Spanish Formosa Explained

Native Name:
Conventional Long Name:Spanish Formosa
Common Name:Formosa
Status:Territory of the Spanish East Indies (colony)
Era:Age of Discovery
Year Start:1626
Event End:Surrender of San Salvador
Year End:1642
P1:Prehistory of Taiwan
S1:Dutch Formosa
Flag Type:Flag of New Spain
Flag:Flag of New Spain
Image Map Caption:The locations of Spanish Formosa, overlapping a map of the present-day island.
Official Languages:Spanish
Common Languages:East Formosan languagesHokkien
Government Type:Colony
Capital:San Salvador (Keelung)
Religion:Roman Catholicism
Currency:Spanish real
Today:Republic of China (Taiwan)

Spanish Formosa (Spanish; Castilian: Gobernación de Hermosa española) was a small colony of the Spanish Empire established in the northern tip of the island now known as Taiwan, then known to Europeans at the time as Formosa or to Spaniards as "Isla Hermosa" from 1626 to 1642. It was ceded to the Dutch Republic during the Eighty Years' War.

The Portuguese were the first Europeans to reach the island off the southern coast of China in 1544, and named it Formosa (Portuguese for "beautiful") due to the beautiful landscape as seen from the sea.[1] The Spanish had translated the name into Spanish as "Hermosa" and is what was historically used in Spanish maps and documents about the colony.

The Spanish set up a colony in the north of the island in 1626 as part of the Manila-based Spanish East Indies that was also subordinated to New Spain (Mexico) at that time. As a Spanish colony, it was meant to protect the regional trade of Spanish Philippines, especially Manila-bound junk ships coming from Ming China and Japan from interference by the Dutch in Dutch Formosa in the south of the island. The colony was short-lived due to the loss of its strategic importance and unwillingness by Spanish authorities in Manila to commit more resources to its defense. After seventeen years, the last fortress of the Spanish was besieged by Dutch forces and eventually fell, giving the Dutch control over much of the island.

Spanish Catholic friar missionaries, especially Dominicans and Franciscans, Christianized about 5,000 indigenous Taiwanese,[2] mostly the Basay people in Keelung and Tamsui and the Kavalan people in Yilan, during the time of the Spanish governorate. The Spanish also settled Sangley Chinese and a few Christian Japanese in Chinese trading settlements (Parián) as traders and laborers and employed at least 300 or more native Filipinos (especially Kapampangan), Mexican Mestizos, Mulattos, Blacks, Mexican Amerindians, and some Mexican Criollo Spaniards from New Spain (Mexico) and Spanish Filipinos from Spanish Philippines as soldiers, laborers, and friar missionaries garrisoned in the forts and settlements of Spanish Formosa.[3]

Background

In 1566, the Dutch rose up against the King Philip II in Hapsburg Netherlands. The Dutch Republic and its allies, England and France attacked and looted some of Spain's overseas territories, as part of the Eighty Years' War.

The Spanish cut the Dutch rebels off from the spice trade based in Lisbon, making it necessary for the Dutch to send their own expeditions to the sources of these commodities to take control of the much desired spice trade in the East Indies.

As a result of the Iberian Union of Portugal and Spain in 1580, the Dutch of the Seventeen Provinces fought the Dutch–Portuguese War. Allies England and France became enemies of both Portugal and Spain. The Dutch colonisation of Formosa was part of the unsuccessful campaign to seize the possessions of the Spanish Habsburgs in Asia, including the Philippines. The Dutch began to attack a string of often undermanned coastal fortresses that comprised the Habsburg's Portuguese African and Asian possessions. The settlements were sometimes isolated, difficult to reinforce if attacked, and prone to being picked off one by one. However, the Dutch were mostly unsuccessful in these attempts.[4]

Pursuing their quest for alternative routes to Asia for trade, the first Dutch privateer squadron to reach the Philippines on 14 December 1600 was led by pirate Olivier van Noort. The Dutch sought to dominate the commercial sea trade in Southeast Asia, often engaging in piracy and privateering. They attempted to disrupt trade by harassing the coasts of Manila Bay and its environs, and preyed on sampans and junks from China and Japan trading at Manila.

In the context of this competition for trade, the Dutch established a colony at Tayouan, present-day Anping, in the south of Formosa. From there they tried threaten Spain's trade in the region. As a counter to this threat, the Spanish colonial authorities in Manila decided to establish their own colony in the north of the island.

Political organisation

Formosa was a governorate. The governor reported to the captain general in Manila. The captain general's superior was the viceroy of New Spain in Mexico City, who, in turn, was appointed by the king of Spain.

