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Capture of Portobello (1601)

Capture of Portobello (1601)
Part of the Anglo–Spanish War
(1585-1604)

Present-day ruins of 16th and 17 centuries Santiago de la Gloria fort at seaport town of Portobelo, Colon, Isthmus of Panama on the Spanish Main of the then world-wide Spanish Empire
Date17 January 1601
Location
Result English victory[1]
Belligerents
 Spain England England
Commanders and leaders
Gov Pedro Meléndez Sir William Parker
of Plymouth, England
(died 1618)
Strength
100 soldiers
3 ships
5 ships
200 soldiers & sailors[2]
Casualties and losses
50 casualties
3 ships captured[3]
Light[2]

The Capture of Portobello was a military event during the long ongoing Anglo–Spanish War of 1585-1604, in which an English naval expedition under the command of privateer William Parker (died 1618), of Plymouth, assaulted and took the seaport town of Portobelo at Colon on the eastern / northern coast of Panama / Isthmus of Panama in Central America, from the Spanish, captured some looted booty, and then sacked the place, an important site on the Spanish Main in the then world-wide Spanish Empire.[4]

  1. ^ Bradley p.128-129
  2. ^ a b Marley p.93
  3. ^ Bicheno pg.302
  4. ^ Chartrand p.30

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Presa di Portobelo (1601) Italian

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