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・ Battle of Cerro del Borrego
・ Battle of Cerro Gordo
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・ Battle of Cervera
・ Battle of Cervera (1811)
・ Battle of Cesenatico
・ Battle of Cape Kaliakra
・ Battle of Cape Lopez
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Battle of Cape Rachado
・ Battle of Cape Sarych
・ Battle of Cape Spada
・ Battle of Cape Spartel
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・ Battle of Cape St Vincent (1797)
・ Battle of Cape St. George
・ Battle of Cape St. Vincent
・ Battle of Cape St. Vincent (1337)
・ Battle of Cape St. Vincent (1641)
・ Battle of Cape St. Vincent (1719)
・ Battle of Cape St. Vincent (1780)
・ Battle of Cape St. Vincent (1833)
・ Battle of Caporetto


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Battle of Cape Rachado : ウィキペディア英語版
Battle of Cape Rachado


The Battle of Cape Rachado, off the present day Malaccan exclave of Tanjung Tuan in 1606, was an important naval engagement between the Dutch Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie and Portuguese fleets.
It marked the beginning of a conflict between the combined Dutch/Johor forces against the Portuguese. It was the biggest naval battle in the Malay Archipelago between two naval superpowers of the time with 31 ships (11 of the Dutch VOC and 20 of the Portuguese). Although the battle ended with a Portuguese victory, the ferocity of the battle itself and the losses sustained by the victor convinced the Sultanate of Johor to provide supplies, support and later on much needed ground forces to the Dutch, forcing a Portuguese capitulation. 130 years of Portuguese supremacy in the region ended with the fall of the city and fortress of Malacca, almost 30 years later, in 1641.
==Departure and alliance with Johor==

Malacca, which was earlier the capital of the Sultanate of Malacca, was sieged and wrested by the Portuguese in 1511, forcing the Sultan to retreat and found the successor state of Johor and continue the war from there. The port city, which the Portuguese had turned into a formidable fortress, was strategically situated in the middle of the strait of the same name giving control to both the spice trade of the Malay archipelago and supremacy over the sea lane of the lucrative trade between Europe and the Far East. The Dutch East Indies Company (VOC) decided that to expand further to the east, the Portuguese monopoly and especially Malacca must first be neutralised.
The fleet was the third sent by the VOC to the archipelago, with 11 ships – ''Oranje, Nassau, Middelburg, Witte Leeuw, Zwarte Leeuw, Mauritius, Grote Zon, Amsterdam, Kleine Zon, Erasmus'' and ''Geuniveerde Provincien''. The ''Oranje'' lead with Admiral Cornelis Matelief de Jonge in command. The Dutch fleet set sail from Texel, Holland on 12 May 1605. The fleet departed with the sailors told that they were on a trade voyage as de Jonge was ordered to keep his true mission a secret, which was to siege Malacca and force a Portuguese surrender.
They passed Malacca on April 1606 and arrived at Johor on 1 May 1606 where de Jonge proceeded to negotiate for a term of alliance with Johor. The pact was formally concluded on 17 May 1606 in which Johor had agreed to a combined effort with the Dutch to attempt to dislodge the Portuguese from Malacca. Unlike the Portuguese, the Dutch and Johor agreed to respect each other's religion, the Dutch would get to keep Malacca and the right to trade in Johor. The Dutch also would not attempt to interfere or wage war against Johor. In effect, the agreement served to limit Dutch influence on the Malay Peninsula in contrast to the islands of the archipelago which would become the Dutch East Indies.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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