Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  The Dutch fort  





1.2  The Austrian Fort  







2 The Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição  





3 See also  





4 References  














Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição de Lourenço Marques






Português
 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 




In other projects  



Wikimedia Commons
 
















Appearance
   

 





Coordinates: 25°5830S 32°3414E / 25.97500°S 32.57056°E / -25.97500; 32.57056
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição
Fortaleza de Nossa Senhora da Conceição
Maputo in Mozambique
Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição is located in Mozambique
Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição

Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição

Coordinates25°58′30S 32°34′14E / 25.97500°S 32.57056°E / -25.97500; 32.57056
Site information
Controlled byPortuguese Empire
ConditionGood
Site history
Built1782

The Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição of Lourenço Marques, nowadays known as the Maputo Fortress (Fortaleza de Maputo) is located at Praça 25 de Junho and represents one of the main historical monuments of the city of Maputo, former Lourenço Marques, in Mozambique.

It has a square floor plan, built in reddish stone masonry. It has only one access gate that opens onto a central courtyard, also with a square layout, to which, in turn, the various rooms that make up the building open. In this courtyard currently stands the equestrian statue of Mouzinho de Albuquerque, which, before the Independence of Mozambique, stood in front of the Municipality of Lourenço Marques.

It houses a statue of Mouzinho de Albuquerque.[1] Here also lie the mortal remains of Gungunhana, transferred from Terceira Island, in the Azores, in 1985.[2]

History[edit]

The Dutch fort[edit]

Dutch plan of the fortress at Lagoa River

The original structure on the site was a fortified trading post built about a quarter of a mile from the mouth of the Espírito Santo River by Dutch from Cape Town. The expedition consisted of 113 men, under the command of Klaas Nieuhof, in two ships, the Gouda and the Caap.[3] Having left the Cape on February 19, 1721, they reached Maputo Bay in early April. After obtaining the authorization of the local chief, they started a wooden fort, with a pentagon plan: the Fort Lijdzaamheid.[4] Having suffered all manner of difficulties, in about six months about half of the Europeans had perished, mainly victims of malaria. Even with the arrival of reinforcements from the Cape by the ships Zeelandia and Uno, bringing 72 more men and supplies, the scenario did not change.[5]

On the morning of April 11, 1722, three English pirate ships under the command of Captain George Taylor, operating in the waters of the Mozambique Channel, entered Maputo Bay, pursued by four ships of the English East India Company, the Lion, the Salisbury, the Exeter and the Shoreham.[6]

The pirate vessels were the Victory, with 64 cannons, the Cassandra, with 36, and a French boat captured off the island of Santa Maria. In total, they had a force of 900 men. On April 18, they decided to capture the Dutch trading post, which they bombarded, captured a boat and the ship De Caap, until, at 5 pm, the white flag of surrender was hoisted from the fort.[7]

Knowing that Van de Capelle, the second-in-command, had fled to the interior with eighteen men, the English demanded his immediate return, on pain of razing the establishment to the ground. Without the Dutch returning, the fort and trading post were destroyed by the English, who withdrew two months later, at the end of June.[8]

The Austrian Fort[edit]

Later, a new fortification was built on the site, now by Austrian forces under the command of William Bolts - the São José Fort -, in 1777, being dislodged from there in March 1781, by a Portuguese expedition coming from Goa under the command of Lieutenant- Colonel Joaquim Godinho de Mira, aboard the frigate "Sant'Anna".[9] In the report that this official sent to the Governor of the Portuguese State of India, D. Frederico Guilherme de Sousa, he informs:

(...) on the 30th of the same [March] I entered the Espírito Santo River, having with a lot of drilling work I passed happily among the many lows that the Bahia de Lourenço Marques is full of. Within that river there were three vessels with top-masts: one bearing a Portuguese flag and passport issued by the governor of Daman, José de Oliveira Leitão, another with the English flag, whose owners of the first are from Surat, and Bombay those of the second, finally the third vessel was a pala with a mast and a half, and had an Imperial flag, belonging to the Company of Trieste, between this and a battery of thirteen pieces that was on land with the same Imperial flag, I went to anchor. Instructed, and sent part of it with its competent officers to take possession of the Imperial pala which was anchored, prepared for any resistance made by it, and with orders not to make the least hostility, i this same thing was executed, and the entry was made without the slightest resistance or offense; I left it to be commanded by Lieutenant-Captain Francisco Lobo da Gama with a competent garrison, and I with some troops headed for the land battery (the entrenched camp of S. José), which I entered without resistance, I immediately ordered lower the Imperial flag, and on the following day, April 1, in the morning, hoist the Portuguese flag, saving it with twenty-one gunshots; to this volley the frigate replied with the same number; I immediately ordered the cleaning, dismantled and led the artillery aboard the frigate, demolished the battery, immediately sending the two sea lieutenants Cândido José Mourão Garcez Palha and Christovão da Costa Athaide, aboard the other two vessels that were there.

