Cessa o Nevoeiro: O Surgir do Quinto Império - A Portuguese Timeline

Index
  • Before anything else, greetings to you reader and fellow history lover. For a few years I have been reading alternate timelines mostly about my country Portugal and I decided to give it a go at writing an alternate timeline of my own.

    I have experimented with many scenarios until I settled on this one: a rather unknown Portuguese Infante named Duarte, Duke of Guimarães, cousin to the more famous King Sebastião who died two years before him, who could have inherited Portugal after his cousin’s death and thus prevent many troubles that the Iberian Union brought had he married, produced children of his own and lived a while longer. This timeline explores a scenario in which these three little things could do to a country and the world.

    Some considerations about the timeline:
    • Information about Duarte and his life is very hard to come across and even though I used everything I could find of him I took many creative liberties to explain his life hopefully without committing too many inaccuracies. Creative liberties will be taken every time I have little information on individuals, territories, etc.
    • I know about the butterfly theory but for the sake of keeping myself on a track I can follow, the changes start at a small pace first and small geography but with the years, more places will be affected until the world is so changed that it doesn’t resemble our own but a similar one where similarities can be found. In other words, do not expect different marriages, wars, revolts, etc. right off the bat just because Duarte got married and had children.
    • What is currently written in the Threadmarks is subject to changes as the story progresses to make it hopefully better. These changes are not meant to destroy the core of the update so the ideas it transmits will remain the same.
    • The Portuguese language I'm using is a modified one for the TL so for those of you who know Portuguese, I'm writing it wrong on purpose. Given names, Country names, City names will be in this TL's Portuguese so you will see Izabel I da Inglaterra rather than Elizabeth I of England or Isabel I da Inglaterra.

    This is my first timeline so it’s all clumsy still but I’m doing my best to learn what is there to learn. So far it has helped improve my knowledge by a lot but I hope to increase it further. All the help will be much appreciated and hopefully, everything remains a believable scenario. Without further ado, let the timeline begin!

    All the rules in Portuguese are the same. Here are the main changes with the IPA providing the European Portuguese pronunciation:
    1) /s/ is always represented by the letter s. As in Castillian and Galician, ss and ç were abolished but the TL's Portuguese went further and abolished ce and ci as well. Examples:
    Sara>Sara /ˈsa.ɾɐ/
    Vanessa>Vanesa /vɐˈnɛ.sɐ/
    França>Fransa /ˈfɾɐ̃.sɐ/
    Céu>Séu /ˈsɛw/
    Francisco>Fransisco /fɾɐ̃ˈsiʃ.ku/

    2) /z/ is always represented by the letter z. The letters s and x no longer have that phoneme. Pre 1911 Portuguese had this rule in many words, in this TL it was not abolished and went further. Examples:
    Casa>Caza /ˈka.zɐ/
    Exemplo>Ezemplo /iˈzẽ.plu/

    3) /ʒ/ is always represented by the letter j. ge and gi no longer have that phoneme. Ge and gi were abolished. Examples:
    Tânger>Tânjer /ˈtɐ̃.ʒɛɾ/
    Gibão>Jibão /ʒiˈbɐ̃w̃/

    4) /k/ is written with a c before a, o, u and with a qu before e and i as in OTL.
    Cama /ˈkɐ.mɐ/
    Queijo /ˈkɐj.ʒu/
    Quilo /ˈki.lu/
    Comida /kuˈmi.dɐ/
    Cumaná /kumɐna/

    5) The letter x either represents /ʃ/ an in ship or /ks/ depending on the situation. This is like OTL except the x no longer has /s/ or /z/ values.

    6) ch represents /ʃ/ in most of the country hence why many Portuguese in this TL want it to be replaced by an x but in Northern Portugal it represents /tʃ/ so it remains controversial. This is like OTL.

    7) rr remains with the /ʁ/ in the middle of the word because the r assumes a different phoneme /ɾ/. This is like OTL.

    8) ês and is are replaced by êz and íz. This is a sort of mix between Pre 1911 Portuguese (ez an iz) and Post 1911 Portuguese (ês and is).
    Português>Portuguêz /puɾ.tuˈɡ/
    Quis>Quíz /ˈk/

    9) New digraphs were added to the language to translate foreign languages if needed. These are:
    ts /ts/ Catsumoto (Katsumoto)
    tx /tʃ/ Txéquia (Chéquia [EP] or Tchéquia [BP]
    dj /dʒ/ Tadjíquia (Tajiquistão) but most often ends up translated as a normal j (Tajíquia)
    xh /x/ Xhersão (Kherson) but most often ends up translated as normal h (Hersão)

    1. The Beginning
    2. King Duarte II "O Popular"/"The Popular" [1580-1595]
    3. King João IV "O Prudente"/"The Prudent" [1595-1628]
    4. King Filipe I "O Pompozo"/"The Pompous" [1628-x]
     
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    King João III and the Portuguese Succession Line
  • King João III and the Portuguese Succession Line
    João III e a Linha de Susesão Portugueza

    The birth of Prince Sebastião de Portugal on January 20, 1554, made King João III de Portugal a little calmer since the Portuguese crown would not fall to Prince Carlos de Espanha, who was mentally unstable and as such unwanted to become King of Portugal or anything really…

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    João III de Portugal​

    Despite the high number of children that King João had, only his daughter, Princess Maria Manuela and his son Prince João Manuel reached adulthood and produced offspring of their own. The Princess was the mother of the aforementioned Carlos and died after his birth while João Manuel was the father of Sebastião and died from complications of diabetes or tuberculosis 18 days before his son was born.

    King João still had some siblings alive at the time of his grandson’s birth, such as Luíz, Duke of Beja who was 47 years old and showed no interest in getting married (he did, however, have a bastard son named António who was destined to an ecclesiastical career). In addition to Luíz, there was also Cardinal-Infante Henrique, Archbishop of Évora who in theory would not produce descendants in accordance to his vows of chastity and finally the educated Maria, Duchess of Vizeu, who was a woman and only half-sister to the King and whose marriage was very unlikely since her dowry would have to be very large. [1]

    In addition to those mentioned, there were also three nephews of the King, the children of the late Duarte, Duke of Guimarães [1] who were: 15 years old Maria de Guimarães, 14 years old Catarina Guimarães and 12 years old Duarte, the current Duke of Guimarães.

    Although the birth of Prince Sebastião saved the Portuguese crown from falling into the hands of Espanha, the threat continued to hover around. This was due to the actions of Queen Catarina, wife of João III, who was a Castilian Habsburgo and did not forget her origins. Having the highest competencies in politics, the Queen was given a lot of power when making decisions by her husband. It was her the one who led the Portuguese foreign policy in all but name, aligning it with that of her brother, the powerful Carlos V do Sacro Império [Holy Roman Empire] and Espanha, and it was also she who dictated the matrimonial policies of the Aviz, being the architect of the marriages of her deceased children, all to Spanish Habsburgos.

    It should also be noted that many Portuguese nobles welcomed the union with the neighbouring country since it would likely bring them the most varied advantages such as access to the Spanish American markets with all the advantages that it brought to Portugal and of course, the enormous amount of silver that Espanha received from its colonies.

    However, there were opponents to the excessively pro-Castilian policy that the Queen pursued, of which Cardinal Henrique stood out. The Cardinal preferred a cautious alignment with Espanha that would allow an independent foreign and domestic policy as opposed to a complete submission that would make the neighbouring country control Portugal in every aspect. But since the Queen had a profound influence on her husband and Infante Luíz was disinterested in the situation, the Cardinal and his faction had many difficulties in enforcing their ideas and intentions.

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    Queen Catarina and Cardinal Henrique​


    [1] King Manuel I de Portugal married three times, firstly to Izabel de Aragão e Castela [Isabella of Aragon and Castille] to whom he had a son called Miguel da Paz who did not live long. His second marriage was to Izabel's sister Maria da Aragão e Castela [Maria of Aragon and Castille] with whom he had ten children which included King João III, Luíz de Beja, Cardinal Henrique and Duarte of Guimarães, all mentioned in this post and one final time to Leonor da Áustria [Eleonor of Austria] which bore him Maria, Duchess of Vizeu also mentioned.
     
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    An Infant's Wedding
  • An Infant's Wedding
    O Cazamento de um Infante

    Young Duarte de Guimarães was born on March 18 in 1541 at Almeirim. [1] His parents were Duarte, 4th Duke of Guimarães and Izabel de Bragansa. By his father, he was the grandson of King Manuel I de Portugal and by his mother, he was the grandson of Jaime, 4th Duke of Bragansa. Posthumous, he inherited his father’s titles at birth: the Duchy of Guimarães with the income from that town along with those from Vila do Conde, Aguiar (a Parish in Barselos [Barcelos]), Pena (a Parish in Vila Real, Castelo de Vide and other lordships in Entre-Douro-e-Minho and Traz-os-Montes, in northern Portugal, to which the income of the Priory of Santa Cruz in the area of Coimbra was added much to the dismay of the monks there.

    His mother Izabel acted as his Regent for nearly 14 years and went out of her way to provide him and her daughters with the best education she could, counting on the support of her eloquent brother, Teodózio I, the current Duke of Bragansa, to do so. From his uncle who acted as a father figure, Duarte emulated several personality traits over the years and at 12, when his cousin Sebastião was born, he was an educated, cultured, handsome, gallant, curious, popular and capable young man, just as his uncle.


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    Izabel e Teodózio I de Bragansa , Duarte's mother and uncle​

    After his cousin's birth, Duarte accompanied, together with his sisters, his mother, his uncle Teodózio and the Duke’s children to Lisboa for the baptism of the newborn Prince. During his stay at the capital, Duarte made an excellent impression on his paternal uncles and the court in general, who were delighted with the young Infante. During the ceremonies, there was an approach between Cardinal Henrique and the Duke of Bragansa as they both shared several points of view regarding the future of the country, especially in what they believed should be Portuguese foreign policy. Both tried to bring young Duarte into their schemes.

    Teodózio’s intentions regarding this alliance were not very clear. The most likely hypothesis was that the Duke wanted to maintain and increase his influence in Portugal where the Bragansas were the most powerful and influential noble family and as such they could follow their own policies because the Aviz did not prevent them from doing so. If they were to fall into the sphere of the Habsburgos, they would not only have more powerful monarchs as their lieges, but they would also have more competition for influence in the monarch because Espanha had quite powerful noble families such as the Dukes of Medina-Sidónia or Alba. Perhaps he really did share the same ideals as the Cardinal without any second intention at all. What is noteworthy is that both went into considerable efforts into moulding young Duarte and as he matured and gained his own discernment, he did so along the same lines as the two mentioned uncles wished.

    When Infante Luíz died on November 27, 1555, it was the Cardinal who suggested his young nephew to the post of Condestável [Constable] de Portugal, despite the fact that Duarte had reached his majority just a few months earlier and criticism from Teodózio who wanted the position for himself. King João did decide to appoint young Duarte to the position. Nominated to an extremely important position which also increased his income to levels similar to those of the Duke of Aveiro, Duarte started to frequent Lisboa more often and as he did so, he progressively got deeper into his uncle, the Cardinal’s circle, expressing his opinion on the most diverse matters to the King and acting as a mediator between the Cardinal and the Duke of Bragansa, ensuring that they did not stray too far from each other. Nevertheless, he developed friendships with the other courtiers and tried his luck with the Queen who did not dislike his presence at the time. The young Duke had become one of the most influential nobles in Portugal despite being only 14 years old.

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    Duke Duarte de Guimarães as the Condestável of Portugal​

    Surprising a lot of people, King João decided that he wanted his nephew to marry a foreign princess in order to improve Portugal’s external relations. The Cardinal and to a lesser extent the Duke of Bragansa had been behind such a decision, suggesting to the King, who for a long time had been showing interest in further remodelling the Portuguese fortresses in North Africa, which were increasingly threatened by the Moroccans, that a wedding of an Infante could bring a considerable amount of money for the intended objective. [2]

    However, there were not many viable options for such a marriage. Initially, João thought of the daughters of his brother-in-law Fernando I da Boémia e Hungria, brother of the mighty Carlos V, but since the alliances with the Habsburgos were already more than consolidated and due to the pressure from the Cardinal to search elsewhere, he gave up on the idea and turned around to the Italian Peninsula, land of wealthy families like the Médisis [Medici], the Este and the Savoias. Soon the King became interested in the Médisis whose fortune was known throughout Europe (although the fortune was not that of Cosme [Cosimo] the Elder or Lourenso [Lorenzo] the Magnificent’s times), and the influence they had in the College of Cardinals (João III had long dreamed of seeing his brother Henrique as the Pope). Such reasons led the King to send his Ambassador to the Estados Pontifísios [Papal States], João Gonsalves de Ataíde, 4th Count of Atouguia, to Florensa in order to inquire Duke Cosme I de Florensa, recently ennobled, about a possible marriage between Duarte and one of his daughters.

    In Florensa, Cosme was, according to the chroniclers, surprised by the Portuguese inquiry because he was not really expecting a family as prestigious as the Aviz to seek marriage in that precise branch of his family, the former junior branch of the Médisis. Although Duarte was quite a distant relative of the Portuguese Monarch, the support and prestige that the marriage could give to the Médisis was vast, but above all, it would legitimize Cosme’s government and would also allow the Florentine to get closer to the Emperor in order to obtain more benefits and safeguards regarding his lands, as the Aviz and Habsburgos were deeply connected by family ties.

    For these reasons, the aforementioned Florentine Duke responded positively to the Portuguese King’s proposal. There was no opposition from Carlos V against the wedding or from Duarte himself, who saw his future being decided without almost having a saying. The young Portuguese Duke also agreed with his uncle the King to exchange the dowry for a considerable number of lordships that once belonged to his late uncle Fernando, Duke of Guarda.

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    Duke Cosme I de Florensa [Cosimo da Firenze/Cosimo of Florence]​

    The negotiations for the marriage began and as they progressed, portraits of Cosme’s two youngest daughters arrived in Portugal since the oldest, Maria de Médisis, was already promised to Afonso II de Ferrara and Modena of the Este family. Duarte was given the opportunity to choose one of them and the Duke of Guimarães chose the second oldest Izabel who was closer to his age and in his opinion and of many, more beautiful. The marriage contract was signed in the following year, 1556, the dowry was set at 50 000 Italian Escudos [Scudi] and the consummation was scheduled for 1558 when Izabel was to be 16 years old. Impaired was Paulo Jordão Orsini [Paolo Giordano Orsini] who was engaged to one of the youngest Médisis since 1553 although his contract did not specify which Médisis he was marrying, Izabel was the most likely to become Orsini’s wife yet now he was to marry Lucrésia, the youngest.

    Despite the death of João III on June 11, 1557, the wedding took place on September 3, 1558, by proxy in Florensa, with Duarte being represented by the Count of Atouguia, and on December 4 of that same year, the new couple effectively got married in the Lisboa Cathedral in a ceremony presided by Archbishop Fernando de Vasconselos after Izabel and her entourage arrived in the Portuguese capital. The young Duchess quickly fell in love with her husband, who she found handsome, graceful and courteous.

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    The wedding portrait of Izabel de Médisis [Isabella de Medici], the new Duchess of Guimarães​

    Queen Catarina already acting as Regent for her grandson Sebastião chose not to donate the lordships that her late husband had promised to Duarte, as she judged and well, that eventually, they would be more advantageous for the Duke than Izabel’s dowry, therefore she gave the Duke the entirety of his wife’s dowry. The Queen-Regent was well aware that Duarte was a supporter of her rival, the Cardinal, but preferred not to alienate him and tried to bring him into her own circle countless times.

    [1] Duarte was born in 1541 but the concrete date I could not find so I chose a random one with number generators (as I do with all non-real characters)
    [2] In OTL, Duarte never got married and died childless in 1576, here he marries Izabel and both live longer thanks to it, this is the POD.
     
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    The Integration of the Dukes of Guimarães in the Kingdom and the Regency for King Sebastião
  • The Integration of the Dukes of Guimarães in the Kingdom and the Regency for King Sebastião
    A Integrasão dos Duques de Guimarães no Reino e a Rejênsia de Dom Sebastião I

    Duarte’s popularity remained high after his marriage. As King Sebastião was still a child, it was Duarte who served as a model to be imitated by the young male courtiers of Lisboa. He often surrounded himself with nobles of his age like João de Bragansa, his cousin, with whom he had a great friendship, Álvaro Pires de Távora, Afonso de Noronha, heir to the County of Linhares, among others which whom he spent hours talking about the most diverse subjects and practised various activities such as bullfighting or hunting. However, it was with his wife Izabel that he really preferred to spend time with and made sure to keep her company every night. The Duke admired Izabel’s strong personality but also her intelligence, grace and beauty and wrote her many poems regarding those things (although many courtiers would claim that the Duchess was better at writing them than her husband...especially after she learned Portuguese).

    In addition to the aforementioned personality traits, Izabel was also lively, high-spirited and impulsive and in the Portuguese court, more conservative than her Florentine counterpart, rumours soon began to spread insinuating that she was cheating on her husband with some other young male courtiers who she flirted with. It was true that the Duchess demonstrated this more daring behaviour several times, but she also did it with her husband more often than not and as has already been stated, the Dukes of Guimarães spent a lot of time together and therefore the rumours were just rumours. Rumours that however denigrated Izabel’s integrity and image, as expected. Despite all this, the young Duchess managed to gather around her a group of young Portuguese ladies fascinated by her personality and intelligence that contrasted with the model of the Portuguese woman who was submissive and perhaps excessively pious. Even Queen Catarina liked the Florentine Princess and how enlightened she was and so brought her many times to her salon despite the rumours that circulated.

    Despite liking the Duchess, the couple became so influential at court that they began to seriously concern the Queen Regent mainly because her efforts to bring Duarte into her circle came to nothing. She then tried to manipulate Izabel to do what she could not but the Florentine preferred to not mess with her husband’s loyalties or with politics unless they concerned the Italian Peninsula. Another problem in the making was King Sebastião who as the years passed, began to become jealous of the popularity that his cousin had and made sure to make it very clear, denigrating the Duke whenever he could. However given his young age and the fact that he was the King, little mind was paid to the Monarch’s inappropriate behaviour by most of the courtiers, his educators tried to correct it several times with little avail.

    When Izabel confessed to Duarte, after a year had passed since they became husband and wife, that she missed her homeland, he decided to have a palace inspired by the Florentine villas be built, in the town of Castelo de Vide, which was one of the lordships he owned in Alentejo, southern Portugal whose climate somewhat resembled Toscânia. Delighted by the idea, Izabel wrote to her father and brothers asking them to send Florentine architects for the project that started in 1560.

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    Castelo de Vide in the Present Time​

    The biggest problem with this happy marriage was not the intrigues of the court but the results of Izabel’s many pregnancies. The Duchess first became pregnant by the end of 1559, but had a miscarriage a few months later. The same situation repeated in 1562 and later in 1568 and in 1565, a stillborn boy who received no name was born. Such misfortunes caused a deep feeling of sadness in the couple, Izabel did not seem to have the famous fertility of her late mother Leonor de Toledo, who had 11 children…Several personalities sent their condolences, especially the family members closest to both but despite all the support received, Izabel remained saddened and afraid of being infertile, the fear of any woman of that period.

    In the Portuguese court, rumours against Izabel’s reputation and integrity increased in intensity after the successive failed pregnancies. It was said that Izabel was infertile and that she was being punished by God because she was involved in extramarital relationships, and because of it, she gradually lost followers. Duarte also suffered a similar situation, with the King, his cousin getting closer and closer to the age of majority and with it, more and more jealous. His insults and humiliations got more serious and he was determined to not let his cousin have companions so many of Duarte’s “friends” left him, which saddened the Duke a lot. As a result of losing so many allies, the Dukes were getting even closer to each other even if they had no luck with childbearing.

    Regarding the political situation of the country during this time, the Regency of Queen Catarina showed weaknesses both internally and externally. But it was mainly the internal ones that weakened her position the most: the great Ducal Houses of Bragansa and Aveiro took advantage of this unstable period to increase their power and influence through a marriage between Teodózio I de Bragansa and Beatriz de Lencastre, niece of the Duke of Aveiro, held in 1559. The wedding was vetoed by Catarina for obvious reasons but the Dukes ignored it completely and for that reason, the Queen Regent expelled them from the court (such exile did not last long, especially because she would later need their support against the Moroccans).

    Because of this marriage, the Queen had her authority undermined and worse still was that the three Ducal Houses (Bragansa, Aveiro and Guimarães) were aligned with Cardinal Henrique who continued to exercise his influence at court and in the education of the young King, aiming to take control of the Regency that had been denied to him when King João III died. The Queen tried to resign her position of Regency but the court was in favour of her staying and so she continued. This episode may have been a political ploy by Catarina to destabilize the Cardinal who was forced to refuse her resignation.

    However, an unexpected event brought new developments to the Regency. In 1561, Álvaro de Carvalho, who at that time was the Captain of the Portuguese fortress of Mazagão [Al Jadida] located in North Africa, went to Portugal to deal with some private matters, leaving his brother as the acting Captain. Informed of the situation, Sultan Abedalá Algalibe [Abdallah al-Galib] de Marrocos sent his son Maomé Mutavaquil [Abdallah Mohammed] at the head of a large army to seize the Portuguese holding to which he laid siege in 1562. Despite the colossal numerical disadvantage, the Portuguese of Mazagão obtained a major victory against the Moroccans who lifted the siege. This was without receiving almost any support from Lisboa since Teodózio de Bragansa, who the Queen nominated to relieve Mazagão was still preparing his army alongside his nephew Duarte the Condestável. The event would also have a profound influence on King Sebastião who was deeply moved by the tenacity of the Portuguese defenders against such a large infidel army and vowed to help them and Christianity get rid of the enemy.

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    King Sebastião I de Portugal in his teenage years​

    In 1563, Catarina resigned definitively from the position of Regent. It was a controversial exit since it happened after the victory in Mazagão, a victory that she could have capitalized on to reinforce her position and undermine her rival, the Cardinal. Surprisingly, she nominated the Cardinal himself to be the new Regent and it was he who assured the Regency from this date forward, appointing his supporters, essentially members of the low nobility, to the most important government positions. Duarte was named a member of the Council of State by his uncle, and so was Teodózio who did not enjoy the position for too long since he died in that same year. Nevertheless, it seemed that the pro-Castillian faction had finally been defeated.

    Still in 1563, due to the absence of marriage proposals for his sisters, Duarte decided to marry his sister Catarina de Guimarães, 23 years old at the time, to his cousin and friend João de Bragansa. The marriage was intended to reinforce their friendship and keep both Ducal Houses united despite the death of Teodózio. In 1565, an unexpected proposal for the hand of his older sister Maria de Guimarães, then 27 years old came to Duarte. It was from Duke Octávio de Parma, a member of the influential House of Farnese who had intended to marry his only son and heir, Alexandre, to a Médisis or an Este to reinforce his position in the Italian Peninsula, but Filipe II de Espanha prevented such a marriage from taking place and therefore Maria was chosen as an alternative.

    Maria’s wedding, which took place in Bruxelas [Brussels] where Alexandre was, placed the Aviz-Guimarães in a privileged position in the politics of the Italian Peninsula as they became mediators between the Médisis and the Farnese, two very influential families in the College of Cardinals and who often clashed with one another for supremacy in the pontificate. Nevertheless, Duarte was not an excessively powerful nobleman who could threaten Filipe II’s plans for that region and for the rest of Europe, so this growing power did not concern the Spanish monarch who continued to indirectly control Portuguese politics as his father Carlos V had done.

    As an aside, I would like to thank the comments and likes that the timeline got so far. Thank you.
     
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    A King's Crusade
  • A King's Crusade
    A Cruzada d'El-Rei

    Cardinal Henrique’s Regency ceased on January 20, 1568, when Sebastião turned 14 and was declared of age, however, all the councillors of the Cardinal were kept allowing him to keep some influence on the King. A few months later, on the 24th of July, Prince Carlos de Espanha died, ending Filipe II’s schemes of an Iberian Union, yet another victory for the Cardinal’s faction. Duarte de Guimarães was now second in line to the succession behind his uncle the Cardinal. It was curious how the Infante who was so far in the line of succession a few years ago was now so close to the throne, even if Sebastião was expected to produce his own offspring soon.

    The young Portuguese King was educated by the Jezuítas, absorbing their solid humanistic education but also a deep religious fervour that mixed with the spirit and duty of being a warrior, he became a crusader King who intended to completely change the Portuguese imperial strategy. Without fully forgetting Índia and Brazil, King Sebastião’s main goals were North Africa and Jeruzalém. Preparations to intervene in Marrocos began as soon as he came of age in 1568.

    This change in strategy was seen as a national imperative since it intended to free the Portuguese holdings in the region from the constant attacks they suffered but also due to the new opportunities offered to the Portuguese bourgeoisie as they could benefit from the region’s gold, cattle, wheat and sugar trade. In other words, the whole of Portuguese society seemed to support the King’s plans. There were, of course, several prominent voices against it such as the Cardinal and his arch-rival Queen Catarina who curiously joined forces in order to dissuade the young King of his bold plan.

