who will say will be marked as the brainiest .why did the Portuguese withdraw from the Arabian gulf in 1560 CE
Answers
Answer:
ur answer is in the above picture mate
![](https://hi-static.z-dn.net/files/d33/7a9333f1b901a3f9ca3bd0e23221f2a9.jpg)
Explanation:
For Portuguese conquest, see Capture of Ormuz (1507). For Persia reconquest, see Capture of Ormuz (1622).
Persian portrait of a Portuguese nobleman (16th century)
Purple - Portuguese in the Persian Gulf in the 16th and 17th century. Main cities, ports and routes. Basra from 1595
The Persian–Portuguese war took place from 1507 to 1622 and involved the Portuguese Empire and its vassal, the Kingdom of Ormus, on one side, and the Safavid Empire of Persia with the help of the Kingdom of England on the other side. During this era, Portugal established its rule for about more than a century in Ormuz and more than 80 years in Bahrain, capturing some other islands and ports such as Qeshm and Bandar Abbas . The conflict came to an end when the Safavid Shah, Abbas I of Persia, conquered the Portuguese Bahrain forcing them to war in the Persian Gulf.
In September 1507, the Portuguese Afonso de Albuquerque landed on the Hormoz. Portugal occupied Ormuz from 1515 to 1622. As a vassal of the Portuguese state, the Kingdom of Ormus jointly participated in the 1521 invasion of Bahrain that ended Jabrid rule of the Persian Gulf archipelago.
After the Portuguese made several abortive attempts to seize control of Basra, the Pasha asked for protection[1] against the Safavid ruler Abbas I , from then on Portuguese stayed in the city and region as traders with a factory (feitoria) and as protector allied army . Later in 1622 the Safavid conquered Ormus with the help of the English, and tried to expelled the Portuguese from the rest of the Persian Gulf, with the exception of the Oman gulf . The Portuguese were for the next decades as allies of Afrasiyab, the Pasha of Basra, against the Persians who failed several times to conquer the city of Basra.