Portuguese Asilah

Last updated
Portuguese Arzila
Arzila Portuguesa (Portuguese)
أزيلا البرتغالية (Arabic)
1471–1550
1577–1589
Flag of Portugal (1578).svg
Braun Asilah HAAB.jpg
Portuguese Arzila depicted in Civitates Orbis Terrarum, 1593.
StatusTerritory of the Portuguese Empire
Capital Arzila
Religion
Roman Catholicism
Sunni Islam (Majority)
Government Colonial administration
King  
 1471–1477 (first)
Afonso V
 1580–1589 (last)
Philip I
Captain  
 1471–1479 (first)
Henrique de Meneses
 1580–1589 (last)
Vasco Fernandes Homem
Historical era Early modern period
1471
 First siege of Asilah
1508
 Restored to Morocco
1550
 Captured by Sebastian I
1577
 Restored to Morocco
1589
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Blank.png Wattasid Sultanate
Saadi Sultanate Blank.png
Today part of Morocco

Portuguese Asilah (Portuguese : Arzila Portuguesa) covers the period of Portuguese rule over Asilah, today a city in Morocco. The territory was ruled by the Kingdom of Portugal from 1471 to 1550 and again between 1577 and 1589.

Contents

History

The Portuguese assault of Asilah in 1471, depicted in one of the Pastrana Tapestries. Assault on Asilah.jpg
The Portuguese assault of Asilah in 1471, depicted in one of the Pastrana Tapestries.

In 1471 the Portuguese captured Asilah. [1] The Portuguese were commanded by King Afonso V personally, at the head of an army that numbered 30,000 men and 400 vessels of various sizes. [2] The episode is illustrated in the Pastrana Tapestries.

The Count of Viana do Alentejo Dom Henrique de Meneses was appointed first captain of Asilah. He was killed in action by the Moroccans in 1480.

During the tenure of captain Álvaro de Faria, in 1488, the Count of Borba Dom Vasco Coutinho distinguished himself in combat ahead of 70 horsemen against the qaid of Ksar el-Kebir, whom he personally fought and captured, despite having been ambushed. [3] The qaid was later ransomed in exchange for 15 000 gold dobras, 15 Christian  ( POW )s, 20 horses, 18 hostages, the qaids suit of chain mail and a truce. He was later further rewarded by king John II, who promoted him to the post of captain of Asilah in 1490. [4]

Like Portuguese Tangier, Portuguese Asilah received Spanish Jewish families after 1490, after they had fled from Spain into Portugal. The city was then governed by the Count of Borba Dom Vasco Coutinho, who granted asylum to many. Many Jews sought baptism out of fear of the Muslims, while others stuck to Judaism or moved to Portugal later. [5]

Dom Vasco was recalled to Portugal to stand trial in 1495, and his nephew Dom Rodrigo Coutinho briefly replaced him as captain until he was killed later that year in a skirmish against the qaids of Chefchaouen and Tetouan. He was replaced by João de Meneses until being replaced by Dom Vasco who returned still in 1495.

A temporary truce was agreed upon with the Sultan of Fez, and while peace lasted, the villages in the vicinity of Asilah developed and cattle could be raised in safety. The governor of Asilah, Count of Borba Dom Vasco Coutinho earned the respect of both Christians and Muslims alike as a fair governor, hence in 1498 he was selected by King Manuel of Portugal to negotiate with the Sultan of Fez Abu Abd Allah al-Sheikh Muhammad ibn Yahya an extension of the truce. [6] Talks however floundered, because Dom Vasco was outraged at the envoy the Sultan had selected and insulted him as inept. [7]

In 1505, Dom Vasco Coutinho succeeded his brother-in-law Dom João de Meneses as captain of Asilah for a second term. In 1507 Meneses would lead a flotilla of three caravels to recon the harbours of Azemmour, Mamora, Salé and Larache accompanied by Duarte D'Armas, who produced sketches in preparation for future attacks. [8] The following year, Dom João de Meneses led a force of 2400 men and caravels against Azemmour though he failed to capture the city upon landing and fighting its garrison on land. [9] [8]

First siege of Asilah 1508

Aware of the attack being prepared against Azemmour, the Sultan of Fez Abu Abd Allah al-Burtuqali Muhammad ibn Muhammad gathered an army to defend Azemmour and siege Asilah so as to pressure the Portuguese. [10] Dom Vasco got word of the impending siege, and dispatched requests for reinforcements to the Portuguese fortresses of Ceuta, Portuguese Tangier and Alcácer-Ceguer.