    Pressed by his grandmother and the Cardinal to solve the problem of his marriage and succession, Sebastião called for a Council of State in 1569. There were two factions in the court regarding the matter:
    • The pro-Castilian party led by the Queen-Dowager wanted Sebastião to marry a daughter of Filipe II with a preference for Izabel Clara Eujénia, the eldest;
    • The Nationalist party led by the Cardinal, in which the Dukes were inserted, advocated for Margarida da Fransa [Margaret of France], daughter of the late King Henrique II da Fransa.
    This group had some support from the Santa Sé [Holy See], which was looking for a way to free itself from Filipe’s control and this marriage would be the most appropriate way to do so since it would strengthen Fransa and Portugal which could counterbalance the Habsburgos. This marriage could also resolve the conflicts that continued to occur in Brazil between the Portuguese and the French. However, the young Portuguese Monarch was disinterested in both potential candidates (as he was most likely homosexual) but he was also quite adamant in criticizing the House of Valuá [Valois]’s stance towards Protestantism which he considered to be too lenient. Therefore, no decision was made due to the King’s stubbornness.

    Sebastião continued to be jealous of his cousin and now he began encouraging the rumours regarding Izabel’s infidelity and infertility in hopes of further denigrating Duarte, it had become some sort of unreasonable personal vendetta of the King by now. The lively and impulsive Duchess, however, responded in the same fashion to the King in regard to his sexual preferences which made her be reprimanded, especially by the Queen-Dowager which rose tensions in court. On the advice of the Cardinal, a worried Duarte took Izabel to Castelo de Vide, before the tension could escalate further, to debut the new villa that was mostly complete by then.

    Nicknamed Palácio Ducal de Castelo de Vide, the villa was a sizeable mansion modelled after the Villa di Castello, which was the Médisis’s favourite residence on the outskirts of Florensa. It had extensive gardens in the Florentine fashion, a private chapel, a field of vineyards and fruit trees as well as an extensive park designed as the family’s recreation playground. It was a costly endeavour but it provided peace for the couple, certainly a welcome sight after a whole decade of rumours and intrigues in Lisboa.

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    Palácio Ducal de Castelo de Vide​

    The new palace also brought a different sort of happiness, on April 4, 1570, Izabel gave birth to a healthy girl who was called Leonor Izabel, a combination of the names of the girl’s grandmothers and of her mother. She was baptized in Évora by Archbishop João de Melo e Castro, a friend of the Cardinal, having as her godfather her uncle, João I de Bragansa and as godmothers her two aunts Maria de Guimarães and Catarina de Guimarães. The birth and baptism were undoubtedly happy moments for the Dukes.

    Two years later, on June 7, 1572, a new child was born, this time a male child baptized as João Duarte in honour of the late King João III, who propelled the Dukes’ marriage but also because the boy was born on exactly the same day that the late King had been. He also honored his father and grandfather who were both named Duarte. He, too, was baptized by the same Archbishop and had his grandfather Cosme I da Toscânia as his godfather and as godmothers, he had Duchess Maria de Vizeu and the Dowager-Queen Catarina who was rather emotional during the baptism because it kept reminding her of her late husband whom she had loved dearly.

    Despite the bad relationship between Sebastião and Duarte, the King summoned him and his cousin João de Bragansa to accompany him on the first royal visit to North Africa since the reign of Afonso V the African. It happened in 1574 and the date was not random: the Ottomans had retaken Tunis from the Spanish in that very same year, thus controlling all of North Africa with the exception of Marrocos. This was a clear threat to Portugal and the rest of Europe as they were very close to acquiring ports in the Atlantic to attack cities like Lisboa, Sevilha, and Londres amongst others. The reason for the aforementioned trip to the Portuguese holdings that caused so much shock in the Kingdom would be to investigate the local situation and initiate plans to fight the Turks in accordance with the King’s ideology.

    Both Dukes organized small armies for the occasion, leaving their wives to rule over their respective possessions. In Tânjer [Tangier], the three made a foray into the outskirts of the city against some Moroccans who were harassing the city, and they were successful. Sebastião became even more confident in pursuing his daring plan, Duarte quickly warned that the achieved victory was simple because the opponent was barely above a group of bandits more concerned with looting rather than fighting and anything should be decided with concrete planning, pointing out Espanha's failures at Mostaganém (1558) and Jerba [Djerba] (1560). The King did not like his cousin’s advice and openly called him a pessimistic and a coward. The two of them would have another discussion when Sebastião appointed their bastard cousin António as Capitão-Geral de Tânjer, the same António who should be pursuing an ecclesiastical career and instead was fathering illegitimate children with commoners. Only the mediation of Bragansa and some other nobles prevented a calamity.

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    António the Prior of Crato​

    The disputes between the King and his cousin continued even after they returned to Portugal, in 1576, the King did not invite Duarte to a royal bullfight in Xabregas, near the capital, which left the Duke saddened and discouraged. It was Izabel who cheered him up by showing their children who needed a strong father but also urged him to stay away from court life, reportedly stating: "Ignore that envious and jealous Sebastião and his vultures whose opinions do not matter s***." Following his wife’s advice, Duarte travelled to Lisboa and resigned from his position as Councilor of State citing the need of spending time with his children, the King accepted his resignation but also shamefully exonerated him from the post of Condestável for "being a coward and a weakling". The Dukes of Guimarães would no longer leave Alentejo before the planned expedition, spending their time educating their children.

    In that same year of 1576 the opportunity that Sebastião so yearned waited for arrived in the person of Sultan Maomé II Mutavaquil, the same who had laid siege to Mazagão in 1562. He had been deposed by his uncle Abedalmaleque I [Abd Al-Malik] (also referred to as Mulei Maluco by the Portuguese) who was supported by the Ottomans and for that reason, Maomé asked the Portuguese King for help to recover his throne by offering him Arzila, which had been a Portuguese possession years before, in exchange for that same support and Sebastião accepted. The King was advised by the Cardinal, his sick grandmother, his own mother Joana de Espanha and even Filipe II to not commit himself to such a risky venture but the King remained resolute in his decision and dismissed whoever opposed it as he had done with his cousin Duarte. He did not receive any significant support from his uncle Filipe despite the fact that the Portuguese King even proposed marriage to Filipe’s eldest daughter, Izabel Clara Eujénia.

    In the year 1577, Sebastião obtained the necessary funds for the enterprise from the Cristãos-Novos [New Christians], 250 000 Cruzados, in exchange for the suspension for a period of 10 years of the penalty of confiscation of property decreed by the Inquizisão [Inquisition]. The King then asked Duchess Izabel, in a letter, to intercede on his behalf in the Italian courts, especially that of her brother Fransisco I, with the goal of getting more credit and military personnel but the Duchess wrote back that there was no need for the intervention of a woman with her reputation when the King had so many competent diplomats in his service that would handle the situation with great distinction. Sebastião was enraged by Izabel’s boldness but decided to ignore her and focus on his goal. He named the new Condestável in the person of João I de Bragansa in an attempt to isolate his cousin Duarte further.

    For the Moroccan campaign, besides the loan he got from the Cristãos-Novos, Sebastião employed a very significant part of the Portuguese treasury, organizing a huge fleet of 500 ships to transport a large army to Tânjer. This army included 2 000 volunteers from Espanha, 3 000 Germans and Flemish mercenaries as well as 600 Italians initially recruited by Pope Gregório XIII to invade Irlanda [Ireland] but who decided that this expedition would be better.

    The new Ordenansa system introduced by the King in 1570 was put into practice for the first time. The Capitanias [Captaincies] were organized according to the territory of the country, covering the area of a city or a municipality and each had a Capitão-Mor [Captain-Major] commanding them. Each Capitania was divided into several Companhias [Companies] of 250 men commanded by a Capitão who was assisted by a variety of lower patents. For the Africa campaign, 8 companies would form a Terso or Tercio (as the Spanish called them). This system provided a fast mobilization of men but perhaps due to its newness, the approximately 18 000 men assembled were mostly poorly disciplined, ill-prepared, inexperienced and with little cohesion. The elite of the army was made up of Aventureiros [Adventurers], that is, Portuguese veterans of the wars in Africa and the Far East, and the already mentioned foreign mercenaries.

    Violent fevers forced the Duke of Bragansa to not partake in the campaign and many nobles including the Duke himself suggested the King appoint Duarte as a replacement since he had military experience but the King refused such a notion because his cousin was a “coward and a fool” and did not even summon him for the expedition to make his point clear. Sebastião left Lisboa on June 25, 1578, even after his dying grandmother Catarina begged him not to. He was convinced that this was call.

    The army landed in Tânjer, where Maomé II was waiting for him, they followed by land to Arzila and from there they moved to Larache. Some preferred to travel by sea since it would allow the troops to rest more and have the necessary replenishment of food and water, notions rejected by the King thirsting for a great and quick victory. The entire army thought it would be a walk in the park, a victory ceremony of sorts rather than a battle.

    Abedalmaleque I tried several times to negotiate with Sebastião, offering him several holdings in North Africa, but the Portuguese King refused them all. The most experienced of his army, such as Duarte de Menezes, the Capitão-Mor of Tânjer at the time and Maomé advised him to wait for Abedalmaleque to die (he had been poisoned and was very close to dying) but Sebastião refused it as well much to the despair of those who were advising him. The Portuguese continued their way into Alcáser Quibir [Ksar-el-Kebir], where they found Abedalmaleque’s army, far superior to the Portuguese in number and definitely not too far in technology and equipment. The Moroccan forces had the clear intention of surrounding the Portuguese and butchering them.

    1582917201156.png
    The Battle of Alcáser Quibir​

    The battle began with an exchange of artillery fire followed by musket shots. The Moorish Cavalry numbering as many as 10 000 horsemen surrounded the Portuguese Tersos and forced them to a clash. Cristóvão de Távora led the Portuguese vanguard of Aventureiros with great success which began turning the battle around forcing the weakened Abedalmaleque to mount his horse to go on his last charge, dying in the effort. His brother Amade Almansor [Ahmad al-Mansur] was clever enough to not let any of their men learn of this lest to break their cohesion. Távora was almost at Moorish camp when he noticed that he was way ahead of the rest of the troops and risking getting cut off from them and thus he retreated back.

    Sebastião had been afraid since he saw the size of his opponent’s army and while seeing his flanks compromised by the numerous Moroccan cavalry and his centre was losing motivation and vigour after seeing Távora retreating, out of a sudden, he regained his composure and accepted his destiny. His life had been a harsh one with some historians believing he was abused as a child by his confessor and preceptor, the Jezuíta Luíz Gonsalves da Câmara who infected him with a sexually transmitted disease and ended up shaping him to prefer men over women, hence why he never married or fathered children. This was also the most likely reason why he felt jealous of his cousin Duarte who was very popular with the male courtiers and felt it necessary to humiliate him.

    Reportedly when they asked him to surrender and live, Sebastião dismissed and said to Duarte de Menezes and some others around him the following: “Gentlemen, real freedom will only be lost with one’s life.” Many of the Portuguese horsemen were exalted by the speech and were conformed with fighting until the end with their King who added the following after some sort of realization: “If any of you makes it alive from this, tell my cousin the Duke of Guimarães that I mistreated him badly and he deserved none of it, the Kingdom is his after my uncle the Cardinal. May they and their descendants as well as Portugal be blessed by God.” Then he made his horse trot forward and finished his speech to his men. “Die, yes, but slowly! Santiago!” The King rode with his men for a final charge with everyone shouting the famous war cry “Santiago!” that while used by all Iberian Nations became associated with the Portuguese in the following century.

    Sebastian still caused havoc in the Moroccan centre but the hesitant Portuguese infantry took too long to do something and failed to capitalize on the King’s move and so the Moroccans had enough time to reorganize and surround the Portuguese army, ending their struggle. The result of the Battle of Alsácer Quibir was a colossal defeat for the Portuguese where the King and the cream of the Nobility perished or were taken prisoner. Only the denigrated Duarte who was not even allowed to participate and the Condestável João de Bragansa were not affected by the heavy defeat. Duke João, however, had sent his 10 years son and heir Teodózio with Sebastião, who enjoyed the child's spirit, and the boy was captured. Of the army of about 23 000 men, those who did not flee were either killed or captured.

    Besides Sebastião and Abedalmaleque, Maomé II also died in the battle so the Moroccan throne passed to the before-mentioned Amade Almansor I. The new Sultan would benefit immensely from the battle as Marrocos acquired more prestige and wealth from the ransoms entering a Golden Age. Sebastião was untimely successful in his objective as Marrocos did not fall into the hands of the Ottomans but in the short term, it was a heavy blow to Portugal’s international prestige and finances. And without a King as well...

    Once again thank you for all the comments and ideas. There is only one post to end the Introduction or Part 1 of the TL and yes I'm aware that it's quite a big introduction with little changes besides Duarte's marriage to Isabella but from now on things will face more changes.
     
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    The Consequences of Alcáser Quibir
  • The Consequences of Alcáser Quibir
    As Consequênsias de Alcáser Quibir

    After the disastrous Battle of Alsácer Quibir, the body of King Sebastião was presented to Duarte de Menezes and other nobles who recognized him and mourned him. Word of the King’s death was sent to Portugal and since the country could not remain without a King, a new one had to be crowned.

    Since Sebastião had no descendants of his own and there were no more living descendants of João III, one had to go back to the other children of Manuel I to find a King. From these, only Cardinal Henrique was still alive and since he was a male (men were preferred over females) he was the one crowned King of Portugal, being acclaimed in the Church of the Hospital Real de Todos os Santos [Royal Hospital of All Saints] in Lisboa, without major celebrations since the nation was mourning the defeat in Marrocos. It was up to him to ransom the many captives of the battles, draining even further the Portuguese treasury, having to resort to selling jewellery to find the necessary money and even then it was not enough. The Crown was pretty much bankrupt.

    Sebastião’s body was thus brought to Faro by boat and taken by land to Lisboa with an escort of eight Portuguese nobles including Duarte de Menezes who was adjoined by Duarte of Guimarães and João I of Bragansa, where it was buried in the Jerónimos Monastery. Some claimed the body was not the King’s and that he was still alive and for decades the Portuguese Kings had to swear they would return the Kingdom to Sebastião if he was still alive to reclaim his throne but of course, it did not happen and by the second half of the 17th Century this practice stopped. There were, however, plenty of individuals claiming to be the deceased King until at least 1650.

    Alcáser Quibir brought new developments to the Dukes of Guimarães since Cardinal-King Henrique had no descendants of his own, his successor would need to be found amongst the living grandchildren of Manuel. The lines of the Infantes Afonso and Fernando were extinct, Luíz had, as previously mentioned, an illegitimate son in António the Prior of Crato but as a bastard, he could not inherit the throne before the legitimate descendants of Manuel. The heir was found in the children of the late Duke Duarte (Duarte II of Guimarães and his offspring, Catarina de Guimarães and her offspring and the late Maria de Guimarães who died in 1577 but had offspring of her own), the youngest of Manuel’s children. Therefore it would be from this male line that the Cardinal-King would find his successor.

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    Cardinal-King Henrique I de Portugal​


    Linha 1.png
    Simplified Portuguese Succession Line​

    Duarte of Guimarães was, therefore, the one with the strongest claim for the succession among all pretenders: He was the closest male relative to Cardinal-King and the late King Manuel, through only the male line and was also Portuguese. He could also invoke the right of representation of his father to further solidify his claim. Furthermore, the last speech of Sebastião, whose veracity is contested by some historians, also nominated him as the heir to the Cardinal-King and Duarte de Menezes was very adamant about defending this.

    The Duke of Guimarães had a meeting with his cousin João de Bragansa after the funeral of Sebastião and secured the House of Bragansa's support but not without making concessions and helping in ransoming young Teodózio from the Moroccans. Duarte then called his wife to meet him in Lisboa but before she did as she was told, Izabel wrote to her brothers Fransisco and Fernando asking for financial support to save the captives and to intercede with Pope Gregório XIII for the recognition of her husband as the legal heir to the Portuguese throne. She did not obtain a lot of money as her brother Fransisco, the Grand Duke of Toscânia did not want to incur the fury of the Hapsburgos as he was married to one and was dependent on them, which greatly irritated Izabel since her brother was mostly throwing the opportunity of having another Médisis Queen. In contrast, she received more positive news from her brother Fernando who was a Cardinal and assured her that he would do everything he could to convince the Pope in recognizing Duarte as the King.

    The Cardinal-King after being crowned ordered the dismissal and later imprisonment of the bad servants of his great-nephew who caused in his understanding the military disaster, the depletion of the Crown’s treasury, the bad legislation and a possible dynastic crisis. He also accused them of encouraging the King to denigrate Duke Duarte and his virtuous wife as a way to end the stigma around them and facilitate their ascension to the throne. He restored many of his allies, which Sebastião had dismissed due to differences of opinion regarding the Moroccan campaign, to the main court positions.

    The Cardinal-King then received his nephew and the Duke of Bragansa and quickly appointed them State Councilors. Despite Duarte asserting his rights and the friendship they both shared, Henrique was still considering asking for a papal exemption to contract marriage and father a child. The Cardinal-King was 66 years old in 1578 and was already sick therefore the probability of producing offspring was very low so all the advisers, especially the more “nationalistic” ones, advised him to appoint his nephew as Prince of Portugal before Filipe II de Espanha could make any political move that could threaten Portugal’s independence and so the Cardinal-King did as advised.

    Speaking of Filipe II, he too was a pretender to the succession of the Cardinal-King, supporting his claim on the fact that he was a grandson of Manuel I and nephew of Henrique just like Duarte, his problem was that it came through the female line instead of the male line, was a foreigner and Duarte’s claim was effectively stronger. Despite this problem, several Spanish jurists and even some Portuguese tried to assert the pretension of the most powerful man in Europe at the time through the birthright, since Isabella of Portugal, Filipe’s mother, was older than Duarte’s father.

    1583081783805.png
    King Filipe II de Espanha​

    Besides Filipe there was also António who now claiming to be a legitimate son of the late Duke of Beja, stating that his father Luíz had secretly married his mother Violante Gomes, which if proven true would make him the rightful heir of the Crown even ahead of Henrique. There were other pretenders but they did not press their claims from either being too far in the line of succession or from pressure from Filipe II. Finally, despite the opposition of several Portuguese nobles already bribed by Filipe II, the Cardinal-King appointed Duarte as his legitimate heir and Prince of Portugal on September 17, 1578, summoning the Cortes in Lisboa on October 1 to ratify his decision. Duarte’s campaign to be universally acclaimed began.

    In order to fight the opposition of António, Cardinal-King Henrique did not recognize him as his heir or as a legitimate son of Duke Luíz (the Cardinal had a known animosity with Prior of Crato because the latter had abandoned the ecclesiastical career which he was destined to follow), the Guimarães and the Bragansa did the same. On September 24, the Cardinal-King ended up removing, through a Royal Edict, the nationality and the assets of António, who was expelled from Portugal with the Dukes forcing him to flee by ship due to their pressure. Nevertheless, the Prior of Crato continued his campaign to assert his claim in Fransa, Inglaterra and the Terras Baixas [Netherlands] but with time his support veined completely...

    With António expelled from the country and thanks to Duarte’s popularity, a better claim, propaganda made by heralds, a rising nationalism, promises of better living conditions, as well as the supposed nomination by Sebastião and the effective nomination by the Cardinal-King, the Duke of Guimarães was able to harness the support of the Third State to his cause, one by one, the Municipalities declared their acceptance of Duarte as the Prince of Portugal and the next King. The Clergy submitted with little opposition and only some elements of the nobility openly opposed him. After the official investiture as Prince of Portugal, Duarte promised to uphold the privileges of all nobles that recognized him which eventually started to get him the rest of the nobility to his side.

    At the international level, several diplomatic victories were secured by Duarte, Izabel I da Inglaterra was the first Monarch to recognize the Cardinal-King’s choice, not wishing to see an Iberian Union arise or lose an important trading partner such as Portugal which would make Espanha, her main rival much stronger. Henrique III da Fransa promptly did the same for the very same reasons. One by one the enemies of Espanha were supporting the Duke of Guimarães’ claim. All doubts seemed to end when, after much effort, Izabel’s brother Fernando de Médisis and a group of other cardinals that included Alexandre Farnese (Cardinal-Protector of Portugal and thus sworn to defend the country's interests), managed to convince Pope Gregório to recognize the Cardinal-King’s choice so as to not let Filipe II further increase his power and thus his influence on the Santa Sé. The jurists of the University of Coimbra and Évora drafted a document to legitimize what happened in those Cortes and began spreading it throughout the country and overseas.

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    Alexandre.png
    Cardinals Fernando and Alexandre, members of two very powerful Italian families, the Médisis and the Farnese​

    In the Spanish court, a possible invasion of Portugal to assert the rights of the Spanish King was considered but Filipe dismissed it quite early on and was more convinced when his cousin Duarte kept accumulating both internal and external recognition which would definitely meant that an invasion would be met with stiff resistance and even if Portugal was conquered, the people would oppose him just as the Dutch were doing. Therefore, he was content with having the means to manipulate Duarte thanks to the ransoms he paid and having his interests represented by the Portuguese nobility and despite his position of weakness, Filipe kept a strong stance and allowed the threat of a Spanish invasion loom around to have his will accepted in Portugal.

    The Cardinal-King remained on the throne after the Cortes of Lisboa, wishing to reign until his death, however, as the months passed, he became more and more ill and chose to abdicate on January 1, 1580, in favour of the nephew and heir Duarte, dying 30 days later in Évora, on January 31, the day he had been born 68 years earlier, with the new King already in power. Duarte was crowned on January 2, 1580, in Lisboa’s Cathedral as Duarte II de Portugal with Izabel de Médisis as his Queen and his children as heirs to the throne and with plenty of cheers throughout the country. The Aviz-Guimarães line was thus founded as some historians proclaim while others believe it's still the same House of Aviz that João I de Portugal founded.

    The Introduction is now finished. I'm afraid updates will become more sporadic now, I'm aiming to have one every week so let's see if I can make it. Thank you as always for all the comments and likes. As a side note...does anyone have knowledge of the Medici Bank after 1494? I have read that despite it ending in 1494 they continue albeit with less impact.
     
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    King Duarte II's Internal Politics and Early Reign
  • King Duarte II: Internal Politics and Early Reign
    (The Eighth Decade of the 16th Century)
    Dom Duarte II: Políticas Internas e Inísio de Reinado
    (A Década de 80 do Século XVI)


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    The slightly altered flag of the Kingdom of Portugal during the 17th Century promoted by Duarte II​

    Relationship with the Nobility and Bureaucratic Reforms:
    The reign of Duarte II began as was already stated on January 2, 1580, when Cardinal-King Henrique still lived. The Cortes of Lisboa of 1578 formally legitimized him and his children as the legitimate rulers of Portugal upon ascending to the throne. The first measure of the new King was to confirm his friend and cousin, João I de Bragansa, as Condestável de Portugal so he could begin counting how many men they had available in case of war and to reorganize the tarnished Army. He also confirmed the titles and privileges of all the nobles who accepted him as King and restored two titles of Counts namely the Count of Tarouca in the person of Duarte de Menezes and the Count of Cantanhede in the person of Álvaro de Menezes, son of one of Sebastião's aids (aios), Aleixo de Menezes who the new King considered a very competent man before his death.

    Those who had not sworn their allegiance had a month to do it before they were branded traitors and expelled from the Kingdom while losing their assets in the process but only half a dozen petty nobles refused to submit and instead kept supporting Philip II’s candidacy so they went to support him to Spain, the most prominent of these was the Countess of Portalege, Filipa da Silva whose husband João da Silva [Juan de Silva] was the Spanish Ambassador in Portugal and could not in good conscience go against his King, Filipe II's interests. Although Duarte submitted the nobility and clergy to his authority, behind the scenes many continued to support the Spanish King by trying to influence Duarte on following a pro-Hapsburgo diplomacy.

    It was also up to Duarte to finish the rescue of many captives who still remained in Marrocos but also some nobles who were “hosted” in Espanha as guests of the Spanish King like Duarte’s nephew Teodózio de Bragansa. In addition to continuing as Constable, Duke João I de Bragansa was allowed the right to appoint his own magistrates in his lands and to institute judicial courts without appellation nor aggravation to King’s judges which reinforced the House of Bragansa's power. The Duke was to be treated as Sua Exselênsia [His Excellence], the title of Condestável would remain in the family for 3 generations and João would also be made Grão-Mestre da Ordem de Cristo [Grand Master of the Order of Christ] until his death. Unfortunately for him, he would die not longer after on February 22, 1583, and was not able to enjoy these privileges for long, being succeeded by his son Teodózio who was still a minor and so Duarte’s sister Catarina became Regent of the Duchy of Bragansa. During this transition, all arrangements, with the exception of leading the Ordem de Cristo, were confirmed by the King.

    Duarte also resolved the succession conflict of the Dukes of Aveiro in 1584, by having the two pretenders, Juliana and Álvaro de Lencastre, who were uncle and niece, marry to keep the family’s holdings and lineage intact and cease hostilities. The title of Duke of Aveiro would be shared by both and be fully inherited by the members of the Lencastre family without the King being able to interfere in the succession unless conflicts like the one he resolved returned. Like the Bragansas they obtained the privilege to be called Sua Exselênsia because both were supportive of Duarte’s cause and descendants of Kings.

    With these measures, Duarte and Izabel managed to exert control over the entire nobility, the Bragansas and the Lencastres were officially in the royal sphere of control with Duchess Juliana ending up becoming one of Queen Izabel’s closest confidants and supporters and young Duke Teodózio II de Bragansa despite showing pro-Castilian tendencies, as a result of his stay in Espanha after Alcáser Quibir, remained faithful to his uncle as well. What one must keep in his mind was that the late Cardinal’s faction now led by the King himself held power in the country as the King kept the same advisers and officers that his uncle Cardinal-King Henrique had nominated and when these died, they replaced with men with similar ideologies.

    Queen Izabel, who had always showcased an enormous aptitude for politics that was common in most of the Médisis, was frequently sought by her husband to provide her opinion and counsel on the most diverse subjects, including delicate state matters and as such, it would only be natural that she was made a Counselor of State thus marking a resemblance to João III’s reign although the foreign policy soon proved to be very different from that late King’s and decisions were made more quickly as well as the dire situation demanded. Nevertheless, the nomination rose many complaints from part of the nobility like the Marquis of Vila Real and a group of counts who could not stand a woman who was also a foreigner above them.

    In 1582 when Portugal’s situation was more stable, King Duarte created the Conselho da Guerra [Council of War] to deal with the business of war. The Council was responsible for:
    • Taking care of the Kingdom’s military affairs, such as the organization of the Army and Navy,
    • Appointing patented officers,
    • Enforcing the job obligations of said officers,
    • Giving service licenses to officers and soldiers in certain circumstances,
    • Building and maintaining fortifications,
    • Supervise the Ordenansas system, making sure it did not get corrupted and was efficient,
    • Ensuring the proper functioning of the workshops and foundries responsible for the manufacture of weapons and ammunition,
    • Formulating operations projects for military expeditions,
    • Apply military justice and discipline.
    Initially, it was composed of only 4 members, among them the Duke of Bragansa and the Duke of Aveiro and was presided by the King himself. Still in the reign of Duarte II, it reached 6 members including the Marquis of Vila Real. All of these counsellors were nobles. The main reason why this council was created was to find a way to help recover the prestige and morale of the defeated Portuguese Army. Some of the earlier decisions included the expansion of King Sebastião’s Lei das Armas [Weapons Laws], forcing all men between 12 and 60 years old to train at least twice a week for a full day to be prepared for any eventual situation (Duarte’s main concerns were a possible Spanish land invasion or a Moroccan attack on the Portuguese fortresses in North Africa).

    The Ordenansas System was also implemented Overseas in order to defend the vast and overstretched Portuguese Empire. Unlike in the metropolis, all Catholic non-whites were included in the Weapons Law and required to serve in the Army if called but a system similar to the Roman foederati or ally system was also incorporated. This allowed for non-Catholics to acquire the rights of the Catholics in the Portuguese possessions if they served in the Army for 10 years. Obviously, few ventured into it because of how long they would need to serve but they still had to serve in the militias if a war was happening though they had less training because their allegiances were deemed dubious (basically they were cannon fodder...).

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    Portuguese Soldiers and Auxiliares in Portuguese Índia, late 16th Century​

    Speaking of Overseas possessions, the new King chose to appoint new officers for the various positions just as his uncle João III had done. The purpose of this measure was to better defend Portuguese Overseas possessions, end possible outbreaks of corruption and ascertain the loyalties of former administrators. In 1584, the Conselho do Ultramar [Council of Overseas] also presided by the King and composed of 4 members was created, one of which was the Queen herself but it also included people who had been Overseas like Duarte de Menezes, the Count of Tarouca. This council took care of all business related to the Portuguese Overseas such as:
    • Proposing to the King the most appropriate policies concerning each colony,
    • Organizing administratively the entire territory under its jurisdiction with Royal Sanction,
    • Proposing the most suitable people for administrative positions and other offices (Justice, Finance, Church and Armed Forces),
    • Ensuring the smooth functioning of the colonial administration, regulating and applying the necessary funds for this purpose in conjunction with the Council of Finances,
    • Equipping the Indian Armadas (Armadas da Índia) with everything necessary for their good navigation,
    • Regulating the flow of passengers to the Overseas possessions (emigrants and traders),
    • Guiding the businesses of war Overseas in alliance with the Council of War,
    • Advising the King on the best way to have the Church’s deliberations enforced,
    • Serving as the highest judicial court to Overseas at least in an initial phase.

    Queen Izabel de Médisis's Role:
    Queen Izabel’s influence and action in Portugal must be highlighted, as she was responsible for several changes in the country. Right after she was crowned, the Queen began a slow process of reforming the court to fit her tastes, first, she brought more Italians mainly from Toscânia to give some new air to the court, new thoughts and ideologies but most importantly people with more open minds and spirit. She and her husband were quick to promote everyone who supported them and succinctly expelled a multitude of people who she considered “unnecessary” and “expensive to the Crown’s finances” (many of these people had spread rumours against her virtue and so it was some sort of revenge on the Queen’s part).

    Such influence of the Queen in the affairs of the Kingdom led to much opposition on degrees to which she had a clear influence but the King did not pay them any mind because he approved Izabel’s help. Many female nobles of older age thought that the King was being manipulated by the Queen into corrupting Portugal with her evil Florentine vices and that it was necessary to save him and the country from this “demon in the shape of a woman”. Obviously, these people would be promptly expelled from the court...

    The Queen expanded the clientele network that she already had as Duchess in order to guarantee supporters for her husband. It was essentially composed of Italians, low-ranking noblemen and some urban aristocrats thirsty for privileges and ascension in life. It also included the so-called “Damas Florentinas” [Florentine Ladies], who were young Portuguese women who mingled with the Queen and other Florentines and were more liberal, emulating the Queen in her more outgoing attitudes and love for arts and dances, they were Izabel’s biggest supporters. Few, however, were able to enter her closest circle, the Queen had learned her lesson when King Sebastião still reigned.

    It was also from Izabel that all negotiations in the Italian Peninsula passed and were made. The fact that she was a Médisis brought her many benefits and contacts in that region that allowed a greater granting of credit for Portuguese travels, especially Genoese, Florentine and Venetian credit, essential for the Portuguese economic recovery. The Queen also took care of the small Médisis Agency in Lisboa, providing credit for carrying out various maritime expeditions. As she was the Queen, debtors could not make schemes to not pay debts so the agency that had little initial capital and just two Tuscans working there quickly increased its coffers and invested more.

    1583514914884.png
    Queen Izabel de Médisis [Isabella di Medici]​

    When Izabel’s younger brother, the ex-Cardinal Fernando ascended to the Florentine throne in 1587 after Fransisco I failed to have a male heir that could outlive him, the Portuguese-Florentine relations got even better. Fernando had supported his sister and her husband’s rights with Pope Gregório XIII and so his relationship with his older sister did not cool off like with Fransisco, therefore the new Grand Duke secured advantageous treaties for Toscânia such as discounts on products that arrived at Lisboa such as brazilwood and spices. He also provided his sister with more capital (coming from the coffers of Toscânia) while guaranteeing part of the profits of the Portuguese Agency for himself which he would invest in improving his realm, especially Florensa. Besides the Médisis. Izabel made deals with Rainúnsio Farnese [Ranuccio Farnese], Duarte’s nephew and regent of Parma while his father was absent in the Terras Baixas [Netherlands] in the same lines as she did with her family, meaning discounts for credit.

    As a Queen who mastered the Portuguese language, she sponsored many artists including females, she made and published some poems of her own written in Portuguese, Italian and Latin. In addition to controlling the Médisis Agency in Lisboa, she was granted the traditional incomes of the Queens of Portugal which she used to found the Academia e Companhia das Artes de Dezenho de Lisboa [Academy and Company of Arts of Design] in 1586, inspired by the Florentine rendition created by her late father Cosme I. It was designed to teach painting, sculpture and architecture to young artists and increase Royal Authority.

    She also made frequent visits to Lisboa and to a lesser extent to other cities where she helped the poor and the sick, something traditional among the Queens of Portugal. In a colossal monetary effort, she took control of all the orphanages in Lisboa where she spent a lot of capital maintaining them but also providing basic education to the children. Many of these children would be sent Overseas as colonists, sailors or soldiers others would remain and become servants of the Paso da Ribeira or other palaces where the Royal family lived. Because of her patronage, the orphanages became known as the "Cazas da Rainha" which were tied to the Mizericórdias [Secular Charity Associations].

    The Royal Children and their Education:
    The children of Duarte and Izabel, João Duarte and Leonor Izabel were educated ever since they were born in a combination of the Italian Renaissance education of the Médisis and the Portuguese Jesuit education of the Aviz to provide the best of both in the children’s upbringing. The governess that the children shared was Maria Luíza de Castro, a lady who had belonged to the household of the Bragansas but was recruited by Duarte for her function. Said lady was Leonor’s main educator in regards to being a good lady and then a Princess. Izabel hired many Tuscan scholars to teach the children such as Mateus Fiorensi [Matteo Fiorensi] who taught them mathematics and science, and Vanozo Baldovineti [Vannozzo Baldovinetti] who taught them several European languages and philosophy. The Cardinal Henrique had provided a friend of his, the Jezuíta Miguel Lopes Couto to teach them history, the Portuguese language, geography and Christianity. Both Duarte and Izabel kept a close eye on every tutor given what happened with Sebastião...

    1583515011742.png
    Queen Izabel with her son Prince João Duarte​

    When their parents were crowned, the children became royals and were now expected to inherit bigger responsibilities and so their education increased in difficulty but as the chroniclers say, they responded well to the challenge. While Princess Leonor was more in line with the Portuguese Jesuit spirit it did not mean that she wasn’t cultured like her mother, far from it, from a young age she wrote her own poems and read the classics, a showcase of her intellect. She also held correspondence with intellectuals all over Europe during her life.

    Prince João Duarte was no different, he was deeply influenced by his Italian tutors and so he showed an open and pragmatic Renaissance spirit. He learned Portuguese, Castilian, Italian and Latin and understood Greek and French, had a great ability to calculate, liked astronomy and history and also had excellent skills in geography. An excellent student in the words of his tutors. In 1588, when he was 16 years of age, he was made Duke of Guimarães by his father with all its lordships and income but also the lordships of Serpa, Moura, Almada and Portalegre, making him richer than the Dukes of Aveiro but slightly less wealthy than the Bragansas.

    Both Leonor and João were introduced from an early age to political issues by attending meetings where the issues dealt with were lighter and less boring. It was also common for the royal couple and their children to spend their summers in Castelo de Vide where they spent as much time together as it was possible, away from the hardships of court, something traditional in the Médisis. Castelo de Vide.
     
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    Duarte II’s Economic Policy
  • Duarte II’s Economic Policy
    Política Económica de Duarte II

    To Duarte II’s reign came some pending debts to Espanha, as Filipe II had paid several ransoms of Portuguese nobles in hopes of getting their support for his claim to the Portuguese throne, debts that had to be paid to reduce the number of possible reasons that Espanha could use to declare war to Portugal. The main problem was that the Portuguese treasury was deeply depleted from Sebastião’s enterprise so a solution had to be found to fill it again and quickly.

    Since this was one of Portugal’s biggest concerns, the King created right in late 1580 the Conselho da Fazenda [Council of Finances] based on the Spanish and Tuscan models which the Cardinal-King Henrique had also been conceiving before his abdication. Through this Council, the administration of the Royal Treasury was centralized as the treasuries of the Kingdom, Índia and África were merged with the Caza dos Contos (which was responsible for inspecting the public accounts) to form it. The functions of this Council were:
    • Controlling and regulating the taxes, fees and public spending,
    • Controlling and regulating the monetary policy,
    • Collecting the revenues coming from the exploitation of overseas resources,
    • In a collective effort with the Conselho do Ultramar [Council of Overseas], it had to provide the necessary funds for an efficient colonial administration and to equip the Armadas da Índia,
    • In a collective effort with the Conselho da Guerra [Council of War], it had to guarantee the funds for the national defence.
    The Council was chaired by the Vedor da Fazenda [Treasurer], 6 counsellors and 6 clerks. The King obviously placed in front of the Council people he trusted to guarantee obedience and loyalty to his person and had to be informed of all opinions taken. Its members were mostly bourgeois, literate people from the universities and the gentry of the low nobility.

    Each counsellor would have a different department, these were:

    1-Department of the Kingdom (Metropolitan Portugal)

    2-Department of the Asores, Madeira and the Military Orders

    3-Department of the Estado da Índio

    4-Department of the Estado do Brazil

    5-Department of Guiné (Sub-Saharan Africa)

    6-Department of North Africa and the Contos

    1584035967879.png
    The Paso da Ribeira, the Main Residence of the Portuguese Royal Family and where all the New Councils were operating​

    The Conselho da Fazenda began working as soon as it was created, an extensive process of reforming and updating the Portuguese tax system in order to recover as much of the Royal Treasury as it was possible, this translated into an increase in the tax burden which stabilized the yearly budget deficit. In 1582, Duarte debased the currency by cutting the value of the Real by 18% and he reintroduced the Cruzado, whose coinage had ceased in 1555, valuing 450 Réis. But it didn't stop there, Duartine economic policies were based on three other key points that did not demand as much burden from the people:

    Firstly, as a result of the Portuguese holdings in North Africa being huge money and population drainers (since they had to be supplied by the sea with all goods), King Duarte proposed in the Council of State, after agreeing with the Conselho da Fazenda’ proposal, to abandon Arzila. This particular holding was poorly defended and very hard to supply given the lack of food and especially water and so the King and Council of Finances found it more prudent and profitable to get rid of it for the time being. The proposal was accepted and Arzila was returned to Sultan Amade Almansor [Ahmad al-Mansur]de Marrocos in 1584 and with it, both parts signed the Paz de Arzila [Peace of Arzila] in which they agreed, not without much dispute on both sides, in a truce between Portugal and Marrocos for a period of 5 years (this truce was renewed many times in the subsequent years) and the impossibility of enslaving and selling the remaining prisoners of war. This truce proved to be essential for the remaining Portuguese holdings in North Africa (Seuta, Tânjer and Mazagão) and for Portugal as well as it allowed the recovery of some economic slack. Nevertheless, it was a short-term solution that would have to be resolved one day more clearly and effectively.

    Secondly, the Cape Route and, consequently, trade with Asia already showed signs of weakness and there was a clear resurgence of the Levantine Routes that had never been totally rendered unfeasible by the Portuguese. Another worrying sign was the Ottoman Navy penetrating further into the Indian Ocean and challenging the Portuguese supremacy in those waters, not to mention the discontent felt by the Sultanatos do Decão [Deccan Sultanates] in India and a handful of other Asian countries that were revolting more frequently against the Portuguese, namely against their often heavy taxes and uncompromising religious policy and fervour. It was necessary to do something to fight this situation lest it reduce the revenues from the region and so the Conselho da Fazenda searched for the best answers it could provide.

    Following what was already being done since the reign of the late King Sebastião, the remaining royal monopolies, with the exception of gold and silver, were abolished to reduce Crown expenses, being replaced with the dízima [tithe] or with quinto real [royal fifth] in accordance with the situation. The Council was adamant about promoting investment from foreign traders mainly from the Italian Peninsula and the Netherlands but also from the Cristãos Novos that still resided in Portugal by intervening in the Inquisition so as not to let them have their properties and wealth confiscated if said Cristão Novos invested in the development and welfare of the country.

    1584036397968.png
    Foreign and Portuguese Merchants in Lisboa​

    The preferable sector of investment for the Conselho da Fazenda was in equipping the Portuguese Armadas as it was here that a huge portion of the Crown’s expenses were. By 1584 the dire need to better control this led to the foundation of the Corporasão das Armadas da Índia [Corporation of the Indian Armadas]. This corporation conceived by the Venetian merchant Rinaldo Bronzino and his followers and inspired by what Veneza and Jénova [Genoa] had been doing for centuries, was intended, as already stated, to administrate the available capital and equip the Portuguese Armadas that sailed to every part of the Empire. The way it worked was that the corporation divided the amount needed to build or equip a ship in 100 equal parts and then they published it between October and December so that investors could provide as much capital as they were willing until February at which point the Crown invested its share, aiming to invest only 25% of the total value of the Armada as to not spend too much and reduce the expenses. In accordance with the amount invested, each investor would be entitled to a corresponding share of the profit of a ship after its crew’s salaries were paid. In other words, now private investors superseded the state as the biggest suppliers of money to fund the Armadas, a big contrast to what happened during Manuel I and João III's reigns.

    However, the possibility of losing vessels during the trip also brought the possibility of losing profit and in the worst-case scenarios going into debt. The solutions put forward right at the beginning were:
    • Reinforcing the Cape Route with new supply points for the ships, as well as improving the already existing ones, aiming to reduce shipwrecks and consequently monetary losses. Through a Royal Decree, King Duarte forced every vessel to stop at these points and if necessary to repair them. Travel took longer now but it got increasingly safer and more profitable to invest in.
    • The insistence of the King and the Conselho da Fazenda in compliance with the decree of King Sebastião that fixed the maximum size of ships to 450 tons. This not only was meant to prevent possible shipwrecks due to the colossal size of some of the ships but also to increase the number of ships at the expense of their size. Naval Industry was promoted, especially in the production of sails, in Metropolitan Portugal (Lisboa, Porto, Setúbal and Viana do Castelo) and Overseas (Goa, Cochim and Salvador da Baía) in hopes to reduce part of the foreign dependence in this sector and expenses mainly towards the Dutch.
    • By 1592 after years of pressure, the Corporasão and the Conselho da Fazenda created a fund in which, in exchange for an annual fee, an investor earned the right to be reimbursed if the ship he had invested in sank. This seemed to finally partially solve the problem of it being a risky investment.

    Thirdly and finally, the sugar trade, mainly from Brazil and Madeira, was generating profits that continued to increase each year thanks to increased demand in Europe, therefore, it was in Portugal’s interest to do everything possible to further increase these revenues as much as it was possible. The strategy adopted was to increase the area of cultivation of this expensive spice both in Brazil and elsewhere in the Empire such as in recently acquired possessions in Africa, this allowed for the volume of sugar produced to double between 1580 and 1600. It also increased resentment in some of the wealthiest Brazilian Captaincies such as Pernambuco and Paraíba because the competition was increasing and so was the slave cost as more were needed. Another problem was the increasingly larger foreign investment in this spice’s production, resulting in many enjenhos [sugar plantation farms] being owned by foreigners such as the Dutch. Although they normally nominated locals to tend to their properties, many of the already-rooted Portuguese elites of Brazil did not like this.

    Overall these measures managed to reduce the Crown’s expenses considerably, which, together with increasingly larger foreign investments from Italian and Dutch merchants seemed to be revitalizing the Portuguese economy after the disaster of Alcáser Quibir. Nearly all of the debts resulting from the disaster were paid by 1600, especially those that were due to Espanha and it was also possible to invest in defence of the Overseas possessions, but there was still a lot to be done by many generations to come. This greater foreign investment also brought other new problems for the country, such as an increased dependence on foreign capital that remained unresolved and the diffusion of the well-hidden Portuguese routes through Europe that was inevitable.

    I would like to thank everyone who liked and commented, especially regarding the whole cadet branch affair. I have some things planned for the children of Duarte but I would like to hear your suggestions as well.
     
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    Overseas: The Empire in Africa (Duarte II)
  • Overseas Developments:

    1580.png

    The Portuguese Empire in 1580:
    Darker Green: Effective Control
    Green: Allies
    Lighter Green: Vassals and Tributaries​

    The Empire in Africa
    O Império em África

    The Portuguese position in Africa after Alcáser Quibir changed little compared to the situation before the battle as the continent aroused little interest in most of Portugal’s elites. The elite in Europe was interested only in North Africa since it was seen as the continuation of the Reconquista and as a place of training and promotion of the low nobility and second sons; the elite in Goa considered the Portuguese possessions on the east coast of Africa as an added burden for the small contingent of soldiers and funds they had available; finally, the elite that was most interested in Africa was the one in Brazil, since it was from Africa that the slaves were arranged to work in the sugar plantations, crucial for the Portuguese economy in this American territory, which made it essential to control these territories to ensure that the enjenhos functioned without problems. However, slaves were acquired in coastal areas, so the continent's interior did not interest the Brazilian elite at all.

    As already mentioned, Duarte II returned Arzila to Amade Almansor [Ahmad al-Mansur] in 1584 and sought to strengthen Ceuta, Tânjer, and Mazagão with better defences so if Marrocos decided to wage war against Portugal the country was better prepared for it. Nevertheless, the truce agreed following the delivery of the aforementioned possession of Arzila was crucial for the maintenance of these three other possessions.

    The other possessions along the African coast were also subject to improvements in their defences as well, although not in the manner intended because there was a lack of soldiers and funds, especially in Duarte’s early reign though by the 1590s and 1600s the situation would be vastly better. Alternatively, to face the lack of funds, the Conselho do Ultramar [Council of Overseas] sought to strengthen and reactivate good relations with regional powers by sending diplomats to negotiate new deals and keep the existing ones. Encouraging results were achieved in the Kingdom of Benim, the Kingdom of Congo, the City-State of Melinde [Malindi] and the Empire of Abisínia [Abyssinia] and less successful results were achieved with the Empire of Songai [Songhai] (which would be destroyed by Almansor) and what remained of the Grão Zimbabué [Great Zimbabwe]. This diplomatic approach allowed Portugal to reduce the military personnel and expenses in possessions closer to allied powers and strengthen others whose neighbours were more aggressive.

    1584470148489.png
    The Fortress of Mazagão​

    The New Feitorias:
    In the same year in which Arzila was returned, 1584, the Conselho do Ultramar decided to establish new supply points in the Cape Route in cooperation with the Conselho da Fazenda [Council of Finances] as mentioned previously. The enterprise fell to Duarte de Menezes, who had been Captain of Tânjer (his birthplace) and Arzila before its handover, as well as one of Sebastião I's main Commanders and supporters of Duarte II who appointed him as Vise-Rei da Índia [Viceroy of India] in that year of 1584. The expedition consisting of 8 ships with a crew of close to 1 000 people, mostly soldiers and sailors but also some traders, some women and children, left Lisboa on April 10 and started founding the new predefined feitorias.

    The first feitoria that Duarte de Menezes founded was the one he baptized as Santa Izabel do Cabo da Boa Esperansa [Saint Elizabeth of the Cape of Good Hope (OTL Cape Town)] in honour of his Queen who adamantly insisted that she wanted a supply point there, not understanding why none existed as it was a crucial point to control the Cape Route, this despite the scepticism of the other counsellors which included her husband. As the terrain was too mountainous in the cape itself, Menezes chose a different spot slightly to the north that was still on the range of the aftermentioned cape and was very close to the burial place of Fransisco de Almeida, the first Vise-Rei da Índia who died fighting there, though the exact place was forgotten at the time. Being in the periphery of the Cape Route, this feitoria received only 138 people, 80% of which were soldiers sick with scurvy. It was a very small number of people and most of them would die in the first year because of the disease.

    The command was given to Captain Jozé Manuel Visente, one of the few without scurvy, who managed to keep the feitoria running despite the increasingly small population contingent at his disposal. He prevented the soldiers and other settlers from stealing cattle from the local tribes, the Cóis (nomadic herders and farmers) and the Sãs (hunters and gatherers) instead he preferred to cultivate good relations with them (the Captain knew that although the Portuguese had superior weaponry they were too vulnerable against surprise attacks coming from the natives as they were very few in number).

    1584473323547.png
    An Encampment of Cóis​

    His plan went far too well because many natives offered some of their cattle and food to the Portuguese to help them survive the first hard months and in return, the Portuguese gave them wine and clothes. The Portuguese priest that chose to stay, a certain António Faria, even managed to convert some of the natives to Catholicism and some unmarried soldiers married natives in the absence of white women at the time. The local climate was quite similar to that of Portugal despite the months “being the other way around” so the settlers were quick to plant wheat and rye but also fruit trees especially orange and lemon trees that they got from the leftovers of the ships. The fruits were much needed to fight against scurvy one of the biggest problems they and the Armadas had to face. By the end of the year, they were having their first proper harvest and were making the first harvest calendars of the Southern Hemisphere (for Europeans at least).

    Thanks to the slowly but ever-growing quantities of food, the Portuguese who suffered so much to survive the first years were now prospering. As the yearly Armadas passed by, more settlers chose to stay in this small community even if the Cabo was one of the least preferred destinations. Thanks to the friendship policy that Captain Visente insisted upon, many natives followed the Portuguese and made their own houses on the outskirts of the village, many of them already converted. To summarize, the colony of Cabo da Boa Esperansa ended up prospering even after its complicated beginning, not with the Cape Route itself (without neglecting its importance of course) but with the trade with the Cóis and Sãs.

    Year
    Males
    Females
    Children
    Total
    1584​
    121​
    11​
    7​
    138​
    1585​
    68​
    10​
    11​
    89​
    1586​
    59​
    10​
    15​
    84​
    1587​
    64​
    15​
    16​
    95​
    1588​
    69​
    17​
    21​
    107​
    1589​
    72​
    22​
    28​
    122​
    1590​
    80​
    25​
    33​
    138​
    1595​
    118​
    38​
    45​
    201​
    1600​
    141​
    57​
    62​
    260​
    Population Evolution in Santa Izabel do Cabo da Boa Esperansa, data of Jozé Manuel Visente’s book: Cabo da Boa Esperansa​

    The second feitoria was Aguada de São Bráz [Watering Place of Saint Blaize (OTL Mossel Bay)], which received the largest number of people, 192 under the command of Captain António Rodrigues. The feitoria had a climate similar to that of the Cabo and was far better placed on the Cape Route, not to mention the site was being used for decades to exchange messages and to acquire freshwater since its discovery by Bartolomeu Dias. As in Cabo, fruit trees, wheat and rye began being planted from the beginning and with great success. It seemed that the feitoria would be the one achieving the greatest results of them all but it was not to be…Captain Rodrigues did not have Visente’s iron fist in commanding the citizens and he did little to prevent them from stealing from the Cóis and Sãs, so the relationships were sour and conflict was almost a constant right from the beginning. Although the Portuguese had superior weaponry and training which allowed them to win most of the confrontations, the natives often resorted to sneak attacks and ambushes that caused many casualties including civilians. The Captains that followed Rodrigues did little to change the situation, preferring to fight the pagans instead of trading with them. Even with this climate of continuous war, the colony also prospered due to its location and its century-old message system.

    On the island of São Lourenso [Saint Lawrance (OTL Madagascar)], Duarte de Menezes founded the homologous feitoria that received 171 settlers under Captain Gonsalo Mendes. However, like the previous attempt to make a feitoria on the island, this feitoria was of ephemeral duration and was abandoned in 1597 by King João IV’s will, as its population was reduced to less than fifty souls, thanks to tropical diseases and native attacks. The settlers were transferred to the nearby feitorias to restart their lives once again or returned to Portugal.

    Finally, when he was already settled in Goa, Duarte de Menezes ordered the occupation of the Ilhas Mascarenhas [Mascarene Islands] with 186 settlers under the command of Captain Gomes Henriques. These islands quickly entered the sugar industry and prospered with it, especially after the arrival of slaves from the Mozambican coast, an area that mattered little for the Atlantic slave trade as it was in the Indian Ocean. The islands were also a mandatory point on the return journey from Índia which increased their value in the great schemes of things. There was a bird here that the Portuguese officially called sotilicário or frango-burro [dumb-chicken (OTL dodo)], a bird about 1 meter in height and relatively heavy which was considered stupid for not being able to defend itself or fly, rarely fleeing from danger. As it was harmless and fat it was thought that it could replace chicken and other meats but it tasted very bad and as such it never replaced anything and was only used as a last resort, nevertheless, the sotilicário population decreased substantially from other predators like cats and dogs something that would wave repercussions.

    1584473529226.png
    The Frango-Burro​

    Portuguese/Portuguêz > Frango-Burro
    Castillian/Castelhano > Frango-Burro
    Catalan/Catalão > Frangase/Frango-Burro
    French/Fransêz > Frangâne
    Italian/Italiano > Frangasino
    Romanian/Romeno > Frango-Burro
    English/Inglêz > Franburo
    Dutch/Nerlandêz > Franbur
    German/Alemão > Franbur
    Polish/Polaco > Franburu
    Russian/Ruso > Франбуру (Franburu)
    Greek/Grego > Φρανβουρου (Franburu)


    The other feitorias that already existed, such as Sofala or Mosambique Island, also received some new settlers and had improvements in their fortresses albeit at a slower pace. Others like the ones on the Costa do Ouro [Gold Coast] also received some funds mostly to keep the flow of slaves to Brazil untouched and protected. In Angola, a recently founded colony, the Crown had problems with the Portuguese there following the death of Capitão Donatário Paulo Dias de Novais, as the Crown tried to regain effective control over the colony and to do so it had to send the new Captain of Angola, Fransisco de Almeida with a small army to take care of the situation and stabilize the region.

    All these points that were to the east of the Cabo da Boa Esperansa were subordinate to the Vise-Rei da Índia, representing more charges for the administration of Goa which was resented the Conselho do Ultramar’s decision to expand their area. However together with the greater control of the size of the vessels already mentioned, these new feitorias and upgrades reduced the shipwrecks by about 40%, soon they brought a greater quantity of products to Lisboa and with it more profits. The more effective control of Angola and the Costa do Ouro also allowed for increasing the flow of slaves to Brazil and other possessions for the production of sugar. The settlements in South Africa also seemed to have great potential in the nearby future.
     
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    Overseas: Portuguese-Ottoman Conflict 1586-1589
  • Portuguese-Ottoman Conflict (1586-1589)
    Guerra Luzo-Otomana (1586-1589)

    In January 1586, an Ottoman corsair named Mir Ali Bei unexpectedly sailed in his galley from Moca [Mokha], in the Eialete do Iémem [Eyalet of Yemen], a province of the Império Otomano [Ottoman Empire], to the east coast of Africa to prey on Portuguese ships sailing in the Indian Ocean. His first stop was made at Mogadíxo [Mogadishu], where he managed to convince its inhabitants to revolt against the Portuguese, to whom they paid vassalage and with it, tributes. Thanks to this, he obtained more vessels and created a fleet. Likewise, the cities of Brava [Barawa] and Faza also declared their support and loyalty to the Império Otomano, unknowingly represented by Mir Ali Bei, leaving the corsair with a fleet of 15 ships. With this fleet, the corsair captured a Portuguese ship in Pate and another in Lamu. In this city, the Xeique [Sheikh] captured and handed over to the Ottoman corsair all the Portuguese who lived there as a token of good faith. Further south, Mir Ali Bei also received a proposal to build a fort in Mombasa by the city itself to better defend itself from the Portuguese.

    As he returned to Moca, Mir Ali Bei captured a Portuguese ship coming from Chaul off the seas of Pate. At first, he promised the crew their freedom in exchange for the cargo they brought but ended up not fulfilling his promise and enslaved them all. In Moca, Mir Ali Bei now commanding 20 ships had 100 Portuguese prisoners at his mercy. When the news that an Ottoman fleet was sailing with impunity across the Indian Ocean, inciting several cities in East Africa to revolt against the Portuguese arrived in Goa, Vise-Rei Duarte de Menezes promptly dispatched an Armada led by Martim Afonso de Melo composed of 2 galleons and 3 galleys that transported 650 soldiers, to expel the Ottomans and restore Portuguese authority in that area of the Indian Ocean.

    1584720388465.png
    Portuguese Tributaries in the Costa Suaíli in the Late 16th Century​

    The Armada’s first action took place in the city of Faza which was brutally sacked and its population was nearly wiped out or enslaved, including the Xeique, whose head was taken to be displayed in Goa as a message to all others. Pate on the other side of the island immediately capitulated and was spared after paying 4 000 Cruzados and the same happened to Mombasa while other cities were sacked. At the same time that East Africa's coast was being pacified, Martim Afonso de Melo strengthened the Luso-Malindi alliance to better respond to a new situation of this kind per the directives of the Conselho do Ultramar. From Mir Ali Bei, the Portuguese Armada found nothing and therefore returned to Goa. In Lisboa, Queen Izabel was enraged by what happened to Faza, considering that the Portuguese actions went too far, so she ordered all the slaves from that city to be freed and the city to be placed under direct Portuguese control, an order which was followed by Goa.

    In 1589, after 2 years of inactivity, Mir Ali Bei returned to Mogadíxo with 5 Ottoman galleys to extract heavy tributes from the Costa Suaíli [Swahili Coast] cities in exchange for protection in the name of the Império Otomano against the Portuguese, getting what he wanted from a city that suffered little from the Portuguese repression 2 years prior yet feared an attack from Portugal at any time. Mir Ali Bei then set sail for Melinde [Malindi] in hopes of plundering the Portuguese ally. He was unlucky that Portuguese captain Mateus Mendes de Vasconselos, responsible for defending Portuguese interests on the East African coast at the time, was in Melinde with a small army waiting for him. The Portuguese continued to have an efficient network of spies and informants in the Red Sea that kept them updated on what was going on there. Even before the corsair set sail, Vasconselos had already sent a vessel to inform the new Vise-Rei Manuel de Souza Coutinho, that the Ottomans were about to attack.

    Approaching Melinde at night, Mir Ali Bei’s fleet was promptly bombarded by a battery of Portuguese artillery that damaged two of the Ottoman galleys, forcing them to retreat towards Mombasa. Vise-Rei Manuel de Souza Coutinho organized a powerful Armada composed of 2 galleons and 17 galleys together with 900 Portuguese soldiers that he placed under the command of Tomé de Souza Coutinho, his cousin. This fleet arrived in Lamu at the end of February 1589 where they found out where Mir Ali Bei was, Mombasa, and after meeting with Mateus Mendes de Vasconselos in Melinde, they added three more galleys to the fleet that set sail for Mombasa.

    Battle of Mombasa, 1589
    On March 5, the Portuguese fleet arrived on the island of Mombasa. Mir Ali Bei, together with the local population, erected a small fort near the city, arming it with artillery pieces from his ships in order to close the port's entrance to the Portuguese. It didn’t help much because the Portuguese ships forced their way in with sheer brute force, taking down in the process, 3 Ottoman galleys. The fort was then bombarded by the entire Portuguese fleet, making it little more than rubble and forcing the Ottomans to flee deeper into the city.

    Two days later, 500 Portuguese soldiers disembarked only to discover that Mombasa had been evacuated and that its inhabitants took shelter in a nearby forest with the Ottomans. By pure chance, a cannibal tribe nicknamed “Zimbas” was migrating north and set up camp on the other side of the channel, with only the 2 galleys left to the Ottomans preventing them from invading the island of Mombasa. The aftermentioned galleys were captured by the Portuguese and Tomé de Souza Coutinho chose to allow the Zimbas to cross to the island in order to capture Mir Ali Bei this way. When the people of Mombasa realized that the Zimbas were on the island, they desperately fled to the beaches to board the Portuguese ships with many drowned in the attempt. Of those captured, Mir Ali Bei stood out from the rest for obvious reasons, and with his capture, the 1586-1589 Luso-Ottoman Conflict ended. On March 24, the Portuguese fleet returned to Melinde where they were received triumphantly with celebrations and long festivities.

    1584720483114.png
    16th Century Depiction of Mombasa​

    The situation on the East African coast changed considerably after the war, the Xeique de Melinde was widely rewarded by Duarte II for his loyalty, with the King ensuring the defence of the city as well as the restructuring of the local feitoria so that commerce between both countries could continue and even increase. Mombasa was defended from the Zimbas by Mateus Mendes de Vasconselos and by a Royal Decree of Duarte II it was formally annexed by Portugal to be the new headquarters of the Portuguese presence in the region. Four years after the conflict, in the place where Mir Ali Bei had erected his fort, a new fort named Fort Jezus was built to defend the city from enemies. Faza was, as said, also directly administrated by Portugal and began a slow reconstruction, the local population deeply resenting the Portuguese but somehow they gained some esteem for Queen Izabel for freeing them. Pate was slowly becoming dependent on Portugal as well and completely unable to oppose them.

    All other cities, except for Mogadíxo and Brava, fell again into the sphere of Portuguese influence. The Xeique de Pemba, loyal to the Portuguese but who had been deposed by pro-Ottoman rebels, was restored to his throne, the one in Lamu was captured and publicly beheaded as a result of what he had done to the Portuguese of his city two years prior and the one in Pate was removed from the throne, being replaced by a more friendly one until eventually the Portuguese decided the city was to be under the direct administration too. Mir Ali Bei was sent to meet with Vise-Rei Manuel de Sousa Coutinho in Goa, where he was beheaded by Royal Decree for having enslaved Portuguese, who were luckily rescued without minimal repercussions.

    This conflict was a private initiative of Mir Ali Bei who only managed to go unnoticed by the Portuguese intelligence network due to the insignificance of his initial vessel. The Império Otomano did not succeed nor did it try to expand its influence in the Indian Ocean yet. Portugal continued, under Duarte II, to enjoy supremacy in the Indian Ocean and the East African coast.

    África.png
    The Empire in Africa at the End of the 16th Century
    Only effectively controlled possessions and Allies are labeled.​

    Hopefully, this map is not too far away from reality in the places where it should be close to reality. Also thank you to everyone who gave likes in the previous posts.
     
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    Overseas: The Empire in Asia (Duarte II)
  • The Empire in Asia
    O Império na Ázia

    During the reign of Duarte II, the Estado da Índia [State of India] continued to produce the largest share of revenue of the Portuguese Crown even if Brazil’s share was increasing with each passing year. Despite this, the Portuguese situation in the Indian Ocean was not exactly the best…After the installation of the Goan Inquisition in the year 1560, problems with the local populations of the most varied religious denominations arose, a fact that was clearly evident in the Guerra da Liga das Índias 1570-1574 [War of the League of the Indies] where many Indian countries showed their discontentment towards the Portuguese, their religious policies and their demanding taxes, by laying siege to many possessions with very large armies. Amongst these possessions were Goa and Malaca, two focal points of the Portuguese Asian trade, which were harassed more than once during the length of the conflict and were for the first time, at risk of being lost. Although Portugal won against much larger forces, thanks to the soldiers’ tenacity and stubbornness, it suffered considerable losses and in Asia, every soldier was worth gold. The danger of a new war was lingering and if it did come to be, its outcome might not be as positive.

    Another serious problem for the Estado da Índia was its very extensive territory, about 70 000 000km2 (about 28 000 000 sq mi) of ocean to patrol, which was administered and defended from Goa by a small number of people, by the 1580s, it was close to 5 000 soldiers, 10 ships and 40 galleys. Obviously, this raised logistical problems and often prevented an adequate and effective response to the various threats that were to emerge at a specific point in time.

    On April 1580, Duarte II sent Matias de Albuquerque to be Vise-Rei da Índia [Viceroy of India]. This was a man with immense experience in Asian warfare and who had shown himself loyal to the new King by supporting him in his ascension. He was to replace Count Luíz de Ataíde who the King called back to Lisboa to see where his loyalties lay. It was likely that Duarte intended to send the Count back to Goa at some point as the man was very capable but he died in Goa a month before Albuquerque left Lisboa and news of it only arrived in Lisboa in the next year. After the appointment of Albuquerque, the Conselho do Ultramar [Council of Overseas] as a whole began to have a saying on appointing the new Vise-Reis, Governadores [Governors] and Capitães-Jerais [Captain-General].

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    Vise-Rei e Governador da Índia, Matias de Albuquerque​

    One of the major changes that Duarte’s reign brought to the Estado da Índia was the implementation of the Ordenansas System. This created a better recruitment system for the local Militias which increased not only their number but quality. Italians, Spanish and Dutch were also more often employed in the Exérsito do Estado da Índia [Army of State of India] which was an unofficial entity at this point as it was not officially created by the King. A fourth line of recruitment, exclusive to the Overseas possessions was also introduced in the last years of Duarte’s reign and the beginning of his son’s which incorporated Indians, Blacks, Chinese, Malay, Japanese and at times Arabs and Persians who after ten years of service to Portugal would acquire most of the rights of non-White Catholics although this measure was controversial especially right when it was implemented not only because of religious reasons but also because the serving time was deemed too big and unappealing.

    Amongst his first directives, Matias de Albuquerque dispatched a fleet of about 22 medium-sized ships under the command of Fernão Teles de Meneses to patrol the Indian coast from Goa to Malabar and hunt down any pirates that they came across. This was seen as crucial because, since the near complete collapse of the Empire of Vijaianagara or also known to the Portuguese as the Kingdom of Bisnaga following its defeat against the Sultanados do Decão [Deccan Sultanates] in the Battle of Talicota of 1565, the waters and shores were growing increasingly more dangerous with individuals resorting to the lives of pirates. This fomented the local shipyards in Goa and Cochim which the Corporasão das Armadas da Índia [Corporation of the Indian Armadas] sponsored.

    The collapse of the Empire of Vijaianagara left Portugal without its major ally in region and thus in a weaker position in the great schemes of things, so to counter the Sultanados do Decão, which disliked Portugal's presence, Diogo Lopes Coutinho was dispatched by Albuquerque to serve as a diplomat at the court of Emperor Aquebar o Grande [Akbar the Great] of the Império Mogol [Mughal Empire] and negotiate a non-aggression treaty as well agreeing to come in support of each other if the Sultanados do Decão attacked.

    In reality, the Mogol Empire did not need Portugal’s support at all as they already dominated the entire north of the Indian Subcontinent but to Portugal, a non-aggression treaty with them was crucial to maintain their privileged position in the region and would provide safety for they would not need to worry about such as dangerous opponent. The achieved results were very encouraging since the Grão-Mogol [Emperor] was not interested in taking the Portuguese possessions if Portugal did not harm his interests. Aquebar also allowed the Jezuítas to come to his court in Agra and a diplomatic channel was therefore maintained between the two countries henceforth. As the years went by and the relations got better, especially when the Mogois were granted special authorizations that allowed them to travel unmolested to Meca and Medina in the Haje [Hajj] provided they sailed with green and white flags which were the symbol of their country. This restrained the ambitions of the Sultanados do Decão as Aquebar was planning a campaign against them and their southern flanks could be attacked by Portugal.

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    The Grão-Mogol Aquebar o Grande [Akbar the Great]​

    In the Ilhas Molucas [Spice Islands], the Portuguese situation was also not the best. They left one of their few allies in the region, the Kingdom of Sunda on the island of Java to be conquered by Muslims; they killed the previous Sultan of Ternate and the current one called a Jiade [Jihad] against Portugal, expelling them from the island of Ternate in humiliating defeat and setting his eyes to kicking them further away; they also had to face the hostilities of the Sultanate of Jór [Johor] who was eager to recover Malaca and the Sultanate of Achém [Aceh] who was a nominal vassal of the Império Otomano [Ottoman Empire].

    To overcome this situation, diplomats were sent to several countries in the region, but especially to the Sultanate of Tidore which competed with Ternate for supremacy in the region and the Kingdom of Gouá [Gowa] who leased Macásar [Makassar] to Portugal decades earlier. Both countries accepted alliances and Portugal’s position improved as they were able to counter Ternate’s growing power. The Conselho do Ultramar ordered Vise-Rei Duarte de Menezes to submit the island of Solor, at the time manned by friars, to the jurisdiction of the Crown and to increase commercial activity in the islands of Timor and Ambão [Ambon]. Despite these measures, the Molucas being farther away from Goa were left a bit to themselves as they had been and as they remained until João IV’s reign.

    Diplomats were also sent to the Far East, to the Mingue Dynasty in China and to Toiótomi Hideióxi [Toyotomi Hideyoshi]'s Japão [Japan]. The port of Macau, in China, the only port authorized by the Central Government for the practice of international commerce, received from Duarte de Menezes the status of a city in 1583 and its Senado [Senate] was constituted for the first time that same year. In the Persian Gulf, the Portuguese fortresses were being repaired as the money allowed them to be in order to face the Otomanos and Safávida Dynasty of Pérsia if needed.

    Despite the attempts to improve relations with neighbouring countries and promote commerce in a more pragmatic stance, little was done to calm the religious tension in the Estado da Índia. The Jezuítas and other religious orders that were increasingly fundamentalist remained as they were albeit with a little more control exerted over them. A good example of this were the Jezuítas in Aquebar’s court where they often preached anti-Islamic speeches, deeply enraging the local imams. The Inquisition of Goa was also gaining a reputation for being more rigorous than its counterpart in Lisboa and increasingly conducted judgments against pagan practices which affected the bulk of the population in the controlled territories, the King who was months away from Goa and could not do much to prevent the processes from continuing but an anti-Inquisition faction led by the Queen and the merchants emerged by the late eighties and early nineties and it began pressuring the King to abolish the institution altogether. In short, however, the problem of religious intolerance was not resolved.

    Summing up, Duarte II’s policies towards both Asia and Africa were focused on keeping everything the country had and promoting peaceful relationships with the neighbours in hopes it would protect the scattered and perhaps overstretched Portuguese Empire. All Governors and Vise-Reis in this period were energetic, astute and were able to work well given their circumstances and for that, they were well rewarded by the King: Duarte de Menezes who had been a staunch supporter of the King had been made Count of Tarouca like his great-grandfather João de Menezes. He aspired to receive the counties of Viana and was promised that his case would be analyzed, however, this did not happen because Menezes died not long after he was relieved of his position and the King decided to not grant his son with the titles but confirmed him as Count of Tarouca. Matias de Albuquerque who ruled for two quite large periods was made Count of Montarjil and Manuel de Souza Coutinho was made Count of Baião, the former in 1588 and the latter in 1591.


    Vise-Reis e Governadores-Jerais da Índia [Viceroys and Governors-Generals of India]
    Term
    Matias de Albuquerque​
    1580-1584​
    Duarte de Menezes (Count of Tarouca)​
    1584-1588​
    Manuel de Souza Coutinho​
    1588-1591​
    Matias de Albuquerque (Count of Montarjil)​
    1591-1597​
     
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    Overseas: Portuguese-Sinhalese War (1580-1595 Phase)
  • Portuguese-Sinhalese War (1580-1595 Phase)
    Guerra Luzo-Singaleza (Faze de 1580-1595)

    In 1581, Rajasinha I de Sitabaca/Sitauáca [Sitawaka] ascended to the throne of his country and in the following year, he invaded and conquered the Kingdom of Cândia [Kandy] without much opposition. With this action, he controlled nearly the entire island of Seilão [Ceylon] with the exception of the Kingdom of Jafana to the north and the Portuguese possessions to the southwest. In consequence of this invasion, the only daughter of the last King of Cândia, named Cusumasana Devi came under the protection of the Portuguese in Colombo and was baptized as Catarina do Cândia, being educated in the Portuguese fashion.

    Portuguese intrigue made its way to Rajasinha’s court and numerous nobles were executed for alleged treason between 1583 and 1587. The King also turned against the Buddhist clergy who he thought was collaborating with the Portuguese and destroyed several temples of this creed and converted to Hinduism in the process, which while more prevalent than Catholicism and Islam, was a minority religion on the island. Rajasinha also redoubled his efforts to expel the Portuguese from the island and in 1587 he began gathering a powerful army of about 50 000 soldiers, numerous war elephants, cavalry and even several cannons manufactured locally and with them, he laid siege to Colombo, the most important Portuguese possession on the island.

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    King Rajasinha I of Sitabaca/Sitauábaca​

    Siege of Colombo, 1587-1588
    The Portuguese Commander who defended Colombo at the time was Captain-Major João Correia de Brito, who had at his disposal 300 Portuguese soldiers and about 700 Lascarins (that is indigenous fighting for the Portuguese), together with a civilian population of about 60 000 people. Having predicted the siege, Correia de Brito stocked the city with supplies and ammunition but he feared it was not enough so he managed to send one of the 6 stranded galleys due to the monsoon to Goa to warn the Vise-Rei and request assistance.

    Having a good idea of Colombo’s defenses, Rajasinha began his siege with excavations around the walls and by draining the lagoon that served as a moat. Then he sent 65 galleys to block the fortress by sea and prevent it from being replenished in hopes of starving the population. He then assembled his entire army to demonstrate his strength with war cries though it was not enough to discourage Brito and his men, who made several night raids against the Sinhalese troops causing great confusion amongst them before returning to the safety of the walls.

    On the night of August 3, Rajasinha ordered the first mass assault on Colombo in which thousands of Sinhalese soldiers attempted to climb the walls while elephant-backed sappers tried to destroy them. They were countered by the superior firepower of the Portuguese and while some Sinhalese managed to get inside the walls, they were promptly repelled by Portuguese counterattacks with 400 of them dying and 2 000 being wounded. In the following months, Rajasinha attempted three more similar attacks on Colombo, along with several attempts to blow the walls but the Portuguese for their part continued to carry out sorties against the Sinhalese positions with much more success than the Sinhalese’s attempts of taking the city.

    The end of the monsoons, around September, brought the much-needed reinforcements from Goa, on February 18, a fleet of 18 galleys commanded by Vise-Rei Manuel de Souza Coutinho himself arrived and sacked the coasts of Sitabaca, being received in Colombo with a general salvo and many cheers. There were now 2 000 Portuguese soldiers in addition to the Lascarins and civilian defenders which convinced Rajasinha that he had little chance of taking over the city so he lifted the siege that had lasted for 8 months and caused him to lose 5 000 men, with much dismay.

    1585602387396.png
    Serco de Colombo [The Siege of Colombo]​

    Portuguese Control over Jafana, Sitabaca and Cândia (1591-1593):
    As a result of the Portuguese victory, the population of the Kingdom of Cândia revolted against Rajasinha’s rule, however, the heiress to their throne was Catarina do Cândia who at the time was in Colombo under Portuguese authority, so the rebels knew not what to do except ousting their current ruler. After their morale and confidence improved with their victory, a Portuguese expedition deposed and killed the King of Jafana, Puviraja Pandarão [Puviraja Pandaram] in 1591 and installed his son Etirimana Sincão [Ethirimana Cinkam] as a client King, of Portugal, bringing Jafana to the area of Portuguese influence.

    With yet another success, the Portuguese decided to intervene in Cândia by placing Iámasinga Bandara [Yamasinghe Bandara], who had been baptized Dom Duarte, in honour of the Portuguese King, on the throne as a client King. However, the new King died mysteriously shortly after his coronation likely at the hands of a faction that opposed the Portuguese which after Duarte do Cândia’s death elected Vimaladarmasúriá [Vimaladharmasūriya] as King. This King who had also initially converted to Catholicism, being baptized as Dom João, abjured his newfound creed and returned to Buddhism when the crown made its way to his head.

    In 1593, Rajasinha made one final push to recover Cândia but died of illness whilst fighting which caused a succession war. One of the pretenders to Sitabaca defected to the Portuguese and allowed them to take full control over that kingdom. Despite the impressive successes of Sitabaca, much of its stability depended on a smooth succession of power as well as a competent ruler leading it, so the abrupt ending of this kingdom could be explained that way for Rajasinha was the sole reason behind Sitabaca’s might.

    But the end of Sitabaca’s hegemony over the island was everything the Portuguese needed to establish full control of the island and only the unstable Cândia stood in their way. The Captain of Colombo’s fort, Fransisco da Silva proposed that young Catarina do Cândia be made a client Queen and the first Capitão-Jeral de Seilão [Captain-General of Ceylon], Pedro Lopes de Souza, though it was a sound plan and proposed it to Vise-Rei Matias de Albuquerque who in turn discussed it with his Council. The Council and the Vise-Rei were very much in favour of the plan and gave it the green light, appointing Lopes de Souza as the Commander, even if he was not the most suitable for the task. Lopes de Souza himself was reluctant to accept but was convinced when he proposed his own marriage to Catarina, a proposal accepted by the Vise-Rei and his Council, albeit only when the kingdom was fully pacified.

    The campaign started with the Portuguese Army being poorly equipped and with many experienced commanders refusing to provide support because they felt wronged by Souza’s appointment as their overall commander. Nevertheless, Souza led a force of around 20 000 soldiers (1 000 Portuguese soldiers, 15 400 Lascarins, 47 elephants and some mercenaries) into the heartlands of Cândia, the largest one until that date. It is estimated that Cândia had only 10 000 men defending but had the terrain advantage as the region was very mountainous and difficult to access. The Portuguese invaded a passage near the village of Balana, the entry point to Cândia and suffered heavy losses due to guerilla warfare but made the Sinhalese forces retreat further inland and allow them to pass.

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    Queen Catarina do Cândia arrives in Cândia​

    The Portuguese forces reached the city of Cândia, the capital, where twelve-year-old Catarina was crowned Queen. At first, they were warmly welcomed but many soldiers took advantage of the situation to commit atrocities such as sacking and raping which obviously enraged the local population. Defections to Vimaladarmasúriá increased even further when rumours about the Queen being set to marry a Portuguese began spreading. Pedro Lopes de Souza for some odd reason gave up on his ambition to marry Catarina and offered her hand to Fransisco da Silva, the mastermind behind the whole campaign but he refused and left for Manar in the Kingdom of Jafana. The commander of the Lascarins, Jaiávira Bandara Mudali [Jayavira Bandara Mudali] asked for Catarina’s hand but Souza refused on grounds of not having enough authority to allow it and on the fact that Jaiávira was a commoner, leaving the Sinhalese very disappointed.

    Vimaladarmasúriá’s forces began attacking small contingents of Portuguese soldiers searching for supplies while also cutting their supply and communications lines. A group of 3 000 Portuguese and Lascarins soldiers was surrounded and annihilated in the Uva region and rumours began circulating about Jaiávira’s plans to betray the Portuguese (a plan devised by the King of Cândia to create distrust between the Portuguese and the Lascarins), so Souza confronted his ally. The Sinhalese denied all the accusations made against him and went as far as to offer himself to be watched so his innocence could be proved with Sousa being inclined to accept the proposal but his men were not and took action, killing Jaiávira, their biggest ally. Jaiávira’s death led many Lascarins to leave the Portuguese in an extremely precarious situation while increasing the Kandian army to 20 000 soldiers.

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    Jaiávira's Assassination​

    Isolated and without enough supplies, Souza decided to abandon Cândia and take refuge in Balana, in the northwest, bringing Catarina with him to keep her as a puppet in a better defendable area. In the first and second days of the march, there were no major occurrences, but when the Portuguese wanted to stay a whole day in the village of Ganoruá [Gannoruwa], Catarina and some soldiers protested heavily against it, arguing that it made no sense as they were being hunted down. The teenage Queen protested so much that a tired Souza agreed to continue their journey despite unrest with his soldiers. On the following day, the supplies ran out and the situation worsened as Vimaladarmasúriá’s forces were gaining distance. Lopes de Souza decided to send Catarina and his young son, Diogo, ahead towards Balana and then to Colombo so that she could warn the Captain-General there and reinforcements could be sent to help them reach a safe position.

    With the Queen in apparent safety, Souza and his men did their best to delay the Kandians but confrontations between both parties became daily and constant. The Portuguese were malnourished, tired and outnumbered but continued to fight and went as far as to repel the enemies many times albeit with massive casualties in the process. As they approached Balana, their supplies were on the brink of fully running out and almost all of them were wounded. Fully desperate, the remaining Portuguese soldiers made their final push to the fortress of Balana but they were ambushed and massacred along the last kilometers near the village of Dantur. Only 23 made it to the fortress, the rest were either captured or killed, those who were unfortunate enough to be made prisoners, like Souza himself were tortured and mutilated as revenge for what they did in Cândia.

    1585603773296.png

    1636690498568.png
    The Portuguese facing the Sinhalese to reach Balana [First Image]
    Important locations of the Portuguese Campaign [Second Image]​

    Days before all this occurred, Catarina and little Diogo’s party arrived at Balana where they took most of what they found namely food provisions and continued on their way to Colombo where the Captain-General, Jerónimo de Azevedo received them and promptly sent an army to Balana to reinforce the fortress and save the others. In the fortress his men found the malnourished and exhausted survivors being surrounded by all sides, holding on with their last bits of strength. Together they made a final push against the Kandians and succeeded in sending them away from the fortress which remained in Portuguese hands.

    Knowing there were plenty of prisoners, Azevedo immediately entered negotiations with Vimaladarmasúriá to save them, managing to secure the freedom of most of them at the cost of depleting the small treasury of Portuguese Seilão. Overall, the expedition was an authentic fiasco and weaken the Portuguese power over the island, putting a stop to their ambitious plans to control it. Lopes de Souza was amongst the last men to be rescued but he was so injured for the torture he endure and so malnourished that he perished not long after reaching Balana.

    While Catarina comforted little Diogo for the death of his father, both of them became great friends from that point on, Azevedo had to face many rebellions all over the territory he ruled once the news of the Portuguese defeat spread through the island but he managed to put an end to them with great distinction. The Kandians made countless attempts to take the Fort of Balana since it was a key point to their country but they failed thanks to the Captain-General’s efforts.

    Vimaladarmasúriá I consolidated his government with his great victory and his religion despite Catarina continuing to lay claim to the throne even if she had little support amongst her people and was but a teen. After consulting Azevedo and Vise-Rei Matias de Albuquerque, Catarina understood that neither could do much so surprising everyone, she took a big gamble and embarked on a ship to Lisboa where she intended to meet the King of Portugal and ask for more means for her cause while also informing him that his domains in India were weak once someone decided to stand their ground.

    Ásia.png
    The Empire in Asia at the End of the 16th Century
    Only Effectively Controlled Possessions and Allies are Labelled​
    My apologies with the map, there are some possessions that are too close to each other and it was quite hard to label them, specifically in Oman and by Cochin so if there is any doubt I'm free to explain it. Also thank you for all the comments and likes, they mean a lot.
     
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    Overseas: The Empire in America (Duarte II)
  • The Empire in America
    O Império na América

    In Brazil, the Repartisões [Governorates] were reunited during the last years of King Sebastião’s reign and neither Duarte II nor the Conselho do Ultramar [Council of Overseas] saw a reason to divide Brazil again. The Governors’ policy had been and was to prioritize the conquest and settlement of the coast, especially in the northeast, the area with the highest concentration of enjenhos [sugar mills] and thus the richest; and fight off pirates, French privateers and adventurers as well as aggressive Amerindians who kept jeopardizing the lives of the Portuguese in the area.

    The first Governor-General of Duarte II’s reign was Diogo Botelho, a low nobleman who supported him and his cousin António Prior of Crato, in other words, a Portuguese, fervently against Filipe II de Espanha’s claim. While some had reservations about Diogo because of his good relations with António, Duarte did not see it that way and trusted him fully. During his government, Botelho sought to pacify the Amerindians of the Captaincies further north, namely Pernambuco, Rio Grande and Paraíba which were deemed the most important ones as they were in the rich northeast where the sugar was produced. He also managed to expel the French adventurers from the region and encouraged, according to directives from the Conselho do Ultramar, the production of sugar in other captaincies where it was not very wide spread. By the end of his term, which ended in 1583, the situation in northeastern Brazil was of apparent peace.

    Next came a nobleman of greater prestige, the Count of Vimiozo, Fransisco de Portugal. The Count had been a supporter and friend of the Prior of Crato but ended up submitting to Duarte after he was crowned in 1580 and was sent to Brazil to prove his loyalty to the new Monarch. Whilst in Brazil, he endeavoured to improve local agriculture with the introduction of other crops, namely cereals, to not only feed the colony’s population but Portugal’s too thus being the precursor of diversifying the economy of Brazil which was heavily dependent on sugar. Like his predecessors, Fransisco had to face the uprising of Amerindians in the northeast who ignited many fires and killed dozens of colonists, and he replied to the revolts by waging a brutal campaign against cannibal Amerindians.

    The Count gave more importance to southeastern Brazil than many of his predecessors, seeking to impose his agricultural reforms in that region without much success besides in São Visente and even there it was quite limited. He created patrol groups to fight pirates and privateers and some of these groups ventured farther inland. One such group under António Jozé Lopes followed the course of the River São Fransisco up to 60 to 70 kilometres searching for its source and potential mineral wealth, trying to replicate earlier explorations such as the one of António Dias Adorno, Bastião Fernandes Tourinho and many others, but because plenty of the Bandeirantes got sick, they had to return with next to no profit.

    1585929264662.png
    River São Fransisco​

    In 1586, Duarte of Bragansa, the second son of the late João I of Bragansa was appointed Governor-General of Brazil. He was only 17 years old but he was a nobleman of House of Bragansa, which made him the most prestigious person to set foot in Brazil until then. His appointment was aimed at maintaining good relations between the Crown and the most powerful ducal family in the country as well as serving as a preparation for the eventual appointment of the young Bragansa as Vise-Rei da Índia, then seen as the best position and most prestigious position of the Empire.

    Duarte of Bragansa was not very happy to be sent to Brazil as he expected to be sent to India right away and he also showed clear inexperience in his position, showcasing narcissism and taking little consideration of advice given to him, preferring the cannibal Amerindians than tackling other problems that did not demand battles. He ended up creating a council of locals to take care of those such matters that he cared little about and his tenure saw the increase in corruption and stagnation of the colony.

    Eventually, Duarte began acquiring experience and became more concerned with other administrative matters of the colony, disbanding the council he created at the beginning of his tenure and managing to make prosperity return in his last few months of tenure but even that did not save him from being dismissed by the King and the Conselho do Ultramar much to his indignation. One good thing about his term was that Duarte effectively pacified Brazil from Rio Grande to Salvador, defeating aggressive Amerindians and European pirates.

    The Conselho do Ultramar proposed the Count of Vimiozo to re-assume the position of Governor of Brazil but he proposed his youngest brother Luíz de Portugal who was his heir. The King accepted and nominated Luíz to the position, a decision that was confirmed by the Conselho. Like his brother, Luíz tried to diversify the Brazilian economy and keep the favourable peace that Bragansa had achieved. In his term, there were plenty of expeditions to the interior the biggest one under Jozé António Custoias which went to find the source of the River São Fransisco, travelling hundreds of kilometres inland only to find out the river was much bigger than was anticipated and like many others, failed to find any mineral wealth of note.

    After Luíz, came another Count, Fransisco de Souza, Count of Prado. Souza was the Governor that organized and sponsored the largest amount of expeditions to the interior of Brazil in search of mineral wealth. First, he sent Bento Masiel Parente and Diogo Martins Cão on two separate expeditions but after getting no results, he organized three large expeditions in 1596: Martins Cão began at the Serra dos Aimorez, Martim Correia de Sá began at coasts of the Parati and João Pereira de Souza Botafogo started in the town of São Paulo in the Captaincy of São Visente. Unfortunately, none of them found what they were searching for in high quantities.

    Overall Brazil received more attention than in the reign of Sebastião I, having received two Counts and two younger sons of prominent families, one of which the powerful Bragansas to work as Governors, a clear improvement in its prestige. It was possible to realize that making administrative positions available to people with little experience (such as Duarte de Bragansa) was not an adequate solution for the interests of the country.

    Advances and developments in Brazil were reduced when compared to other reigns such as that of King João III, but much of the territory was pacified and the French were definitively expelled from it. The number of enjenhos increased considerably in proportion to foreign investment. Cities like Salvador, Olinda and Resife acquired a new dynamism with the installation of merchant colonies and some credit agencies. The explorations were providing slow and steady results and much of the elite in Brazil was sure that mineral resources in quantities similar to the Potosí Mines were not too far away from being found.

    Viceroys and Governors
    Term
    Diogo Botelho​
    1580-1583​
    Fransisco de Portugal (Count of Vimiozo)​
    1583-1586​
    Duarte de Bragansa​
    1586-1589​
    Luíz de Portugal​
    1589-1592​
    Fransisco de Souza (Count of Prado)​
    1592-1595​

    Brasil.png
    Brazil at the End of the 16th Century with it's Captaincies​

    A smaller update but I didn't have much to go on about in Brazil in this particular timeframe. Hoping the next update is larger as it's going to be about the 90s and the International Scene too. Marriages of Princes likely coming soon. Thank you for the likes and comments and stay safe.
     
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    Portuguese Diplomacy and International Devolpments in Europe Worth Mentioning
  • Portuguese Diplomacy and International Developments in Europe
    Diplomasia Portugueza e Dezenvolvimentos Internasionais na Europa

    Duarte II and Izabel sought, despite wishing to maintain peace with Espanha, to move as far away from its influence as much as it was possible without alienating them. To that end, they sought to improve diplomatic and commercial relations with other European countries.

    With Izabel I da Inglaterra [Elizabeth I of England], the Portuguese’s diplomatic strategy had to be well thought out as on one hand, it was an allied country and on the other hand, it was a country of Protestants whose relations with Espanha and the Santa Sé [Holy See] were very bad. A secret agreement was signed between the Portuguese diplomat Afonso Mendes Neves and the government of Izabel I which pledged both countries to maintain the commercial relations as they have been until then. Portugal also allowed English ships to sell spices and other luxury items after acquiring them in Lisboa for good prices and English investors were also invited to invest in the Corporasão das Armadas da Índia [Corporation of Indian Armadas] and the English privateers were forbidden from attacking Portuguese ships with heavy penalties if they did not comply.

    With Fransa, Duarte went to great lengths to solve the problems that Portugal had with this country, such as piracy and privateering off the Asores, Madeira and Brazil, as well as the existence of pirate nests in the latter, something that worried many local officials. The Portuguese King had been a staunch supporter of the marriage of his late cousin Sebastião to Margarida de Valuá [Margaret of Valois], which unfortunately never happened, and as such he was very interested in finding a French Princess to marry his son João Duarte to but there was none of suitable condition available. The solution found was to elaborate trade agreements along the lines of those arranged with Inglaterra and Toscânia that would hopefully reduce the need for the French merchants to illegally obtain spices and luxury items at the expense of Portugal. Duarte and Izabel gave King Henrique III da Fransa diplomatic and economic support to surpass the terrible civil war he was involved in against Protestants and staunch Catholics. In exchange for this valuable support, Henrique III forbade attacks on Portuguese ships and Portuguese possessions, but unlike the English privateers who accepted Izabel I’s commands, many French captains did not respect the royal command, especially the Protestant ones, so the problem persisted.

    1586554781414.png
    Henrique III da Fransa [Henri III de France]​

    All progress went down the drain when Henrique III was assassinated in 1589 by a Catholic fanatic. The King’s death led to the end of the House of Valuá in the male line which meant that a succession crisis arose and the civil war now assumed dynastic contours. According to the Salic Law that prevented women from inheriting, the new King would be the Protestant Henrique de Burbom [Henry of Bourbon], King of Navarra, the closet male relative to the now-deceased King, but the French Catholic League, an alliance created to defend Catholic interests together with Filipe II de Espanha did not accept Henrique de Burbom as the King of Fransa for obvious reasons and contested his claim. Portugal chose to stay away from the conflict hoping that the situation would be resolved with the least damage to Portuguese interests.

    Since Portugal could not produce enough cereals to feed its people, especially in Lisboa and North Africa, it had to import huge quantities of cereals to keep the country running smoothly. One of the major exporters of cereals was the Comunidade Polaco-Lituana [Commonwealth of Poland-Lithuania] a nation that Portugal had some diplomatic ties but the Royal couple decided to improve further in hopes of reducing the price of wheat and other cereals. They sent a diplomat to the court of Estêvão I Batóri [Stephen Báthory] and Ana I Jaguelão [Anna Jagiellon] and achieved satisfying results yet not the ones they were aiming for and so they searched for different solutions such as cutting the intermediaries’ roles in favour of sending Portuguese ships to Polish ports like Guedansque [Gdansk] and Conisberga [Königsberg] or to Hamburgo where a Portuguese firm existed and could act as a warehouse. These expeditions were financed by the Crown, Izabel’s controlled Médisis Agency in Lisboa and other merchants.

    This change of policies regarding the cereal trade began harming Dutch interests who until then were responsible for bringing wheat to Lisboa. Unlike the Habsburgos who blocked trade with the revolting provinces of the Terras Baixas [Netherlands], Portugal did not and even opened a firm in Amesterdão [Amsterdam] by 1586 in which cereals began being collected and stored as well. The Dutch invested high quantities of money in the Corporasão das Armadas da Índia [Corporation of the Indian Armadas] and the sugar trade not to mention that they actively sought Portuguese salt which was indispensable for them.

    1586554995284.png
    Amesterdão in the Late 16th Century​

    There were several attempts by Portugal to obtain rights for their citizens in the revolting provinces but the Calvinist Dutch were quite apprehensive in granting anything to Catholics because they viewed them all as possible traitors that could favour Espanha and therefore this refusal was poorly seen by the Portuguese Crown. Also noteworthy were the attempts to get closer to other Protestant countries such as Dinamarca [Denmark], Suésia [Sweden] and Escósia [Scotland] but also the Orthodox Império Ruso [Russian Empire] that until then was forgotten by Portugal.


    The Anglo-Spanish War and the Eighty Years War (1585-1595); the Invincible Armada:
    The assassination of Guilherme o Tasiturno [William the Silent] in 1584 and the Fall of Antuérpia [Antwerp] in 1585 prompted the Dutch separatists to ask for Izabel I da Inglaterra's support to protect them from the Spanish. Izabel accepted the request because she feared that the recovery of the northern provinces of the Terras Baixas [Netherlands] by the Spanish would threaten Inglaterra. Through the Treaty of Nansutxe [Nonsuch], Izabel granted the Dutch with men, horses and subsidies but refused the sovereignty that they offered her. In turn, the Dutch gave her four key locations to be manned by English troops along the frontline.

    Filipe II took this action as a declaration of open war by Inglaterra against his rule of the Terras Baixas and so he ordered all English ships in Spanish ports to be seized by the local authorities. The British retaliated with attacks against the Spanish fishing industry at Terra Nova [Newfoundland], which achieved good results. Various Spanish possessions in America were also attacked and plundered and the English officially joined the Dutch rebels in the Eighty Years War.

    On February 8, 1587, Maria I da Escósia [Mary I of Scotland] was executed in Inglaterra at the behest of Izabel, an action that scandalized Catholic Europe, including Portugal. This was the final stab against the fragile peace between Espanha and Inglaterra as Filipe II finally decided to invade Inglaterra and place a Catholic monarch on the English throne. The Royal couple of Portugal openly criticized Izabel’s deed and imposed some sanctions but refused to partake in any war against as they knew it would harm their trading interests with the Far East, Brazil and Europe and therefore the economy of Portugal.

    1586555906892.png
    Queen Izabel I da Inglaterra [Elizabeth I of England]​

    Filipe, thirsty for the help of the powerful Portuguese Navy pressured Portugal, especially by threatening the betrothal between Princess Leonor Izabel de Portugal and Prince Filipe de Espanha but Duarte II remained firm in his decision to not wage war against Inglaterra. He allowed Portuguese ships to join the Spanish fleet as mercenaries at their captains’ responsibilities and not the Crown’s. About 9 large galleys and carracks together with a few dozens of smaller vessels joined the Invensível Armada this way.

    The English were not going to let the Spanish amass the largest fleet without a fight and so the English privateer Fransisco Draque [Francis Drake] sank about 30 Spanish ships at the Bay of Cádiz by mid-April 1587 and another 15 ships while returning to Inglaterra, delaying Filipe’s plans by more than a year, prompting the Spanish King to seriously consider if he had the necessary means to invade Inglaterra. As he obtained Papal Sanction from Sisto V on July 29, 1587, Filipe ignored his doubts and decided to go forward with his planned invasion, assembling a huge armada of about 104 ships, 8 000 soldiers and 15 000 sailors at Santander. This number would increase once the Duke of Parma’s army embarked on the Terras Baixas.

    As Álvaro de Bazã [Álvaro de Bazán], the highly experienced naval commander died in February 1588, the command of the expedition was given to Alonso Péres de Gusmão, the Duke of Medina Sidónia who was relatively inexperienced. Meanwhile, the English captains Carlos Hauárde [Charles Howard] and Fransisco Draque led a war of attrition against the Spanish fleet as it sailed towards its destination, preventing it from taking any English port from which the invasion could begin. The Spanish were forced to retire towards Calé [Calais] without getting any base in Inglaterra.

    While the armada was in Calé, it was a victim of a joint ambush from the English and Dutch navies, the Battle of Gravelinas. In this battle, the English took advantage of the greatest weakness of the Spanish naval strategy: the Spanish preferred to board their enemy’s ships instead of sinking them with bombardments so the English simply needed to stay away from the Spanish vessels to neutralize them. But they went further, they bombed the Spanish ships as well, with everything they had available and so they won the engagement.

    1586555578782.png
    The Battle of Gravelinas​

    Damaged from the English bombardment, the armada was forced to sail further north, by turbulent currents bypassing Escósia and Irlanda so it could return to Espanha. It was in this catastrophic return that most ships were lost, the invasion was a total failure.

    Izabel tried to capitalize on the Spanish disaster so that she could force Filipe II to negotiate peace on favourable terms for Inglaterra. To achieve this, she needed to fully destroy the Spanish armada and cut off the supply of silver from the Americas so she organized her own armada, prepared and financed through a stock company that arranged 80 000£ and between 10 000 to 19 000 soldiers. The command was given to both Fransisco Draque and João Noreis [John Norreys] who gave the order to leave Plimate [Plymouth] on April 13, 1589. Like its Spanish counterpart, it suffered from the fury of the elements and was delayed by almost two weeks, being forced to bypass Santander where the majority of the Spanish ships were being repaired.

    On May 4, the British captured and looted part of Corunha and defeated a small relief fleet. However, when they attacked the upper part of the city they were defeated and had to leave. They docked several days later in Lisboa to refuel but King Duarte, fearing Spanish reprisals, especially while he was negotiating the marriage of Princess Leonor granted them only one day in Lisboa. Fueled, Fransisco Draque sailed north again, avoiding the Spanish fleet that came after him and sacked Vigo and Pontevedra which offered far less resistance than Corunha. As they returned to try their luck against Corunha once again, they were met by the sizable Spanish fleet that had been following them which forced the Battle of the Coast of Corunha. Despite winning the battle, Draque’s fleet had lost several ships and most of the crew was falling ill so considering this and the fact the rest of the Spanish fleet could appear at any moment, he decided to withdraw back to Plimate [Plymouth].

    1586555728994.png
    Fransisco Draque [Sir Francis Drake the Famous English Privateer]​

    Inglaterra managed to weaken Espanha further but it was not the total annihilation that the Queen expected. Furthermore, the looting revenues were not as high as expected either especially considering the expedition drained the English treasury considerably, the expedition like its Spanish counterpart was a failure. However, indirectly the English forced the Spanish to divert money and resources to rebuild its navy so as to not allow the Império Otomano to take action now that the country was weakened and this delayed payments to the huge Spanish army in the Terras Baixas which caused riots and benefited the Dutch. The Spanish managed to rebuild their armada with 12 new giant galleons, making the Spanish Navy stronger than before 1588. However, Filipe grew cautious after the failure and began brooding different ways to defeat Inglaterra nevertheless the failed invasion was a huge blow to Espanha’s prestige.

    After controlling the revolting soldiers, Alexandre de Farnese, the Duke of Parma laid siege against Berguém-no-Sóm [Bergen op Zoom], a Dutch city manned by English troops but he was defeated and the morale of the Dutch and the English increased dramatically. In the following year, part of the English forces went to Fransa to support the Protestants in their struggle against the Catholic League. In 1590, a joint Anglo-Dutch force took Breda while the Duke of Parma was also in Fransa to support the Catholic League. The Estatuder da Holanda e Zelândia [Stadtholder of Holland and Zealand], Maurísio de Nasau [Maurice of Nassau], took advantage of the tide of successes and the absence of Farnese to recover a variety of lost territories and with the conquest of Groninga [Groningen] in the summer of 1594, the Spanish were expelled of the northern Terras Baixas.

    Portugal managed to stay away from the conflict and was deeply involved in finding a peaceful solution acting as a mediator between both belligerent countries. From those 9 ships that partook in the Armada, only 2 remained mostly undamaged and three were heavily damaged. As promised the Crown helped no captain. The constant presence of English and Spanish ships off the Asores was, however, an attack against Portuguese sovereignty of these islands, which led Duarte II, under pressure from his son, Prince João Duarte, to protest against the situation but despite promises to end those conflicts, nothing changed.

    I would like to thank all those answers to my question, they were very helpful. Also, these International Developments weren't too different from OTL because I'm not a fan of TLs where there are so many butterflies that things end up far too different from OTL. I like changes but with a thin connection to OTL hence why there haven't been too many changes yet. As the reigns go by, the changes will be in bigger quantities but for now, it's like this.
     
