History
History, 23.10.2020 03:01, anthonygeorge7

Please help! Edgenuity 2020 history project Excerpt the questions are based on:
Two distinct but linked questions are always asked about the impact that Portugal made in the Indian
Ocean between the arrival of Vasco da Gama and the death of Albuquerque. First, how was it
possible for Portugal, so poor, small, weak and distant, to capture great cities like Ormuz, Goa and
Malacca and to lay the western Indian Ocean under tribute, successfully defying the powerful
kingdoms of Asia and the Middle East. The second question, asked in partial answer to the first, is
whether Portugal's impact on Asia was really as great as a reading of the chroniclers might lead one
to suppose. The second of these questions will be examined in the last chapter of this book, but a
consideration of the first needs to form an epilogue to any account of the era of da Gama, Almeida
and Albuquerque.
Most historians have agreed that Portugal arrived in the Indian Ocean at a moment uniquely
favourable for themselves. The great land-based powers of the East—the Delhi sultanate, Hindu
Vijayanagar, Persian, imperial China, and the Ottoman empire were all preoccupied with political
struggles deep within the continental land masses. Warfare in the Middle East and the eastern
Mediterranean had closed the overland spice routes at the end of the fifteenth century. The seaborne
commerce of the Indian Ocean was handled by port-city states which were largely independent of the
mainland powers which derived little of their income from maritime commerce. Indeed imperial China
had closed its ports to outside trade altogether. It has therefore been argued that the great Asiatic
powers simply ignored the arrival of the Portuguese until the latter were too firmly established to be
easily dislodged.
The second explanation, particularly advanced by G. V. Scammell, is that, from the start, the
Portuguese were able to exploit local rivalries and came to rely heavily on the collaboration of local
allies. The rivalries came to rely heavily on the collaboration of local allies. The rivalry of Melinde with
Mombasa in eastern Africa, or Cochin with Calicut on the Malabar coast, are two obvious cases.
Almost from the start the Portuguese began to recruit local soldiers and seamen to supplement their
shortage of manpower. According to this argument, the Portuguese victories were won with the aid of
collaborators and by using the tactics of divide and rule—and not by any superior military or naval
capacity. It was an argument developed to counter the claims made by Carlo Cipolla that it was the
armed warship with its heavy artillery that gave Portugal an overwhelming military advantage.
The role of gunpowder in the story of European overseas expansion is not to be easily dismissed and
remains an important line of argument, especially for those who believe that global capitalism has
triumphed not by the logic of the market but too often by the logic of the gun. The Portuguese
commanders themselves attached a great deal of importance to firearms and were determined to be
properly supplied with guns and experienced artillerymen—Albuquerque even recommended to Dom
Manuel that half the gunners in the fortresses in the East should be Germans who had a reputation for
being the best gunners of the age, and gave permission for a German chapel to be built in Goa.
Morocco had been the school and testing ground for a particularly successful type of warfare. The
Portuguese attacks on Moroccan ports in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries had been amphibious
operations. By moving their forces by sea the Portuguese found that they could achieve surprise and
concentrate their forces rapidly at one particular point. Moreover, as Cipolla pointed out, the ships could carry heavy guns which could be easily and rapidly manoeuvred into position.

1. Summarize the author’s argument and supporting evidence.
2. Why was Portugal successful in Asia? Be sure to amplify the author’s argument as you explain your answer.

answer
Answers: 1

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