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The first Portuguese feitoria overseas was established by Henry the Navigator in 1445 on the island of Arguin, off the coast of Mauritania. It was built to attract Muslim traders and monopolize the business in the routes traveled in North Africa.
The British Factory House (Portuguese: Feitoria Inglesa), also known as the British Association House, is an 18th-century Neo-Palladian building located in the northern Portuguese centre of Porto, associated with the influence of Britain in the port wine industry.
On December 15, 1607, a Portuguese naval force numbering 13 galleons anchored before the city in preparation for an attack. [37] Further military action however, proved unnecessary. Upon spotting the Portuguese, the Sultan of Johor panicked, set his capital on fire and fled into the jungle, along with the resident Dutch merchants.
Official Portuguese presence in Asia was established in 1500, when the Portuguese commander Pedro Álvares Cabral obtained from the King of Cochin Una Goda Varma Koil a number of houses to serve as a feitoria, or trading post in exchange for an alliance against the hostile Zamorin of Calicut.
The fort is illustrated on a Portuguese postage stamp from 1946, from the series commemorating the "5th Centenary of the Discovery of Guinea", with a face value of 30 escudos. The restoration work of the former Portuguese fort was carried out from January to March 2004, with resources of around one hundred thousand Euros, made available by the ...
Portuguese navigators reached ever more southerly latitudes, advancing at an average rate of one degree a year. [18] Senegal and Cape Verde Peninsula were reached in 1445. In the same year, the first overseas feitoria (trading post) was established under Henry's direction, on the island of Arguin off the coast of Mauritania.
By the treaty the Portuguese were allowed to open a feitoria or trading post at Cochin and its first agent was Gonçalo Gil Barbosa, who remained ashore with six others. [2] [3] With the consent of the Trimumpara, Afonso de Albuquerque built Fort Manuel on Cochin three years later. Cochin remained a Portuguese protectorate until 1663. [1]
The structure dates to the beginning of the 17th century, raised by English smugglers of native Brazilian spices and medicines, similarly to a Feitoria.The settlement was attributed to the English and Dutch, [2] being raised by James Purcell, an Irish merchant associated with Dutch capital, with authorization of King James I of England and King Charles I of England, [3] these kings had donated ...