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    The Troubled Portuguese-Spanish Relations
  • Troubled Portuguese-Spanish Relations
    As Atribuladas Relasões Luzo-Espanholas

    It was in the interest of King Duarte II and his wife, Queen Izabel to prevent the Spanish from invading Portugal, a threat that loomed around them ever since they came to power. The best solution they had at their disposal was to have a marriage between both families, which was something quite usual for both countries. Negotiations began as early as 1580 with diplomats from both countries crossing the border frequently until an agreement was somewhat reached in March 1582: Princess Leonor Izabel de Portugal, the only daughter of the Portuguese Royal Couple was betrothed to the Prince of Asturias, Diogo Félix [Diego Felix] with the marriage occurring once the Spanish Prince turned 14 years old, which would be by 1589.

    Portugal would provide Espanha with a considerable dowry of 250 000 Spanish dobras (roughly 97.25 contos de réis, 100 000 ducats at the time). This dowry would, therefore, pay the debts owed to Espanha after Alcáser Quibir and guarantee that Filipe II would not invade Portugal. These terms were not as much appreciated in Espanha as they were in Portugal as the dowry was quite low considering previous sums. Nevertheless, Filipe in need of money and with a very high chance of his son inheriting Portugal peacefully through his future wife accepted the agreement.

    The premature death of the young Prince on November 21 of that same year did not stop the arrangement as the deceased Diogo was replaced by his younger brother Filipe, 8 years younger than Leonor, now the heir to Espanha. The wedding date was now 1592 which pleased Portugal quite a lot as it gave them more time to arrange the dowry without straining the economy as much as it would in the previous date. The Spanish, however, took the chance to demand an increase in the dowry’s value, something the Portuguese King promised to consider but was not so keen on accepting as the Portuguese situation was not the best at the time…

    Princess Leonor had several romances during her adolescence, being regarded as romantic and somewhat naïve by many. Standing out among her lovers and admirers was a petty nobleman called Afonso de Alenquer. It is not known how far this relationship went but as it happened with Queen Izabel, rumours spread quickly in court and Duarte was forced to send the young nobleman away to Índia in order to protect his daughter’s integrity and betrothal with the Spanish Prince.

    1587077408467.png
    Princess Leonor Izabel de Aviz-Guimarães​

    Tragedy would, however, plague the Portuguese Royal Family…about half a year before her marriage, Leonor passed out while visiting Lisboa with her mother and ladies-in-waiting. She was immediately brought to Paso da Ribeira where the court physicists inspected her, discovering that she had malaria. Despite the physicists’ best efforts, she would eventually perish on July 13, 1591, at 21 years old. Many of her Médisis [Médici] uncles, aunts and even her grandmother died in the same fashion which some attributed to some sort of curse. The death of the beautiful and cultured Princess caused a great deal of pain to the Royal Family, which was now shattered, but also to the court and the country. Condolences quickly arrived from all over Europe and Spain, where Prince Filipe was reportedly devastated to find out he had lost his betrothed. Leonor’s death brought another problem to Portugal as the matrimonial alliance with Spain was now cancelled bringing everything back to square one.

    Since there weren’t many worthy options of potential wives for Prince João Duarte, Queen Izabel proposed, in a Council of State, the marriage of her son to a Habsburg wife. The proposal was approved by all members of the Council of which her son was part already and so an inquiry was made to Filipe II for the hand of his daughter Princess Izabel Clara Eujénia [Isabella Clara Eugenia] or his cousins of the Austrian Branch, Maria Cristina and Catarina Renata. It is known that Filipe did not welcome those inquiries well mainly because he was in dire need of money for his navy and army expenses but also because Espanha was not in the condition to pay a huge dowry.

    However, since 1588, Izabel Clara Eujénia’s marriage prospects were greatly reduced, Sebastião I of Portugal, one of her potential husbands died in Africa and Rodolfo II do Sacro-Império [Rudolf II of the Holy Empire], another potential husband refused her. In the mind of the Spanish Monarch, there were options such as Matias [Matthias] and Ernesto de Habsburgo, his cousins and potential heirs to the Sacro-Império but also the members of House of Guize but despite all this, the Portuguese match was still the one he was more inclined to.

    1587077503902.png
    Princess Izabel Clara Eujénia de Espanha​

    Finally, he convened a Council of State to discuss the Portuguese proposal and the future of his favourite daughter and after the meeting, Filipe decided to send his terms of the contract to Portugal. Amongst the reasons for this decision were:
    • The need for the Spanish King to regain some of the lost influence in its western neighbour provoked by the death of Sebastião. By having a strong influence in Portugal, Espanha could potentially weaken its enemies by depriving them of the profitable Portuguese spice trades.
    • The number of male sons Filipe II lost was very large and although Prince Filipe was 13 years old and healthy, the possibility of him dying was high as he was relatively frail. If such a thing was to happen, Izabel Clara would be the heir to the Spanish throne and therefore a Portuguese consort would be better regarded than a German or Italian one. Although Filipe prayed for it to not happen…

    The contract brought many heavy clauses that would obviously benefit Espanha and prejudice Portugal as Filipe wanted:
    • The Portuguese ports to be closed to Protestant ships;
    • Portuguese support in all the Spanish conflicts, especially naval support to fend off English, Dutch and Ottoman attacks;
    • The official recognition of the Ilhas Filipinas [Philippine Islands] as Spanish;
    • Access to the Chinese and Japanese markets without restrictions.
    In return, Portugal would receive:
    • A dowry of approximately 75 contos de Réis;
    • The forgiveness of all Portuguese debts towards Espanha;
    • The addition of 50 léguas (leagues, roughly 300km) beyond the Tordesilhas Line in Brazil only as compensation for the loss of the Filipinas and to increase the dowry size of Princess Izabel;
    • The guarantee that Espanha would not invade Portugal.
    The Portuguese Council of State was very apprehensive and offended by the terms that Filipe pressed forward as it compromised the Portuguese foreign policy and forced Portugal to participate in wars to which the country had no reason to join. Queen Izabel and Prince João Duarte were the ones who opposed the proposal the most despite being the ones who wanted it in the first place. Now they called for it to be rejected and for Portugal to search for another bride in the Italian Peninsula or in the Austrian Branch of House of Habsburgo which King Duarte was inclined to agree but Duke Teodózio II de Bragansa [Theodosius II], a Spanish supporter, stopped it by suggesting them to bargain the terms to obtain a more favourable marriage contract.

    Duarte accepted this suggestion and entrusted his nephew to negotiate with the Spanish King on his behalf while they searched for alternatives elsewhere. The Duke of Bragansa promptly made his way to Madride and communicate his King’s concerns regarding the marriage’s terms and the negotiations resumed. After several months of advances and setbacks, Teodózio returned to Lisboa with new terms, Filipe’s concessions regarding his initial proposal:
    • Portugal now did not need to enter the Spanish wars but it had to support Spain economically and diplomatically in the name of the Holy Catholic Church.
    • Portugal still had to close its ports to Protestants, recognize the Filipinas as Spanish possessions and allow Spanish traders to enter the Chinese and Japanese markets.
    As a consequence of the “softened” terms, the number of leagues granted by Espanha in Brazil was reduced to only 30 (about 180km).

    Novo Tordesilhas 4.png
    The New Land Grants in Brazil, Represented by the Red Line and the original territory of the Captaincies​

    The new terms provided Portugal with more flexibility in their diplomatic relations but the terms were still considered outrageous by the Queen and the Prince. Nevertheless, King Duarte did not feel the same way as his wife and son and with some whispers from his nephew the Duke of Bragansa, he accepted the new marriage contract, irritating his family.

    The wedding was held by proxy on September 28, 1591, at the Cathedral of Toledo by the hand of Cardinal Gaspar de Quiroga e Vela with Teodózio de Bragansa representing his cousin in the ceremonies. On October 10, at the Cathedral of Lisboa, Archbishop Miguel de Castro presided over the official celebrations as the 25-year-old Princess arrived in Portugal. João Duarte was 19 years old at the time and deeply irritated by the entire affair but reportedly received his new wife with the dignity she deserved and went as far as to confess to his mother that he found his spouse good-looking enough for him.

    Finally, it seemed that Portugal resolved most of its problems with Espanha but likely gained others with Protestant nations, this despite Duarte and later his son faking the enforcement of some clauses of the marriage contract. Despite Portugal gaining more land in Brazil at the expense of the Ilhas Filipinas, the problem of map demarcation remained due to inaccurate and imprecise coordinates. While it was now mostly accepted that the mouth of the Amazonas [River Amazon] belonged to Portugal, the Portuguese argued that the mouth of the Rio da Prata [La Plata River] belonged to them even before the new concessions whilst the Spanish did not see it the same way and so much diplomatic struggle was in the horizon once Espanha stopped looking so much towards Europe. But for the time being, Portugal was at peace.

    I would like to thank all the feedback until now and I hope everyone is alright in these days of peril. Anyhow, I'm not 100% about these terms I laid down for the marriage and all but I think it should bring some changes outside of Portugal soon. Looking forward to updating this.
     
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    Late Reign Of King Duarte and Queen Izabel
  • Late Reign of King Duarte and Queen Izabel
    O Fim do Reinado de Dom Duarte e Dona Izabel

    Izabel Clara’s First Year in Portugal:
    As intended by her father, Izabel Clara Eujénia began to gather the pro-Spanish courtiers around her in order to lead them and further her father's interests, but she quickly realized that her task was not as easy as Filipe II had thought it would be...Both Prince João Duarte and the Queen had very strong and unyielding personalities regarding various subjects, especially when they knew they were right or saw that they were being prejudiced. They were serious supporters of an Independent “Nationalist” policy together with King Duarte who was certainly more malleable than them but who held their advice in great esteem.

    Furthermore, the Queen had also replaced the old courtiers of Sebastião and João III with young Italian aristocrats, some young Portuguese nobles and even some merchants and artists, all of which were extremely loyal to her, her husband and her son. Like his father and mother, Prince João Duarte was very popular and had a small but trustworthy group of companions with whom he practised the widest variety of leisure activities such as bullfighting and hunting. He also had many ladies hoping to become lovers to the handsome Prince just as many courtiers searching for his favors. Finally, the high Portuguese nobility was loyal to the Royal Couple through ties of blood and fidelity like Duchess Juliana de Aveiro who was one of the Queen’s most loyal followers.

    1587675773098.png
    Juliana de Lencastre, Duchess of Aveiro​

    Thanks to these reasons, Izabel Clara could only count on the support of some nobles and clerics that were somewhat disappointed with the current situation of the country especially regarding the tolerance that the Royal Couple promoted towards Protestants and Cristãos-Novos [New Christians]. But these supporters were older people much more conservative and less innovative than those who roamed the court and therefore they were less reliable to Izabel Clara who complained about the situation to her father who tried to send some Spanish courtiers to help her. Although the schemes were causing difficulties for the Spanish Princess, she was very well received by her mother-in-law, Queen Izabel, who brought her to her group of closest companions. The Queen introduced the Princess to the Académia e Companhia das Artes de Dezenho de Lisboa [Academy and Company of Arts of Design of Lisbon] that she founded and to the many orphanages that she kept with her income in hopes that Izabel Clara would follow her footsteps and take responsibility for these assets, something which the young Princess was very receptive about. Overall both Izabels shared a good relationship…that is if politics and diplomacy were not involved in the conversations…

    In accordance with the clauses of João Duarte’s marriage to Izabel Clara, Duarte II officially closed the Portuguese ports to Protestants but no ship was seized, especially if they were flying a white flag. There were other schemes to go around this “prohibition” such as Protestants being transported in Portuguese ships or sailing to other ports beside Lisboa such as Porto and Setúbal where the control was less rigorous and the Spanish spies were not as present. In the long run, this adversity compelled the Portuguese to be more active in the European trade routes and rally less in foreign involvement, something which the Royal Couple had been trying to do since the very first years of their reign and with poor results. Overall Protestant investment in Portugal fell but not in a quantity that threatened the country’s stabilized finances.

    In March 1592, Izabel Clara announced that she was pregnant, news that brought much joy to the court. The birth of an heir to the Aviz was a long-awaited and welcome thing since there was no one but João Duarte to continue the lineage. Around May, the court went to the Palásio of Castelo de Vide, the Spanish Princess’ first visit to the area. It would be here that Princess Leonor Izabel de Aviz-Guimarães, named after João Duarte’s deceased sister, was born on August 16. She was baptized in the Cathedral of Évora and had her grandfather Filipe II de Espanha as the godfather and as first godmother Catarina Micaela, Izabel’s sister and Duchess of Savoia, both represented by the mother of the child. As second godmother the little Princess had her grandmother, Queen Izabel de Médisis who began entertaining the idea of having her marry her cousin Cosme de Médisis [Cosimo de Medici], heir of Toscânia who was just a couple years her elder. Izabel’s brother Fernando II da Toscânia seemed quite excited with the prospect once he received his sister’s letter and so the proposal was made to João Duarte who also seemed interested in the idea but preferred to wait a few years before deciding anything.


    The French Succession:
    In that same year of 1592, the war in Fransa had reached a stalemate. On one hand, Henrique de Burbom [Henri de Bourbon] also known as Henrique IV da Fransa, the legitimate King according to Fransa’s law of succession could not achieve the necessary consensus to reign due to his confession nor could he take Paris but on the other hand, the Catholic League was unable to find an indisputable Anti-King that could counter Henrique’s claim, not to mention the growing divisions within the League’s leaders who were now more concerned in having their private interests satisfied.

    Among the various possibilities of Anti-Kings, the name of Izabel Clara Eujénia the future Queen of Portugal was pressed forward. Izabel was a granddaughter of King Henrique II da Fransa and was also a fervent Catholic but she was a woman whom the Salic Law prevented from ever obtaining the throne not to mention that her mother, Izabel de Valuá [Elizabeth of Valois] renounced her “claims” when she married King Filipe II.

    The Spanish monarch promptly gave his consent to these supporters of his daughter and promptly pressured Duarte II to do the same, in accordance with the marriage agreement signed a year earlier. There are some who claim that Filipe was considering bold schemes such as forcing João Duarte to abdicate his legitimate right as the next King of Portugal to become King of Fransa with Izabel Clara and in return, Portugal would go to Filipe II and his descendants once Duarte II died. But these schemes didn’t leave the paper and as such, they are impossible to confirm. What can be verified is that the Portuguese King realized the mistake he made by accepting the marriage, but it was too late to do anything…João Duarte and Queen Izabel advised him to support his daughter-in-law’s claim but to leave the responsibility of her election to the French Estates-General and the will of the French people and that was what Duarte II did.

    The Estates-General convened in Paris by Carlos, Duke of Maiéne [Charles, Duke of Mayenne], in 1592, issued the notion that the French laws and customs forbade foreigners from assuming the position of King even if they argued that they were preserving Catholicism in Fransa. This notion excluded the candidacy of Izabel Clara and her husband but the Spanish refused it and kept pressuring the Guizes, the French people and the Portuguese to change the verdict. The instability continued and in Espanha, more drastic measures were pondered but there was little support internationally and even internally so any concrete plans kept being postponed.

    Meanwhile, Henrique de Burbom convinced by his lover Gabrielle d'Estrées but also by Henrique III da Fransa’s final wish and by his many supporters in Fransa and abroad (the Médisis were supporting him economically), and interestingly by the Duke of Maiéne himself with whom Henrique was negotiating in secret, announced his willingness to convert to Catholicism. This move gave the final blow to the Catholic League and the Spanish ambitions as his conversion that took place on February 18, 1593, brought many of his former opponents to his cause. His excommunication was lifted by the Archbishop of Burje [Bourges] and in the following year, he was anointed and officially crowned as Henrique IV in the Cathedral of Chartre [Chartres].

    Filipe II did not recognize this move but did not go forward with anything as he was already overburdened with his wars against the English and the Dutch. Duarte II and the rest of the Portuguese Royal Family gave their condolences to Izabel Clara but encouraged the acceptance of the verdict of the Estates General and recognized Henrique IV as the legitimate King of Fransa. This would not be the last news that Henrique IV would give, however…by 17 January 1595, he would declare war against both Espanha and Portugal.

    1587678180432.png
    King Henrique IV da Fransa, the First King of House of Burbom [Bourbon]​


    Late Reign Tragedies:
    On August 19, 1593, Izabel Clara gave birth to a stillborn boy named Duarte, a boy who would have been the heir to Portugal had he lived…The Spanish Princess was devastated but was comforted by the Royal Family who were together in her grief. That year had much more grief to come…A week before the New Year, Queen Izabel de Médisis fell terribly ill and never recovered, receiving her last sacraments in the very first days of 1594. On the day of her death, January 4, she called her remaining family in Portugal for some final words:
    • To her son, she wished that he followed the example of the previous monarchs named João and of his father so that he would not let anyone use him or the country in which she felt so welcomed use as a pawn. She also urged him to rule with justice and wisdom.
    • To her daughter-in-law, she asked to continue sponsoring the art and charity and give her husband good advice.
    • To her husband, she urged him to listen to her son as well if not better than to her and to continue the good work.
    The death of Queen Izabel at 51 years old was felt throughout the country, especially in Lisboa, a city in which she frequently visited and practice charity thus leaving a good memory of her. In front of her orphanage in the capital, a statue of marble was built and in the newly found village of Santa Izabel do Cabo da Boa Esperansa, a statue was also built, the first one in South Africa.

    But the person who suffered the most was the King, who became constantly tired, depressed, disappointed and with little will to rule now that he lost his beloved wife. He delegated power to his son making him Regent in the Name of the King. João Duarte kept consulting his father but his father gave him less response as the months went by.

    On June 12 of 1595, Izabel Clara miscarried another child and in this very heavy air of grief, four days later, the King was found dead in his room. Officially, it is said he died of natural causes but many historians argued that he committed suicide due to his emotional weakness. The country was grieving heavily for a lost Royal child and a lost King but João Duarte stepped on and took the reins of the country in this time of need and was determined to lead the country to greatness as King João IV. But that was part of it... many things were left away from the eyes of the people...

    A small reference to a certain movement called Sebastianism must be made. This movement believed that the deceased King Sebastião would return to Portugal on a white horse during a foggy morning to save Portugal from its misfortunes, slowly dissipated during the reign of Duarte II nicknamed the Popular due to his immense popularity with the people. People began believing that he, his wife and his descendants were the ones who came on that foggy morning, in a couple of white horses to save Portugal from its misfortunes and not that madman called King Sebastião. Duarte II's reign also marked the point of no return to Portuguese Nationalism as from 1580 forward, Portugal considered itself a country, a set of people and culture completely different from Espanha that could not, in any circumstance, lose it's independence.

    And so the Reign of King Duarte II of House Aviz and his wife ended. 15 years are not much but they were not exactly that young in 1580. So yes, onto King João IV's reign. Also again thank you for the comments and likes.
     
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    King João IV's First Years
  • King João IV: First Years
    Dom João IV: Primeiros Anos

    The beginning of João IV’s reign was very turbulent and sorrowful. He had lost his sister in 1591, a newborn son in 1593, his mother in 1594 and his father in 1595. To make matters worse, Fransa declared war against Portugal because João's wife, Izabel Clara was the greatest threat to Henrique IV’s rule. Finally, João’s heir was his 4-year-old daughter, Leonor Izabel de Aviz who was likely to never become Queen due to her sex thanks to the Lei Mental made by Duarte I on April 8, 1434, which forbid women from inheriting the Crown (in theory that is).

    During those perilous times, the King only truly counted on his three longtime friends: Fransisco Coutinho, a member of the Counts of Redondo’s family; Vasco António da Costa-Corte-Real, the Count of Angra and Capitão-Donatário of the islands of Terseira and São Jorge in the Asores which he inherited from his mother Margarida Corte-Real, the heiress of the famous explorers and finally the petty Florentine nobleman Ludovico Accolti, better known in Portugal as Luíz Acolti. It was by spending time with his friends and his daughter that João felt somewhat better and arranged the will to lead Portugal in what became known as the Ano Amaldisoado de 1595 [the Cursed Year of 1595].

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    King João IV de Portugal​

    In this Cursed Year, Catarina do Cândia, the pretender to the throne of Cândia [Kandy] arrived in Lisboa with little Diogo Lopes de Souza, to personally ask the King of Portugal for support to recover her lost throne. It was said that João IV and the Portuguese court were impressed with the presence of the exotic woman who despite being Catholic and speaking Portuguese still practiced many Sinhalese customs and had Moorish complexion. It was claimed and nowadays confirmed, that the King was romantically involved with Catarina while she was in Lisboa, as he reportedly did not sleep often with his wife during this time and ignored her. These rumours are further justified by the existence of other mistresses like Maria de Ataíde, daughter of the former Count of Atouguia, a Venetian lady that his mother promoted in court and a female artist known as Joana whom his mother also promoted. This proved that although the King was leading the country energetically and efficiently, he was emotionally shattered.

    João IV granted Catarina the honorific title of Princeza do Cândia [Princess of Kandy] in 1597. It was equivalent in prestige to a Duke and to complement it, she received a fifth of Portuguese Seilão’s [Ceylon] revenues together with a considerable Royal Pension so that she could hire mercenaries for a new campaign that would be coordinated with the Captain-General of Seilão. Catarina received visits from Papal Nuncios and some foreign envoys who also gave her some monetary aid, but above all, she received many marriage proposals both from Portuguese nobles and foreign nobles, after all, she was comely enough to the eye and young being 19 years old in 1597. Perhaps because of the sheer number of proposals made to her or because the main reason for her losing the throne was her possible marriage, she refused to accept any proposal. In return for everything she got from João IV, she would recognize the King of Portugal as her overlord. The agreement also contained a code of laws which the King was hopeful would seduce the Sinhalese to her cause and Portugal’s. Catarina do Cândia left Lisboa in 1598, leaving little Diogo Lopes de Souza behind in a tearful separation. The boy would later make a career at service of his country.

    But perhaps the worst thing that happened to Portugal in that cursed year was when a Dutchman called Ián (João) Hüíguen van Linshoten [Jan Huygen van Linschoten] who had been working for a former Archbishop of Goa, published the book “Travel Accounts of Portuguese Navigation in the Orient”, a work that contained very precise information about Índia, Japão, China and other Portuguese possessions in the East together with the best ways to navigate the Indian Ocean and to bypass the Portuguese control. The book exposed what until then was a secret of the state and although Linshoten was not the first to disclose it, (another Dutchman called Piter Platevute [Pieter Platevoet] had already published detailed planispheres of the world in 1592), he was without any doubt the one who achieved a wider international projection, as his book was translated into English and German in 1598, Latin in 1599 and French in 1610.


    1588371964703.png
    “Travel Accounts of Portuguese Navigation in the Orient”​

    All this information encouraged a consortium of Dutch merchants to send an expedition to the East, the 1st expedition without any ties to Portugal, which left the Provínsias Unidas [United Provinces] on April 2, 1595, and only returned on August 14, 1597. This expedition achieved considerable profits, but it was very poorly received on the island of Java, leaving the Dutch with a bad reputation there, (thanks to the intervention of the Portuguese spies and the murder of a local Prince by the Dutch) and had many deaths and conflicts between the crew members.

    Linshoten hailed as a hero in Europe beyond the Pirinéus [Pyrenees], was considered a spy in Portugal and Espanha, thus destined for capital punishment if he were to ever step on Iberian soil again. His betrayal contributed to a new climate of strong distrust between Portuguese authorities and the ever-rising local merchants and foreign traders, as they feared the presence of more spies. In the Provínsias Unidas, the Dutch merchants split between two factions regarding trade:
    • The Portuguese-friendly “Booteigenarens” (boat suppliers) who supported the model of financing Portuguese Armadas as they had been doing until then as the Portuguese were better accustomed to trading in the Indian Ocean and thus more capable of larger profits and better relations with the locals.
    • The Anti-Catholic “Dominatorens” (dominators of trade) who argued that Catholics should not be able to control trade and that the Dutch could and should take Portugal and Espanha’s positions in international trade.
    This was yet another point of contention between the society of the Provínsias Unidas, besides religion and political disputes between the Grand Pensionaries and the Estatuders [Stadtholders], a pot of gunpowder that was close to exploding into a civil war.

    On a more joyful note, on August 23, 1597, a boy of fragile constitution but healthy named Duarte Filipe of Aviz was born at the Palásio de Castelo de Vide. His name was a combination of both of his grandfathers’ first names and he was baptized in Évora with Teodózio de Bragansa being his godfather and both Catarina de Aviz-Guimarães and Margarida de Parma being his godmothers. The birth of a male heir to Portugal seemed to have reconnected King João and Queen Izabel Clara on a more personal level. Two years later, on May 10, 1599, a girl named Maria Catarina of Aviz was born in the Paso da Ribeira and baptized right there in Lisboa with Fernando I da Toscânia as the godfather and Juliana de Lencastre and Maria de Médisis, future Queen of Fransa as godmothers. The royal family was growing up with a Prince and two Princesses warming the days of the Royal Couple and securing the succession of the country and of Espanha too as Prince Duarte Filipe was only behind his mother in the Spanish Succession Line.

    On March 8, 1600, something that no one was expecting, happened. Manuel, eldest son of the exiled and now deceased António the Prior of Crato arrived in Lisboa with his wife, Emília de Orânje-Nasau [Orange-Nassau], a daughter of Guilherme o Tasiturno [William the Silent], and their two very young children, 2-year-old Maria Béljica and months old Manuel António. Manuel was an illegitimate son of an illegitimate son, with a weak claim that practically no one else supported, a marriage without a dowry, as the Orânje-Nasau were staunch Calvinists and refused to recognize the marriage performed in a Catholic fashion, little money to live in accordance to their status and two children to raise and for these reasons, he knelt before his cousin the King, renounced his father’s claim, swore allegiance to his cousin and in return, João IV made him Count of Crato with half the income of that town together with a medium-sized Royal Pension, House of Crato was therefore founded, despite the opposition of Izabel Clara who did not appreciate an Oranje-Nasau in Portugal and the Priorate of Crato who lost income to him.

