After the death of
Admiral Sidhoji Gujar around 1698, the Maratha Navy survived because of the extensive efforts of
Koli Admiral
Kanhoji Angre. Under his leadership, the influence of European trading companies was checked along the western coast of India. Kanhoji owed allegiance to the supreme Maratha king
Chhatrapati Shahu and his prime minister
Peshwa Balaji Vishwanath. He gained their support to develop naval facilities on the western coast of India, or
Konkan. Under the leadership of Kanhoji, the Maratha developed a naval base at
Vijayadurg featuring dockyard facilities for building vessels, mounting guns, and making the ships sea-worthy. Their naval fleet consisted of ten
gurabs/grabs (warship) and fifty
gallivats (warboat). A gallivat had a displacement lower than 120 tons, while a grab could go as high as 400 tons. Another ship type used was the
Pal (Maratha
Man-of-war), which was a cannon-armed, three-masted vessel. The grabs had broadsides of 6- and 9-pounder guns, and carried two 9- or 12-pounders on their main decks. These guns pointed forward through port-holes cut in the bulkheads. The gallivats were mostly armed with light
swivel guns, but some also mounted six or eight cannons, either 2- or 4-pounders. These boats were propelled by forty to fifty oars. Even during the reign of Kanhoji Angre, the Maratha Government signed a treaty of friendship with the Portuguese in 1703. As per the treaty, the Portuguese agreed to supply
cannon and
gunpowder to the Maratha, supplies which they needed as they had only a few cannon
foundries producing their own armaments. The Marathas signed a treaty with the Siddi as well, thus concentrating all their forces against the English East India Company. By the beginning of the 18th century, Kanhoji Angre controlled the entire coastline from
Sawantwadi to
Mumbai, which is the entire coastline of present-day
Maharashtra. He built
fortifications on almost all creeks, cove, and harbours, such as a fortress or
citadel with navigational facilities. Any ship sailing through Maratha territorial waters was to pay a levy called
Chouth, which expressed Angre's dominance. Between 1717 and 1720, the EIC made at least two attempts to defeat the Maratha Navy, but were unsuccessful. In response to a EIC ship being captured by Kanhoji's seamen, the British attempted to capture Vijayadurg and Khanderi, but these attempts were unsuccessful. File:Mahratta pirates attacking the sloop 'Aurora', of the Bombay Marine, 1812; beginning of the action.jpg|"
Mahratta Grabs and Gallivats attacking the sloop Aurora of the Bombay Marine." by
Thomas Buttersworth c.1812 File:Maratha-Grabs-and-Gallivats-attacking-an-English-Ship.jpg|Maratha Grabs and Gallivats attacking an English-Ship File:Model of Maratha Warship - DattaPaal.jpg|model of a
Pal, one of the largest Maratha Ships. File:Capture of the Ranger 1783.jpg|Capture of the Ranger by Maratha Ships. C.1783 File:Statue of a Maratha Navy sailor.jpg|Sculpture depicting a Maratha Sailor File:Sea-fight with the Mahrattas.jpg|A fight between Maratha and East India Company sailors File:Handwriting of the great Angres.jpg|Handwriting of the Angres, a predominant Maratha era naval family. File:Peshwa's Navy.jpeg|Sculpture depicting the
Peshwa's Navy near the
Maharashtra-
Goa border, one of the several
naval fortifications built by the Maratha Navy ==Limitations==