The Portuguese kicked ass: 1501: The First Naval Battle in the Indian Ocean against Indians


Jan‘s Advertisement
Video & Audio: Whites: Strategy Versus Tactics
This is a very important video. When you understand this, you‘ll grasp how Whites survive even when they don‘t have a plan! And why we always stand a chance against racial enemies.


[This group of small ships, 4 in number, were PRIVATE ships, and their goal was simply to go to India to buy spices to make money. They found themselves being attacked by quite a massive fleet that outnumbered them. In total there were 350-400 Portuguese, only 80 of whom were armed. And they were in their small privately owned ships, when a fleet of 7,000 men, 220 smaller ships tried to corner them. Of the 220 ships, 40 were big ships. The Whites fought a battle at sea for 2 days. So the Whites were massively outnumbered, but their superior technology caused them to kick some ass! Jan]

Here is a drawing of the battle: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Battle_of_Cannanore#/media/File:Batalha_de_Cananor_%E2%80%93_Hist%C3%B3ria_de_Portugal,_Popular_e_Ilustrada.jpg

This is what the smaller Indian vessels looked like: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sambuk

Here’s the story:
First Battle of Cannanore

In mid-December 1501, the Third Armada was preparing to leave India, loaded with spices from Cannanore and other goods from piratical attacks. News arrived, however, that a battle fleet led by the Zamorin was approaching.

Sometime in December,[34] Nova’s fleet was cornered by the Zamorin’s fleet as he was about to leave Cannanore. The Zamorin’s fleet comprised nearly 40 large ships, and 180 small ships called paraus and zambuks. He commanded an estimated 7,000 men.[35]

The Raja of Cannanore urged Nova to stay under his protection and avoid conflict. Nova rejected the Raja’s offer, attempting to break out with a favorable breeze. The Third Armada fired its cannons to breach the Zamorin’s line. Once a breach was opened, four Portuguese ships charged into the breach in a column formation, their side cannons blasting. The pounding from the cannons and the height of Nova’s ships prevented the Calicut forces from boarding the Portuguese ships with grappling hooks. The less seaworthy fleet of the Zamorin, pursuing the escaping Portuguese, began to splinter due to intense cannon fire. The increased distance between the slowed-down Calicut fleet and the Third Armada caused the former to stop aiming to board the Portuguese ships, causing the battle to become a ranged artillery duel. The Calicut fleet retreated after it realized that its cannons’ range and reloading speed could not match those of the Third Armada. Nova gave a brief chase, finally breaking up the engagement on January 2, 1502.

After two days of fighting, the Third Armada had sunk five large ships and about a dozen oar-driven boats. It inflicted great damage on the remaining vessels of the Zamorin while it was not damaged much itself.

Although João da Nova was not prepared for a fight, the two-day naval battle off Cannanore is regarded by some[who?] as the first significant Portuguese naval engagement in the Indian Ocean. It was not the first clash between Portuguese and Indian ships – Vasco da Gama’s First Armada and Cabral’s Second Armada also fought with various Indian fleets. Earlier encounters were fought against mostly poorly armed merchant ships, pirates and isolated squads; a single well-armed caravel could win a battle against these targets with ease. In the First Battle of Cannanore, the Zamorin of Calicut had attacked directly, deploying the best fleet he could against a small group of Portuguese merchant carracks, which were significantly less heavily armed than the ships of Gama and Cabral.

According to the Portuguese Navy’s official website, the battle is also historically notable for being one of the earliest recorded deliberate uses of a naval column, later called line of battle, and for being resolved by cannon fire alone. The tactics used in the battle became increasingly prevalent as naval technology and strategy evolved, causing the battle to have been called the first modern naval battle.[36]

Return voyage
In early 1502, the Third Armada captured another Calicut merchant ship near Mount d’Eli, which it sacked, burned and sunk. It began the return voyage soon afterwards.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3rd_Portuguese_India_Armada_(Nova,_1501)
And: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Battle_of_Cannanore



Jan‘s Advertisement
The History Reviewed Channel on Odysee
This is the Odysee Channel where new HistoryReviewed and AfricanCrisis Videos are also uploaded to

%d bloggers like this:
Skip to toolbar