The captured Madre de Deus docks at…
September 1592 CE
The captured Madre de Deus docks at Dartmouth harbor on September 7, towering over the other ships and the town's small houses.
Nothing like it has ever been seen in England and pandemonium breaks loose.
Madre de Deus attracts all manner of traders, dealers, cutpurses and thieves from miles around, and even from as far as London and beyond; they visit the floating castle and seek out drunken sailors in taverns and pubs, buying, stealing, pinching and fighting for the takings.
Local fishermen as well constantly venture aboard and back to shore, further depleting the cargo.
English law at this time provides that a large share of the loot is owed to the sovereign, and when Queen Elizabeth finds out what is happening, she sends Sir Walter Raleigh to reclaim her money and punish the looters.
By the time Raleigh has restored order, a cargo estimated at half a million pounds (nearly half the size of England's treasury and perhaps the second-largest treasure ever after the Ransom of Atahualpa) has been reduced to one hundred and forty thousand pounds.
Still, ten freighters are needed to carry the treasure around the coast and up the River Thames to London.
The fabulous cargo stokes the English appetite for trade with the Far East, currently a Portuguese monopoly.