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{{Short description|Combats of Spanish soldiers against Japanese samurai pirates in the Philippines}}
{{Orphan|date=August 2013}}
{{Refimprove|date=August 2013}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict = 1582 Cagayan battles
| conflict = 1582 Cagayan battles
|partof =
| partof =
| date = 1582
|image = [[Image:Ronin, or masterless Samurai, lunging forward.jpg|300px]]
|caption = [[Rōnin]] Japanese drawing from 1869
| place = [[Cagayan]], [[Luzon]], [[Philippines]]
|date = [[1582]]
| result = Spanish victory
|place = [[Cagayan]], [[Luzon]], [[Philippines]]
| combatant1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1506}} [[Spanish Empire]]
* {{flagicon|Spain|1506}} [[New Spain]]
|casus = Piracy in a portion of the [[Spanish empire]]
* {{flagicon|Spain|1506}} [[Captaincy General of the Philippines|Spanish Philippines]]
|description = Naval battles between a small Spanish force and a numerically-superior Japanese force
|result = Spanish victory
| combatant2 = [[Wokou]]
| commander1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1506}} Juan Pablo de Carrión<br>{{flagicon|Spain|1506}} Pedro Lucas{{KIA}}
|aftermath = Japanese piracy activity in the area stopped
| commander2 = Tay Fusa<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico">General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 2, number 59. Letter from Gonzalo Ronquillo, Governor of the Philippines, to the Viceroy of Mexico,
|combatant1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1506}} [[Spanish Empire]]
1st of June, 1582</ref>
|combatant2 = [[Wokou]]
| strength1 = 60 soldiers (not including Philippine native recruits)<br />20 sailors<ref name=numero_marineros>A.G.I. Filipinas, legajo 29, ramo 3, número 62. Letter from Juan Bautista Román governor to the Viceroy of Mexico 25 June 1582</ref><br /><br />1 galleon<br />5 small vessels <br />1 light vessel<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" />
|commander1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1506}}[[Juan Pablo de Carrión]]
| strength2 = 1 junk<br />18 sampans<br /><1,000 Wako pirates<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" />
|commander2 = [[Tay Fusa]]
| casualties1 = 10–20 (not counting native recruits) casualties<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" />
|strength1 = 40 soldiers<br />1 galera<br />5 small support ships<br />1 light vessel
| casualties2 = Estimated hundreds of casualties<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" />
|strength2 = 1 junk<br />18 sampans<br />More than a 1000 men
| casus = Piracy in a portion of the [[Spanish empire]]
|casualties1 = 10-20 killed
| descrptian = Well-armed Spanish troops clash with untrained native pirates.
|casualties2 = several hundreds killed
| aftermath = Japanese/Asian pirate group in the area defeated
}}
}}


The '''1582 Cagayan battles''' were a series of clashes between the [[Spain|Spanish]] colonizers of the [[Philippines]] led by Captain [[Juan Pablo de Carrion]], and [[Wokou]] (Japanese pirates) headed by [[Tay Fusa]]. These battles, which took place in the vicinity of the [[Cagayan River]], finally resulted in a Spanish victory.
The '''1582 Cagayan battles''' were a series of clashes between the forces of the [[Spanish Philippines]] led by Captain '''Juan Pablo de Carrión''' and [[wokou]] (possibly led by [[Japanese pirates]]) headed by '''Tay Fusa'''. These battles, which took place in the vicinity of the [[Cagayan River]], finally resulted in a Spanish victory.<ref>[http://pares.mcu.es/ParesBusquedas/servlets/Control_servlet?accion=3&txt_id_desc_ud=422276&fromagenda=N] General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 29, bunch 3, number 62. Letter from Juan Bautista Román to the Viceroy of México,
25 June 1582</ref>{{Ref|NoteA|A}}<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" /><ref>General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 2, number 60. Letter from the Governor of the Philippines to the Viceroy of México,
20 July 1583</ref><ref>General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 74, bunch 1, number 24. Letter from Bishop of the Philippines to the King of Spain,
18 January 1583</ref><ref name="Orden de enviar hombres a Filipinas desde México">[http://pares.mcu.es/ParesBusquedas/servlets/Control_servlet?accion=3&txt_id_desc_ud=431623&fromagenda=N] General Archive of the Indies, Council of the Indies, 339,L.1,F.286V-287R. Order to send men to the Philippines from Mexico, 14 June 1583</ref>{{Ref|NoteB|B}}


