Conflict between William Leyel and Bernt Pessart | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Pessart loyalist | Leyel loyalist Dutch Coromandel English Madras Portuguese Carical Supported by: Thanjavur Nayak | ||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Bernt Pessart † Jacob Stackenborg Niels Andersen Frantz Erkmand Michel Evertsen Peter de Sivart Marten Jansen | Willem Leyel Claus Rytter Herman Clausen Jørgen Hansen Anthony Diemen Francis Day Antonio Pacheco Vijaya Raghava Nayak | ||||||||
Units involved | |||||||||
Dend gode Haab Dansborg garrison Den store Charluppe | Valby Christianshavn Christian | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
~51 1 ship 1 barge Multiple guns | 70 men 3 ships 1 longboat 3 guns | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
1 ship Unknown amount of men | Negligible |
The Conflict between William Leyel and Bernt Pessart (Danish; Conflikten mellem Leyel og Pessart) refers to the tensions and minor civil war between Willem Leyel and Bernt Pessart over the governorship of Tranquebar and the Danish East India Company. The conflict led to the escape of Bernt Pessart, and the command at Tranquebar accepted Willem Leyel as governor of Danish India.
During the Age of Exploration various European nations sought to establish themselves in the Indian subcontinent to expand commerce and trade. [1] Christian IV of Denmark (r 1588–1648) sought to expand Denmark's international presence and economy and subsequently established the Danish East India Company in 1616. [2] [3] In 1618, on the basis of an un-ratified treaty with Senarat of Kandy, Ove Gjedde was sent to India to establish a monopol on Ceylon. [4]
Senerat did no longer desire the Danish monopol when Gjedde arrived. [4] Instead Gjedde succeeded in signing a treaty with the nayak of the Thanjavurian kingdom, which by an annual tribute gave the Danes the right to the small fishing village of Tharangambadi. [5]
During the 1620s and 30's trade flourished, and a far-flung string of Danish factories and outposts were established in Bengal, the Coromandel Coast and Sunda Islands. [6] Though in the late 1630s and early 40's the company would start to owe large debts, and in response governor Bernt Pessart unsuccessfully made numerous risky voyages to make money. [1] Pessart would ignore the Danish company's most profitable contacts such as Tanjore and Makassar, and even Tranquebar which fell into chaos. [7] [8] [9] Pessart would, in favour of Tranquebar, reside in Bandar which were the center of trade in plain cotton goods. [6] [10] Here Pessart would become involved in diamond trade. [1]
Because of the situation in India, Christian IV sent captain Willem Leyel to Dansborg to investigate the company's affairs. [11] [12] [13] Leyel arrived on 5 September 1643 in Dansborg. [6] [11] [13] Here he fulfilled his royal orders and investigated Tranquebar; He noticed heavy damage to Fort Dansborg and found the warehouse empty. [6] Pessart explained that Danborg was no longer of much use, and that the warehouse was emptied to load off two ships that were sent to the Sunda Islands. [6]
When Pessart informed Leyel that he was going to Bandar, Leyel opted to join because he distrusted Pessart's intentions. [6] [10] When leaving Tranquebar, distrusted Leyel put a couple of men loyal to him on each of Pessart's ships and left others at Dansborg. [6] [11]
When at sea Pessart insisted to visit the English station at Madras, where he had accounts to settle with Francis Day. [11] Here they stayed in four days, until Leyel got impatient and gave orders to sail. [6] When Pessart heard they were about to weight anchor he was obligated to get on board, yet was furious at Leyel's decision. [11] [10] On 25 September they reached Bandar, [13] Leyel was pained to hear about the debts and credits of the Danish Company in the town. [6] Leyel and Pessart then continued to Emeldy. [11] Here on 10 October Pessart tried to get the vessel, The Bengali Prize nearer to shore so it could unload, yet it ran aground and was badly damaged. [6] [11] Pessart carelessly put up a tent and began to drink
One night several men secretly came to Leyel and told him that Pessart was planning to take Valby and sail off with his men. [6] In response on 28 October Leyel sent Jørgen Hansen with eight unarmed men over to Valby where they went on board and cut the cable. [6] [11] This move was a minor risk; If Pessart had found out what was happening, he might have came out of his tent with his 20 armed men and a fight might have occurred, which Leyel wished to avoid. [6] [11]
With the intent to arrest Pessart, Leyel went ashore and advanced on Pessart's tent with a party of armed men. [11] [10] Yet when they entered the tent, they found out that Pessart had already fled with 16 men. [10] Leyel found out, that Pessart not only had intentions to seize Valby but also to set Leyel's ship, Christianshavn, on fire. [6] [11]
Leyel immediately sent off Jørgen Hansen with a longboat and a strongly armed crew to try overtake Pessart's barge. [11] Hansen did overtake Pessart during the night and shouted to Pessart that he must return and declare his arrest, to which Pessart shouted that he would rather die. [6] [11] Hansen now gave orders to fire on Pessart's barge, yet the heavy sea made it hard to aim properly. [6] Hansen pursued Pessart all the way to the Pedapulivarru reef, where he would give up because of Pessart's readiness to fight. [11] Pessart would continue down to Dansborg. [6] [10] [13]