The city was besieged by the Sultan of Fez on October 15, 1508. [11] [12] He commanded a large army and was accompanied by the qaid of Chefchaouen Ali ibn Musa ibn Rashid Al-Alam ("Barraxe" in Portuguese) and the qaid of Tétouan Cid Al-Mandri II ("Almandarim" in Portuguese). As almost all the guns in the fortress were inactive, the Moroccoans managed to breach into the city on the second day of the siege, wound captain Dom Vasco with an arrow and force the Portuguese to seek refuge in to the citadel. [11]

The first of Dom João de Meneses' ships arrived on October 17 by midnight but most of it only arrived the following day by mid-day, but after gathering a war-council with the forts officer, landed only on Thursday on Dom Vascos requests. [11] Dom Vascos son-in-law Dom João Mascarenhas landed with a force of 300 men, who managed to secure a beachhead for the landing of further reinforcements. [11] The Portuguese were assisted by Castillians, who dispatched a number of reinforcements to their aid aboard galleys. [11] Warned of the heavy siege on Asilah, King Manuel I moved to Tavira in the southernmost Portuguese region of Algarve, to oversee the organization of reinforcements more closely, while many residents of Algarve volunteered to sail out in the aid of the beleaguered fortress. [11] Seeing no way to overcome Portuguese defences and gradually accosted by an increasing number of Portuguese attacks on his camp, the Sultan of Fez lifted the siege and withdrew with his army. [11]

Second siege of Asilah 1509

After the Sultan of Fez had lifted the siege of Asilah, captain Dom Vasco Coutinho conducted a raid where he succeeded in capturing 30 POWs and numerous cattle from hostile Moroccan towns and cities in the vicinity of Asilah. [13] The qaids of Alcácer Quibir, Jazém, Larache, Tetouan, e Chefchaouen retaliated against Asilah, but failed in causing damage. [13] Outraged at the scope of Portuguese action, the Sultan of Fez decided to lay siege to Asilah once more. [13] As Dom Vasco informed King Manuel of the impending attack, he was provided with numerous reinforcements, and the Sultan was forced to withdraw shortly after arrived. [13]

Development of the defenses of Asilah

The Portuguese walls of Arzila. Assilah 12.jpg
The Portuguese walls of Arzila.

The Portuguese built a stronghold, which was expanded and strengthened from 1509 onwards, with designs by Diogo de Boitaca, who rebuilt the citadel and the wall of its port, combining traditional architectural elements such as the keep and a sea-wall, with more modern ones, such as the bastions with embrasures.

Among the most spectacular bastions and towers standing as representatives of the Portuguese stronghold are the Borj al-Bahr and the Borj al-Kamra. The first was built between 1508 and 1516, stretched out to sea and was used to track the arrival and departure of supplies and reinforcements by ship. The second, dubbed Torre de Menagem in Portuguese was the main tower of the stronghold, and it marks the medina of Asilah with its imposing appearance. Built in 1509 and reproduced on a very famous engraving of Assilah in the 16th century, it featured a double-pitched roof and turrets at the four corners. These architectural features refer to the style of Portuguese military architecture. This tower ensured a public function and more ceremonial than military, conveying the image of power. It is a remnant of the Portuguese governor's residence, which was built over the location of the Moroccan governor's palace in medieval Asilah.

