Some of these complexities can be glimpsed …

Years: 1540 - 1683

Some of these complexities can be glimpsed in a brief history of Ternate, Maluku, in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.

In 1512 seven Portuguese arrive in Ternate as the guests of Sultan Abu Lais (r. ?-1522), having been rescued by fishermen from a shipwreck of their locally built vessel (their original ship had become too unreliable to continue in service) loaded with spices purchased in Banda.

The sultan seeks an alliance with the Portuguese, of whom he has already heard, and is eager to exchange cloves for assistance against the rival sultanate of Tidore.

When Spanish ships arrive in Maluku in 1521, Sultan Mansur of Tidore seals a similar agreement with them, to which the Portuguese soon respondsby building a large stone fortress on Ternate.

This act touches off decades of warfare among Europeans and their local allies, in which political control, economic ascendancy, and religious identity all are contested, but it also brings change in Ternate itself, for the ruler here becomes essentially a prisoner of the Portuguese, whose increasingly arbitrary and oppressive interference in local affairs, including spice production and harvesting, eventually turns their former allies against them.

Under the leadership of Sultan Babullah (r. 1570-83), Islam becomes a powerful tool with which to create alliances and gather widespread opposition to the Portuguese.

After a siege in 1575 against the Ternate fort, he ousts the Portuguese forces.

Babullah allows a limited contingent of Portuguese merchants to continue trading in Ternate, but the fort becomes the royal residence, and the sultanate rapidly expands its reach to key trading ports as far away as northern and southern Sulawesi until the arrival of the Dutch touches off new and even more complex struggles.

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