Leyel and his men would stay at Emeldy during monsoon, while Pessart would reach the Santhome and later Dansborg. [6] [11] Leyel reached Fort St. George in early April and received a warm reception by Francis Day.Fort St. George. [11] On June 11, 1644, Leyel, with Christianshavn and Valby, reached Dansborg, [13] yet the city showed no sign of life. [6] [10] Unsure of the situation, Leyel sent letters to the commander at Dansborg, Jacob von Stackenborg, and chaplain, Niels Andersen with no response. [11] Leyel suspected that Pessart had odered to close to fort to Leyel and his men, and therefore Leyel wrote in one of his letters:
You may be sure that i will use even the most extreme measures, as is meet and proper, and to perform which i shall not lack the means ... To punish rebels and perjurers, as both the Dutch and the English have promised me every assistance; still, i hope that it will not prove necessary to resort to such extreme measures. [6]
— Willem Leyel
After some time Leyel was still denied access to Tranquebar, and was therefore in need of fresh provisions, so he left for Karaikal, [13] where he would sent Portuguese Antonio Pacheco to Dansborg for negotiations. [11] [10] Pacheco was not well received in Dansborg, and when Leyel again anchored near Dansborg, Pacheco would successfully try to sail out to him, though under fire from Dansborg. [6] [11]
Since Dansborg was still seald off, Leyel went ashore on June 22 with 70 armed men and two guns. [6] [11] He was received well by the local inhabitants and the Thanjavur Nayak kingdom, who feed his soldiers and offered to help. [6] The siege lasted for some time. Finally the commander, Frantz Erkmand came out and admitted that there now was a shortage of almost everything in Dansborg. [10] Erkmand would surrender on the terms that he would be pardoned, which Leyel accepted. [6] [10]
Leyel now inspected the town and fort to which he concluded that it had been left by Pessart in poor conditions. [6] As response to the poor conditions and
conflict with Pessart, he summoned a coincil meeting which ended in the recognition of Leyel as the new governor. [11] [10]
Meanwhile, Pessart had left for Japan, [13] though he was intercepted by the Dutch of the Malacca Strait. [11] [13] Pessart would be imprisoned for 6 month, after which he would be sent on a joint Dano-Dutch expedition to the Spanish Philippines. [10] When Leyel got word of this, he quickly notified the Spanish governor. [6] [11] Though this would be unnecessary, since Pessart would be killed by a native Filipino near the Bay of Manila. [6] [13]
Leyel would now focus on the damages left by Pessart on the Danish Company. [6] He would sent annual voyages to the Danish outposts in Bantam and Makassar, and would actively privateer against the Mughal Empire. [11] [1] [10]
Tharangambadi, formerly Tranquebar, is a town in the Mayiladuthurai district of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu on the Coromandel Coast. It lies 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) north of Karaikal, near the mouth of a distributary named Uppanar of the Kaveri River. Tranquebar was established on 19 November 1620 as the first Danish trading post in India. King Christian IV had sent his envoy Ove Gjedde who established contact with Raghunatha Nayak of Tanjore. An annual tribute was paid by the Danes to the Rajah of Tanjore until the colony of Tranquebar was sold to the British East India Company in 1845.
The Danish East India Company refers to two separate Danish-Norwegian chartered companies. The first company operated between 1616 and 1650. The second company existed between 1670 and 1729, however, in 1730 it was re-founded as the Asiatic Company.
Danish India was the name given to the forts and factories of Denmark in the Indian subcontinent, forming part of the Danish overseas colonies. Denmark–Norway held colonial possessions in India for more than 200 years, including the town of Tharangambadi in present-day Tamil Nadu state, Serampore in present-day West Bengal, and the Nicobar Islands, currently part of India's union territory of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The Danish and Norwegian presence in India was of little significance to the major European powers as they presented neither a military nor a mercantile threat. Dano-Norwegian ventures in India, as elsewhere, were typically undercapitalized and never able to dominate or monopolize trade routes in the same way that British, French, and Portuguese ventures could.
The Cattle War also commonly referred to as the Perumal War or the Perumal Naik-War was a colonial conflict between the Danish East India Company and the Thanjavur Maratha kingdom over the Danish governor Hans Georg Krog's expansionistic foreign policy. The conflict started over the raiding of Danish cattle by the local supervisor of a small land district, Perumal Naik.
The Capture of The Bengali Prize, or the Seizure of The Bengali Prize, was a Danish capture and seizure of a larger Bengali vessel in late 1642 in the Bay of Bengal. The capture is known to be the first confrontation of the Dano-Mughal War, after the formal declaration of war.