Later history

In 1515, Asilah was experiencing a great scarcity of cattle, and its captain Dom João Coutinho (son of Dom Vasco Coutinho) conducted a raid a village in the vicinity of Ksar el-Kebir the Portuguese identified as "Tintais", having departed by night with no more than 250 horse from the garrison of Asilah and successfully captured the villages cattle. On the way back, they found that heavy rains had swollen the previously dry rivers so much that the water flowed over the bridges and the trees on the banks. [14] Yet as the garrison of Ksar el Kebir presumed the Portuguese would not have undertaken such a daring raid without the support of the garrison of Portuguese Tangier, they failed to pursue, giving the Portuguese time to cross the rivers and return to Asilah safely. [15]

In 1520 Manuel I of Portugal opened a royal feitoria (trade post) in Arzila, for whose defense a coast-guard fleet called "Squadron of the Strait" was created. The feitoria was provided with cloths, silks, headwear like caps, as well as lacquer, fine embroideries, semi-precious stones and spices which were highly sought after by Moroccan and Jewish merchants; Francisco Ribeiro was appointed as its first feitor, Tomé Pires as clerk, João Queimado as provedor and a branch was opened in Fez, the feitor of which was Francisco Gonçalves. [16] In just a few years, the city became an important commercial and strategic hub on the Saharan gold route.

Starvation befell all of Morocco in 1521, causing a scarcity of foodstuffs in Asilah (and an abundance of slaves, sold into captivity by their family members). The captain of the city Dom João Coutinho successfully raided the region of Ksar el-Kebir, and though pursued by the forces of the qaid of that city he managed to return with 48 POWs and 2000 animals, with which Asilah was restocked. [17]

Plague however befell Asilah in 1522. [18] Captain Dom João Coutinho took various measures meant to keep the city free from pestilence, such as turning back merchant caravans, forbidding raids, arresting anyone who challenged these rules, and forcing people to wash their clothes, however plague nevertheless broke out in January 12. In February the captain evacuated his family and 500 people on a caravel to Tavira, in Portugal. [18] At its height in March, 20 to 25 people died a day, until it subsided in June 24, day of the feast of Saint John. [18] The captain hosted a feast with the remaining inhabitants, and the evacuees returned in September. [18]

In April 1523, Dom João Coutinho travelled to Portugal to attend the funeral of his father, the previous captain of Asilah Dom Vasco Coutinho, and left behind Dom Manuel de Meneses in his place. [19] Dom Manuel was however killed in a skirmish shortly after taking office. [19] Fearing for the safety of the stronghold, the alcaide-mor of Castro Marim and anadel-mor of crossbowmen Garcia de Melo sailed there in person with 600 men, among other volunteers from Portugal and Spain. [19] Melo was however unpopular, and the residents elected the contador Fernão Caldeira as interim captain until Dom João returned. [19]

Arzila was also the birthplace of the warrior "Mulei Amade", who started by fighting the Portuguese, then defected to their side and served under their command in Portuguese India and the Far East.

In April 1529, the Sultan of Fez Abu al-Abbas Ahmad ibn Muhammad attempted to siege Asilah in 1529 unsuccessfully, and destroyed the crops around Asilah for four days. In retaliation the then captain of Asilah António da Silveira set fire the crops of the Moroccans in the region of Ksar el-Kebir between May and June, which caused great damage to the region as the weather conditions were dry and windy. [20] Silveira was succeeded by Dom João Coutinho in October that year.

With the support of King John III, Coutinho signed a truce with qaid of Chefchaouen Muley Ibrahim on behalf of the Sultan of Fez Abu al-Abbas Ahmad ibn Muhammad, by a river the Portuguese identified as Rio Doce. The truce was not respected, and although captain Dom João Coutinho renewed them in 1538, the qaids of Chefchaouen, Tetouan and Ksar el-Kebir persisted in raiding Asilah, until the Sultan of Fez considered truces officially null and void in 1543. [21]

Dom Francisco Coutinho. Francisco Coutinho vice-rei.jpg
Dom Francisco Coutinho.

