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Conquerors: How Portugal Forged the First…
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Conquerors: How Portugal Forged the First Global Empire (Original 2015; 2015. Auflage)

von Roger Crowley (Autor)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
4111161,729 (4.13)21
[Impressum] -- [Menü] -- Widmung -- Prolog: Der Vorposten Europas -- Teil eins: Erkundung: Der Weg nach Indien -- 1 Der Indien-Plan -- 2 Der Wettlauf -- 3 Vasco da Gama -- 4 „Hol dich der Teufel!" -- 5 Der Samorin -- Teil zwei: Wettstreit: Monopole und Heiliger Krieg -- 6 Cabral -- 7 Das Schicksal der Miri -- 8 Zorn und Rache -- 9 Brückenköpfe -- 10 Das Königreich Indien -- 11 Die große Hure Babylon -- 12 „Der Schreckliche" -- 13 Drei Tage in Chaul -- 14 „Der Zorn der Franken" -- 15 Diu -- Teil drei: Eroberung: Der Löwe des Meeres -- 16 Die Türen des Samorin 17 „Was die Portugiesen einmal haben, geben sie nie wieder her" -- 18 Gefangene des Regens -- 19 Der Einsatz von Terror -- 20 Zum Auge der Sonne -- 21 Die Wachskugel -- 22 „Alle Schätze der Welt in Euren Händen" -- 23 Die letzte Fahrt -- Epilog: „Sie bleiben nie an einem Ort stehen" -- Dank -- Anhang -- Bibliographie -- Anmerkungen -- Register -- [Informationen zum Buch] -- [Informationen zum Autor]… (mehr)
Mitglied:drm205
Titel:Conquerors: How Portugal Forged the First Global Empire
Autoren:Roger Crowley (Autor)
Info:Random House (2015), Edition: 1st, 400 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:*****
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Werk-Informationen

Conquerors: How Portugal Forged the First Global Empire von Roger Crowley (2015)

  1. 00
    Vanguard of Empire: Ships of Exploration in the Age of Columbus von Roger C. Smith (macoram)
    macoram: "Vanguard of the Empire" focus on the Iberian naval technology and artillery of the 15th and 16th centuries from shipwrecks and contemporaneous accounts. Both Portuguese and Spanish explorations and colonial organizations are dissected and compared. "The conquerors" is a vivid account of Portuguese 15th and 16th centuries overseas Asiatic enterprises painstakingly taken from contemporaneous letters, diaries and documents.… (mehr)
  2. 00
    A Nation upon the Ocean Sea: Portugal's Atlantic Diaspora and the Crisis of the Spanish Empire, 1492-1640 von Daviken Studnicki-Gizbert (macoram, macoram)
  3. 00
    The Last Crusade: The Epic Voyages of Vasco da Gama von Nigel Cliff (Stbalbach)
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This history of Portugal's age of exploration and conquest taught me a great deal, in an eminently readable style.. The foresignt and persistance of Portugal's advance to the East was amazing, as was the power and wealth it achieved. In the fifteenth century, Portugal was tiny (about a million people - smaller than some Chinese cities of the day) and poor. Nonetheless, its rulers undertook a planned program of exploration and conquest to reach and in time control the trade of the East. The book is heavy on detail, particularly military detail, which at times gets repetitive. It also underlines the stunning brutality of these explorers and adventurers, who often sound rather like very Catholic Vikings. I would have liked a bit more of an overview, particularly of the retreat of Portugal's empire. Nonetheless, I enjoyed the book and would recommend it to anyone interested in colonialism. ( )
  annbury | Feb 18, 2024 |
How? By falling on shipping and ports on a seasonal cycle like Vikings, but depredating this time thousands of miles from home. By barbaric violence and astounding military audacity. By erupting like a plague on virgin soil, a wave of virulent, hateful belligerence entering a maritime zone of regular and mostly mutually beneficial trade. The shock of the new shaking up a complacent order that had no way to defend itself. The Portuguese had the best cannons, but renegades soon began to teach Asian powers. Their attacks were determined more than organized. It wasn't so much technological or military superiority as the shock of a new predator, its base safe from retaliation and capable of producing new forces every year, arriving in a theatre that was not prepared for the kind of war it was willing to wage. A first-mover in state-building moving into the region. A cartel moving into the city park. A wolfpack on the factory farm. ( )
  fji65hj7 | May 14, 2023 |
As Roger Crowley explains in "Conquerors", in the early 16th century Portugal, a poor country on the periphery of Europe, came to control trade in the Indian Ocean thanks to bravery, cruelty, navigation skills and cannons. They fought against kings and sultans on the Swahili Coast of Africa and the Malabar Coast of India with no more than 1500 troops at a time. Before they could start fighting they had to find a way to the Indies and did this after eighty years of working their way down the coast of West Africa.

