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Recapture of Angola

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(Redirected from Recapture of Luanda) Portuguese siege on Dutch-controlled Luanda
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Recapture of Angola
Part of Dutch–Portuguese War
Date1648
LocationLuanda, Benguela, São Tomé and Príncipe
Result Portuguese victory
Belligerents
Portugal Portuguese Empire Dutch West India Company Dutch West India Company
Kingdom of Ndongo
Kingdom of Matamba
Commanders and leaders
Salvador de Sá Unknown
Strength
900 men 1,200 Dutch
Unknown number of natives
Casualties and losses
163 men killed
160 men wounded
Dutch
at least 150 men killed
at least 300 men captured
Unknown number of men wounded
Natives
Unknown
Dutch–Portuguese War
Europe
Brazil
Africa
Asia
Dutch colonial conflicts
17th century

18th century

19th century

20th century

Portuguese colonial campaigns
15th century
16th century
17th century
18th century
19th century
20th century

The Recapture of Angola, or Reconquest of Angola, was a military campaign fought between the Portuguese and the Dutch occupiers of Angola. Its most important episode was the siege imposed by the Portuguese on the far larger Dutch garrison of Luanda.

In 1641 Johan Maurits sent an expedition under Admiral Cornelis Jol from Recife in Dutch Brazil to seize the Angolan capital of Luanda. The Dutch were able to easily capture Luanda in August as the Portuguese forces were occupied inland in a campaign against the Kingdom of Kongo. The two countries fought to a stalemate over Angola, until in 1648 the governor of Rio de Janeiro and Angola, Salvador de Sá, reached Luanda and finding the city defended by 1200 Dutch troops, besieged them and regained it for Portugal exactly seven years after its loss. When a Dutch force of 300 soldiers returned from the interior to help their garrison of Luanda, they also surrendered to the Portuguese, but their allied warriors of Queen Ndjinga fought a battle against the Portuguese and were defeated as well. Then Salvador Correia de Sa sent a force to Benguela where the Dutch garrison surrendered.

He also sent a fleet which recaptured the archipelago of São Tomé e Príncipe from the Dutch, who left behind their artillery.

This was a decisive Dutch defeat since Dutch Brazil couldn't survive without the slaves from Angola. The end of Dutch presence in South America (with the exception of the Guiana) meant not only the bankruptcy of the WIC, but also the end of most of the West Dutch empire.

Notes

  1. Alden, Dauril (1996). The Making of an Enterprise: The Society of Jesus in Portugal, Its Empire, and Beyond, 1540-1750. ISBN 9780804722711.

References

  • Lourenço, Paula.Battles of Portuguese History - Defence of the Overseas. - Volume X. (2006)


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