Malacca, which had been earlier the capital…
May 1605 CE
Malacca, which had been earlier the capital of the Sultanate of Malacca, had been besieged and wrested from the natives by the Portuguese in 1511, forcing the Sultan to retreat and found the successor state of Johor and continue the war from there.
The port city, which the Portuguese had turned into a formidable fortress, is strategically situated in the middle of the strait of the same name giving control to both the spice trade of the Malay archipelago and supremacy over the sea lane of the lucrative trade between Europe and the Far East.
The Dutch East Indies Company (VOC) has decided that to expand further to the east, the Portuguese monopoly and especially Malacca must first be neutralized.
The fleet is the third sent by the VOC to the archipelago, with eleven ships: Oranje, Nassau, Middelburg, Witte Leeuw, Zwarte Leeuw, Mauritius, Grote Zon, Amsterdam, Kleine Zon, Erasmus and Geuniveerde Provincien.
The Oranje leads with Admiral Cornelis Matelief de Jonge in command.
The Dutch fleet sets sail from Texel, Holland, on May 12, 1605.
The fleet departs with the sailors told that they are on a trade voyage, as de Jonge has been ordered to keep his true mission a secret, which is to besiege Malacca and force a Portuguese surrender.