“Behind the Africa initiative lay a very old dream of militant Christendom: that of outflanking Islam, which blocked the way to Jerusalem and the wealth of the East.”

This is a story to rival or even eclipse those Columbus discovering America, Cortes conquering Mexico and Pizarro doing the same in Peru. But the names of Vasco da Gama, the Portuguese captain who made it around Africa, and Alfonso de Albuquerque the man who consolidated the Portuguese presence in India are not so well known. The Indians didn’t manage to get the Portuguese out of Goa until the 1960s! Magellan, the captain who circumvented the world under Spanish patronage, is the only Portuguese explorer the Anglo world taught me about as a kid -- and then I grew up to discover Magellan was killed halfway through the journey! In the Indies, the Portuguese were known as the Franks or Ferengi, the common term for Christian Westerners at the time. The Thais call us Farang to this day.

The Portuguese made it around Africa with the counter-intuitive move of sailing away from the West African coast. This allowed them to catch the winds to take them past the bottom of Africa. This way they discovered Brazil, sailing too far west and landing there by accident. But “Conquerors” does not deal with South America. Once in India, da Gama was surprised to meet with some Castilian speaking Tunisians and find a thriving multicultural civilization. The rulers were generally Hindus but the traders were Muslim, due to the fact that it was taboo for Hindus to eat at sea. The Muslims knew all about Europe and Asia, but the Christian knowledge of the world at the time was limited. Da Gama caused havoc in India before having to sail back before the Monsoon.

After da Gama, Almeida and Albuquerque solidified the Portuguese position. They used diplomacy, threats and terror to achieve their aims. One terror tactic was cutting off the noses ears and hands of Muslim prisoners and then setting them free. Albuquerque was a skilled leader and commander, introducing pike-wielding phalanxes of foot soldiers, much to the disgust of the noblemen who wished for the glory of one on one combat. Albuquerque, following the orders of King Manuel, made a real attempt to control the Red Sea and from there the plan was to launch an attack on Jerusalem, but the failure to capture the city of Aden scuttled these plans. Portuguese pressure in the area was one of the factors in a shift of power in the Muslim world, away from the Mamluk Sultans in Cairo to the Ottomans in Turkey. "Conquerers", however, does not give much information on the politics of the Middle East and India -- which is fair enough, otherwise, this manageable, concise work would balloon out in length. The Venetians, who had controlled the entry of spices into Europe worked with the Muslims to try and get the Portuguese out of the Indian Ocean.

My interest in the Portuguese Empire was sparked by a visit to a Brazilian BBQ in Shanghai in 2007 called Vasco da Gama. "What does Vasco da Gama mean?" I asked. Despite being twenty-eight I had no clue - I’d been to Macau and seen the Portuguese colonial buildings, the azulejos, the calcadas and eaten the Portuguese tarts - but I had no idea how the Portuguese got to Macau. Slowly I've been piecing it all together - it's quite the job as the Portuguese made it to the most far-flung places and often didn't leave much behind.

