Siege_of_Diu_(1531)

Siege of Diu (1531)

Siege of Diu (1531)

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The siege of Diu occurred when a combined Ottoman-Gujarati force defeated a Portuguese attempt to capture the city of Diu in 1531. The victory was partly the result of Ottoman firepower over the Portuguese besiegers deployed by Mustafa Bayram, an Ottoman expert.[14]

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Shortly before the siege they encountered roughly 800 enemy soldiers at Siyâl Bet island[a], engaged them in combat, and killed them all.[15] There were 9[16] or 17 Portuguese killed and 120 wounded.[17] They then sailed for Diu, but the Muslim alliance defeated them and killed 14.[18]

Although Diu was successfully defended, victory was short-lived: Diu was blockaded and the Portuguese armada was diverted towards more exposed Gujarati cities.[19] Ghogha, Surat, Mangrol, Somnath, Bassein, Tarapur, Kelva, Mahim, Bulsar, Agashi, Patam, Pate, and many smaller settlements were assaulted and sacked, some never recovering from the attacks.[20][21][12]

In 1534, Sultan Bahadur of Gujarat signed a peace treaty with Governor Nuno da Cunha, granting the Portuguese the territory of Bassein, including Bombay. In 1535, the Portuguese were allowed to construct a fortress at Diu.

See also

Notes

  • ^[a] Gujarati name for jackal island, one of three islands near Diu, João de Barros calls it Ilha de Bet.

References

  1. Monteiro, Saturnino. Batalhas e Combates da Marinha Portuguesa – Volume II: 1522–1538, 1991, Livraria Sá da Costa Editora, p.207
  2. Monteiro 1991, p. 207.
  3. Monteiro 1991, p. 220,221.
  4. J. Gerson Da Cunha: The Origin of Bombay, Asian Educational Services, 1993, p.77.
  5. Gaspar Correia (1495-1561). Lendas da Índia 1858 edition, Typographia da Academia Real das Sciencias de Lisboa, p. 390
  6. Correia 1858, p. 390.
  7. Gaspar Correia (1495-1561). Lendas da Índia 1858 edition, Typographia da Academia Real das Sciencias de Lisboa, p. 392
  8. Correia 1858, p. 392.
  9. Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency, Volume 13, Government Central Press, 1882, p.451
  10. Monteiro, 1991, pp.205-209.
  11. Guns for the sultan: military power and the weapons industry in the Ottoman Empire, Gábor Ágoston, page 194, 2005
  12. Monteiro (1991), p.205
  13. Frederick Charles Denvers: The Portuguese in India, W.H. Allen & Company, 1894, p. 401.
  14. Monteiro (1991), p.205
  15. Monteiro, 1991, p.209
  16. Pearson, Michael Naylor (1976). Merchants and Rulers in Gujarat: The Response to the Portuguese in the Sixteenth Century. University of California Press, pg. 76

20.71°N 70.98°E / 20.71; 70.98


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