The 'Battle of Ceuta' (
August 14,
1415) and the subsequent conquest of the
Spanish city of
Ceuta by the
Portuguese had its roots in the earliest years of the
House of Aviz dynasty of Portugal. Both the Battle of Ceuta and, in a larger sense, the era of
European expansion were influenced by the ''Infant Dom Henrique of Portugal''; he is better known to history as
Prince Henry the Navigator.
Born in
1394, Henry was the third son of King
João I and his Queen, Philippa, who were monarchs from the
House of Aviz. He and his brothers lived in an era where honour was as much earned as inherited; the medieval concept of
chivalry still held sway in European courts. Given this worldview, it is not surprising that João I led his sons and their assembled forces in an attack on the
Muslim stronghold of Ceuta in
1415. This "
baptism of blood" was a traditional manner by which nobles proved their valor. In addition, the expedition fed the
crusading spirit of the warriors, as there was no greater glory for Iberian Christians of the
Reconquista than that attained through the defeat of the
Saracen hordes.
The Portuguese conquest of Ceuta served larger purposes than simply winning
knightly spurs for the sons of João I; their victory over the forces of
Allah rekindled dreams of a unified
Christendom that could subdue
Islam in a multi-pronged conflict. The prospect of a triumphant
military and
religious unification with distant Christian empires thus increased in its attraction to European leaders.
The battle itself was almost anti-climactic, because the 45,000 men who traveled on 200 Portuguese
ships caught the defenders of Ceuta off guard. An attack that commenced on the morning of
August 14,
1415 ended with the capture of the town by nightfall. Prince Henry distinguished himself in the battle, being wounded during the conquest of the city that was known as the “Key to the
Mediterranean.”
Thus, one of the major northern trade centers of the Islamic world was now in the possession of Portugal. This African conquest was the first significant ripple of a wave of European expansion that would reach every continent on the globe.