This event is a recorded battle between European soldiers and sailors against [[Japanese pirates]],<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" /><ref name="Orden de enviar hombres a Filipinas desde México" /> which followed similar events like the battles of [[Battle of Manila (1574)|Manila]] and [[Battle of Fukuda Bay|Fukuda Bay]]. The clash pitted [[Spaniards|Spanish]] [[musketeers]], [[pikemen]], [[rodeleros]] and sailors assisted by allied native warriors against a larger group of [[Japanese people|Japanese]], [[Chinese people|Chinese]] and likely native [[Filipino people|Filipino]] pirates made up of [[rōnin]], soldiers, fishermen, and merchants ([[smuggler]]s and legitimate).<ref>Contemporary Maritime Piracy: International Law, Strategy, and Diplomacy at Sea By James Kraska [https://books.google.com/books?id=pkNHFtJhG6UC&dq=The+wokou+or+wako+were+lordless+samurai+(ronin),+soldiers,+merchants,+and+smugglers,+and+later+many+of+them&pg=PA17]</ref> The pirates had a large [[Junk (ship)|junk]], and 18 [[Sampan|sampans]] which are flat bottomed, wooden fishing boats.<ref>General Archive of the Indies, Council of the Indies, 339,L.1,F.286V-287R. Order to send men to the Philippines from Mexico, 14 June 1583</ref>
This event was the only recorded battle between European regular soldiers against [[samurai]] warriors.{{Fact|date=August 2013}}


==Prelude==
This unique event pitted [[musketeers]], [[pikemen]] and Spanish [[rodeleros]] against [[Japanese people|Japanese]] [[Ronin]] (masterless samurai), and to a lesser extent, [[ashigaru]] (foot soldiers).{{Fact|date=August 2013}}
[[File:Ronin, or masterless Samurai, lunging forward.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Rōnin]], or masterless samurai.]]


Around 1573, the Japanese began to exchange [[gold]] for silver on the Philippine island of [[Luzon]], especially in the [[Cagayan Valley]] around the modern-day province of [[Cagayan]], [[Manila (province)|Manila]], and [[Pangasinan]], specifically the [[Lingayen]] area. In 1580, however, a ragtag group of pirates forced the natives of Cagayan into submission. These raiders were called [[wokou]] and had been previously [[Jiajing wokou raids|fought]] by the Chinese [[Jiajing Emperor]].
== History ==


In response, the [[Governor-General of the Philippines]] [[Gonzalo Ronquillo de Peñalosa|Gonzalo Ronquillo]] commissioned Juan Pablo de Carrión, [[Hidalgo (nobility)|hidalgo]] and a captain of the [[Spanish navy]], to deal with the piracy.<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" />
Around [[1573]], the Japanese began to exchange [[gold]] for silver on the Philippine island of [[Luzon]], especially in the provinces of [[Cagayan]], [[Metro Manila]] and [[Pangasinan]], specifically the Lingayen area. In [[1580]], however, Japanese pirates forced the natives of Cagayan to tender loyalty and submission. These raiders were called Wokou, although in the sixteenth century the term referred also to Chinese pirates.


Ronquillo wrote to King Philip II on 16 June 1582:<ref name="Letter from the Governor to the King">General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 2, number 56. Letter from Gonzalo Ronquillo, Governor of the Philippines, to the King of Spain,
The [[Governor-General]] Gonzalo Ronquillo amend the situation commissioned [[Juan Pablo de Carrion]], gentleman and Navy captainof the [[Spanish navy]]. Carrion took the initiative and, thanks to the technical superiority of Western ships, easily shelled a Japanese ship in the [[South China Sea]] to force him to retire. The answer came through the pirate leader Tay Fusa (also referred to as Tayfusu or Tayfuzu), which sailed toward the [[Philippine archipelago]] with 10 ships. To counter this, captain Carrion managed to gather 40 soldiers and 7 boats: support five small support vessels, a light ship ('''San Yusepe''') and a galley ('''La Capitana''').
16th of June 1582</ref><ref name="Borao" />