On January 20, 1548, the captain of Asilah Dom Francisco Coutinho together with the captain of Portuguese Tangier Francisco Botelho raided the fields of "Alexarife" beyond Ksar el-Kebir, capturing more than 500 cattle and numerous POWs; upon trying to raid the region of Ksar el Kebir later that year, they were engaged by 400 horse and 1000 foot under the qaid of that city, however the Portuguese routed them killing over a hundred, and forced the remainder to seek refuge within the settlement. [22] That same year, the qaids of Ksar el-Kebir, Tetouan and Chefchaouen together attempted to raid the fields around Asilah with a combined force of 2500 horse, however captain Dom Francisco Coutinho sallied out at the head of the garrison and put them to flight. [23]

After Mohammed al-Shaykh unified Morocco, the captain of Asilah Dom Francisco Coutinho reported to King John III that the sultan, his princes and many qaids were assembling an army to siege Asilah and other Portuguese strongholds. Fearing that the defenses of the city would be inadequate to resist the onslaught, King John III ordered Dom Francisco to speak to the inhabitants, register their belonging and oversee their evacuation to Tangier by sea, returning then to Portugal, while his successor Luís de Loureiro would stay behind with the soldiers and the frontiersmen to evacuate the objects, the artillery and demolish the church of São Bartolomeu as well as the Franciscan monastery. [24]

The city was later recaptured by King Sebastian in 1577. Portugal kept hold of the town until Philip I of Portugal returned Arzila to Ahmad al-Mansur. The Moroccans briefly regained control of Asilah, but then lost it to the Spanish. [25]

List of captains

TenureIncumbentNotes
1471–1479Henrique de Meneses
1480–1481Lopo Dias de Azevedo
1482–1486João de Meneses
1486–1488Álvaro de Faria
1488–1495Vasco Coutinho, Count of RedondoFirst term. Interim to 1490.
1495Rodrigo Coutinho
1495João de MenesesFirst term. Interim.
1495–1501Vasco Coutinho, Count of RedondoSecond term.
1501–1502João Coutinho, Count of RedondoFirst term. Interim.
1502–1505João de MenesesSecond term. Interim.
1505–1508Vasco Coutinho, Count of RedondoThird term.
1508                Jorge Barreto
1508–1513Vasco Coutinho, Count of RedondoFourth term.
1513João Coutinho, Count of RedondoSecond term. Interim.
1513–1514Vasco Coutinho, Count of RedondoFifth term.
1514–1523João Coutinho, Count of RedondoThird term. Interim.
1523Manuel de MenesesInterim.
1523Fernão CaldeiraInterim.
1523–1525João Coutinho, Count of RedondoFourth term. Interim.
1525–Oct 1529António da SilveiraSubstitute.
1529–1538João Coutinho, Count of RedondoFifth term. Interim.
1538–1544Manuel Mascarenhas
1544–1546Sebastião de Vargas
1546–1549Francisco Coutinho, Count of Redondo
1549–Aug 1550Luís de Loureiro
Aug 1550–1577 Moroccan rule
1577–1578Duarte de Meneses
1578Pedro de Mesquita
1578–1580Pedro de Silva
1580–1589Vasco Fernandes Homem

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Portuguese conquest of Ceuta</span> 1415 conflict between Portugal and Marinid Morocco

The Portuguese conquest of Ceuta took place on 21 August 1415, involving the forces under the command of King John I of Portugal and the Marinid sultanate of Morocco. The city fell under Portuguese control after a carefully prepared attack, and the successful capture of the city marked the beginning of the Portuguese Empire.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Alcácer Quibir</span> 1578 battle in Morocco

The Battle of Alcácer Quibir was fought in northern Morocco, near the town of Ksar-el-Kebir and Larache, on 4 August 1578.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ferdinand the Holy Prince</span> Master of Aviz

Ferdinand the Holy Prince, sometimes called the "Saint Prince" or the "Constant Prince", was an infante of the Kingdom of Portugal. He was the youngest of the "Illustrious Generation" of 15th-century Portuguese princes of the House of Aviz, and served as lay administrator of the Knightly Order of Aviz.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Haketia</span> Romance language

Haketia is an endangered Jewish Romance language also known as Djudeo Spañol, Ladino Occidental, or Western Judaeo-Spanish. It was historically spoken by the North African Sephardim in the Moroccan cities of Tétouan, Tangier, Asilah, Larache, Chefchaouen, Ksar el-Kebir, and the Spanish towns of Ceuta and Melilla. Tetuani Ladino was also spoken in Oran, Algeria. One of the distinctions between Ladino and Haketia (Haquetia) is that the latter incorporates Arabic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Postage stamps and postal history of Morocco</span>

