Calicut was taken over by the Muslim alliance, but the Portuguese repelled the Ahmednagar army at Chaul, and held back the Bijapur at Goa itself. Adil Shah with his overwhelming manpower surrounded the city with a wall of men and elephants, while the combined fleets managed to block the harbour to ensure that no supplies reached the defenders. Against this immense armament the Portuguese could only raise a few hundred soldiers along with some priests who were unwilling to bear arms. Portuguese had the advantage of short lines of communication, but the chief defence of lay in the marshy lands which bordered it. After a siege that lasted nearly a year Adil Shah withdrew his troops and hence city was saved. Within a very short span the city had almost made up for any loss in population. A number of travellers visited Goa and have vividly described about its magnificence and splendour. Among the visitors was Albert de Mandelso who visited Goa in 1639. He gave a vivid description of golden Goa. However by the seventeenth century life in Goa was completely corrupted and the whole economy was reliant on the slaves owned by different owners. Majority of the shops were under the management of the slaves. When the other European nations arrived in India the once resilient Portuguese were not in proper position to put up much resistance and while Golden Goa remained in a trance the entire empire slipped away. Apart from the English the Dutch were the principle attackers and the ones who annexed most of the Portuguese empire. The Dutch had taken control over the spice trade - the original reason for Portugal's eastern expansion. |
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