalhas e Combates da Marinha Portuguesa 1179-1975, volume III, Livraria Sá da Costa Editora, 1994, pp. 63-65.