The postal history of Morocco is complex due to the country's political development in the 20th century. Mail was sent via post offices operated by the Sherifian post created by the Sultan, and by the European powers. After Morocco was partitioned into protectorates of France and of Spain in 1912, both European administrations established postal services in their respective zones.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Duarte de Menezes</span> Portuguese nobleman

Dom Duarte de Menezes, was a 16th-century Portuguese nobleman and colonial officer, governor of Tangier from 1508 to 1521 and 1536 to 1539, and governor of Portuguese India from 1522 to 1524.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts</span> Conflicts between Morocco and Portugal

Moroccan–Portuguese conflicts refer to a series of battles between Morocco and Portugal throughout history including Battle of Tangier, Fall of Agadir and other battles and sieges in the Moroccan coast.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Morocco–Portugal relations</span> Bilateral relations

Morocco–Portugal relations cover a period of several centuries largely historic, and to present not particularly substantial relations. Initial contacts started in the 8th century, when Muslim forces invaded most of the territory of the Iberian peninsula. After the Reconquista, Portugal would then expand into Africa, starting with the territory of Morocco, by invading cities and establishing fortified outposts along the Moroccan coast.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Conquest of Asilah</span>

The Portuguese conquest of Asilah in modern Morocco from the Wattasids took place on 24 August 1471.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ksar es-Seghir</span> Town in Tanger-Tetouan-Al Hoceima, Morocco

Ksar es-Seghir, also known by numerous other spellings and names, is a small town on the Mediterranean coast in the Jebala region of northwest Morocco, between Tangier and Ceuta, on the right bank of the river of the same name. Administratively, it belongs to Fahs-Anjra Province and the region of Tanger-Tetouan-Al Hoceima. By the census of 2004, it had a population of 10,995 inhabitants.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pedro de Meneses, 1st Count of Vila Real</span> Portuguese nobleman

Pedro de Menezes Portocarrero, was a 15th-century Portuguese nobleman and military figure. Pedro de Menezes was the 2nd Count of Viana do Alentejo, 1st. Count of Vila Real and the first Portuguese governor of Ceuta.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Duarte de Meneses, 3rd Count of Viana</span> Portuguese nobleman

Dom Duarte de Menezes, was a 15th-century Portuguese nobleman and military figure. Duarte de Menezes was the 3rd Count of Viana do Alentejo, 2nd Count of Viana, Lord of Caminha and the first Portuguese captain of Alcácer-Ceguer.

The battle of Tangier, sometimes referred to as the siege of Tangiers and, by the Portuguese, as the disaster of Tangier, refers to the attempt by a Portuguese expeditionary force to seize the Moroccan citadel of Tangier and its defeat by the armies of the Marinid Sultanate, in 1437.

Jaysh al-Rifi, described in 18th-century correspondence with the British as 'the Army of all the People of the Rif', was the name of an influential Moroccan army corps in the 17th and the 18th centuries. The army was formed by Moulay Ismail out of Riffian tribesmen from the eastern Rif. Their rise coincided with the formation of the Black Guard, also by Moulay Ismail. They came to play an important role in the 17th century Moroccan wars against Spanish colonization. Cities like Tangier, Ksar el-Kebir, Mehdya, Asilah were reconquered by the Jaysh al-Rifi. One of its generals was Ali bin Abdallah al-Riffi, a native of Temsamane, who became governor of Tangier, Asilah and Tetouan. His descendants, the al-Rifi family, would govern those towns and most of the Gharb with a large degree of autonomy until 1912.

