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The Battle of Alcântara took place on August
25, 1580, near the brook of Alcântara, in the vicinity of Lisbon, Portugal, and was a decisive victory of the Spanish Habsburg King Philip II over the Portuguese
pretender to the Portuguese
throne, António, Prior of Crato.
In Portugal, the death of King Sebastian of Portugal in 1578, without any heirs to succeed
him, had plunged the country into a dynastic crisis. King
Philip II of Spain was one of seven who laid claim to the
Portuguese throne, and in June 1580 a Spanish army invaded
Portugal, under the command of Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, Duke of
Alba.
The Duke of Alba met little resistance and in July landed his
forces at Cascais, west of
Lisbon. By mid-August, the Duke was only 10 kilometers from the
city. West of the small brook Alcântara, the Spanish encountered a
Portuguese force on the eastern side of it, commanded by António, Prior of Crato (a
grandson of King Manuel I of Portugal who had
proclaimed himself king as António I) and his lieutenant, the Count of
Vimioso.
The battle ended in a decisive victory for the Spanish
Habsburgs, both on land and sea. Two days later, the Duke of Alba
captured Lisbon, and on March 25, 1581, Philip II was crowned King of Portugal as Philip I. Spain and
Portugal would remain united in a personal union of the crowns (remaining
formally independent and with autonomous administrations) for the
next 60 years, until 1640. This
period is called the Iberian Union.
Two more battles (1582 and 1583) over
the succession were fought in the Azores.
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Philip I of Portugal (II of Spain)
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Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, Duke of Alba
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Source
See also
References
- ^
Geoffrey Parker The army of Flanders and the Spanish road,
London, 1972 ISBN 0-521-08462-8, p. 35
- ^
Henry Kamen, The
duke of Alba (New Haven–London: Yale University Press, 2004),
Pp. x + 204.