Portuguese conquest of the Jaffna kingdom

Portuguese conquest of the Jaffna kingdom
Part of Crisis of the Sixteenth Century

Colonial era Map of the Jaffna kingdom c. 1619
Date1560 – 1621
Location
Result

Portuguese victory

Belligerents
 Portugal Jaffna kingdom  Kandy
Commanders and leaders
Phillippe de Oliveira
Constantino de Sá de Noronha
Cankili II Executed
Varunakulattan
Migapulle Arachchi
Mudaliyar Attapattu
Strength
5,000 soldiers
(by land)
Unknown 10,000
Casualties and losses
Unknown High Unknown

The Portuguese conquest of the Jaffna kingdom occurred after Portuguese traders arrived at the rival Kotte kingdom in the southwest of modern Sri Lanka in 1505. Many kings of Jaffna, such as Cankili I, initially confronted the Portuguese in their attempts at converting the locals to Roman Catholicism, but eventually made peace with them.

By 1591, the king of Jaffna Ethirimanna Cinkam was installed by the Portuguese. Although he was nominally a client, he resisted missionary activities and helped the interior Kandyan kingdom in its quest to get military help from South India. Eventually, a usurper named Cankili II resisted Portuguese overlordship only to find himself ousted and hanged by Phillippe de Oliveira in 1619. The subsequent rule by the Portuguese saw the population convert to Roman Catholicism. The population also decreased due to excessive taxation, as most people fled the core areas of the former kingdom.


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