{{quote|text=
As they passed the Bogueador cape the fleet discovered a Japanese [[Sampan]] that just arrived to the coast and were treating extremely harshly the native population. The Captain began a naval battle against the [[Sampan]] and boarded the Japanese ship, still outnumbered by the Japanese. The Spanish [[rodeleros]] face then against real Japanese samurai with armor and armed with katanas. As the Japanese also had [[muskets]], which had been provided by the Portuguese, the deck of the [[sanpan]] become a battlefield with the Spanish pikemen at front and [[arquebusiers]] and musketeers behind. Finally, the victory was for the Spanish troops thanks to the improvised parapet and the best quality of the Spanish armor and weaponry.
{{lang|es|Los japoneses son la gente más belicosa que hay por acá. Traen artillería y mucha arcabucería y piquería. Usan armas defensivas para el cuerpo. Lo cual todo lo tienen por industria de portugeses, que se lo han mostrado para daño de sus ánimas.}}
The Japanese are the most belligerent people here. They bring artillery and many arquebusiers and pikemen. They wear body armor. All provided from the works of the Portuguese, whom they have shown to them for the detriment of their souls {{sic}} ...
|multiline=yes
|author=[[Gonzalo Ronquillo de Peñalosa|Gonzalo Ronquillo]]
}}


Carrión took the initiative and shelled a Wokou ship, possibly of Chinese manufacture, in the [[South China Sea]], removing it from action. A retaliation came from Tay Fusa, who sailed toward the [[Philippine archipelago]] with a fleet.<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" />
The [[flotilla]] continued down the [[cagayan River|Tagus River]], finding a fleet of 18 [[sampans]], the Spanish flotilla make their way through
using its artillery and disembarked to dig in and place the [[artillery]]unloaded from the galley in the trenchs, while continually making fire at the enemy. The Wokou decided to negotiate a surrender and Carrion ordered them to leave [[Luzon]]. Pirates asked gold in compensation for the losses they would suffer if they left, which was followed by an outright refusal of Carrion.
thenthe Japanese decided to attack by land with 600 soldiers. The trench endured that first assault, followed by another. As some pikes were seized by the Japanese Spanish [[sebum]] put the wood to make it more slippery and be more difficult to grasp. After a third attack, which almost came in the trenches, and with little gunpowder, the 30 Spanish soldiers were able to resist and defeat the enemy, and then attacked him, causing the enemy to flee. The Spanish then took the Japanese weapons that were left on the battlefield as trophies, which included beautiful katana and armor. European [[Fencing]] proved to be better than the Japanese martial arts and Toledo steel swords much stronger and useful than katanas. The Japanese armor were refined with European style, adding metal breastplates.


==Opposing forces==
Pacified the region, and with reinforcements, Carrión founded in the city of Nueva Segovia (now Lal-lo).
The Wokou fleet was composed of one junk and 18 sampans. Although their numbers comprised ethnic [[Japanese people|Japanese]], [[Min Chinese speakers|Chinese]], and [[Ethnic groups in the Philippines|Philippine]] raiders, the name of their leader suggests the Japanese led their fleet. Spanish sources record it as Tay Fusa, which does not correspond to a [[Japanese name]] but could be a transliteration of ''Taifu-san'' or ''Taifu-sama'', with ''taifu'' ([[wikt:大夫|大夫]]) being a word for a Japanese medieval chieftain rank,<ref>{{cite book|last=Miura|first=Shumon|title=Tōnan Ajia kara mita Nihon|date=1976|publisher=Shōgakkan|location=Tokyo|page=109}}</ref> also pronounced as ''tāi-hu'' ([[Pe̍h-ōe-jī|POJ]]) in [[Hokkien]] Chinese, or ''dàfū'' ([[pinyin]]) in [[Mandarin Chinese|Mandarin]] [[Standard Chinese]]. Meanwhile, ''-san'' ([[wikt:さん|さん]]) or ''-sama'' ({{Ruby-ja|[[wikt:様|様]]|[[wikt:さま|さま]]}}) are [[Japanese honorifics|Japanese honorific]] [[suffix]]es. They carried not only bladed weapons but also [[muskets]], which had been provided by the [[Portuguese Empire|Portuguese]].<ref name=RC/>


