King Sebastian of Portugal Sebastian, who would later be known in Portugal as
the Desired, was the son of the
Infante Dom
John (son of
John III of Portugal) and
Joanna, daughter of the
Emperor Charles V. His father died before he was born, and he became king at the age of three after the death of his grandfather in 1557. He was educated almost entirely by
Jesuits, by his guardian and tutor
Aleixo de Meneses and by
Catherine of Austria, sister of Charles V and wife of King John III. Some, judging him after his defeat, alleged that under these influences his youthful idealism soon mutated into
religious fanaticism, although he never joined the
Holy League. The
Portuguese Cortes asked Sebastian several times to go to
Morocco and stop the turmoil of the advancing
Turkish military presence, because the
Ottomans would be a threat to the security of the Portuguese coasts and to the commerce with
Guinea,
Brazil, and the Atlantic Islands, like the
Azores and
Madeira. But it was only when
Abu Abdallah Mohammed II al-Mutawakkil went to
Portugal and asked for Sebastian's help in recovering his throne from his uncle that Sebastian decided to mount a military effort. Sebastian felt driven to revive lost glories by intervening in North Africa, influenced by the events such as the defense of
Mazagan in 1562 from a Moroccan siege. Accordingly, in 1568, the kingdom began to prepare for intervention in Morocco. This policy was not only supported by the mercantile
bourgeoisie as it would benefit commerce in this area (primarily,
gold,
cattle,
wheat, and
sugar), but also by the
nobility. Up to that time Portuguese military action in Africa had been confined to small expeditions and raids; Portugal had built its vast maritime empire from Brazil to the
East Indies by a combination of trade, sea exploration, and technological superiority, with Christian conversion of subject peoples being one, but by no means the only, end in view. Sebastian proposed to change this strategy entirely. In 1574 Sebastian visited some of the Portuguese bases in North Africa and led a successful raid on Muslim territory beyond the then Portuguese city of
Tangier, engaging in several skirmishes and in a confrontation of greater magnitude on 21 October. Although in numerical inferiority but with a heavy contingent of cavalry, he was successful, which encouraged him to grander designs against the new
Saadian ruler of Morocco. He gave his support to Al-Mutawakkil, who was engaged in a civil war to recover the throne of Morocco from his uncle, the Emir Abd Al-Malik—who was aided by the Ottomans. Despite the admonitions of his mother and his uncle
Philip II of Spain (who had become very cautious after the
Battle of Djerba), Sebastian was determined to wage a military campaign, and he used much of Portugal's imperial wealth to equip a large fleet and gather an army which included soldiers of several nationalities: 2,000 volunteers from Spain (
Castile), 3,000 mercenaries from
Flanders and
Germany, and 600
Italians initially recruited to aid in an
invasion of Ireland under the leadership of the English adventurer,
Thomas Stukley. It is said that the expeditionary force numbered 500 ships, and the army in total numbered about 23,000 men, including the flower of the Portuguese nobility.
Sultan Abd al-Malik of Morocco Morocco, meanwhile, was under the rule of the
Saadi (or Saadian) dynasty, a Moroccan
Sharifian dynasty. Their rise to power began as a resistance to the Portuguese presence in
Agadir and by the 1550s they controlled most of present-day Morocco and had supplanted the earlier
Wattasid dynasty. Upon the death of Sultan
Abdallah al-Ghalib in 1574 his son
Muhammad II al-Mutawakkil inherited the throne, but two years later he was overthrown by his uncle
Abd al-Malik. Abd al-Malik had travelled to
Istanbul in 1574 and secured Ottoman support from the Sultan there himself. The
beylerbey of Algiers provided him with troops and with these Abd al-Malik was able to depose his nephew after winning a
decisive victory near Fez. Once on the throne, as an Ottoman vassal he had the
Friday prayers and the
khutba in mosques delivered in the Ottoman sultan's name (
Murad III), adopted Ottoman clothing, and organized his army along
Ottoman lines with the help of Turkish officers. After this, the Saadi army, whose bulk was recruited from
guich troops ("military tribes" mobilized to serve as regular levies), combined mounted
arquebusiers, infantry armed with rifles, large numbers of light cavalry, and a detachment of artillery; most of which were newly trained in Ottoman tactics. In addition to his local
guich troops and Berber contingents, many of the soldiers were recruited from
Andalusis previously expelled from the Iberian Peninsula (or descended from those refugees), Berber tribes from the east such as the
Zwawa, and from the Turks and ex-Ottoman soldiers in the region. Abderrahmane El Moudden, in a large study of Ottoman-Saadian diplomacy in this period, notes that some modern Turkish sources attribute the 1578 victory to Ottoman forces led by Ramazan Pasha on the field—though he also notes that some of these sources are liable to exaggerate Turkish military history. In an encyclopedic entry about King Sebastian, historian
Allen Fromherz indicates the presence of Ottoman forces at the battle, including
Janissaries. Historian R. G. Grant states that Abd al-Malik's army was "partly supplied by the Ottoman Turks" and that it combined "Moroccan cavalry with Ottoman musket-armed infantry and cannon". Professor of Islamic Studies, Jamil M. Abun-Nasr, states that the Turks "could not take over the affairs of Morocco after [the Battle of Alcácer's] victory to which they contributed much". He also mentions that Abd al-Malik's army included Turkish troops, that its officers were Turks and so was the commander of his army, who is alleged to have had Abd al-Malik poisoned in order to secure total Ottoman control over Morocco. == Campaign ==