The Battle of Cape Rachado, off the…
August 1606 CE
The Battle of Cape Rachado, off the present day Malaccan exclave of Tanjung Tuan in 1606, is the the opening act for the series of conflicts between the coalition of Dutch-Johore and Portuguese Malacca; it will ultimately end with the Portuguese surrender of the city and fort of Malacca to the VOC in 1641.
It is the biggest naval battle in the Malay Archipelago between two naval superpowers of the time, with thirty-one ships (eleven of the Dutch VOC and twenty of the Portuguese).
Although the battle ends with a Portuguese victory, the ferocity of the battle itself and the losses sustained by the victor persuade the Sultanate of Johor to provide supplies, support and later on much needed ground forces to the Dutch, forcing a Portuguese capitulation.