The arrival of Mateus is announced by…
February 1513 CE
The arrival of Mateus is announced by king Manuel I of Portugal to Pope Leo X in 1513.
Although Mateus faces the distrust of some of Albuquerque rivals, who try to prove he is some impostor or Muslim spy, Albuquerque sends him to Portugal.
The king is described as having wept with joy at their report.
The Portuguese, who fear a new expedition from the Mamluks, organize a rapprochement with Persia, and endeavor to establish an alliance that can provide bases for the Portuguese on the northern shores of the Indian Ocean and create an eastern threat for the Ottomans and the Mamluks.
Albuquerque receives an ambassador of Shah Ismail at Goa, and returns a letter as well as an ambassador in the person of Rui Gomes.
In the letter to Shah Ismail, Albuquerque proposes a joint attack against the Mamluks and the Ottomans: Following their victory at the Battle of Diu and the elimination of rival Muslim fleets in the Indian Ocean, the Portuguese undertake the systematic destruction of Muslim commercial shipping.
Albuquerque now prepares a campaign in the Red Sea in order to stop completely Mamluk trade with India, and defeat Mamluk plans to send a fleet to India.
On February 7, 1513, he leaves Goa with seventeen hundred Portuguese and one thousand Malabaris in twenty-four ships.