Filipe de Brito e Nicote: Difference between revisions
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Returning to [[Goa]] the next year to gain official recognition, he returned in 1602, awarded the titles "Commander of Syriam", "General of the conquests of [[Pegu]]", and "King of Pegu" by the Portuguese royal court. |
Returning to [[Goa]] the next year to gain official recognition, he returned in 1602, awarded the titles "Commander of Syriam", "General of the conquests of [[Pegu]]", and "King of Pegu" by the Portuguese royal court. |
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[[Ekathotsarot]] of [[Ayutthaya]] mobilized Bannya Dala and de Brito to come to the aid of Toungoo, when attacked by the [[Ava Kingdom]], and after [[Natshinnaung]] had asked to be subject to |
[[Ekathotsarot]] of [[Ayutthaya]] mobilized Bannya Dala and de Brito to come to the aid of Toungoo, when attacked by the [[Ava Kingdom]], and after [[Natshinnaung]] had asked to be subject to Ayutthaya. Before they could arrive however, Toungoo had submitted to the King of Ava. Bannya Dala and de Brito then burnt down Toungoo and brought back any remaining property and people, including their King, Natshinnaung, to Syriam. De Brito took the opportunity of "seizing objects of worship of the Buddha" and "committed sacrilege to the point of forcibly demolishing Buddha images and sacred shrines and pagodas."<ref name=Damrong/>{{rp|188–189}} |
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In 1613, de Brito's Syriam was besieged by the Burmese forces of King [[Anaukpetlun]]. After the fall of the city in April 1613, de Brito was executed along with [[Natshinnaung]]. de Brito was executed by being impaled; it took him three days to die.<ref>R. Findlay & K.H. O'Rourk, "Power and Plenty: Trade, War, and the World Economy in the Second Millennium", (2007), Princeton University Press, p.196</ref> More than 400 Portuguese were taken as prisoners of war back to Ava.<ref name=Damrong/>{{rp|190}} |
In 1613, de Brito's Syriam was besieged by the Burmese forces of King [[Anaukpetlun]]. After the fall of the city in April 1613, de Brito was executed along with [[Natshinnaung]]. de Brito was executed by being impaled; it took him three days to die.<ref>R. Findlay & K.H. O'Rourk, "Power and Plenty: Trade, War, and the World Economy in the Second Millennium", (2007), Princeton University Press, p.196</ref> More than 400 Portuguese were taken as prisoners of war back to Ava.<ref name=Damrong/>{{rp|190}} |
Revision as of 01:08, 25 March 2020
Filipe de Brito e Nicote | |
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Born | C. 1566 |
Died | 1613 |
Nationality | Portuguese |
Occupation(s) | Adventurer, mercenary, governor |
Filipe de Brito e Nicote or Nga Zinga (Template:Lang-my, pronounced [ŋə zɪ̀ɰ̃kà]; c. 1566 – April 1613) was a Portuguese adventurer and mercenary in Rakhine (Arakanese) and later, in the service of the Siamese Kingdom of Ayutthaya.[1]: 185–187
Biography
Born to a French father in Lisbon, Portugal, de Brito first traveled to Southeast Asia as a cabin boy.
He eventually served under Min Razagyi, King of Arakan and became governor of Thanlyin (Syriam) in 1599, commanding 3 frigates and 3000 men. He encouraged more Portuguese to settle in Syriam and constructed forts for defence, eventually seizing control and announcing his independence from Arakan. He captured Min Khamaung, crown prince of Arakan when Toungoo and Arakan attacked, keeping him hostage until granted independence from any Burmese in 1603. De Brito then married the daughter of Bannya Dala of Martaban, becoming a subject of the Kingdom of Ayutthaya (present day Thailand).[1]: 185–187
Returning to Goa the next year to gain official recognition, he returned in 1602, awarded the titles "Commander of Syriam", "General of the conquests of Pegu", and "King of Pegu" by the Portuguese royal court.
Ekathotsarot of Ayutthaya mobilized Bannya Dala and de Brito to come to the aid of Toungoo, when attacked by the Ava Kingdom, and after Natshinnaung had asked to be subject to Ayutthaya. Before they could arrive however, Toungoo had submitted to the King of Ava. Bannya Dala and de Brito then burnt down Toungoo and brought back any remaining property and people, including their King, Natshinnaung, to Syriam. De Brito took the opportunity of "seizing objects of worship of the Buddha" and "committed sacrilege to the point of forcibly demolishing Buddha images and sacred shrines and pagodas."[1]: 188–189
In 1613, de Brito's Syriam was besieged by the Burmese forces of King Anaukpetlun. After the fall of the city in April 1613, de Brito was executed along with Natshinnaung. de Brito was executed by being impaled; it took him three days to die.[2] More than 400 Portuguese were taken as prisoners of war back to Ava.[1]: 190
References
External links
- Danvers, Frederick Charles, The Portuguese in India. London, 1966.
- Harvey, G. E., A History of Burma. n.p., 1967.