1883 Perron map TERRITORY OF GOA, INDIA, #102 |
Nice small map titled Territoire de Goa, from wood engraving with fine detail and clear impression. Overall size approx. 16.5 x 15.5 cm, image size approx. 11 x 8.5 cm. From La Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, 19 vol. (1875-94), great work of Elisee Reclus. Cartographer is Charles Perron.
Goa
state of India, comprising a mainland district on the country's
southwestern coast and an offshore island. It is located about 250 miles (400
km) south of Mumbai (Bombay). One of India's smallest states, it is bounded by
the states of Maharashtra on the north and Karnataka on the east and south and
by the Arabian Sea on the west. The capital is Panaji (Panjim), on the
north-central coast of the mainland district. Formerly a Portuguese possession,
it became a part of India in 1962 and attained statehood in 1987. Area 1,429
square miles (3,702 square km). Pop. (2011) 1,457,723.
The ancient Hindu city of Goa, hardly a fragment of which survives, was built at
the southernmost point of the island of Goa. The city was famous in early Hindu
legend and history; in the Puranas and various inscriptions, its name appears as
Gove, Govapuri, and Gomant. The medieval Arabian geographers knew it as
Sindabur, or Sandābūr, and the Portuguese called it Velha Goa. It was ruled by
the Kadamba dynasty from the 2nd century CE to 1312 and by Muslim invaders of
the Deccan from 1312 to 1367. The city was then annexed by the Hindu kingdom of
Vijayanagar and was later conquered by the Bahmanī sultanate, which founded Old
Goa on the island in 1440.
With the subdivision of the Bahmanī kingdom after 1482, Goa passed into the
power of Yūsuf ʿĀdil Khan, the Muslim king of Bijapur, who was its ruler when
seafarers from Portugal first reached India. The city was attacked in March 1510
by the Portuguese under Afonso de Albuquerque. The city surrendered without a
struggle, and Albuquerque entered it in triumph.
Three months later Yūsuf ʿĀdil Khan returned with 60,000 troops, forced the
passage of the ford, and blockaded the Portuguese in their ships from May to
August, when the end of the monsoon season enabled them to put to sea. In
November, Albuquerque returned with a larger force and, after overcoming a
desperate resistance, recaptured the city, killed all the Muslims, and appointed
a Hindu, Timoja, governor of Goa.
Goa was the first territorial possession of the Portuguese in Asia. Albuquerque
and his successors left almost untouched the customs and constitutions of the 30
village communities on the island, abolishing only the rite of suttee (sati; the
immolation of widows on the funeral pyres of their husbands).
Goa became the capital of the whole Portuguese empire in Asia. It was granted
the same civic privileges as Lisbon, reaching the climax of its prosperity
between 1575 and 1600. The appearance of the Dutch in Indian waters precipitated
the decline of Goa. In 1603 and 1639 the city was blockaded by Dutch fleets,
though never captured, and in 1635 it was ravaged by an epidemic. In 1683 a
Mughal army saved it from capture by Maratha raiders, and in 1739 the whole
territory was again attacked by the Marathas and was saved only by the
unexpected arrival of a new Portuguese viceroy with a fleet.
The seat of the government was moved to Mormugão (now Marmagao) and in 1759 to
Panjim (or New Goa; now Panaji). Cholera epidemics were one of the chief reasons
for the migration of the inhabitants from Old Goa to Panjim. Between 1695 and
1775 the population of Old Goa dwindled from 20,000 to 1,600; in 1835 the city
was inhabited by only a few priests, monks, and nuns.
During the 19th century, major events affecting the settlement were its
temporary occupation by the British in 1809 as a result of the invasion of
Portugal by Napoleon I; the governorship (1855–64) of Count de Torres Novas, who
inaugurated a great number of improvements; and the military revolts of the
second half of the century. The most notable of the revolts was that of Sept. 3,
1895, which necessitated the dispatch of an expeditionary force from Portugal.
The infante (Portuguese prince) Affonso Henriques, duque de Oporto, accompanied
this expedition and exercised governor's powers from March to May 1896.
After India achieved independence in 1947, it made claims on Goa in 1948 and
1949, and Portugal came under increasing pressure to cede Goa and its other
possessions in the subcontinent to India. In mid-1954, Goan nationalists seized
the Portuguese enclaves of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and established a pro-Indian
administration. Another crisis occurred in 1955 when satyagrahis (nonviolent
resisters) from India attempted to penetrate the territory of Goa. At first the
satyagrahis were deported, but later, when large numbers attempted to cross the
borders, the Portuguese authorities resorted to force, which resulted in many
casualties. This led to the severance of diplomatic relations between Portugal
and India on Aug. 18, 1955. Tension between the two countries came to a head on
Dec. 18, 1961, when Indian troops supported by naval and air forces invaded and
occupied Goa, Daman, and Diu. All three territories subsequently became part of
India. Goa became a state in 1987.