To counter this, Carrión gathered forty soldiers and seven boats: five small support vessels, a lightship (''San Yusepe''), and a galleon (''La Capitana''), with their respective crews.<ref name="Letter from the Governor to the King" /><ref name=Borao>Borao, José Eugenio (2005), p.2</ref> Though lesser in numbers, the Spanish were advantaged by their greater experience with firearms than the pirates, as well as the superior quality of their armor and weaponry.<ref name=RC>Del Rey, Canales, 2012</ref>
Pirate activity was residual and the commercial activity focused on [[Lingayen]] Bay, in Pangasinan, on the port of [[Agoo]] and consisted principally on the deerskin trade.

On board the ships, apart from the crew, there were forty soldiers. Contrary to popular belief, they did not belong to the Tercios and no more than five or six had fought in Europe, since the majority were born in [[New Spain]] (what is today, Mexico and the Southwestern United States). They were Tlaxcalan indigenous people, veterans among others from the Chichimeca War, and fully integrated into the Spanish army, along with Iberians and Novohispanos, since these would have already participated in several of the first explorations in the Pacific and some of the wars in the region. All the weapons they carried were European, with the weapons and defenses of a common soldier. They all knew by heart, and practiced with ease the usual tactics of the Spanish formations. The flotilla would also be filled with recruits from the allied Tagalog, Pampanga and Visayan tribes.

==Battle==
[[File:Japon-1886-32.jpg|thumb|250px|Japanese sampan-like river boat.]]
As they passed the [[Cape Bojeador]], the Spanish [[flotilla]] encountered a heavy Wokou [[sampan]]. It had recently arrived at the coast, and its sailors abused the native population. Carrión, although outnumbered by the wokou, engaged in a naval battle with the [[sampan]], eventually boarding it. The Spanish [[rodeleros]] then encountered armored Japanese [[wokou]] wielding swords. Though initially successful, the Spanish soldiers were repelled back to their ship, whose deck became a battlefield. Eventually, the Spanish turned the battle again in their favor by improvising a parapet with Spanish pikemen at the front and [[arquebusiers]] and musketeers at the rear, thanks to the well-timed reinforcement of the rest of the fleet. The wokou abandoned the ships and swam away, with some drowning due to the weight of their armor.<ref name=RC/> The Spanish had suffered their first casualties, among them the galley's captain Pedro Lucas.<ref name=RC/>

The flotilla continued down the [[Cagayán River]], finding a fleet of eighteen [[sampans]] and a Wokou [[fort]] erected inland. The Spanish fleet forced their way through using artillery and disembarked onshore. They dug in, assembling the [[artillery]] unloaded from the galleon in the trenches, and continually bombarded the pirates. The wokou decided to negotiate a surrender, and Carrión ordered them to leave [[Luzon]]. The pirates asked for gold in compensation for the losses they would suffer if they left, which was denied outright by Carrión.<ref name="Letter from the Governor to the King" /><ref name=Borao/> After this, the wokou decided to attack by land with a force of some six hundred strong.<ref name=RC/>

The Spanish trenches, crewed by soldiers and sailors, endured a first assault, then another. In response to their pikes being seized by the Wokou soldiers, the Spanish oiled the shafts of their pikes to make them difficult to grasp.<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" /> The Spanish ran low on gunpowder by the third attack, which became a close-quarters fight that almost breached the trenches. Finally, with the Wokou assaults diminishing, the Spanish emerged from the trenches and attacked, routing the remaining Wokou.<ref name="Letter from Ronquillo to the Viceroy of Mexico" /> They then plundered the Wokou weapons left on the battlefield, which included katanas and armor, and kept them as trophies.<ref name="Letter from the Governor to the King" /><ref name=Borao/>

