When Morgan’s fleet reaches the settlement on…
July 1668 CE
When Morgan’s fleet reaches the settlement on the northern coast of South America, the buccaneers find the fortresses very intimidating.
With this in mind, Morgan delivers a rousing speech in which he reminds them that the Spanish do not know of their presence and promises them gold and silver.
When the sun sets, the ships begin to sail towards Puerto do Naos where there is a river that could lead them to Porto Bello.
With information gained from a prisoner, the buccaneers are able to quickly destroy the first fort.
Seeing how easily the first two castles were taken, the third castle surrenders, enabling Morgan’s buccaneers to overrun the city.
Not long after this, the Spanish counterattacks in an attempt to protect their wealth and center of trade but the buccaneers are ready for the battle and Morgan organizes an ambush of the fleet in a narrow passage.
After defeating the much larger and more powerful Spanish fleet, Morgan and his men continue to inhabit Portobelo for fourteen days while they collect all of the wealth of the city that they can find before ransoming the Spanish for the safety of its town and citizens.
This daring endeavor, although successful, also proves particularly brutal as it involves rape, torture, and murder on a grand scale.
From the ransom alone, Morgan and his men collect roughlyone hundred thousand pieces of eight to bring their total loot from Portobelo to over two hundred thousand pieces of eight.
In a foreshadowing of Morgan’s future endeavors, the governor of Panama asks him how he had beaten the Spanish army sent from his city, along with an emerald ring and a request that he not attack Panama.