'Portuguese India' ( or ''Estado da Índia'') was the aggregate of
Portugal's colonial holdings in
India. At the time of India's independence in
1947, Portuguese India included a number of
enclaves on India's western coast, including
Goa proper, as well as the
coastal enclaves of
Daman (Port: ''Damão'') and
Diu, and the enclaves of
Dadra and Nagar Haveli, which lie inland from Daman. The territories of Portuguese India were sometimes referred to collectively as Goa.
Early history

Portuguese and other European settlements in India.
The first Portuguese encounter with India was on
May 20 1498 when
Vasco da Gama landed in
Calicut (present-day
Kozhikode). Over the objections of
Arab merchants, da Gama secured an ambiguous letter of concession for trading rights from the
Zamorin, Calicut's local ruler, but had to sail off without warning after the Zamorin insisted on his leaving behind all his goods as collateral. Gama kept his goods, but left behind a few Portuguese with orders to start a trading post.
In 1510, Portuguese admiral
Afonso de Albuquerque defeated the
Bijapur sultans on behalf of a local sovereign, Timayya, leading to the establishment of a permanent settlement in
Velha Goa (or Old Goa). The Southern Province, also known simply as
Goa, was the headquarters of Portuguese India, and seat of the Portuguese
viceroy who governed the Portuguese possessions in Asia.
The Portuguese acquired several territories from the Sultans of
Gujarat: Daman (occupied
1531, formally ceded
1539);
Salsette,
Bombay, and
Baçaim (occupied
1534); and Diu (ceded
1535). These possessions became the Northern Province of Portuguese India, which extended almost 100 km along the coast from Daman to
Chaul, and in places 30–50 km inland. The province was ruled from the fortress-town of Baçaim. Bombay (present day
Mumbai) was given to
Britain in
1661 as part of the Portuguese Princess
Catherine of Braganza's dowry to
Charles II of England. Most of the Northern Province was lost to the
Marathas in
1739, and Portugal acquired
Dadra and Nagar Haveli in
1779.
The Goa Inquisition
The Portuguese set up a long program to convert the native population (mainly Hindus) by torture. It was much larger and endured for a longer period than the
Spanish Inquisition. Thousands of citizens suffered horrors and execution and led to large portions of Goa being depopulated (''See
Goa Inquisition''
[1][2]). Eventually, the Inquisition in Goa was banished in
1812 by royal decree, as a consequence of Napoleon's Iberian
Peninsular campaign.
After India's independence
After India's independence from the British in
1947, Portugal refused to accede to India's request to relinquish control of its Indian possessions. The decision given by the International Court of Justice at The Hague, regarding access to Dadra and Nagar Haveli, after it was invaded by Indian citizens, was an impasse
[3].
From
1954, peaceful
Satyagrahis attempts from outside Goa at forcing the Portuguese to leave Goa were brutally suppressed.
[4] Many revolts were quelled by the use of force and leaders eliminated or jailed. As a result, India closed its consulate (which had operated in Pangim since 1947) and imposed an economic embargo against the territories of Portuguese Goa. The Indian Government adopted a "wait and watch" attitude from 1955 to 1961 with numerous representations to the Portuguese Salazar regime and attempts to highlight the issue before the international community.
[5] Eventually, in December
1961, India militarily invaded Goa, Daman and Diu, where they were faced with insufficient Portuguese resistance.
[6][7] Portuguese armed forces had been instructed to either defeat the invaders or die, and though a cease-fire was decreed, an official truce was never signed.
[8] The meager resistance offered was because the Portuguese army was poorly armed and comprised of about 3,300 men, against a fully armed, British-trained Indian force of over 30,000 with full Air and Naval support.
[9] [10]. The territories were annexed to India on 19 December 1961.
The
Salazar regime in Portugal refused to recognize Indian sovereignty over Goa, Daman and Diu, which continued to be represented in Portugal's National Assembly until
1974. Following the
Carnation Revolution that year, the new government in
Lisbon restored diplomatic relations with India, and recognized Indian sovereignty over Goa, Daman and Diu. However, due to the military takeover, and since the wishes of the people of Portuguese India were never taken into consideration (as required by UN Resolution 1514 (XV) of 1960 on
"the right to self-determination" [11] -- see also UN Resolutions 1541 and 1542
[12]), the people continue to have the right to Portuguese citizenship. However, since 2006, this has been restricted to those born during Portuguese rule.
Postage stamps and postal history
Main articles: Postage stamps and postal history of Portuguese India
Early
postal history of the colony is obscure, but regular
mail is known to have been exchanged with
Lisbon from
1825 on. Portugal had a
postal convention with
Great Britain, so much mail was probably routed through
Bombay and carried on British
packets. Portuguese
postmarks are known from
1854.
The first
postage stamps were issued
1 October 1871 for local use. The design simply consisted of a denomination in the center, with an oval band containing the inscriptions "SERVIÇO POSTAL" and "INDIA POST". In
1877, Portugal included India in its standard "crown" issue and from
1886 on, the pattern of regular stamp issues followed that of the other colonies closely, the main exception being a series of surcharges in
1912 produced by perforating existing stamps vertically through the middle and overprinting a new value on each side.
The last regular issue was on
25 June 1960, for the 500th anniversary of the death of Prince
Henry the Navigator. Stamps of India were first used
29 December 1961, although the old stamps were accepted until
5 January 1962. Portugal continued to issue stamps for the lost colony but none were offered for sale in the colony's post offices, and are thus not considered valid stamps.
References
1. The Portuguese Inquisition in Goa (1560-1812)
2. Kanchan Gupta, "Recall the Goa Inquisition to stop the Church from crying foul"
3. International Court of Justice Case Summaries, Case Concerning Right of Passage Over Indian Territory (Merits), Judgment of 12 April 1960
4. Rear Admiral Satyindra Singh AVSM (Ret.), ''Blueprint to Bluewater, The Indian Navy, 1951-65''
5. Lambert Mascarenhas, "Goa's Freedom Movement," excerpted from Henry Scholberg, Archana Ashok Kakodkar and Carmo Azevedo, ''Bibliography of Goa and the Portuguese in India'' New Delhi, Promilla (1982)
6. Government Polytechnic of Goa, "Liberation of Goa"
7. ' "The Liberation of Goa: 1961" ''Bharat Rakshak, a Consortium of Indian Military Websites,'
8. Fernando Zamith, "Invasão de Goa foi 'ilegal, ilegítima e contra os direitos humanos'", ''Diario de Noticias''
9. Jagan Pillarisetti, "The Liberation of Goa: 1961" ''Bharat Rakshak, a Consortium of Indian Military Websites''
10. Liberation of Goa, ''Maps of India''
11. United Nations, General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV) of 1960 (Declaration on the granting of independence to colonial countries and peoples)
12. United Nations, General Assembly, Resolutions 1541 (XV) and 1542 (XV)
See also
★
Portuguese Indian Rupia
★
Portuguese Indian Escudo
External links
★
The GoaMog Information Resource Portal
★
Goacom
★
Summary of the judgment of the International Court of Justice in the Right of Passage over Indian Territory (Portugal vs. India) case
★
Dutch Portuguese Colonial HistoryDutch Portuguese Colonial History: history of the Portuguese and the Dutch in Ceylon, India, Malacca, Bengal, Formosa, Africa, Brazil. Language Heritage, lists of remains, maps.