Portuguese monopoly over trade in the Indian Ocean and Asia In 1509, the Portuguese under
Francisco de Almeida won the decisive
battle of Diu against a joint
Mamluk and Arab fleet sent to expel the Portuguese of the Arabian Sea. The victory enabled Portugal to implement its strategy of controlling the Indian Ocean. Early in the 16th century,
Afonso de Albuquerque emerged as the Portuguese colonial viceroy most instrumental in consolidating Portugal's holdings in Africa and in Asia. He understood that Portugal could wrest commercial supremacy from the Arabs only by force, and therefore devised a plan to establish forts at strategic sites which would dominate the trade routes and also protect Portuguese interests on land. In 1510, he
conquered Goa in India, which enabled him to gradually consolidate control of most of the commercial traffic between Europe and Asia, largely through trade; Europeans started to carry on trade from forts, acting as foreign merchants rather than as settlers. In contrast, early European expansion in the "
West Indies", (later known to Europeans as a separate continent from Asia that they would call the "
Americas") following the 1492 voyage of
Christopher Columbus, involved heavy settlement in colonies that were treated as political extensions of the mother countries. Lured by the potential of high profits from another expedition, the Portuguese established a permanent base in
Cochin, south of the Indian trade port of
Calicut in the early 16th century. In 1510, the Portuguese, led by
Afonso de Albuquerque, seized Goa on the coast of India, which
Portugal held until 1961, along with
Diu and
Daman (the remaining territory and enclaves in India from a former network of coastal towns and smaller fortified trading ports added and abandoned or lost centuries before). The Portuguese soon acquired a monopoly over trade in the Indian Ocean. Portuguese viceroy Albuquerque (1509–1515) resolved to consolidate Portuguese holdings in Africa and Asia, and secure control of trade with the
East Indies and China. His first objective was
Malacca, which controlled the narrow strait through which most Far Eastern trade moved.
Captured in 1511, Malacca became the springboard for further eastward penetration, starting with the voyage of
António de Abreu and
Francisco Serrão in 1512, ordered by Albuquerque, to the Moluccas. Years later the first trading posts were established in the
Moluccas, or "Spice Islands", which was the source for some of the world's most hotly demanded spices, and from there, in
Makassar and some others, but smaller, in the
Lesser Sunda Islands. By 1513–1516, the first Portuguese ships had reached
Canton on the southern coasts of China. 1415–1542: arrival places and dates; Portuguese
spice trade routes in the
Indian Ocean (blue); territories of the
Portuguese empire under
King John III rule (green) In 1513, after the failed attempt to conquer
Aden, Albuquerque entered with an armada, for the first time for Europeans by the ocean via, on the
Red Sea; and in 1515, Albuquerque consolidated the Portuguese hegemony in the
Persian Gulf gates, already begun by him in 1507, with the domain of
Muscat and
Ormuz. Shortly after, other fortified bases and forts were annexed and built along the Gulf, and in 1521, through a military campaign, the Portuguese annexed
Bahrain. The Portuguese conquest of Malacca triggered the
Malayan–Portuguese war. In 1521,
Ming dynasty China defeated the Portuguese at the
Battle of Tunmen and then defeated the Portuguese again at the
Battle of Xicaowan. The Portuguese tried to establish trade with China by illegally smuggling with the pirates on the offshore islands off the coast of
Zhejiang and
Fujian, but they were driven away by the
Ming navy in the 1530s-1540s. In 1557, China decided to lease
Macau to the Portuguese as a place where they could dry goods they transported on their ships, which they held until 1999. The Portuguese, based at Goa and Malacca, had now established a lucrative maritime empire in the Indian Ocean meant to monopolize the
spice trade. The Portuguese also began a channel of trade with the Japanese, becoming the first recorded Westerners to have visited Japan. This contact introduced Christianity and firearms into Japan. In 1505, (also possibly before, in 1501), the Portuguese, through
Lourenço de Almeida, the son of Francisco de Almeida, reached
Ceylon. The Portuguese founded a fort at the city of
Colombo in 1517 and gradually extended their control over the coastal areas and inland. In a series of military conflicts and political maneuvers, the Portuguese extended their control over the
Sinhalese kingdoms, including
Jaffna (1591),
Raigama (1593),
Sitawaka (1593), and
Kotte (1594)- However, the aim of unifying the entire island under Portuguese control faced the
Kingdom of Kandy`s fierce resistance. The Portuguese, led by
Pedro Lopes de Sousa, launched a full-scale military invasion of the kingdom of Kandy in the
Campaign of Danture of 1594. The invasion was a disaster for the Portuguese, with their entire army wiped out by Kandyan
guerrilla warfare.
Constantino de Sá, romantically celebrated in the 17th century Sinhalese Epic (also for its greater humanism and tolerance compared to other governors) led the last military operation that also ended in disaster. He died in the
Battle of Randeniwela, refusing to abandon his troops in the face of total annihilation. The energies of Castile (later, the
unified Spain), the other major colonial power of the 16th century, were largely concentrated on the Americas, not South and East Asia, but the Spanish did establish a footing in the Far East in the Philippines. After fighting with the Portuguese by the Spice Islands since 1522 and the agreement between the two powers in 1529 (in the treaty of Zaragoza), the Spanish, led by
Miguel López de Legazpi, settled and conquered gradually the Philippines since 1564. After the discovery of the return voyage to the Americas by
Andres de Urdaneta in 1565, cargoes of Chinese goods were transported from the
Philippines to
Mexico and from there to
Spain. By this long route, Spain reaped some of the profits of Far Eastern commerce. Spanish officials converted the islands to Christianity and established some settlements, permanently establishing the Philippines as the area of East Asia most oriented toward the West in terms of culture and commerce. The Moro Muslims fought against the Spanish for over three centuries in the
Spanish–Moro conflict.
