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Home Front: Culture Wars
This Week in Books 1/10/16
2016-01-10
Conquerors: How Portugal Forged The First Global Empire
Roger Crowley
Penguin Random House LLC, 2015

This is Roger Crowley's fourth book, and I would suggest it as fourth in the reading order: City of Fortune, 1453, Empires of the Sea, then Conqerors.

Mr. Crowley covers both the Portuguese age of exploration as well as a history of trade in the Indian Ocean, beginning with the initial explorations sent by King Joao. (page 29)

Although Joao had been badly shaken by Columbus's claims, he revived his India plan and prepared a new expedition. But for him it was too late. "The Man is dead," Isabella of Spain was said to have murmured when she heard the news in 1495. She had hoped to marry her daughter to Joao's son, Afonso, but he had already died. The throne passed to the young Dom Manuel, duke of Beja, who had witnessed the final briefing of Paiva and Covilha. Manuel fortuitously inherited a crown, eighty years of accumulated exploration experience, and the launchpad for the final push to India. He had even been gifted the wood to build the ships. If Joao passed into Portuguese history as the Perfect Prince, Manuel was destined to be the Fortunate King.

Mr. Crowley describes the continuing pushes into the Indian Ocean, where men battle hardened by fighting off the Barbary raiders, sailing upon large ships with superior cannon, crash their way into an unsuspecting ocean of trade. The hard men such as Vasco de Gama, superior weapons, excellent logistical resupply from Portugal, and sheer daring have the Portuguese smashing nearly any and all opposition to their incursion into what was an amiable trade arena. Indeed, the Portuguese have few setbacks under the leadership of Alfonso de Albuquerque. (page 233)

The first faltering steps in colonial administration were not error free. Timoji was initially put in charge of tax collecting, but this promised to stir dissent from both communities and his remit had to be altered. And although Albuquerque had promised religious freedom, he recoiled in horrer at the practice of suttee – the immolation of Hindu widows on their husband's funeral pyres – and banned it. The underlying sense of Christian mission and his own obduracy also led him to order summary executions that were to cause unrest.

A large portion rightfully deals with the exploits of Alfonso de Albuquerque. (page 313)

Albuquerque had been in the Indian Ocean for nine years. He had worked continually and at a furious pace to build Manuel's empire, during which time he had endured the incessant voyaging, the wars, the intriguing, the rigors of the climate. He had been wounded at Goa; for three months he had been besieged in the Mandovi River in the rain. He had negotiated, intimidated, persuaded, and killed. To outsiders he appeared indestructible. The bullets and the spear wounds had not felled him; the cannonballs had whistled past his head; he had stood up in his boat to taunt the Turkish gunners of Benastarim. But he was nearly sixty years old, and to those who saw him up close, such as his secretary Gasper Correia, "he was old and very wasted in body." Now, in the atomizing heat of Ormuz, between the brilliant blue of the sea and the blinding sunlight on the barren rocks, he was dying.

This was not a tickling contest. The stakes were high for all involved - the Venetians and Genoese stood to lose much money as the backwater prow of Europe cut both the European near monopoly pricing as well as the Mamluk monopoly pricing middlemen from the spice trade, launching Lisbon into European prominence. In fact Mr. Crowley hints at the weakening of the Mamluks as partly the result of this trade bypass, which will usher the Ottoman rise to power as they go on the capture chunks of the failing Mamluk Empire.

Mr. Crowley pulls no punches, nor should he so the reader can have the full appreciation of this page of history concerning the Indian Ocean. In the book's conclusion, a very relevant quote by Alfonso de Albuquerque is noted. (page 322)

Surveying the walls of Ormuz, he declared:

So long as they are upheld by justice and without oppression, they are more than sufficient. But if good faith and humanity cease to be observed in these lands, then pride will overthrow the strongest walls we have. Portugal is very poor and when the poor are covetous they become oppressors. The fumes of India are powerful - I fear the time will come when instead of our present fame as warriors we may only be known as grasping tyrants.

I really enjoyed this book, and Mr. Crowley's whole series of this chapter of the history of the Mediterranean Sea. Again the book reads so easily and vividly at the same time. The battles read like a fine movie script, but it is the atmosphere created where Mr. Crowley shines. At one point I was just reading along when it hit me that after the men and the ship itself, the most important cargo carried was the bilge pump, the ships so worm eaten that any ceasing of the pumping would flounder the ship.

Link is to Amazon's page.
Posted by:swksvolFF

#4  I didn't know I knew so little about Venice until reading on the subject. I knew they were shrewd merchants, but didn't know why. Such as their meticulous collection of information. Mr. Crowley mentions in City of Fortune that an archive was found with something like 30 miles of paper noting events and rumors and prices; captains were required by law brief the state about the voyage.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2016-01-10 17:53  

#3  I've read _Empires of the Sea_ and it was good. I haven't read any of the others but I have read other works on Venice, notably _A Brief History of Venice_ by Elizabeth Horodwich.

There's all sorts of cheap free or nearly free books on the Kindle Store and at Gutenberg.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2016-01-10 16:34  

#2  Ima reading Dick and Jane, Sally and Spot a Retrospective in which er nouns are declined, capital Lettres noted and the awesome Run Spot, Run! Chapter is finally recognized for itn awesome effect on English Literature.

I will review Penrod next week maybe.
Posted by: Shipman   2016-01-10 11:35  

#1  Great review. Many thanks! Will be my next read. Currently galloping thru Roelf van Heerden's 'Four Ball One Tracer'
Posted by: Besoeker   2016-01-10 04:13  

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