The Fort Nossa Senhora da Conceição[edit]

Courtyard of the fort.

With the Austrian position undone, the place was occupied by a Portuguese presídio, under the command of Joaquim de Araújo, who started a new fortification the following year intended to protect the trading post of Lourenço Marques. This establishment, on the left bank of the Espírito Santo River, in the current Baixa de Maputo, was built in faxina (bundled wooden branches) and earth, under the invocation of Nossa Senhora da Conceição ("Forte de Nossa Senhora da Conceição de Lourenço Marques" ).

In a few years, the first stone-and-lime houses began to be built next to the fort, including the famous Casa Amarela, which currently houses the National Currency Museum.

In 1785 the fort was attacked by warriors of the Tembe chiefdom, but were repulsed with aid of the Matola chief.[10]

The fort was later rebuilt by Captain António José Teixeira Tigre, as can be seen from the epigraphic inscription on the site, which reads:

O CAPam DE GRANADros AN / Tº jOZE TEIXra TIGRE CO / MANDANDO ESTAS ILHAS / FEZ ESTA FORTALEZA / NO ANNO DE 1791. ("The Captain of Grenadiers António José Teixeira Tigre, at the command of these islands made this fortress on the year of 1791")[11]

This fortification, with a quadrangular plan surrounded by a moat, had an ephemeral duration, being looted, in the context of the struggles that followed the French Revolution, by three vessels artillery of French corsairs, on October 26, 1796; abandoned by the few men under the command of Governor João da Costa Soares, the small fort was captured and looted.[12]

Gateway.

To recover the lost position, a small detachment was sent from the Fortress of São Sebastião under the command of Lieutenant-aide Luís José, aboard the pala Minerva.[13]

Having arrived in Lourenço Marques on June 7, 1799, they settled "in the land of Capella, in front of the old prison, because the chief of Matola did not want to attend to him immediately". There they remained until about 1805, when with relative safety they were able to "pass over to the other side, which had previously been occupied by the Dutch and Austrians." Here he then erected a "small fortified dwelling for troops' barracks and trading post, where the Portuguese flag was flown, as a sign of possession of the land, and with no intention of resisting any enemy".[14] The Governor and Captain General of Mozambique justified the smallness of this establishment "due to lack of resources in the province".[15]

Around 1946, in the context of the Centenary celebrations, the fort was restored over the foundations of the original one, proceeding with the conservation of the existing historical tree next to its Gate of Arms (where, according to tradition, the Vátuas had hanged Governor Dionísio Ribeiro, in 1883) and the requalification of the buildings inside it as the "Historical Museum of Mozambique".

Currently, it houses the Military History Museum, managed by Eduardo Mondlane University.[16]

Statue of Mouzinho de Albuquerque.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  • ^ Forte de Nossa Senhora da Conceição / Fortaleza de Maputo / Museu Histórico de Moçambique at monumentos.gov.pt.
  • ^ Baylus C. Brooks: Sailing East: West-Indian Pirates in Madagascar p.274.
  • ^ LIMA, Alfredo Pereira de; COETZEE, Colin. Pedras Que Já Não Falam. 1972
  • ^ Forte de Nossa Senhora da Conceição / Fortaleza de Maputo / Museu Histórico de Moçambique at monumentos.gov.pt.
  • ^ Forte de Nossa Senhora da Conceição / Fortaleza de Maputo / Museu Histórico de Moçambique at monumentos.gov.pt.
  • ^ Forte de Nossa Senhora da Conceição / Fortaleza de Maputo / Museu Histórico de Moçambique at monumentos.gov.pt.
  • ^ Forte de Nossa Senhora da Conceição / Fortaleza de Maputo / Museu Histórico de Moçambique at monumentos.gov.pt.
  • ^ Elizabeth A. Eldredge: 9Kingdoms and Chiefdoms of Southeastern Africa: Oral Traditions and History, 1400-1830, Boydell & Brewer, 2015, p.143
  • ^ Forte de Nossa Senhora da Conceição / Fortaleza de Maputo / Museu Histórico de Moçambique at monumentos.gov.pt.
  • ^ Elizabeth A. Eldredge: 9Kingdoms and Chiefdoms of Southeastern Africa: Oral Traditions and History, 1400-1830, Boydell & Brewer, 2015, p.143
  • ^ LOBATO, Alexandre. História do presídio de Lourenço Marques (vol. II). 1960
  • ^ THEAL, George. The Portuguese in South Africa. 1896.
  • ^ CASTILHO, Augusto. O Distrito de Lourenço Marques, no Presente e Futuro. Lisboa: 1881
  • ^ Fortaleza de Maputo at uem.mz.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fort_Nossa_Senhora_da_Conceição_de_Lourenço_Marques&oldid=1144441900"

    Categories: 
    Forts in Mozambique
    Historic sites in Mozambique
    Buildings and structures in Maputo
    Portuguese forts
    Buildings and structures completed in 1782
    Portuguese Empire
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Coordinates on Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 13 March 2023, at 20:01 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki