Blockade of Cebu

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Blockade of Cebu
Part of the Portuguese–Spanish colonial rivalry

Cebu highlighted in red
Date31 October 1568 – 1 January 1569
Location
Result Spanish victory
Belligerents
Spanish Empire Portuguese Empire
Commanders and leaders
Spanish Empire Miguel López de Legazpi Portuguese Empire Gonzalo Pereira

The Blockade of Cebu was a failed Portuguese naval action against the Spanish colony in the present-day city of Cebu, Philippines in 1568. The Portuguese fleet under captain-general Gonzalo Pereira blockaded Cebu in an effort to starve and expel the Spanish. However, the Spanish colony proved to be resistant to the blockade and the Portuguese fleet eventually suffered from typhoid fever. Pereira then decided to lift the blockade and sail the fleet to the Maluku Islands.

Background[edit]

In 1494, the Treaty of Tordesillas divided the lands outside of Europe in half between Spain and Portugal. The Spaniards obtained the Americas (except Brazil) and the Pacific while the Portuguese acquired Africa and parts of Asia. However, the Philippines was not mentioned in the treaty. The Spaniards originally ignored the islands because it was well west of their supposed claims.

Charles V, monarch of Spain and the Holy Roman Empire, authorized an expedition by Ferdinand Magellan who was known to have made the first circumnavigation of the world. The objective of the expedition was to find an alternative route to Asia.[1] Magellan was ultimately killed during the Battle of Mactan in 1521.

It was during the reign of Charles's son, Phillip II, that Spain decided to colonize the Philippines thinking that Portugal would not protest as the islands was not abundant in spices. An expedition led by Miguel López de Legazpi successfully established in 1565 a Spanish colonial settlement in Cebu. When King Sebastian of Portugal learned of Legazpi's colony, he sent captain-general Gonzalo Pereira to expel the Spaniards.[2]

Blockade[edit]

On September 18, 1568, a Portuguese vessel arrived in Cebu with letters from Pereira announcing his imminent arrival. Ten days later, a fleet manned by Portuguese and Moluccan sailors appeared on the horizon. Pereira sent messages to Legazpi asserting that the islands lay on their side of the demarcation line that then divided the globe between Spain and Portugal.[3] The Portuguese threatened to attack if the Spaniards did not abandon their colony but Legazpi refused their demands. The last communication between Legazpi and Pereira was on October 31. Faced with the risk of being blamed for conflict, Pereira decided to blockade Cebu instead of directly attacking it.

During the following months, the Portuguese ships fired upon neighboring villages and killed native inhabitants, including women and children.[4] When it became clear that the Spaniards would not leave the Philippines and with the Portuguese fleet suffering from a typhoid epidemic, Pereira lifted the blockade on New Year's Day in 1569 and sailed to the Maluku Islands.[5]

Aftermath[edit]

After the Portuguese blockade, Legazpi held a general meeting of officers and priests. Their decision was that a second Spanish settlement should be established in Panay due to its plentiful food supply and several outlets to the sea. It was there the Spaniards would later found what is present-day Roxas City on the bank of the Panay River in 1569.[6]

Legazpi would subsequently transfer the colonial government to Manila, which he proclaimed to be the new capital of the Spanish East Indies in 1571.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Crum, Haley (31 May 2007), The Man Who Sailed the World, Smithsonian Magazine
  2. ^ Hawley, Ethan (1 April 2014), The Birth of Globalization: The World and the Beginnings of Philippine Sovereignty, 1565-1610 (PDF), Northeastern University, p. 71
  3. ^ Ocampo, Ambeth (16 April 2021), Coveting PH, then and now, Philippine Daily Inquirer
  4. ^ Oaminal, Clarence (17 August 2020), The Spaniards and Portuguese in Cebu - Part 3, The Philippine Star
  5. ^ Pisano, Nicholas (5 June 1992), The Spanish Pacification of the Philippines (PDF), Defense Technical Information Center, p. 285, archived (PDF) from the original on August 5, 2020
  6. ^ Halili, Maria Christine (2004), Philippine History, Rex Publishing, p. 79, ISBN 9789712339349