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    Manuel do Crato and Emília of Orânje-Nasau​

    After five long years full of the widest variety of events and catastrophes, Portugal, already at peace with Fransa following the Peace of Monpelié [Montpellier] and with the King more mentally stable and with his succession secured, made way to a new phase, a phase with many more adversities but also progress.

    So I want to start by saying that I made a few very minor changes in the last update, nothing too big. This is the first update from the reign of King John IV "The Prudent". Next week should be the war with France, I'm a bit nervous about it mostly because of dates and strategies but I'm sure everything will turn out okay. Anyway, thank you for all the likes and replies, stay safe.
     
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    Europe: King Henrique's War
  • King Henrique’s War
    A Guerra do Rei Henrique

    1595 had just begun and King Henrique IV de Fransa [Henry IV of France] was still facing opposition to his rule: The Catholic League was still active with many of its members refusing to recognize him as the King; part of the Army of Flandres was still in French territory; Filipe II de Espanha had yet to recognize him as King and Izabel Clara Eujénia’s alleged claim still lingered around. For these reasons but also because Henrique wished to unite the French people in a common cause, he declared war on Espanha and Portugal on January 17 as stated before. The French King had clear objectives for this war: Eliminate his political enemies, make the claim of the Queen of Portugal unfeasible and obtain territorial gains. He was convinced that he could defeat both Iberian countries because Espanha was involved in several wars already and Portugal had been humiliated by some Muslim barbarians in Marrocos.

    Preparations for War:
    The declaration of war was received in Portugal by the end of February and it was said that João Duarte, at the time still Regent for his depressed father, covered his face with his hands whilst shaking his head in disbelief at the mess he found himself in. Then he called for his cousin, Teodózio II de Bragansa to come to Lisboa as soon as it was possible. The Constable’s arrival in the capital coincided with the Royal Decree to raise the Ordenansas for war and prepare the Army. Fransa was far away from Portugal’s borders but the Sultanate of Marrocos was not and this was a perfect chance for Amade Almansor [Ahmad al-Mansur] to attack the North African possessions and with the humiliation suffered in Alcáser Quibir still haunting the minds of the Portuguese elite, no one wished to harm their prestige more with unnecessary risks, least of all the King.

    In total, by late March, 10 Tersos were raised with about 2 000 men in each, making a total of about 20 000 soldiers, one of the largest national contingents ever raised in Portugal.

    Name
    Commander
    Terso do Minho​
    Álvaro de Lencastre, Duke of Aveiro​
    Terso do Douro​
    Miguel Luíz de Menezes, Marquis of Vila Real​
    Terso do Porto​
    Luíz de Noronha e Menezes, Heir to the Marquisate of Vila Real​
    Terso de Tráz-os-Montes​
    Fransisco de Portugal, Count of Vimiozo​
    Terso de Coimbra​
    João Gonsalves de Ataíde, Count of Atouguia​
    Terso da Beira​
    António de Castro, Count of Monsanto​
    Terso de Lisboa​
    Teodózio II de Bragansa, Duke of Bragansa and Constable of Portugal​
    Terso da Estremadura​
    João Coutinho, Count of Redondo​
    Terso do Alentejo​
    Duarte de Bragansa, Heir to the Dukedom of Bragansa and former Vise-Rei do Brazil​
    Terso do Algarve​
    Fransisco da Gama, Count of Vidigueira​

    This decently large number of soldiers was achieved thanks to the consolidation that the Ordenansas had in Portugal and its society ever since they were implemented in 1570. The nobility had allowed the King to fully enforce the Ordenansas in their lands after Alcáser Quibir despite many powerful nobles like the Bragansas, the Aveiros and the Vila Reais being exempt from doing so by law. As in Sebastião’s army, there was some corruption noted in the recruitment but in general, the troops were more disciplined and cohesive than those of 1578. Contrary to what was normal in Europe at the time, there were almost no mercenaries, Sebastião had much difficult to arrange them for his campaign and João Duarte was no different.

    Eventually, Izabel managed to convince her father-in-law and husband to send troops to fight in Fransa as a way to appease her father for “Portugal’s troubles” enforcing some requirements of the marriage contract and hopefully regain some of the lost prestige of the Portuguese Army since it would not regain it by staying put. 6 Tersos left Portugal to southern Fransa by the end of May despite the risks.

    Naval Combats and the Supremacy of the Iberian Nations at Sea:
    A month earlier, in April, João Duarte and Filipe II agreed to use their fleets against Fransa despite the Portuguese King refusing the offer to unite them in one. His reasoning was simple, keeping the Portuguese fleet independent, guaranteed that the English and the Dutch would not attack it and that it would not be “diverted” to other destinations...Therefore the Spanish naval engagements were focused on the French Mediterranean coast where it achieved great success, razing ports such as Marselha, Toulão [Toulon], Monpelié [Montpellier] and Narbona, among others, of course, making the almost nonexistent French fleet unfeasible in the Mediterranean.

    As for Portugal, by April 25, a fleet of 25 Portuguese ships under the command of João de Azevedo, the Admiral of Portugal, bombed and razed the port of Larrochel [La Rochelle] and the fleet that was anchored there. They continued on the coast of Aquitânia and went as far as to bomb Bordéus [Bordeaux]. By May 2, they had a naval engagement with a French fleet of 60 ships that Henrique IV sent to face them. The French had the numbers but Portugal had the power as most of its ships were galleons of great tonnage and with many cannons, furthermore, the Portuguese used the English strategy of bombing instead of boarding and because of it, the French lost between 60% of its ships while Portugal lost a total of 7 (3 were sunk and 4 damaged).

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    The French Offensive Against Portuguese Ships​

    On May 4, the Portuguese took control over the island of Olérão which became a base from which the attacks were made and the ships could take refuge from storms. Throughout the rest of the war, Portuguese ships devastated the French coasts from Britânia [Brittany] to the border with Espanha with the French Navy being powerless to do anything even if some of their fleets caused damage and some plunder in the Asores and the Americas. But this naval superiority brought consequences, as both Inglaterra [England] and the Provínsias Unidas [United Provinces] grew worried about having so many ships close to their shores and contemplating intervening on behalf of Henrique, however, because he was the aggressor, Izabel I who did not wish to lose one of her few allies, Portugal sat still and so did the Dutch. On the other hand, while the Protestants did not directly enter the conflict or their intervention was small, the opportunistic Carlos Emanuel I, Duke of Savoia joined the Iberian countries after witnessing their successes and was now hoping for a territorial expansion.

    Land Warfare, the Core of the War:
    During its march towards Fransa, the Portuguese Army stopped in Madride where the Spanish King reinforced them with an extra Terso of 3 000 Spanish fresh soldiers which brought the number of soldiers to something between 15 000 and 16 000. They entered Fransa through the Bay of Biscaia on 4 June and laid siege to Baiona [Bayonne] and Biarritse, which they took on the 16th with minimal losses. Teodózio then advanced to Dax, laying siege on the 21st and capturing it on the 24th.

    On June 20, the Army of Flandres laid siege to Lacatlé [La Catelet] and captured it on the 26th. Two days before the capture, Carlos Emanuel entered Provensa with an army of 13 000 soldiers, mostly mercenaries and took Cane [Cannes] on July 1, laying siege to Toulão on July 14. Both the Spanish and Savoyards met moderate success on the Franco Condado [Franche-Comté] and Northern Savoia as well.

    The war had started only 7 months ago and Henrique had already realized that he had gone too far when declaring war on the two Iberian countries, especially when his position was not fully consolidated. Because of the lack of victories and the devastation that the coastal towns were suffering, more and more voices were rising against his authority. This convinced the French King that he needed to eliminate his opponents in Britânia as quickly as he could lest his enemies completely overrun Fransa. He sent his Marshals and trusted commanders to different areas:
    • Auvergne and Balagny to Picardia to stall the Army of Flandres;
    • Biron, likely his best Marshal, to Borgonha [Burgundy] together Sully, his First Minister;
    • Joyeuse and Beaumanoir to fight the Portuguese in the southwest,
    • La Châtre and Boisdauphin to stop Carlos Emanuel in Provensa.
    Meanwhile, Henrique rode with Cossé to Britânia
    Henry's Marshals.png
    Henrique's Marshals and the War Situation​

    Battle of Pau:
    On July 28, Joyeuse and Beaumanoir approached the Portuguese Army that was laying siege to Pau and overconfidently, forced a fight. The French were about 10 000 (roughly 9 000 infantrymen and 1 000 knights), most of whom were hurriedly recruited from southern Fransa and therefore were not very cohesive. The best troops were with Henrique in Britânia or in Picardia but their cavalry was strong. Their disposition was as follows:
    • First Line of Troops with 5 Regiments under Joyeuse with the cavalry in the flanks (roughly 5 000 infantrymen and 1 000 on horse).
    • Second Line of Troops with 4 Regiments under Beaumanoir (roughly 4 000 infantrymen).
    Teodózio had numerical superiority in both infantry and cavalry, his troops had already developed group spirit and thanks to the mandatory training they had been subjected to, they had accumulated experience and knew what to do, yet, they had yet to face an army in combat. The Portuguese command was slightly defensive in approach and hesitant too, thanks to the previous failure in Marrocos and acted with caution. The disposition of Portuguese troops was as follows:
    • First Line with the Spanish Terso and the Terso da Estremadura in the centre and the cavalry in the flanks. The command was under Count of Redondo (Roughly 4 000 infantrymen and 1 500 on horse).
    • Second Line with the Terso do Douro, Lisboa and Tráz-os-Montes under Teodózio himself (6 000 infantrymen).
    • Third Line or reserves with the Terso de Coimbra and the Terso da Beira under the overall command of the Count of Monsanto.

    Teodózio began the battle by ordering the bulk of the artillery to focus on the advancing French forces, searching to organize themselves in the battleground. This inflicted casualties on the enemy and disoriented them. Joyeuse, unable to bring the French artillery to counter the Portuguese bombardment, ordered the French cavalry to strike in hopes of disrupting the enemy artillery this way. As soon as the Duke of Bragansa noticed the French cavalry charging, he sent the Marquis of Vila Real, who was commanding the cavalry, to meet them. Both cavalries met and although the French lacked the numbers, they had a slight advantage in quality, so the Portuguese left flank cavalry was neutralized and in danger of shattering while the right flank, where Vila Real was, seemed more resistant.

    With these positive results in mind and with the Portuguese’s first line of defence seemingly in numerical inferiority, Joyeuse ordered the front regiments to advance. Teodózio deciding to take no risks and noticing the recklessness of his opponent ordered the entire second line of defense to reinforce the first line, strengthening it and making it very consistent. He also ordered the reserves to move to the left flank to support the ever-weakened left cavalry there. Beaumanoir sent the remaining French regiments to support Joyeuse when it became clear that his colleague’s plan was not going to work. As expected by both sides, the Portuguese cavalry in the left flank had to retreat after suffering heavy casualties and disrupting its organization, however, the two reserves Terços had already covered their retreat by stalling the French horsemen.

    Meanwhile, on the other flank, Vila Real’s forces managed to overcome, with great difficulty, their opposing counterparts who retreated. Instead of chasing the enemy to make sure they left the battleground, as expected, Vila Real advanced against the French infantry in the centre, razing two French regiments with the help of the Tersos, the French were left exposed. The now-free Tersos and Vila Real’s horsemen rammed the exposed French who barely held them back. While all this happened, the French cavalry in the Portuguese left flank collapsed and retreated. This was noted by Joyeuse and Beaumanoir who realized they were at risk of being surrounded and so they retreated their army, giving the victory to Portugal.

    Consequences of the Battle of Pau, the Path Towards Peace:
    The Portuguese celebrated their victory but their commanders noticed the problems that the battle showcased: they had lost close to 3 000 men, most of them horsemen meaning the already seemingly weak Portuguese cavalry was now crippled. It was clear that this sector of the Portuguese Army was far from what was needed and if they struggled so much when they had numerical superiority, they would certainly collapse with an even or lower number of riders. Thus it was very likely that this could cost Portugal the next battle and also meant that this was a Pyrrhic victory.

    Teodózio requested reinforcements from both his King and from Filipe II, but from the first, he received very little, due to fears of needing to send troops to North Africa and having none if he sent more and from the latter, he only received troops to garrison the conquered towns. Due to this lack of support, the Constable of Portugal was forced to adopt an even more defensive stance while trying to keep the morale of his troops high. Luckily for him, the French were suffering from the same problems, they lost 5 000 men, most of which were cavalry units and therefore they also couldn’t do much but reform their armies, something which would take quite some time. The Aquitanian front was now at a stalemate, with both parties laying siege to the towns, hoping the other would not come to relieve the sieged towns.

    Toulão fell to Carlos Emanuel on July 21 and this Duke secured a victory against the French at Colobríer [Collobrières] not long after, where he lost quite the amount of men, even more than Teodózio, but he kept his aggressive stance and it didn’t seem like he was weakened at all. Motivated by both his victory and the Portuguese victory, the Duke of Savoia now had the ambition to take Lião [Lyon], one of the most important French cities that was very close to his border. He was unlucky because Henrique IV had travelled to Lião in a royal progression to consolidate his internal rule there and so the French monarch quickly assembled an army and drove the Savoyards back once he got notice of it. Sully then began preparing an invasion of Savoia since they noted that the Savoyards had fewer troops there.

    In Picardia, the Spaniards gradually achieved significant gains but due to being engaged in three simultaneous wars, one of which was in the Terras Baixas [Netherlands] and needed the attention of the Army of Flandres, they were unable to carry a full-scale invasion of the region that could threaten Paris. Watching from afar, Izabel I da Inglaterra was growing increasingly concerned with the situation in Fransa, her compromises with Portugal were becoming a burden to Inglaterra’s defence so in one last attempt to not declare war on Portugal, she pressured both Portugal and Fransa to enter negotiations. She wasn’t the only one interested in peace between both countries, Fernando I da Toscânia [Ferdinand I of Tuscany], Henrique IV’s biggest creditor and with many interests in Portugal, where the local Médisis [Medici] agency was booming, also sought to act as a moderator in this war and bring the Médisis more prestige and security, his diplomatic strategy.

    1588893381934.png
    Izabel I da Inglaterra on her last years​

    Both monarchs were receptive to peace and they reached many compromises for a future peace treaty, however, João IV, already King now, insisted that Henrique should make peace with Espanha as well. Fernando de Médisis’ support proved once more crucial for the French monarch, as the influence of the former Cardinal convinced Pope Clemente VIII to officially lift Henrique’s excommunication on September 17, 1595. Despite this diplomatic victory, 1595, was also a black year for France as it had lost Pau, Tarbes, Lurdes [Lourdes], Lower Navarra, Ortêz [Orthez] and many other possessions in Aquitânia; Provensa, Draguinhã [Draguignan], Brinhol [Brignoles] and other locations on the Provensal Coast and in Picardia, Dulã [Doullens] and Cambraia.

    1596, however, was a much better year for the first Burbom King of Fransa, on February 9, he finally took Anjê [Angers], forcing his greatest opponent in the region, Duke Filipe Emanuel de Mercou [Philip Emmanuel of Mercœur] to flee the country. By March, Britânia was pacified and Henrique was now free to focus on other fronts. He divided his army in two, sending Cossé to Savoia to prepare an invasion there with Sully and La Châtre while Henrique himself rode to Aquitânia to hopefully pressure Filipe II to start negotiations at the same time he sent diplomats to Madride.

    2.png
    Situation in Fransa After the Fall of Anjê​

    Henrique’s arrival at Aquitânia broke the stalemate there as the French army was now bigger and had a huge contingent of knights. This forced the Portuguese Army to be in constant movement to avoid a battle that would no doubt end up in defeat. By late April, Teodózio warned his cousin, the King, of this chaotic situation and urged him to either send more troops, call them back or achieve a diplomatic solution as they were unable to do anything in the condition they were in. Filipe was preparing more troops to send to Aquitânia but these troops would take a couple of months at the very least. Henrique, on the other hand, was recovering some towns he had lost because he had no opposition.

    Cossé’s arrival at Savoia coincided with the full collapse of the Savoyard Army in the region as 16 000 French soldiers defeated 6 000 Savoyards at Ambrio-no-Buje [Ambérieu-en-Bugey] on March 13. The battle opened Savoia to a full invasion by Fransa. In the last days of March, the French were already at the Alpes and Carlos Emanuel withdrew from Provensa with his army to defend his lands when he was so close to taking Marseilha. He left, however, the towns he had captured properly garrisoned so when Boisdauphin and the new French Marshal, François de Bonnes tried to recover these towns, they failed due to the lack of men.

    In the face of the debacle that was occurring on almost all the fronts of combat to which Maurísio de Nasau’s victories in the Terras Baixas were added, together with the pressure that the Pope and João IV were doing on him as well as the disease that was slowly draining the life from him, Filipe II accepted to negotiate peace with Fransa, now that a Catholic King accepted by the Pope ruled there.

    The Treaty of Monpelié:
    The representatives of the belligerent countries met in Monpelié [Montpellier] where the bulk of the negotiations took place. It was known that Espanha wanted to annex Lower Navarra, Baiona and Biarritse while Savoia wanted Provensa and Saluzo, something that Henrique IV was not willing to grant, especially considering that the tables were turning in Fransa’s favour. Teodózio, who was representing his cousin in the negotiations also protested a lot against the Spanish’s demands since it was the Portuguese Army that took them from Fransa. It was in Teodózio’ protests that Henrique and his advisers understood how they could turn Espanha’s allies against it.

    The French King offered Saluzo (which was already occupied by Savoia since 1588) together with war reparations to Carlos Emanuel and in return, he wanted the county of Brez [Bresse] up to the River Ãe [Ain] and the return of the occupied towns in Provensa. Secretly he also offered to divide the Duchy of Milão between Fransa and Savoia if the Duke accepted the peace terms. To Portugal, to whom he had started negotiations earlier, he guaranteed that he would compensate the country monetarily, would cease all attacks in Portuguese territory and ships, and even offer them a royal wedding if Portugal publicly renounced Izabel Clara’s claims and returned the still occupied territories in Aquitânia.

    Henrique’s proposals pleased the Portuguese entourage and whilst Carlos Emanuel was hesitant at first, the French advance in his lands and budget difficulties prompted him to realize that he would not get better terms than these, especially when he was seen as an opportunist. Thus the French monarch had managed to isolate Espanha which he enticed with monetary compensations since the country was again on the brink of bankruptcy.

    So the terms agreed upon at Monpelié were as follows:
    • Portugal, Espanha and Savoia returned their occupied territory to Fransa and Fransa returned the occupied territory together with the fortresses manned by French to the Duchy of Savoia,
    • Savoia traded Brez for Saluzo with Fransa,
    • Fransa recognized the Spanish sovereignty over Flandres and Artézia [Artois], returning Charolé [Charolais], near the Franco Condado to Espanha
    • Henrique IV was recognized as the rightful King of Fransa and Izabel Clara’s claim was fully nullified,
    • All countries involved in the war pledged to not attack or occupy any territory belonging to the others,
    • All countries involved in the war pledged to promote trade and good diplomatic relationships with each other,
    • Fransa would pay 300 000 French livres to Portugal, Espanha and Savoia (900 000 livres in total). These would be paid in yearly instalments and potential dowries.
    1588893677487.png
    King Henrique IV da Fransa at the Conclusion of the Treaty of Monpelié​

    The Aftermath:
    Savoia lost land in its northwestern border but it also got a little bit more defensible, the southwest became more consistent as well. The duchy was also free of French troops inside it which also helped improve its defenses. Carlos Emanuel was not fond of failing to take Provensa but the potential to gain parts of Milão left him satiated for the moment. He slowly entered the French sphere of influence because of this, especially after the death of his wife, Catarina Micaela, daughter of Filipe II, in 1597.

    Savoy.png
    Duchy of Savoia after the War outlined in Dark Green, Brez is in the Upper Left Corner​

    Espanha avoided bankruptcy by just a small chance and was now free from one war before it could get even costlier to the country. It did not gain new territories but was now able to focus on the crusade against the Protestants and Otomanos. Two more large fleets were sent against Inglaterra in late 1596 and 1597 but they failed, like the first one. Filipe II would die on September 13, 1598, and Espanha would slowly lose its hegemonic power, giving way to other countries to rise.

    Henrique IV managed to solve the mess he had gotten himself into without major losses. He managed to acquire Brez, a territory that improved the defences of Lião considerably at the expense of a territory he no longer controlled. On the other hand, he would have to pay a colossal amount of money to his three former enemies, money that Fransa didn’t really have…especially when there was so much to rebuild.

    On November 8, 1596, he published the Edict of Monpelié in which he granted freedom of religion to French Calvinists. This ended the Wars of Religion that ravished the country for decades and finally brought peace, stability and somewhat, prosperity to Fransa. The Duke of Sully, Henrique’s First Minister would achieve a remarkable economic recovery of the country which would help pay Fransa’s debts but it wasn’t enough. Henrique who succeeded in getting a divorce from Margarida de Valuá [Margaret of Valois] married Maria de Médisis, niece to Fernando I da Toscânia and cousin of João IV de Portugal who not only brought a sizable dowry but also some sizable loans from Fernando to help Sully implement his reforms. This marriage produced the third Médisis Queen, second in Fransa, bringing great prestige to the Médisis. It also allowed the Grand Duke to achieve independence from Habsburgo influence as he balanced between Portugal, Espanha and Fransa in the international panorama, according to what was best for Toscânia. Maria would also bring Henrique the heirs he needed to secure alliances.

    1588894369618.png
    Queen Maria de Médisis​

    French reputation was however tarnished by its defeats at Pau and Colobriér against seemingly weaker countries, it also showed how weak the country was against countries with strong navies and naval traditions as the French Navy now counted with something as some 30-40 ships. Henrique was adamant about improving the Navy but unfortunately for him, the money was not enough to do much yet.

    The Portuguese troops that fought in Fransa were well-received upon their arrival in Lisboa. Portugal was now free from war again and the credibility of the Army had improved. Teodózio received from his cousin the title of Grão-Mestre da Ordem de Cristo [Grand Master of the Order of Christ] as a reward, but the Duke was expecting more and the relationships between them worsened. The King summoned all the nobles who fought in Fransa to an extraordinary Conselho de Guerra [Council of War] aimed to assess the performance of the Army and the weaknesses that were noted. All the commanders except the Marquis of Vila Real for obvious reasons noted the cavalry as being a great weakness but above it, they noted the lack of reinforcements as the biggest problem.

    After the meeting, João Duarte created a special Terso with about 3 000 veterans from the war to serve as the core of a true National Army and also the Guarda Real Montada [Mounted Royal Guard], a force with 250 mounted soldiers designated to improve the quality of the Portuguese cavalry so criticized. Regarding the war reparations money that Portugal received from Fransa, it was mostly used to finance this National Army in the making and would also be used in North Africa. French attacks against Brazil and the Portuguese ships ceased and this greatly benefited the Portuguese trade.

    I'm not sure how I did with this one, it is until the moment the largest update I made and I'm not sure about how logical it will seem. I took heavy influence on OTL Portuguese War of Succession, the Spanish-French War of 1595-1598 and the Franco-Savoyard War of 1600-1601, all of which lasted just a couple of years, hence why this one took so little time too. I'm looking forward to see the feedback on this one. Also thank you for the comments and likes.
     
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    Internal Situation Of The Kingdom
  • Internal Situation of the Kingdom
    Situasão Interna do Reino

    Family Drama:
    At the beginning of the 17th century, the Portuguese Royal Couple’s living children were Leonor Izabel aged 7, Duarte Filipe aged 2 and Maria Catarina who was just a few months old. The new century did not begin well for Izabel Clara who had another spontaneous abortion on April 22, 1601, the same year in which the young Prince Duarte died of pneumonia, on December 28. Once again, the grieving Royal Family was having a troublesome succession as Princess Leonor was once again the heiress to the throne of Portugal but no longer of Espanha as on September 22, King Filipe III gave birth to a daughter named Ana Maria. To avoid the potential loss of independence, João IV considered marrying his little heiress to his cousin Teodózio II de Bragansa but this never materialized as, on November 8, 1602, a new Prince named Filipe Duarte was born. Unlike his deceased older siblings, little Filipe, whose name honoured both of his grandfathers and his deceased older brother, was a strong and healthy child and far more active. He had light brown hair and dark blue eyes and was quickly named Prince of Portugal. His godfather was his uncle Filipe III de Espanha (represented by Izabel Clara) and the godmothers were Emília de Nasau, Countess of Crato and Juliana de Lencastre, Duchess of Aveiro.

    In the meantime, relations between Izabel Clara and her half-brother Filipe III began deteriorating after this birth. The most commonly accepted version for this turn of events was that Izabel had the habit of sending letters of advice to her father and once he died in 1598, she began sending them to her half-brother as well, hoping she could help them and Espanha somehow. Filipe III however found them annoying and his favorite, the Duke of Lerma promptly sought this opportunity to extinguish the influence of the late King’s favorite daughter so he could secure his position at the Spanish court.