==Aftermath==
With the region pacified and the arrival of reinforcements, Carrión founded the city of Nueva Segovia (now [[Lal-lo, Cagayan|Lal-lo]]). The pirate activity was sparse afterward, although the impression left by the fierceness of the battle led the local Spanish viceroy to request more troops. The commercial activity near Cagayan was focused in [[Lingayen Gulf|Lingayen]] Bay, in Pangasinan, on the port of [[Agoo]] and consisted principally of deerskin trade.<ref>General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 6, number 154. Letter from the Governor of the Philippines to the King of Spain, 12th of July, 1599</ref><ref>General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 18, bunch 7, number 154. Letter from the Governor of the Philippines to the King of Spain, 12th of July, 1599</ref>

==Notes==
:A.{{Note|NoteA}} Carta de Juan Bautista Román, factor y veedor de la Real Hacienda de Filipinas, al virrey de Nueva España dando cuenta de la expedición del capitán Juan Pablo de Carrión a Cagayán para expulsar a los japoneses que estaban allí poblados. Fue con una pequeña armada, por el camino peleó con un corsario chino al que rindió, y al doblar el cabo Bojeador topó con un navío japonés, con quienes se entabló una batalla hasta que los españoles consiguieron rendirlos. Carrión subió por el río Cagayán, hallando a la entrada un fuerte con navíos japoneses. Los españoles anduvieron por el río desperdigados y Carrión se hizo fuerte en un estero, resistiendo allí ataques de los japoneses. Juan Bautista Román expone la necesidad que tienen de socorro. (Cat. 2814)
:B.{{Note|NoteB}} [[Real Cédula]] al conde de Coruña, virrey de Nueva España, comunicándole que, según informa el capitán Gabriel de Rivera que vino de Filipinas, en una jornada que hizo el gobernador Gonzalo Ronquillo al río de Cagayan se perdieron algunos españoles, y que para reparar esta falta y poblar esas islas convenía se llevasen a ellas hasta doscientos hombres. Se encarga al virrey que atienda esta petición y los envíe desde Nueva España, además de otros doscientos que se le encargaron desde Lisboa. (Cat. 2999) Nota: Corresponde a imagen nº 600–601

== See also ==
* [[Siege of Moji]] (1561) – A Portuguese carrack joins a Japanese battle in what became the first European naval bombardment on Japanese soil
* [[Battle of Fukuda Bay]] (1565) – A Japanese flotilla attacks a Portuguese carrack and fails to capture it in the first naval clash between Japan and the West
* [[Battle of Manila (1574)|Battle of Manila]] (1574) – A Chinese and Japanese pirate fleet attacked Manila intending to capture the city
* [[Nossa Senhora da Graça incident]] (1610) – A Japanese flotilla attacks a Portuguese carrack that ends in the latter's sinking
* [[Allied naval bombardments of Japan during World War II#Second attack on Kamaishi|Second Attack on Kamaishi]] (9 August 1945) – last-ever direct naval bombardment of the Japanese home islands in World War II


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


== Bibliography ==
* Antony, Robert J.: ''Elusive Pirates, Pervasive Smugglers: Violence and Clandestine Trade in the Greater China Seas'', pp. 82–83
* Borao, José Eugenio (2005). «[http://www.canela.org.es/cuadernoscanela/canelapdf/cc17borao.pdf La colonia de japoneses en Manila en el marco de las relaciones de Filipinas y Japón en los siglos XVI y XVII]». Cuadernos Canela (Tokio: Confederación Académica Nipona, Española y Latinoaméricana) (17): 25-53. ISSN 1344-9109 (Spanish)
* {{citation
* {{citation
|first=Del Rey Vicente, Canales Torres|first2=Miguel, Carlos|title=En Tierra Extraña: Expediciones Militares Españolas|year=2012|publisher=Edaf|isbn=978-84-414-3206-2}}
|author=Del Rey Vicente, Miguel|author2=Canales Torres, Carlos|title=En Tierra Extraña: Expediciones Militares Españolas|year=2012|publisher=Editorial Edaf|isbn=978-84-414-3206-2}}
* Sola, Emilio (1999). ''Historia de un desencuentro: España y Japón, 1580-1614''. Fugaz Ediciones. p.&nbsp;24. {{ISBN|84-884-9409-2}}.
Del Rey Vicente, Miguel; Canales Torres, Carlos (2012). En tierra extraña: Expediciones militares españolas. Editorial Edaf. ISBN 84-414-3206-6.
* [https://interesting-study.com/cagayan-battles-1582-the-victory-of-the-spanish-knights-over-the-samurai/ battle of cagayan 1582]
Sola, Emilio (1999). Historia de un desencuentro: España y Japón, 1580-1614. Fugaz Ediciones. p. 24. ISBN 84-884-9409-2.

