Siege of Salvador (1638)
Siege during the Dutch-Portuguese War and Eighty Years' War
12°58′S 38°30′W / 12.967°S 38.500°W / -12.967; -38.500Spain
Dutch Republic
Luís Barbalho
Johan van der Mast[3]
30[2] or 45[4] ships
30 captured[2]
Large amount of abandoned military equipment[6]
- v
- t
- e
Dutch–Portuguese War
- Europe
- Cape St. Vincent
- The Downs
- 1st Salvador
- 2nd Salvador
- 3rd Salvador
- 1st Recife
- Mata Redonda
- Abrolhos
- Porto Calvo
- 4th Salvador
- Itamaracá
- Paraíba
- Tabocas
- Casa Forte
- Tamanare
- 1st Guararapes
- 2nd Guararapes
- 2nd Recife
- Africa
- 1st Mozambique
- 2nd Mozambique
- 1st Elmina
- 2nd Elmina
- 1st Luanda
- Kombi
- 2nd Luanda
- Asia
- Bantam
- Amboina
- 1st Malacca
- Changi
- Cape Rachado
- Macau
- Persian Gulf
- Hormuz
- Jambi
- Goa
- Mormugão
- Galle
- 2nd Malacca
- 1st Colombo
- 2nd Colombo
- Malabar
The siege of Salvador was a siege that took place between April and May 1638, during the Dutch–Portuguese War and Eighty Years' War. The governor of the Dutch colony in Brazil, John Maurice, Prince of Nassau-Siegen, commanding the army of the Dutch West India Company, with vastly superior forces and a supporting fleet under Johan van der Mast, put the city of Salvador under siege. The Portuguese and Spanish defenders, commanded by Giovanni di San Felice, Count of Bagnolo, and Luís Barbalho, managed to resist the Dutch attacks until they gave up taking the city and withdrew with several casualties.[7]
See also
References
- ^ Queiroz, Padre Fernão de, Vida do Venerável Irmão Pedro de Basto, Oficina de Miguel Deslandes, Lisboa, 1689, p. 315
- ^ a b c d Guedes, Max Justo, História Naval Brasileira, Ibrasa, Rio de Janeiro, Segundo Volume, Tomo IA, 1986, p.488
- ^ a b Dorato, Hernâni, Dicionário das Batalhas Brasileiras, Ministério da Marinha, Rio de Janeiro, Segundo Volume, Tomo IA, 1990, p.228
- ^ a b Marley 2008, p. 193.
- ^ Fernández Duro, Cesáreo (1898). Armada española desde la unión de los reinos de Castilla y Aragón (in Spanish). Vol. IV. Madrid, España: Instituto de Historia y Cultura Naval.
- ^ a b Marley 2008, p. 194.
- ^ Marley 2008, pp. 193–194.
Sources
- Marley, David (2008). Wars of the Americas: A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the New World, 1492 to the Present (2 ed.). Santa Barbara, USA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-100-8.