    This cooling of relations was made more apparent when Izabel suggested a marriage between the young Prince Filipe and Ana Maria de Espanha, something her husband did not disapprove but her half-brother did, refusing immediately without a concrete reason for doing so. The Portuguese Queen felt betrayed and abandoned by her birth family so she did what Lerma wanted and withdrew herself from Spanish politics. She also, motivated by political pragmatism, stopped contesting her husband’s bold and weird policies unless she was sure they were completely absurd. Her husband appreciated this change and began seeking her advice more often prompting the pair to grow closer. Izabel focused mainly on promoting art and continuing her late mother-in-law’s policies of which maintaining what became known as the Orfanatos da Rainha [Queen’s Orphanages], was on top of her list of actions. She also helped her husband conduct negotiations with her Austrian cousins and took an active part in arranging her children’s marriages for the benefit of Portugal.

    1590108291895.png
    The Queen Izabel Clara Eujénia de Portugal​

    The Portuguese Royal Couple had another son named Carlos Fernando on December 29, 1605, but he also died early, just three years later, a victim of smallpox and a weak constitution. A stillborn daughter called Ana Micaela was born on March 3, 1607, and after her death, the Royal Couple did not try to have more children likely because Izabel had already become sterile due to her advancing age and multiple stillbirths and miscarriages. Nevertheless, the relationship between Izabel Clara and João IV continued to improve over the years with her gaining more influence in the country.

    In summary, the children that reached adulthood were Leonor Izabel, Maria Cristina and Filipe Duarte. The Royal Children were given an enhanced education on topics as diverse as mathematics, science, history, geography, etiquette, philosophy and foreign languages. Their tutors were of many nationalities and they frequently praised them and their many qualities. Leonor was the smartest and the shrewdest of the three, the pride of her parents and endowed with excellent management skills. Filipe was smart as well but lazy and with a tendency to let himself be manipulated in matters that he had little interest in. He was also an adherent of a refined lifestyle and a big spender. Maria preferred the company of books and to focus more on religion and charity, she was the most introverted of the siblings. Both Izabel and João IV sought to create a spirit of unity amongst their children in a similar style to what they experienced in their families and for this reason, the three younglings were very close with themselves and their parents. When the family moved to Castelo de Vide during the summers, they made sure to not be disturbed by the affairs of the state unless they were very important, so they spent countless hours together as a family.

    Soon however came the hard separations…Leonor was the first to marry, the date was September 8, 1607, when she was barely 15 years old and her husband was Cosme de Médisis [Cosimo de Medici], her 17-year-old cousin and heir to Toscânia. This marriage followed negotiations between their fathers and the suggestion of the late Queen Izabel de Médisis and was contested by the Habsburgos who disliked Fernando’s excessively Pro-French policies and wanted to keep Toscânia in control with a Habsburgo Princess but those protests did little due to the intervention of Izabel Clara in appeasing her relatives but also of Henrique IV and the Pope who saw the match as beneficial.

    1590108382147.png
    Princess Leonor Izabel de Portugal before her marriage​

    Maria and Filipe got closer after Leonor left for Florensa and although each of them began forming their circles of companions, they spent a lot of time together and helping their parents in their affairs. They also enjoyed reading and writing letters to their older sister. This relationship of love between siblings would continue until their last days and it would have both positive and negative repercussions. When he turned fourteen in 1616, Filipe Duarte was made Duke of Guimarães in the same way as his father had been, he also received a seat in the Council of State and the position of Vise-Rei dos Algarves so he could gain experience ruling. Unlike his father, he was a womanizer and had many relationships with young noble ladies, commoners and even nuns if rumours are to be trusted, most likely fathering more bastards than those he would recognize later.

    There was a particular servant who served in the Palásio de Castelo de Vide who captivated him due to her beauty and so the heir to the throne did not stop until he seduced her and made her his official mistress until he married. Her name was Ana Barboza and she was about the same age as the Prince, she had strawberry blonde hair, blue eyes and freckles adorning her face. The plebeian would give the King three sons, one of them stillborn and two daughters, all of them were natural bastards who were well provided by their father receiving a good education. Ana herself would be given a considerable pension even after the Prince broke up with her.

    Filipe also took the chance to travel Europe, visiting Espanha, Fransa, Inglaterra, Tôscania, Estados Papais [Papal States], Jénova [Genoa] and other countries. The most famous of his trips happened in 1620 when he visited the Basilica of San Vitale in Ravena which made him obsessed with Roman and Greek culture, including Eastern Roman culture (he wanted to emulate Eastern Roman Emperors in their clothing). When he returned to Lisboa that year, he began studying Greek with such passion that he learned the language in record time surprising his tutors with his speed.

    Relations with the Nobility:
    While his father, Duarte II, had to negotiate extensively with the nobility and the clergy to guarantee their loyalty, João IV tried to reduce their mercies in privileges without cutting them off completely since he didn’t have the threat of a Spanish invasion looming him. He had a peculiar relationship with the High Nobility thanks to this.

    With the House of Bragansa, the King often called upon Teodózio II, his cousin, to get advice and to have him command the few military campaigns of his reign. As already mentioned, João was very close to marrying his daughter to the Duke to keep a Portuguese on the throne but this was a contrast to the schemes the King promoted to restrain the massive power of the Bragansas. As explained earlier, as a reward for his services, Teodózio was made Grand Master of the Order of Christ for life, this was extended to the end of his son’s life following the Morrocan Campaign. He was appointed Vise-Rei dos Algarves before Filipe Duarte, a position he held until 1617 when he resigned and retired to manage his vast holdings likely because of the grievances he collected from his cousin and because his mental health was declining. Both cousins had a very good relationship by all standards and Teodózio was one of the most loyal vassals that João IV had but he always felt his services were not properly rewarded.

    His brother Duarte de Bragansa, made a second term as Vise-Rei do Brazil between 1601 and 1605 and completed two terms as Vise-Rei da Índia between 1608 and 1612 and later between 1620 and 1623. His performance in these terms was far superior to his horrible first term in Brazil and after returning to Portugal in 1624 after considering his Overseas career finished, he was nominated Marquis of Montemor-o-Novo, a title that once belonged to a cadet branch of the Bragansas during the reigns of Afonso V and João II, and a member of the Conselho do Ultramar [Council of Overseas].

    The other brothers Alexandre and Constantino (OTL Filipe de Bragança) followed ecclesiastical careers. The first was made Grand Inquisitor and Archbishop of Évora before he was named Cardinal in 1604 by Pope Clemente VIII and partook in the Papal Conclave of 1605. However, he died 3 years after said Conclave due to a long-term illness and so he was unable to hold his position for long. The second brother was made Bishop of Vizeu at a very young age, aspiring to be a Cardinal but dying in 1608 as well and so he too was unsuccessful in his ambitions.

    The Dukes of Aveiro did not receive much either, Juliana joined the Queen’s closest circle and her husband Álvaro remained in the Council of State while the King promised their numerous children positions in the Overseas administration and the Church, promises he would keep. The newly founded House of Crato was likely the one who benefited the most during João IV’s reign as the King used them to counterbalance the other families but even they did not gain excessive power and had fewer privileges compared to the most powerful families not to mention their usual lack of funds. In his reign, the Menezes were finally made Dukes cementing their status amongst the nobility but it was mostly the culmination of nearly 300 years of services to the Crown rather than João IV's benevolence.

    Despite this seemingly anti-nobility stance, João IV created twice the amount of titles that his father did: one or two Dukes (if one can call the Príncipe do Cândia as a Duke during his reign), six Marquis, eight Counts, two Viscounts and one Baron. The main reason for this was that João liked to reward individuals who did a good job in ruling Overseas or did a good job on the military front with a title. Two Brazilian-born nobles were also made Viscounts due to their loyalty and one Wallachian-born noble was made a Baron continuing a precedent that Duarte II opened by ennobling two Tuscan families.

    Judicial Reforms:
    João IV was undoubtedly a King concerned with the country’s administrative and judicial system, crucial aspects to strengthen the Royal Authority. He followed the footsteps of his great-grandfather Manuel I in his pursuit to increase his power rather than the very aggressive approach of João II. First, in 1596, he gave new statutes to the Caza da Suplicasão de Lisboa [House of Supplications], the supreme judicial court of the country, abolishing the Caza do Sível and transferring its functions to the aforementioned court. In the following year, he gave a similar statute to the Tribunal da Relasão de Goa [Court of Appeal] which had jurisdiction over the entire Estado da Índia. In 1598 he created the Tribunal da Relasão do Porto to receive appeals from the northernmost Correisões [Judicial Districts] of the country and in 1600 he created the Tribunal da Relasão de São Salvador da Baía with jurisdiction over the Estado do Brazil, both of these courts had the same regulations like the one in Goa.

    He created Correisões throughout the Portuguese Empire so that justice could become more efficient and trustworthy. By 1612 he published the Lei dos Juízes de Fora [Law of the Outside Judges] which required that all the cities of the Portuguese Empire have a Juíz de Fora [Outside Judge], that is a judge directly appointed by the King who had a Decree of Law from the University of Coimbra or an aboard university, as opposed to the Juízes Ordinários [Ordinary Judges] which did not have a formation in Law and were elected by the aristocracy of the Municipalities amongst themselves.

    To enforce this measure, he created scholarships for the students entering Civil or Canon Law in Coimbra provided they achieved good results in a prior exam to test their skills. Despite heavy criticism from many Municipalities, this considerable increase of Juízes de Fora, especially in Portugal, guaranteed that the King’s Justice reached a large portion of the country while also fighting against pockets of corruption.

    But perhaps the greatest judicial achievement of João’s reign was the elaboration of a new and modern compilation of laws, the Ordenasões Joaninas [Joanine Ordinances] published and enforced in 1602. This compilation was inspired by the previous Ordinances in Portugal but also those of Parma, Toscânia and Espanha and would remain in effect for a very long time. It spread quickly Overseas and contrary to what happened in other countries like Espanha or Fransa, in Portugal there was no duality of laws because the country was a unitary state with a single set of laws and privileges.

    1590108785796.png
    The Front Of The Ordenasões Joaninas​

    Religion and Culture:
    João IV would become known for his religious tolerance, he was a devout Catholic but liked to understand the other religions and respected them within the standards of the time. He established relations with several Jewish communities of Portuguese origin spread across Europe, especially those in Hamburgo, Lubeque and the Provínsias Unidas [United Provinces]. They were not allowed to effectively return to Portugal itself but they were not forbidden from staying for periods of time or holding properties in the country, especially in North Africa. The King encouraged the many abroad Jews to act as representatives of the country with many becoming diplomats in the long run. It is to be noted that the majority of workers in the various warehouses in Northern Europe such as Hamburgo and Lubeque were Portuguese Jews.

    Officially, Protestants were forbidden to enter Portugal until 1609 when the Twelve Years Truce was signed and Portugal “reopened” their ports to them, however, the Protestants never stopped coming to Portugal in the first place. Like the Jews, they were confined to private worship but also from attempting to convert Catholics. By 1625 as many as 4 000 Protestants were present in Lisboa, the majority of them were Dutch Calvinists followed by Anglicans and small minorities of German and Danish Lutherans. The King’s most enduring legacy in this sector was the prohibition of the confiscation of properties from the New Christians and enabling them to ascend socially, provided the Holy Inquisition did not find them guilty of practising Crypto-Judaism. Some wealthy New Christians involved in trading achieved positions in Court.

    1590108942624.png
    The New Christians​

    Another major change in the country was the end of the persecutions against Buddhists and other Eastern Religions. His affair with Catarina do Cândia and the arrival of some Buddhist clerics to serve as objects of study made him conclude (in his mind) that these were not religions but ways of living and because of this, they were not susceptible to being persecuted. New statutes destined for Overseas possessions already contemplated this tolerance as it will be explained.

    As already mentioned, João IV did not abolish the Holy Inquisition but he controlled it. He allowed the institution’s agents to carry out their investigations but rarely applied the penalties of capital punishment unless these were pacts with the devil or matters of the sort. He also sought to completely abolish the Inquisition of Goa, considered far more aggressive than the one in Lisboa, something he partially achieved by 1614-1615, by submitting it to the court of Lisboa and thus cutting most of its autonomy.

    It is also worth mentioning that João IV found himself involved in disputes with the Santa Sé [Holy See] many times due to his religious policies and was almost excommunicated between 1623 and 1624. He promised changes but never implemented them in any concrete way as he was “searching for the best possible solution to the problems caused…” This was his famous approach to diplomacy promising never-ending promises. Nevertheless, his religious policies allowed an extensive improvement of Portuguese diplomacy and acceptance in the Far East and with Protestant Europe as well as even succeeding in the Muslim World.

    In regards to culture, Portugal moved from Mannerism into early Baroque. Painters like Vasco Pereira Luzitano and Domingos Vieira Serrão completed the transition while others like André Reinozo, Baltazar Gomes Ferreira and Luíza Dias pushed it further. Overall paintings and sculptures had a bigger focus on emotions and Christian themes in accordance with the Counter-Reformation despite Portugal’s open stance. The Academia e Companhia das Artes de Dezenho de Lisboa [Academy and Company of Arts of Design] was crucial to finance the many artists of the new style and none can forget the sponsorship of the clergy and the nobility so that they could educate their subjects about the values of the Counter-Reformation and subjugation to the authorities.

    So I'm back with another update, it covers a large variety of subjects but overall they are all tied to the same topic which is the one in the title. I didn't develop too much the marriages because they will be more develop in the Diplomacy and some of them in other updates too. So as always thank you for the likes and comments, and stay safe.
     
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    Economic Policies and Demographic Surveys
  • Economic Policies and Demographic Surveys
    Políticas Económicas e Sensos Demográficos

    The economic situation that João IV inherited from his father was very different than the one his progenitor had received. The coffers were reasonably full and the expenses of the Crown were quite low, making it possible to invest in a variety of areas without harming the treasury. Besides this, the number of merchants and investors was increasing due to the success of the Corporosão das Armadas da Índia [Corporation of the Indian Armadas].

    The King’s National Survey and its Consequences:
    Like his namesake João III, João IV was quick to manifest his intention to conduct a Senso [Census] but only ended up going forward with the expensive plan in 1622 after years of planning and the Conselho da Fazenda's [Council of Finances] approval. The Senso lasted two years, from 1622 to 1624 and was conducted all over the Portuguese Empire. It was the King’s wish to have a sense of the population of his lands not only for statistical purposes but also for fiscal and military matters. Adding to it, he wished to have a geographical notion of the Portuguese Overseas possessions and so in addition to the Senso, a vast work entitled Relatos de Portugal e Suas Conquistas [Report on Portugal and its Overseas Territories] was commissioned by João IV to the Vedor da Fazenda Jozé Pedro Viegas between 1627 and 1636 being the first of its kind in Europe and being a good source of Modern Age Demographics.

    As for the demographic results, it quickly became clear that collecting rigorous data was complicated because much of the population was afraid of such inquiries, after all, what usually followed them was either forced conscription to war or heavy taxes. Many villages and towns managed to deceive the authorities responsible for the survey so the data was not fully trustworthy. Another problem faced was the enormous difficulty of acquiring data in isolated and far away areas in Brazil, Africa and Asia in which many people were left uncounted. It is to be noted that the unit of accounting was a household and not the people themselves, therefore to acquire rigorous numbers, one has to multiply the results by between three and four.

    Only in North Africa, the Cabo and some other possessions along the coast of Africa was it possible to achieve the most rigorous results due to either the size of the territories or because of families that kept strict track of everything like the Visente Family of the Cabo da Boa Esperansa. Despite every difficulty encountered, the King was very satisfied with the results he was presented with and quickly sent these numbers to the Conselho da Fazenda so they could reform the taxes in accordance with the new data and also to the Conselho da Guerra [Council of War] so they could update the Ordenansas and have a better sense of how many troops they could muster.

    A better analysis of the data revealed that the population in Portugal had stagnated and even decreased a little. Modern calculations place the number 1 262 376 inhabitants as the result of the 1527 survey whilst the number for 1624 was 1 248 402. The most likely causes for this decrease were the emigration to Overseas, especially Brazil and Índia, and the many epidemics that devastated the country, especially during the reign of Sebastião I. Unlike the rest of the country, Lisboa continued to grow, being the largest city in the Iberian Peninsula and one of the largest in Europe, representing more than 10% of the country’s population.

    Population of Every Province in Metropolitan Portugal (Modern Calculations Using the Data of the Survey)
    Province
    Capital
    Population
    Entre-Douro-e-Minho​
    Porto​
    289 982​
    Tráz-os-Montes​
    Vila Real​
    107 711​
    Beira​
    Coimbra​
    301 052​
    Estremadura​
    Lisboa​
    258 078​
    Alentejo​
    Évora​
    92 870​
    Algarve​
    Faro​
    64 781​
    Asores​
    Ponta Delgada​
    81 230​
    Madeira​
    Funchal​
    52 698​
    Total​
    Portugal​
    1 248 402​


    The 10 Most Populous Cities
    City
    Province
    Population
    Lisboa​
    Estremadura​
    157 852​
    Porto​
    Entre-Douro-e-Minho​
    25 082​
    Évora​
    Alentejo​
    20 132​
    Santarém​
    Estremadura​
    13 145​
    Beja​
    Alentejo​
    11 698​
    Elvas​
    Alentejo​
    9 115​
    Coimbra​
    Beira​
    7 859​
    Setúbal​
    Estremadura​
    6 234​
    Guimarães​
    Entre-Douro-e-Minho​
    4 978​
    Lagos​
    Algarve​
    4 135​


    Italian Banks in Portugal, the Resurgence of the Médisis Bank:
    The late Queen Izabel de Médisis [Medici] had taken the small and humble Médisis Agency in Lisboa and increased its capital twelve times by the time of her death. She had left the control of the agency as an inheritance to her son, now the King of Portugal, without consulting her brother Fernando, the owner of all agencies, thinking that he would care too much about a single agency that had been more than forgotten until then. The problem was that this specific agency had become the second-largest source of income of the Grand Duke, falling behind the incomes of the entire Grand Duchy of Toscânia and because of this, Fernando contested Izabel’s will. João Duarte chose to negotiate with his uncle a peaceful resolution to this affair that could benefit both.

    João IV intended to make the agency a bank to supply his colonial endeavours and loan money to the merchants in a similar fashion to what his mother had done but on a bigger scale so he convinced his uncle to revive the Banco Médisis [Medici Bank] in 1607 to a full institution as it had been before it went bankrupt in 1494. Fernando I did not need much to be convinced as the prospects seemed interesting to him, especially considering how much he could profit from the whole affair.

    The core of the new bank was its branch in Lisboa but Fernando also restored the Florentine and Roman branches albeit these did not have as many transactions and revenues as the one in the Portuguese capital. João IV and his successors were entitled to a quarter of the income of the Lisboan branch and the right to appoint its employees while also having the duty to guarantee that the debts were collected so that the bank would not go bankrupt again. The Médisis kept the remaining three-quarters of the income, the right to approve or reject the employees appointed by the Kings of Portugal and the duty to keep track of the loans. To seal the agreement between both families and in hopes of future cooperation, as already mentioned before, Princess Leonor Izabel de Portugal married Cosme de Médisis.

    The Banco Médisis began acting as a pseudo-National Bank of Portugal, granting loans to merchants or people willing to invest in the companies of the country or internal projects while granting sizable profits to both the Portuguese and the Tuscan crowns. It wasn’t however the only bank that emerged in Portugal, several Italians and even Jews established their own loaning agencies and banks to the point that Lisboa was the city with more banks of the Iberian Peninsula and likely Europe with perhaps the exception of Amesterdão.

    1590719629675.png
    House of Médisis's Coat of Arms, also used by the Banco Médisis​

    The Great Commercial Companies:
    In the same way that the Portuguese sought to cut costs with the Polish-Lithuanian cereals trade, many Dutch and English investors, endowed perhaps with some sort of nationalism and greed, decided to cut their costs in the spice trade by going right into the origin of the products in a similar fashion to what the Portuguese did a century before. The foundation of the Companhia da Índia Oriental Ingleza [English East India Company] in 1600 and the Companhia da Índia Oriental Nerlandeza [Dutch East India Company] in 1602 reduced the number of investors in Lisboa and increased competition in the world markets. To complicate Portugal’s situation, the Spanish Bankruptcy of 1607 had great repercussions in the country as many Italian investors and merchants, especially the Genoese, lost much of their fortunes.

    Despite all of this, profits and investments remained high thanks to the neutral foreign policy of Portugal, perfect for investments and their already more than consolidated presence in the world trade routes, whereas Northern Europe’s companies had no bases or experience in their early years, gradually acquiring them and with great difficulty. It should also be noted that the profits in Amesterdão and Londres despite being very high were far below in value and quantity to those one could get in Lisboa, so many foreign merchants still preferred the security of investing in Lisboa, especially the Dutch Booteigenarens.

    The King of Portugal, after hearing the Conselho da Fazenda and several petitions from merchants specifically those from the Provínsias Unidas, decided to merge the Caza da Índia with the Corporasão das Armadas da Índia to create two chartered companies inspired by their English and Dutch’s innovations, that acquired the functions and statutes of the previous companies, the Companhia do Comérsio da Índia e das Ilhas das Espesiarias [Company of Commerce of India and the Spice Islands] aka the CI (Companhia da Índia) and the Companhia do Comérsio do Brazil e Guiné [Company of Commerce of Brazil and Guinea] aka the CB (Companhia do Brazil).

    The CI had the monopoly of the Indian Ocean commerce (spices and silks) and the CB had the monopoly of the Atlantic Ocean commerce (sugar and slaves). Unlike their Northern European counterparts, these companies were purely commercial by nature and as such, they could neither declare or wage wars but they could negotiate trade deals, diplomatic treaties and were represented in every colony and possession which allowed them to promote their interests, including pushing for war if need be. The companies operated like the Corporasão das Armadas da Índia, meaning by a system of shares to equip the ships, similar to what their counterparts were doing in Northern Europe. The investment was open to everyone who wished to invest, and the Crown was an active investor too, investing between 10 to 15% in each company and so were the Médisis and other Italian families like the Farnese, Salviati, Perutxi [Perucci], Dória, etc. Once equipped, the Company's Trade Fleets would leave for their destinations and there, the merchants belonging to the Companies would buy the local products and bring them to Lisboa where the products would be taxed with the tithe and sent to the European markets. The profits were divided proportionately by the investors after all the salaries were paid to the merchants and crew.

    If the investment exceeded what was necessary, the extra capital would be used to pay marine insurance and cover unforeseen circumstances such as wars and pirate raids. This would later evolve into some sort of bank system that revolved around storing money and providing loans. The capital of the Companies was about 250 Contos in the CI and 230 Contos in the CB in 1612, the year they were founded. By 1615 they were 380 and 350 respectively and in 1630, 470 and 460. Each of the companies was managed by a Company Board that had 6 clerks and 1 vedor. These were elected by all who had shares in the companies for a term of 3 years. The Conselho do Ultramar [Council of Overseas] and the Conselho da Fazenda [Council of Finances], as well as the Crown, appointed a representative each for the meetings with the power of suspensive veto. These three representatives served as advisers and supervised the activities of the companies. Except for some occasional situations, these representatives made little use of their veto power.

    These reforms allowed Portugal to continue being competitive on the international scale and dominate the first half of the 17th Century as its English and Dutch counterparts were, as mentioned above, struggling to establish bases in the Far East. Portuguese merchants, employees and spies in Asia had an active role in denigrating and sabotaging their competitors to further weaken them.

    1590719891469.png
    The CI's Merchant Fleet​

    But not everything was a bed of roses, many Portuguese merchants in the East refused to join the Companies and accept their statutes, continuing their private businesses and therefore entering into a conflict with the ever stronger and absolutist Crown, who began fining these people for not comply with the King's Decrees. This led to many Portuguese merchants becoming pirates or corsairs, a problem that would need to be fixed. Another problem was that the stronger investors were the powerful and rich Italian families that seemed to monopolize the companies, this led to some resentment among the Portuguese merchants who were still few in number and mostly without enough money to invest.

    To sum things up, the reign of João IV was of economic expansion as not seen since the early years of Manuel I: the treasury was full, the expenses few, the number of Portuguese merchants slowly increasing, a variety of banks lending credit, two very powerful chartered companies monopolizing most the international commerce while their opponents were in infancy. These conditions allowed João IV to invest heavily in the defence of the country as he built, repaired and improved numerous fortresses throughout the Empire; increased the size of the war and commercial fleets, keeping it among the four strongest navies in Europe; kept a sizable regular army ready to fight at any moment and was able to continue buying cereals without having a negative deficit.

    So yes, some more economic reforms, to me it felt like the logical path from the previous ones, especially when Portugal already has two rather successful models to copy. Continuing the path for Italian World Domination... :rolleyes: we have the return of the Medici Bank! By this point, it seems the Avis and the Medici are entangled I know...
    Regarding the demographic numbers, I hope they are not too bad, in OTL, Portugal had about 1 100 000 people in 1636 so it's a slight improvement already. I would love to hear your thoughts on this update, I'm not sure if I pushed it too far, especially after saying that it can't go from 0 to 100, but there is a lot of things to do still like reforming agriculture, creating industry and of course building roads, but that will be for other Kings. Next, Empire in Africa! Thank you for all the likes and comments.


    Edit: I have changed the companies' names to hopefully something better. I have also tried my best to make my thoughts better understood and to set the investors apart from the merchants who worked with the ship crews. Once again thank you for the comments regarding this update.
     
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