Pre-Portuguese Era The
Greek merchant
Cosma Indicopleustes is known to have visited the areas around
Vasai in the 6th century, and the
Chinese traveller
Xuanzang in June or July 640. According to historian
José Gerson da Cunha, during this time,
Vasai and its surrounding areas appeared to have been ruled by the
Chalukya dynasty of
Karnataka. Until the 11th century, several
Arabian geographers had mentioned references to towns nearby, like
Thane and
Nala Sopara, but no references had been made to Vasai. Vasai was later ruled by the
Silhara dynasty of
Konkan and eventually passed to the
Yadava dynasty. It was the head of district under the Yadavas (1184–1318). Later, being conquered by the
Gujarat Sultanate, a few years later
Barbosa (1514) described it under the name
Baxay (pronounced Basai) as a town with a good seaport belonging to the
king of
Gujarat.
Portuguese Era The
Portuguese Armadas first reached the west coast of
India after the
discovery of the
Cape route by
Vasco da Gama; he landed at
Calicut in 1498. For several years after their arrival, they had been consolidating their power in north and south
Konkan, in and around present-day Bombay and
Goa. They had established their capital at
Velha Goa, captured from the
Adil Shahi dynasty of
Bijapur in 1510. According to historian
Manuel de Faria e Sousa, the coast of Bassein (Vasai) was first visited by them in 1509, when
Francisco de Almeida, on his way to
Dio, captured a ship off
Bombay Harbour, with 24 citizens of the Sultan of Guzerat aboard it. In 1530, Portuguese captain António da Silvera burnt the city of Vasai and continued the burning and looting up to nearby
Bombaim, when the King of
Thana surrendered the islands of
Mahim, and Bombaim. Subsequently, the towns of
Thana,
Bandora,
Mahim and
Bombay were brought under Portuguese control. In 1531,
António de Saldanha while returning from Gujarat to Goa, set fire to Baçaim again — to punish the Sultanate of Gujarat's King
Bahadur Shah for not ceding Diu. In 1533, Diogo (Heytor) de Sylveira, burnt the entire sea coast from Bandora, Thana, Baçaim, to Surat. Diogo de Sylveira returned to
Goa with 4000 slaves and spoils. For the Portuguese, Diu was an important island to protect their trade, which they had to capture. While devising the means to capture Diu, the Portuguese governor of India
Nuno da Cunha found out that the governor of Diu was
Malik Ayaz whose son Malik Tokan was fortifying Baçaim with 14,000 men. Nuno da Cunha saw this fortification as a threat. He assembled a fleet of 150 ships with 4000 men and sailed to
Baçaim. Upon seeing such a formidable naval power, Malik Tokan made overtures of peace to Nuno da Cunha. The peace overtures were rejected. Malik Tokan had no option but to fight the Portuguese. The Portuguese landed north of the Baçaim and invaded the fortification. Even though the Portuguese were numerically insignificant, they fought with skill and valor killing off most of the enemy soldiers while losing only a handful of their own. On 23 December 1534, the Sultan of Gujarat Bahadur Shah signed a
treaty with the Portuguese and ceded Baçaim with its dependencies of Salsette, Bombaim (Bombay),
Parel,
Vadala,
Siao (Sion),
Vorli (Worli),
Mazagao (Mazgaon), Thana, Bandra, Mahim, and
Caranja (
Uran). In 1536, Nuno da Cunha appointed his brother-in-law Garcia de Sá as the first Captain/Governor of Baçaim. The first cornerstone for the Fort was laid by
António Galvão. In 1548, the Governorship of Baçaim was passed on to
Jorge Cabral. The Bassein and its surroundings were the largest Portuguese territory, including places such as
Chaul-
Revdanda, Caranja, the Bombay Archipelago, Bandra Island,
Juhu Island,
Salsette Island including the city of
Thane,
Dharavi Island, the Bassein archipelago,
Daman and
Diu.