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Pablo_de_Carri%C3%B3n
{{Pirates}}
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combates_de_Cagay%C3%A1n
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cagayan battles, 1582}}
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedro_Ord%C3%B3%C3%B1ez_de_Cevallos
[[Category:1582]]
[[Category:1582 in the Spanish Empire]]
[[Category:History of Spain]]
[[Category:History of the Philippines (1565–1898)]]
[[Category:History of the Philippines]]
[[Category:History of Cagayan]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving Spain]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving pirates]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving Japan]]

Latest revision as of 20:24, 9 December 2024

1582 Cagayan battles
Date1582
Location
Result Spanish victory
Belligerents

Spain Spanish Empire

Wokou
Commanders and leaders
Spain Juan Pablo de Carrión
Spain Pedro Lucas 
Tay Fusa[1]
Strength
60 soldiers (not including Philippine native recruits)
20 sailors[2]

1 galleon
5 small vessels
1 light vessel[1]
1 junk
18 sampans
<1,000 Wako pirates[1]
Casualties and losses
10–20 (not counting native recruits) casualties[1] Estimated hundreds of casualties[1]

The 1582 Cagayan battles were a series of clashes between the forces of the Spanish Philippines led by Captain Juan Pablo de Carrión and wokou (possibly led by Japanese pirates) headed by Tay Fusa. These battles, which took place in the vicinity of the Cagayan River, finally resulted in a Spanish victory.[3]A[1][4][5][6]B

This event is a recorded battle between European soldiers and sailors against Japanese pirates,[1][6] which followed similar events like the battles of Manila and Fukuda Bay. The clash pitted Spanish musketeers, pikemen, rodeleros and sailors assisted by allied native warriors against a larger group of Japanese, Chinese and likely native Filipino pirates made up of rōnin, soldiers, fishermen, and merchants (smugglers and legitimate).[7] The pirates had a large junk, and 18 sampans which are flat bottomed, wooden fishing boats.[8]

Prelude

[edit]
Rōnin, or masterless samurai.

Around 1573, the Japanese began to exchange gold for silver on the Philippine island of Luzon, especially in the Cagayan Valley around the modern-day province of Cagayan, Manila, and Pangasinan, specifically the Lingayen area. In 1580, however, a ragtag group of pirates forced the natives of Cagayan into submission. These raiders were called wokou and had been previously fought by the Chinese Jiajing Emperor.

In response, the Governor-General of the Philippines Gonzalo Ronquillo commissioned Juan Pablo de Carrión, hidalgo and a captain of the Spanish navy, to deal with the piracy.[1]

Ronquillo wrote to King Philip II on 16 June 1582:[9][10]

Los japoneses son la gente más belicosa que hay por acá. Traen artillería y mucha arcabucería y piquería. Usan armas defensivas para el cuerpo. Lo cual todo lo tienen por industria de portugeses, que se lo han mostrado para daño de sus ánimas.

The Japanese are the most belligerent people here. They bring artillery and many arquebusiers and pikemen. They wear body armor. All provided from the works of the Portuguese, whom they have shown to them for the detriment of their souls [sic] ...