The governors of Formosa were:

The early years (1626–1629)

See main article: Spanish expedition to Formosa.

Landing at Cape Santiago in the north-east of Formosa but finding it unsuitable for defensive purposes, the Spanish continued westwards along the coast until they arrived at Keelung. A deep and well-protected harbour plus a small island in the mouth of the harbour made it the ideal spot to build the first settlement, which they named Santissima Trinidad. Forts were built, both on the island and in the harbour itself.

In 1629 the Spanish erected a second base, centred on Fort Santo Domingo, in Tamsui.

First battle with the Dutch

See main article: Battle of San Salvador (1641).

In 1641, the Spanish colony in the north had become such an irritant to the Dutch in the south that they decided to take northern Formosa by force. In courteous terms, the Dutch governor, Paulus Traudenius, informed the Spanish governor of their intentions.The Spanish governor was not inclined to give in so easily and replied in kind.Subsequently, the Dutch launched an assault on the northern regions held by the Spanish, but the positions were well-defended and the attacking troops were not able to breach the walls of the fortresses. They returned, thwarted and humiliated, to the Dutch base at Fort Zeelandia.

Second battle with the Dutch

See main article: Battle of San Salvador (1642).

In 1642, the Spanish governor in Manila recalled most of his Formosa troops for an expedition in the Philippines.[6] In August that year, to profit from the relatively undefended Spanish position, the Dutch returned to Keelung with four large ships, several smaller ships, and approximately 369 Dutch soldiers.[7] A combination of Spaniards, Latin Americans, Formosan natives, and Kapampangan from the Philippines attempted to hold off the larger Dutch force. After six days of battle, the small force surrendered the fort and was returned to Manila defeated, giving up their flags and what little artillery that had remained with them. Sebastián Hurtado de Corcuera, governor-general of the Philippines, was blamed for the loss of Formosa and was eventually tried in court for his actions. Upon conviction, he was imprisoned for five years in the Philippines. Historians since Corcuera's time have chastised him for the loss of the settlement in Formosa but other factors, such as the limited military resources available for the defence of the remote territory, played a role in the loss.[8]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sujuan . Zhan . Formosa . dead . https://archive.today/20120718000214/http://taiwanpedia.culture.tw/en/content?ID=3454&Keyword=Spanish+Taiwan . 18 July 2012 . 22 May 2012 . Encyclopedia of Taiwan . Council for Cultural Affairs .
  2. News: Pérez . Francisco Luis . 29 January 2009 . En Taiwán al pan se le llama pan y abundan los nombres hispánicos . es . . . 17 September 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210917113540/https://www.elconfidencial.com/cultura/2009-01-29/en-taiwan-al-pan-se-le-llama-pan-y-abundan-los-nombres-hispanicos_974865/ . 17 September 2021 . Los españoles también desarrollaron una intensa actividad misionera que logró la conversión de unos 5.000 indígenas, gracias a los esfuerzos de Bartolomé Martínez (1626-1629), Domingo de la Borda (1626), Francisco Váez de Santo Domingo (1626-1636), Francisco Mola (1627-1631), Ángelo Cocchi de San Antonio (1627-1632), Juan de Elgüeta (1627-1629) y Francisco de Acebedo (1627-1629)..
  3. Mawson . Stephanie J. . August 2016 . Convicts or Conquistadores ? Spanish Soldiers in the Seventeenth-Century Pacific . . en . 232 . 87–125 . 10.1093/pastj/gtw008 . 0031-2746 . free.
  4. Book: Boxer, C. R. . The Portuguese Seaborne Empire 1415–1825 . 1969 . Hutchinson . 0-09-131071-7 . London . 23 . registration.
  5. http://www.gutenberg-e.org/andrade/pdfs/AppendixB.pdf How Taiwan Became Chinese: Appendix B.
  6. Book: Chiang, Frank . The One-China Policy: State, Sovereignty, and Taiwan's International Legal Status . 2017 . Elsevier . 978-0-08-102314-3 . Amsterdam . 185.
  7. Book: Andrade, Tonio . How Taiwan Became Chinese: Dutch, Spanish and Han Colonization in the Seventeenth Century . 2005 . Columbia University Press . Tonio Andrade . gutenberg-e.org.
  8. Borao . José Eugenio . 2007 . An Overview of the Spaniards in Taiwan (1626–1642) . Paper presented at the Conference on China and Spain during the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Centre of Sino-Western Cultural Studies, I.P.M., Macao, May 2007.