The fort presents a design in accordance with the then most up-to-date treatises. It had a triangular plan with 132 meters long walls on the two smaller sides and 143 meters on the longer one. At its apexes rose a dominant
bastion and two half-bastions. They were named
São Jerónimo,
Santo Inácio and
São Francisco Xavier. The structure was conceived as a kind of autonomous
hornwork of the fortress of Daman, with the three bastions facing north, northeast and east, thus pointing towards the land and not towards the city, with flanks where the wall is weak and narrow. The three bastions, with a pronounced triangular outline, had elements that allowed them to function autonomously as bastions of resistance. It had a moat. Several barracks and ammunition houses were built inside the fort. The main door of the fortification, facing south, in addition to containing extensive information about the foundation of the structure, features two decorative motifs flanking the opening, consisting of two giants, each holding a millstone and a parchment. The message inscribed on the parchments reads:
“Whoever wants to enter here must pay with this millstone: my companion and I will guard it without money”. This message perhaps alludes to the supposed or desired incorruptibility of the fort's defenders. Over the arch there is a niche with the image of
Saint Jerome, crowned by the
Portuguese coat of arms and a cross. The statue of St. Jerome was "paid" the salary of an army captain, saved until the feast of St. Jerome when the garrison had a gala organized with the funds accumulated from the pay. The wooden gates are studded with iron spikes to prevent elephants from breaking them open. ==See also==