Carrión took the initiative and shelled a Wokou ship, possibly of Chinese manufacture, in the South China Sea, removing it from action. A retaliation came from Tay Fusa, who sailed toward the Philippine archipelago with a fleet.[1]

Opposing forces

[edit]

The Wokou fleet was composed of one junk and 18 sampans. Although their numbers comprised ethnic Japanese, Chinese, and Philippine raiders, the name of their leader suggests the Japanese led their fleet. Spanish sources record it as Tay Fusa, which does not correspond to a Japanese name but could be a transliteration of Taifu-san or Taifu-sama, with taifu (大夫) being a word for a Japanese medieval chieftain rank,[11] also pronounced as tāi-hu (POJ) in Hokkien Chinese, or dàfū (pinyin) in Mandarin Standard Chinese. Meanwhile, -san (さん) or -sama (さま) are Japanese honorific suffixes. They carried not only bladed weapons but also muskets, which had been provided by the Portuguese.[12]

To counter this, Carrión gathered forty soldiers and seven boats: five small support vessels, a lightship (San Yusepe), and a galleon (La Capitana), with their respective crews.[9][10] Though lesser in numbers, the Spanish were advantaged by their greater experience with firearms than the pirates, as well as the superior quality of their armor and weaponry.[12]

On board the ships, apart from the crew, there were forty soldiers. Contrary to popular belief, they did not belong to the Tercios and no more than five or six had fought in Europe, since the majority were born in New Spain (what is today, Mexico and the Southwestern United States). They were Tlaxcalan indigenous people, veterans among others from the Chichimeca War, and fully integrated into the Spanish army, along with Iberians and Novohispanos, since these would have already participated in several of the first explorations in the Pacific and some of the wars in the region. All the weapons they carried were European, with the weapons and defenses of a common soldier. They all knew by heart, and practiced with ease the usual tactics of the Spanish formations. The flotilla would also be filled with recruits from the allied Tagalog, Pampanga and Visayan tribes.

Battle

[edit]
Japanese sampan-like river boat.

As they passed the Cape Bojeador, the Spanish flotilla encountered a heavy Wokou sampan. It had recently arrived at the coast, and its sailors abused the native population. Carrión, although outnumbered by the wokou, engaged in a naval battle with the sampan, eventually boarding it. The Spanish rodeleros then encountered armored Japanese wokou wielding swords. Though initially successful, the Spanish soldiers were repelled back to their ship, whose deck became a battlefield. Eventually, the Spanish turned the battle again in their favor by improvising a parapet with Spanish pikemen at the front and arquebusiers and musketeers at the rear, thanks to the well-timed reinforcement of the rest of the fleet. The wokou abandoned the ships and swam away, with some drowning due to the weight of their armor.[12] The Spanish had suffered their first casualties, among them the galley's captain Pedro Lucas.[12]

The flotilla continued down the Cagayán River, finding a fleet of eighteen sampans and a Wokou fort erected inland. The Spanish fleet forced their way through using artillery and disembarked onshore. They dug in, assembling the artillery unloaded from the galleon in the trenches, and continually bombarded the pirates. The wokou decided to negotiate a surrender, and Carrión ordered them to leave Luzon. The pirates asked for gold in compensation for the losses they would suffer if they left, which was denied outright by Carrión.[9][10] After this, the wokou decided to attack by land with a force of some six hundred strong.[12]

The Spanish trenches, crewed by soldiers and sailors, endured a first assault, then another. In response to their pikes being seized by the Wokou soldiers, the Spanish oiled the shafts of their pikes to make them difficult to grasp.[1] The Spanish ran low on gunpowder by the third attack, which became a close-quarters fight that almost breached the trenches. Finally, with the Wokou assaults diminishing, the Spanish emerged from the trenches and attacked, routing the remaining Wokou.[1] They then plundered the Wokou weapons left on the battlefield, which included katanas and armor, and kept them as trophies.[9][10]

Aftermath

[edit]

With the region pacified and the arrival of reinforcements, Carrión founded the city of Nueva Segovia (now Lal-lo). The pirate activity was sparse afterward, although the impression left by the fierceness of the battle led the local Spanish viceroy to request more troops. The commercial activity near Cagayan was focused in Lingayen Bay, in Pangasinan, on the port of Agoo and consisted principally of deerskin trade.[13][14]