Crowley maps the Portuguese progression clearly, occasionally I encountered sentences that made no sense or something mentioned in the narrative that would not be explained until much later. This is minor quibbling, Crowley, like Max Hastings, can condense a huge amount of information and turn it into a cohesive narrative. I’d say one of his strengths is relating the tactics of maritime battles. I’m sure he had a lot of help with the translation of original sources, his bibliography looks pretty thorough. Crowley's message is that the Portuguese were cruel and backwards compared with the civilizations of the East, but they were great navigators and incredibly determined and astute with the trump card of superior weaponry. ( )
  FEBeyer | Oct 25, 2021 |
Conquerors is mainly a history of Portuguese first contact with India and east Africa during the first 30 years or so in the late 1400s and early 1500s. They were the first Europeans to round the Cape of Good Hope and 'discover' India and points further east. I've never read anything about it before and found it totally enthralling, the sense of discovery and adventure. It's hard to like the Portuguese, one keeps wishing they get their comeuppance after so much senseless killing. Since Portugal was the first, it is foundational history to understanding all later European colonization globally. Having read it via audiobook I became confused by too many names and places, reading in the book would have been better. There are some amazing set piece battles which Crowley is very skilled with as usual. This is a very action filled period and one I'd like to read more about. ( )
  Stbalbach | Jul 6, 2019 |
Como herederos de la gesta Colombina, uno no tiene presente la paralela gesta de Portugal, armando su imperio en Africa y Asia, especialmente India donde se quedó hasta 1960. Con un celo propio de las cruzadas, pero también con una gran impronta comercial armaron un imperio basado en factorías y puertos y no en conquista de terreno ( que por otro lado no estaba ni vacio ni con culturas indefensas) Asia era en algunos aspectos más desarrollada que el propio Portugal, pero basándose en la violencia y dando golpes muy efectistas se hicieron del nudo del comercio de las especias.
Colon en busca de las mismas descubrió américa pero especias no encontró. Muy interesante y agil ( )
  gneoflavio | Dec 22, 2018 |
"In 'Conquerors,' Roger Crowley delivers a rousing and masterful account of how a handful of determined adventurers — at once ruthless and visionary — carved out the first truly global commercial empire, for better and for worse."
 
"Crowley’s craftsmanship comes through most clearly in telling this story of relentless, one-sided slaughter without glutting the reader with gore."
 
"Crowley’s interpretations are nuanced and fair"
 
"Perfect for anyone who likes a high seas tale"
hinzugefügt von bookfitz | bearbeitenPublishers Weekly (Oct 12, 2015)
 
"A specialist in the history of the era, and the clash of the Ottoman Empire with the Christian West, Crowley brings a gift for vivid (and gory) storytelling buttressed by a firm grasp of the political and religious dimensions of the time."
hinzugefügt von bookfitz | bearbeitenThe National, Matthew Price (Sep 30, 2015)
 

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[Impressum] -- [Menü] -- Widmung -- Prolog: Der Vorposten Europas -- Teil eins: Erkundung: Der Weg nach Indien -- 1 Der Indien-Plan -- 2 Der Wettlauf -- 3 Vasco da Gama -- 4 „Hol dich der Teufel!" -- 5 Der Samorin -- Teil zwei: Wettstreit: Monopole und Heiliger Krieg -- 6 Cabral -- 7 Das Schicksal der Miri -- 8 Zorn und Rache -- 9 Brückenköpfe -- 10 Das Königreich Indien -- 11 Die große Hure Babylon -- 12 „Der Schreckliche" -- 13 Drei Tage in Chaul -- 14 „Der Zorn der Franken" -- 15 Diu -- Teil drei: Eroberung: Der Löwe des Meeres -- 16 Die Türen des Samorin 17 „Was die Portugiesen einmal haben, geben sie nie wieder her" -- 18 Gefangene des Regens -- 19 Der Einsatz von Terror -- 20 Zum Auge der Sonne -- 21 Die Wachskugel -- 22 „Alle Schätze der Welt in Euren Händen" -- 23 Die letzte Fahrt -- Epilog: „Sie bleiben nie an einem Ort stehen" -- Dank -- Anhang -- Bibliographie -- Anmerkungen -- Register -- [Informationen zum Buch] -- [Informationen zum Autor]

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