Three Dutch ships under the eventual command…
February 1603 CE
Three Dutch ships under the eventual command of Admiral Jacob van Heemskerk at dawn of February 25, 1603, spot the carrack Santa Catarina at anchor off the eastern coast of Singapore,
The ship is traveling from Macau to Melaka, laden with products from China and Japan, including twelve hundred bales of Chinese raw silk, worth 2.2 million guilders.
Her cargo is particularly valuable because it contains several hundred ounces of musk.
After a couple of hours of fighting, the Dutch manage to subdue the crew, who forfeit the cargo and the ship in return for the safety of their lives.
This marks the start of the Dutch–Portuguese War that is to end the Portuguese monopoly on trade in the East Indies.
Locations
Groups
Tupi people (Amerind tribe)
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Cochin, Kingdom of
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Kongo, Kingdom of
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Kandy, Sinhalese Kingdom of
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England, (Tudor) Kingdom of
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Johor, Sultanate of
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Matamba, Kingdom of
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Brazil, Colonial
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Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
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Portugal, Habsburg (Philippine) Kingdom of
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Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
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East India Company, British (The Company of Merchants of London Trading into the East Indies)
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Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC in Dutch, literally "United East Indies Company")
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Dutch East India Company in Indonesia
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