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Second Battle Of Guararapes




  date February 18 , 1649
  place Pernambuco , Brazil
  result Portuguese victory
  combatant1 Netherlands
  combatant2 Portugal ( Brazil )
  commander1 Johan Van Den Bricken
  commander2 Francisco Barreto De Menezes ,<br/> João Fernandes Vieira ,<br/> André Vidal De Nequeiros ,<br/> Henrique Dias ,<br/> Diogo Pinheiro Camarão
  strength1 4,000
  strength2 3,200
  casualties1 1,500
  casualties2 Unknown


The Second Battle of Guararapes was the second and decisive battle in a conflict called '''Pernanbucana Insurrection''', between Dutch and Portuguese forces in 1649 at Pernambuco , ending the Dutch Occupation of Brazil.

Though the Dutch West India Company fielded a larger, better equipped force, they suffered Morale problems as most of their army was made up of Mercenaries from Europe (primarily Germany ) who felt no real passion for the war in Brazil, as opposed to the Natives and Luso-Brazilian settlers who considered Brazil to be their home and were fighting for a Patriotic cause. The Dutch force was also unused to fighting in the dense Jungle and Humid Conditions of the country, wearing thick, brightly coloured European clothing and heavy metal Armour which inhibited their Dexterity . Contemporary accounts describe Dutch troops at the battle as "pale and sickly". The Dutch army at Guararapes were armed with Pike s, Cannon and an assortment of Blade d weapons. It is thought by historians that the use of short blades by the Dutch was an attempt to imitate previously successful Portuguese weaponry and Tactics .

The Luso-Brazilian force was made up of an assortment of natives, blacks and whites who knew, and had experience fighting in, the difficult Brazilian terrain. They would weaken Dutch troops with fusillades of Musket fire from behind trees, and then charge with Mêlée weapons.

The Dutch had expected the enemy to march down the well established coastal roads, and thus formed a lines of defence covering these roads. However, the Luso-Brazilian force used a series of minor trails to reach Pernambuco, appearing out of the Wetlands to the west and Guararapes hills (from which the battle derived its name) and flanking the Dutch. After several hours of fighting, the Dutch retreated northwards to Recife , leaving their artillery behind. Following the Dutch retreat, the Portuguese army marched into Pernambuco.


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