Construction of the fortress On 22 February 1554, the Portuguese built a new fortress enclosing a whole town within the fort walls. The fort included 10 bastions, of these nine, were named Cavalheiro, Nossa Senhora dos Remédios, Reis Magos Santiago, São Gonçalo, Madre de Deus, São João, Elefante, São Pedro, São Paulo and São Sebastião, São Sebastião was also called "Porta Pia" or the pious door of Baçaim. It was through this bastion that the Marathas would enter to defeat the Portuguese. There were two medieval gateways, one on the seaside called
Porta do Mar with massive teak gates cased with iron spikes and the other one called
Porta da Terra. There were ninety pieces of artillery, 27 of which were made of bronze, and seventy mortars, 7 of these mortars were made of bronze. The port was defended by 21 gunboats each carrying 16 to 18 guns. This fort stands today with the outer shell and ruins of churches. In 1548,
St. Francisco Xavier stopped in Baçaim, and a portion of the Baçaim population was converted to Christianity. In Salsette Island, the Portuguese built 9 churches: Nirmal (1557), Remedi (1557), Sandor (1566), Agashi (1568),
Nandakhal (1573), Papdi (1574), Pali (1595),
Manickpur (1606), Mercês (1606). All these beautiful churches are still used by the Christian community of Vasai. In 1573 alone 1600 people were baptized. Baçaim during the Portuguese period was known for the refinement and wealth and splendor of its buildings, palaces and for the beauty of its churches. The Bassein fort which now lies in ruins was the administrative center and court of the northern province, and was subordinate only to Velha Goa in the south, the capital of the
East Indies or the eastern faction of the Portuguese empire. The northern province consisted of a territory that extended as far as 100 kilometers along the coast, in between Damaon (Daman) and Chaul (
Colaba district), and in some places extended 30-50 kilometers inland. It was the most productive Indian area under Portuguese rule. In 1618, Baçaim suffered from a succession of disasters. First, it was struck by a plague then on 15 May, the city was struck by a deadly cyclone. It caused considerable damage to the boats and houses, and thousands of coconut trees were uprooted and flattened,
monsoon winds had pushed
brackish seawater inland. Many churches and convents of the
Franciscans and
Augustinians were affected by the disaster. The roofs of three of the largest churches in Bassein city including the seminary and the chapel of the
Jesuits were ripped off, making the structure almost beyond repair. This storm was followed by so complete a failure of rain which resulted in famine-like conditions. In a few months, the situation grew so precarious that parents were openly selling their children to Muslim brokers into slavery rather than starving them to death. The practice was stopped by the Jesuits, partly by saving from their own scanty allowances and partly by donations from the rich. In 1634, Baçaim's population numbered about 400 Portuguese families, 200 Indian Christian families and 1800 slaves (Indians and Africans). In 1674, Bassein had 2 colleges, 4 convents, and 6 churches. In 1674, 600
Arab pirates from
Muscat landed at Baçaim. The fort garrison remained within the fort walls. The pirates plundered all the churches outside of the fort walls and spared no violence and cruelty towards the people of Baçaim. In 1674, More Pundit stationed himself in
Kalyan, and forced the Portuguese to pay him one-fourth of Baçaim's revenues. Two years later,
Shivaji advanced near Saiwan. As the Portuguese power waned towards the end of the 17th century, Baçaim suffered considerably. The importance of Baçaim was reduced by the transfer of neighboring Bombaim island to the British in 1665. The
East India Company had been coveting the relatively safe
Bombay Harbour for many years, even before their trading post was affected by the
Sack of Surat.
Bombaim was finally acquired by them through the royal dowry of Catherine Braganza, before that they had ventured to seize it by force in 1626 and had urged the directors of the East India Company to purchase it in 1652. Their colonization efforts gradually divided the lands into estates or fiefs, which were granted as rewards to deserving individuals or to religious orders on a system known as
foramen to whereby the grantees were bound to furnish military aid to the king of Portugal or where military service was not deemed necessary, to pay a certain rent. Portuguese administration saw frequent transfers of officers and the practice of allowing the great nobles to remain at court and administer their provinces. The Portuguese trade
monopoly with
Europe could henceforth last only so long as no European rival came upon the scene. The community known as the "Bombay East Indians" were called
Norteiros (Northern men) after the Court of the North, based in the fort.
Maratha Era In the 18th century, the Bassein Fort was taken over by the
Maratha Empire under
Peshwa Baji Rao's brother
Chimaji Appa and fell in 1739 after the
Battle of Vasai.
British Era Treaty of Vasai (1802) The
Treaty of Vasai (1802) was a pact signed on 31 December 1802 between the
British East India Company and
Baji Rao II, the
Maratha Peshwa of
Pune in
India after the
Battle of Pune. The treaty was a decisive step in the dissolution of the
Maratha Empire. ==Present==