Decline of Portugal's Asian empire since the 17th century , 1606 The lucrative trade was vastly expanded when the Portuguese began to export
slaves from Africa in 1541; however, over time, the rise of the slave trade left Portugal over-extended, and vulnerable to competition from other Western European powers. Envious of Portugal's control of trade routes, other Western European nations—mainly the
Netherlands, France, and England—began to send in rival expeditions to Asia. In 1642, the Dutch drove the Portuguese out of the
Gold Coast in Africa, the source of the bulk of Portuguese slave laborers, leaving this rich slaving area to other Europeans, especially the Dutch and the English. Rival European powers began to make inroads in Asia as the Portuguese and Spanish trade in the Indian Ocean declined primarily because they had become hugely over-stretched financially due to the limitations on their investment capacity and contemporary naval technology. Both of these factors worked in tandem, making control over Indian Ocean trade extremely expensive. The existing Portuguese interests in Asia proved sufficient to finance further colonial expansion and entrenchment in areas regarded as of greater strategic importance in
Africa and
Brazil. Portuguese maritime supremacy was lost to the Dutch in the 17th century, and with this came serious challenges for the Portuguese. However, they still clung to Macau and settled a new colony on the island of
Timor. It was as recent as the 1960s and 1970s that the Portuguese began to relinquish their colonies in Asia. Goa was invaded by India in 1961 and became an Indian state in 1987;
Portuguese Timor was abandoned in 1975 and was then invaded by
Indonesia. It became an independent country in 2002, and Macau was handed back to the Chinese as per a treaty in 1999.
Holy wars The arrival of the Portuguese and Spanish and their holy wars against Muslim states in the
Malayan–Portuguese war,
Spanish–Moro conflict and
Castilian War inflamed religious tensions and turned Southeast Asia into an arena of conflict between Muslims and Christians. The Brunei Sultanate's capital at Kota Batu was assaulted by Governor Sande who led the 1578 Spanish attack. The word "savages" in Spanish, cafres, was from the word "infidel" in Arabic - Kafir, and was used by the Spanish to refer to their own "Christian savages" who were arrested in Brunei. It was said
Castilians are kafir, men who have no souls, who are condemned by fire when they die, and that too because they eat pork by the Brunei Sultan after the term
accursed doctrine was used to attack Islam by the Spaniards which fed into hatred between Muslims and Christians sparked by their 1571 war against Brunei. The Sultan's words were in response to insults coming from the Spanish at Manila in 1578, other Muslims from Champa, Java, Borneo, Luzon, Pahang, Demak, Aceh, and the Malays echoed the rhetoric of holy war against the Spanish and Iberian Portuguese, calling them kafir enemies which was a contrast to their earlier nuanced views of the Portuguese in the Hikayat Tanah Hitu and Sejarah Melayu. The war by Spain against Brunei was defended in an apologia written by Doctor De Sande. The British eventually partitioned and took over Brunei while Sulu was attacked by the British, Americans, and Spanish which caused its breakdown and downfall after both of them thrived from 1500 to 1900 for four centuries. Dar al-Islam was seen as under invasion by "kafirs" by the Atjehnese led by Zayn al-din and by Muslims in the Philippines as they saw the Spanish invasion, since the Spanish brought the idea of a crusader holy war against Muslim Moros just as the Portuguese did in Indonesia and India against what they called "Moors" in their political and commercial conquests which they saw through the lens of religion in the 16th century. In 1578, an attack was launched by the Spanish against Jolo, and in 1875 it was destroyed at their hands, and once again in 1974 it was destroyed by the Philippines. The Spanish first set foot on Borneo in Brunei. The Spanish war against Brunei failed to conquer Brunei but it totally cut off the Philippines from Brunei's influence, the Spanish then started colonizing Mindanao and building fortresses. In response, the Bisayas, where Spanish forces were stationed, were subjected to retaliatory attacks by the Magindanao in 1599-1600 due to the Spanish attacks on Mindanao. The Brunei royal family was related to the Muslim Rajahs who in ruled the principality in 1570 of Manila (
Kingdom of Maynila) and this was what the Spaniards came across on their initial arrival to Manila, Spain uprooted Islam out of areas where it was shallow after they began to force Christianity on the Philippines in their conquests after 1521 while Islam was already widespread in the 16th century Philippines. In the Philippines in the Cebu islands the natives killed the Spanish fleet leader Magellan. Borneo's western coastal areas at Landak, Sukadana, and Sambas saw the growth of Muslim states in the sixteenth century, in the 15th century at Nanking, the capital of China, the death and burial of the Borneo Bruneian king Maharaja Kama took place upon his visit to China with Zheng He's fleet. The Spanish were expelled from Brunei in 1579 after they attacked in 1578. There were fifty thousand inhabitants before the 1597 attack by the Spanish in Brunei. During first contact with China, numerous aggressions and provocations were undertaken by the Portuguese They believed they could mistreat the non-Christians because they themselves were Christians and acted in the name of their religion in committing crimes and atrocities. This resulted in the
Battle of Xicaowan where the local Chinese navy defeated and captured a fleet of Portuguese caravels. ==Dutch trade and colonization in Asia==