Count of Redondo was a Portuguese title of nobility created by a royal decree, in 1481, by King Manuel I of Portugal, and granted to D. Vasco Coutinho, the son of Fernando Coutinho, Marshall of Portugal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Portuguese Tangier</span> Former territory of the Kingdom of Portugal

Portuguese Tangier covers the period of Portuguese rule over Tangier, today a city in Morocco. The territory was ruled by the Kingdom of Portugal from 1471 to 1661.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">European enclaves in North Africa before 1830</span>

The European enclaves in North Africa were towns, fortifications and trading posts on the Mediterranean and Atlantic coasts of western North Africa, obtained by various European powers in the period before they had the military capacity to occupy the interior. The earliest of these were established in the 11th century CE by the Italian Kingdom of Sicily and Maritime republics; Spain and Portugal were the main European powers involved; both France and, briefly, England also had a presence. Most of these enclaves had been evacuated by the late 18th century, and today only the Spanish possessions of Ceuta, Melilla, and the Plazas de soberanía remain.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Mamora (1515)</span>

The Battle of Mamora was a military engagement between the Wattasid Moroccans and the Portuguese army who landed in Mamora. The Wattasids were victorious, and the Portuguese were decisively defeated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Portuguese conquest of Ksar es-Seghir</span>

The Portuguese conquest of Ksar es-Seghir in modern Morocco from the Marinid dynasty took place between 23 and 24 October 1458 by Portuguese forces under the command of King Afonso V, surnamed the African.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Targa expedition (1490)</span> Part of Moroccan-Portuguese conflicts

The Portuguese Targa expedition took place in 1490 when a Portuguese fleet commanded by Dom Fernando de Meneses plundered the town of Targa, a known pirate haven in Morocco. On the same occasion, Dom Fernando sacked the Moroccan mountain town of Comice.

References

  1. Elbl (2013) , p.  10 .
  2. Jeremy Black, Cambridge illustrated atlas, warfare: Renaissance to revolution, 1492-1792 (1996) p.18
  3. Rodrigues, 1915, p.138.
  4. Damião Antonio de Lemos Faria e Castro: Historia geral de Portugal, e suas conquistas. Typografia Rollandiana, Lisbon, 1787 edition, tome VIII, p.138
  5. José Alberto Rodrigues da Silva Tavim: Os judeus na expansão portuguesa em Marrocos durante o século XVI: origens e actividades duma comunidade, Edições APPACDM Distrital de Braga, 1997, p. 86.
  6. Bernardo Rodrigues : Anais de Arzila, crónica inédita do século XVI, Tomo I (1508-1525). Academia das Sciências de Lisboa. Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra, 1915, p. 102-104
  7. Anais de Arzila, ibidem, p. 106.
  8. 1 2 Bernardo Rodrigues: Anais de Arzila, crónica inédita do século XVI, publicada por ordem da academia das sciências de Lisboa, e sob a direcção de David Lopes, sócio efectivo da mesma academia. Coimbra — Imprensa da Universidade — 1919. p. 9 - 19
  9. Pedro de Mariz : Diálogos de Vária História. Officina de António de Mariz. Coimbra 1598
  10. David Lopes: História de Arzila. Ibidem, p. 127-146
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 David Lopes: História de Arzila. p. 127-146
  12. Jorge Correia: Muralha e Castelo, Assilah [Arzila], Norte de África, Marrocos, Arquitetura militar in hpip.org.
  13. 1 2 3 4 David Lopes: História de Arzila. Ibidem, p. 116-121
  14. Rodrigues, 1915, p.141.
  15. David Lopes: História de Arzila durante o domínio português (1471-1550 e 1577-1589), Imprensa da Universidade, 1924, p. 192.
  16. Lope, 1924. p. 204-211.
  17. Lopes, História de Arzila, 1924, p. 235-243
  18. 1 2 3 4 Lopes, 1924, p. 243-250.
  19. 1 2 3 4 Lopes, 1924, p. 250-262
  20. Bernardo Rodrigues: Anais de Arzila, crónica inédita do século XVI, Academia das Sciências de Lisboa. Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra, 1915, volume II p. 128
  21. Lopes, História de Arzila, 1924, p. 383.
  22. Lopes, 1924, p. 386
  23. Lopes, 1924, p.387
  24. Lopes, 1924, p.423-424
  25. Paula Hardy; Mara Vorhees; Heidi Edsall (2005). Morocco . Lonely Planet. pp.  121–122. ISBN   978-1-74059-678-7.