The Siege of Dansborg or the Siege of Fort Dansborg, was a short siege lasting from 20 to 30 December 1644, between general Tiagepule of Thanjavur and the Danish command at Fort Dansborg. The conflict started over the Danish rejection of the general's demand to tax Tranquebar, and as a result, a series of confrontations followed. The confrontations had no major result, and an armistice may have been signed.
The Siege of Dansborg alternatively the Siege of Fort Dansborg sometimes also referred to as Willem Leyel's siege of Dansborg, was a siege initiated by traveler and seafarer, Willem Leyel, against the men loyal to governor Bernt Pessart. The siege was concluded after the men at Dansborg opened the gates for Willem Leyel, surrendered, and accepted Leyel as the new governor.
The Siege of Dansborg or the Siege of Fort Dansborg, was a siege of the newly finished Danish fort of Dansborg in Trangebar in 1624. The siege was initiated by the nayak of Thanjavur, Raghunatha, because of the Danish rejection of the demands from the nayak. The Siege, laid by general Calicut, was abandoned after the arrival of Danish reinforcements from sea. The event is mostly described by Icelander, Jón Ólafsson, in his work The Life of the Icelander Jón Ólafsson, Traveller to India.
Roland Crappé's raids on Portuguese colonies refers to a series of raids by Dutchman in Danish service, Roland Crappé, on Portuguese Ceylon and India. The raids were partially unsuccessful, in that Crappé's ship, Øresund, caught fire and sank.
Willem Leyel or Willum Leyel was a Danish governor of Tranquebar and captain in the Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy.
The Skirmish at the Strait of Malacca was a skirmish in 1644 between the claimed governor of Tranquebar, Bernt Pessart, and the local authorities of Dutch Malacca. The confrontation led to the imprisonment or death of all of Pessart's crew and the confiscation of the vessel, Dend gode Haab. Although Pessart and his crew would later be released and cooperate with the Dutch to spy on the Spanish in Manila.
The Ambush near the Bay of Manila, alternatively the Death of Bernt Pessart, was an ambush by the Indigenous peoples of the Philippines, against a combined Dano-Dutch espionaging expeditionary force in 1645. The ambush led to the death of former governor and president of Danish India, Bernt Pessart.
The Sieges of Tranquebar or the War between Tranquebar and Thanjavur refers to the warfare between the Thanjavur Nayak kingdom and Danish Tranquebar between 1655 – 1669. The Thanjavurian sieges were repelled, mainly due to the new fortifications being built around Tranquebar, and a peace agreement was issued in 1669.
The Capture of St. Michael or the Seizure of St. Michael, was a Danish seizure of a Bengali ship in the Bay of Bengal. The Danes captured the Bengali ship and the vessel was subsequently incorporated into the Danish Navy given the name St. Michael.
Roland Crappé or Roelant Crappé was a Dutch colonial official serving the Dutch and Danish East India Company. He became director general of the Ceylonese department of the Danish East India Company in 1618 and became commander in chief and governor of Tranquebar upon his seventh arrival in the Indies in 1624. During his leadership, new factories and offices were established and Danish trade went exceptionally well. He died in 1644 only a few years after his homecoming to Denmark.
The Tranquebar Rebellion also known as the TranquebarMutiny was a bloodless mutiny and uprising against the governor of Tranquebar, Willem Leyel, at Tranquebar in 1648. The mutineers succeeded in arresting Leyel, and he would be replaced by the leader of the rebellion, Paul Hansen Korsør.
Bernt Pessart, Berndt Pessart or Berent Pessart was a Dutch overhoved and self-proclaimed President of Danish India from 1636 to 1643. In his earlier years, he would serve the Dutch East India Company in Bantam, and in September 1636 he would land in Danish Tranquebar on the St. Jacob. Here he would serve the Danish East India Company until his deposure in 1643. His claim to being governor of Tranquebar, would lead to a confrontation known as the 1644 Skirmish at the Strait of Malacca with the local authorities of and end with the capture of Pessart and his crew. He again would serve the Dutch East India Company by espionage on the Spanish Philippines. He would die in June 1645 by an ambush of local natives near Manila.
The Tranquebar Treaty of 1620 formally the Treaty between Raghunatha Nayak and Christian IV, was a treaty of friendship between the Thanjavur Nayak kingdom and Denmark–Norway in 1620. The treaty would establish Danish Tranquebar: a base that would be the headquarters of Danish India for the next 200 years.
The Dano-Carical Conflict was a small-scale conflict between the Danes at Tranquebar and the Portuguese at Carical (Karaikal). The conflict includes three smaller naval engagements, which eventually led to a four-hour-long imprisonment of Danish Captain Simon Jansen.
Willem Leyel's war on Golconda, or simply the Dano-Golconda War, was a brief privateering war between Sultanate of Golkonda and the Danish East India Company led by Willem Leyel. The hostilities quickly resulted in a peace treaty and the two parties would soon reconcile.