5. Square Fortresses in Far East

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1511

Malacca (MALAYSIA)

The original town of Malacca was created into a sultanate extended throughout the lower half of the Malay peninsula. In 1509, the Portuguese arrived and tried first negotiation, but in 1511 they conquered Malacca under the excuse that the Malaccans had attacked their fleet, commanded by Alfonso d' Albuquerque. The Sultan Mahmud fled to Johor, from where he tried to recover his city but it was without success, because the Portuguese started the construction of the massive fortification A Famosa or Porta De Santiago . They settled in during more than a hundred years, a time in which Malacca became a major trading port for Asia. The first and second maps are from 1629 and 1630. In 1641, the Dutch took over after an eight-month siege of the city and a fierce battle. They carried out an extensive rebuilding program. The third map is from Francis Valentijn (1726). Other paintings and maps.

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index 

1571

Manila (PHILIPPINES)

Manila was founded by Legazpi, the first one of the governors of the Philippines, 1571. Nevertheless, Legazpi, prior to Manila, had established in 1565 the triangular fort-bastion San Pedro in Cebu city.The fortifications of the city of Manila went through many projects, which have been shown at the Expo-Manila. Miguel Antonio Gomez made a fortification project in the 19th century, which never was implemented, converting the Santiago fort in a square fortress.

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1595
San Felipe (Cavite, PHILIPPINES)

Lourdes Trechuelo, Arquitectura Española en Filipinas, Sevilla 1959.
René B. Javellana, Fortress of Empire, Manila, 1997.
Old maps of Cavite
Spanish fortifications in the Philippines

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1616
San Pedro (Iloilo, PHILIPPINES)


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Lourdes Trechuelo, Arquitectura Española en Filipinas, Sevilla 1959.
René B. Javellana, Fortress of Empire, Manila, 1997.
Spanish fortifications in the Philippines

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1619

Batavia (Jakarta, INDONESIA)

In the 14th century the area later called Batavia was under the control of the Hindu kingdom of Pajajaran. Later, in 1522, Portuguese merchants arrived there and signed a treaty with the King of Pajajaran to establish commercial activities, and they built a fortress, which was conquered in 1527 by Muslim forces, becoming a part of the Banten sultanate, and renaimed the city Jayakarta. In 1618, the VOC arrived in that town, and few months later, they razing it completely
and constructed a new walled city called Batavia. Several local forces mounted attacks on the Dutch over the next decade, but all of them failed, and Batavia became the center of Dutch trading and administrative activities in the East Indies.
F. S. Gastra, The Organization of the VOC in Asia.

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1620

Fort Sao Paulo do Monte (Macao, CHINA)

It is not clear the exact moment in which Portuguese arrived to Macao, but it took several years to start the fortification of the city. This fortress is located in a hill inside the town, and it was the central link in the settlement's protective city walls, and in 1622 was very efficient in putting away the Dutch in their attempt to conquer the city. Currently is hosting a modern museum on the history of Macao.

Jorge Graça, The fortifications of Macau.

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1624

Fort Zeelandia (Tayouan, Anping, Tainan, TAIWAN)

More

Dutch in Taiwan, Koxinga

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1626
Santísima Trinidad (Kelang, She-liao Tao, Hoping Island, Jilong, TAIWAN)

The fortress Santísima Trinidad in Isla Hermosa (modern Taiwan) was built by the Spaniards to protect their Manila-Fujian trade, which was threatened by the Dutch of Fort Zeelandia. The inner square was 100 m. long and 100 m. wide. The Dutch conquered the fortress in 1642 and occupied it until 1662. They demolished the walls and left the former bastion San Antonio el Grande which they named Noort Holland. The same name was given to the whole fortress (See the first map). The Dutch forces reoccupied the fortress for a second time between 1664 and 1668. In 1666, they rebuilt the walls and reconstructed the bastions, two of them in a half-moon shape (See the second map). The following year after suffering an attack from the Zheng troops, they rebuilt another bastion most probably according to the original shape (See the third map). More.

José Eugenio Borao, Spaniards in Taiwan, Taipei, vol. I (2001), vol. II (2002).

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1635
Nuestra Señora del Pilar (Zamboanga, PHILIPPINES)


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Today

The Spaniards arrived for the first time to Zamboanga in 1598. But, only in March 1633, the Governor General Juan Cerezo de Salamanca sent Juan de Chaves to establish this fortress in the South of Mindanao to give protection to the Jesuit missions. The plan of the fortress was made by the Jesuit Melchor de Vera, and construction began on 23 June 1635. Next Governor General, Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, regretted the construction of this fort,  but later gave his support. In 1662, when Philippines received the threat of Koxinga, all the strength was concentrated in Manila, and the fortress was abandoned. in 1672, the Spanish government issued a decree for the reestablishment of the fortress but the lack of resources delayed this action. Only in 1718 the fortress was rebuilt and reoccupied. The name of the fortress was San José, but now received the name of Nuestra Señora del Pilar de Zaragoza, and the four bastions were named after San Felipe, San Fernando, San Luis and San Francisco Javier. The second map is from 1738.

Lourdes Trechuelo, Arquitectura Española en Filipinas, Sevilla 1959.
René B. Javellana, Fortress of Empire, Manila, 1997.
Spanish fortifications in the Philippines

| Malaca | Manila | Cavite | Iloilo | Batavia | Macao | Anping | Jilong | Zamboanga | Ternate | Index

1637

Ternate (INDONESIA)

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