Soon after the failed attack, Albuquerque quickly…
May 1510 CE
Soon after the failed attack, Albuquerque quickly assembles a powerful fleet of twenty-three ships and twelve hundred men.
Contemporary reports state that he wanted to fight the Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate fleet in the Red Sea or return to Hormuz.
However, he had been informed by Timoji (a privateer in the service of the Hindu Vijayanagara Empire) that it would be easier to fight them in Goa, where they had sheltered after the Battle of Diu, and also of the illness of the Sultan Yusuf Adil Shah and the war between the Deccan sultanates.
Portugal wants not to be seen as an eternal "guest" of Kochi and has been coveting Goa as the best trading port in the region.
A first assault takes place in Goa from March 4 to May 20, 1510.
After initial occupation, feeling unable to hold the city given the poor condition of its fortifications, the cooling of Hindu residents' support and insubordination among his ranks following a severe attack by Ismail Adil Shah, Albuquerque refuses a truce offered by the Sultan and abandons the city in August.
His fleet is scattered, and a palace revolt in Kochi hinders his recovery, so he heads to Fort Anjediva.
New ships arrive from Portugal, which are intended for the nobleman Diogo Mendes de Vasconcelos at Malacca, who has been given a rival command of the region.