Notes

[edit]
A.^ Carta de Juan Bautista Román, factor y veedor de la Real Hacienda de Filipinas, al virrey de Nueva España dando cuenta de la expedición del capitán Juan Pablo de Carrión a Cagayán para expulsar a los japoneses que estaban allí poblados. Fue con una pequeña armada, por el camino peleó con un corsario chino al que rindió, y al doblar el cabo Bojeador topó con un navío japonés, con quienes se entabló una batalla hasta que los españoles consiguieron rendirlos. Carrión subió por el río Cagayán, hallando a la entrada un fuerte con navíos japoneses. Los españoles anduvieron por el río desperdigados y Carrión se hizo fuerte en un estero, resistiendo allí ataques de los japoneses. Juan Bautista Román expone la necesidad que tienen de socorro. (Cat. 2814)
B.^ Real Cédula al conde de Coruña, virrey de Nueva España, comunicándole que, según informa el capitán Gabriel de Rivera que vino de Filipinas, en una jornada que hizo el gobernador Gonzalo Ronquillo al río de Cagayan se perdieron algunos españoles, y que para reparar esta falta y poblar esas islas convenía se llevasen a ellas hasta doscientos hombres. Se encarga al virrey que atienda esta petición y los envíe desde Nueva España, además de otros doscientos que se le encargaron desde Lisboa. (Cat. 2999) Nota: Corresponde a imagen nº 600–601

See also

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  • Siege of Moji (1561) – A Portuguese carrack joins a Japanese battle in what became the first European naval bombardment on Japanese soil
  • Battle of Fukuda Bay (1565) – A Japanese flotilla attacks a Portuguese carrack and fails to capture it in the first naval clash between Japan and the West
  • Battle of Manila (1574) – A Chinese and Japanese pirate fleet attacked Manila intending to capture the city
  • Nossa Senhora da Graça incident (1610) – A Japanese flotilla attacks a Portuguese carrack that ends in the latter's sinking
  • Second Attack on Kamaishi (9 August 1945) – last-ever direct naval bombardment of the Japanese home islands in World War II

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 2, number 59. Letter from Gonzalo Ronquillo, Governor of the Philippines, to the Viceroy of Mexico, 1st of June, 1582
  2. ^ A.G.I. Filipinas, legajo 29, ramo 3, número 62. Letter from Juan Bautista Román governor to the Viceroy of Mexico 25 June 1582
  3. ^ [1] General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 29, bunch 3, number 62. Letter from Juan Bautista Román to the Viceroy of México, 25 June 1582
  4. ^ General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 2, number 60. Letter from the Governor of the Philippines to the Viceroy of México, 20 July 1583
  5. ^ General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 74, bunch 1, number 24. Letter from Bishop of the Philippines to the King of Spain, 18 January 1583
  6. ^ a b [2] General Archive of the Indies, Council of the Indies, 339,L.1,F.286V-287R. Order to send men to the Philippines from Mexico, 14 June 1583
  7. ^ Contemporary Maritime Piracy: International Law, Strategy, and Diplomacy at Sea By James Kraska [3]
  8. ^ General Archive of the Indies, Council of the Indies, 339,L.1,F.286V-287R. Order to send men to the Philippines from Mexico, 14 June 1583
  9. ^ a b c d General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 2, number 56. Letter from Gonzalo Ronquillo, Governor of the Philippines, to the King of Spain, 16th of June 1582
  10. ^ a b c d Borao, José Eugenio (2005), p.2
  11. ^ Miura, Shumon (1976). Tōnan Ajia kara mita Nihon. Tokyo: Shōgakkan. p. 109.
  12. ^ a b c d e Del Rey, Canales, 2012
  13. ^ General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 6, bunch 6, number 154. Letter from the Governor of the Philippines to the King of Spain, 12th of July, 1599
  14. ^ General Archive of the Indies, Philippines, file 18, bunch 7, number 154. Letter from the Governor of the Philippines to the King of Spain, 12th of July, 1599

Bibliography

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