The Dano-Carical Conflict[a] (Danish: Konflikten mod Carical) was a small-scale conflict between the Danes at Tranquebar and the Portuguese at Carical (Karaikal). The conflict includes three smaller naval engagements, which eventually led to a four-hour-long imprisonment of Danish Captain Simon Jansen.
Prelude
In 1643, the Danes, who had been in possession of Tranquebar since 1620,[1] seized a sampan from the Portuguese at Carical (Karaikal). This resulted in the Portuguese wanting to restore the military balance, and this would lead to three hostile incidents between Tranquebar and Carical.[2]
According to Nielsen, the sampan, which belonged to a citizen of Tranquebar, was on its way home from Ceylon, when it was attacked by three Portuguese vessels off Carical.[3] The Portuguese carried the sampan with them and the owner of the sampan complained to Nielsen.[2][3]
Second incident
Despite having no Danish vessels to pursue the Portuguese, Nielsen set off to Carical in an Indian vessel with three white and three Indian soldiers.[2] However, the same three ships that had seized the sampan now appeared again and launched fire upon Nielsen's vessel, where he had to retreat.[2][3]
Nielsen then wrote a letter to the Carical authorities, threatening to get revenge when he could.[2][3] In response, the adrigar (a town clerk) responded that they just wanted to restore the balance from the Danish seizure of a Portuguese sampan the year before.[2][4] However, Neilsen refuted this claim as pure nonsense.[2][4]
Third incident
In February 1645, the Valby arrived at Tranquebar, and it, together with Simon Jansen, was sent to Carical to revenge the previous attacks.[5] Jansen seized two sampans lying in the roads, however, two Dutch ships lay at anchor there.[6][5] The Dutch crews boarded the Valby and Simon Jansen was brought to Carical as a prisoner.[6]
Jansen would stay as a prisoner for roughly four hours until the sampans he had seized got to safety.[6][5] No further hostilities would occur between the two towns, however, it was known that Carical had supported the Indian general, Tiagepule in his war on Tranquebar.[6]
^Alternative names include: Dano-Carical War, Dano-Karaikal Conflict, Dano-Karaikal War, Danish-Carical War, Danish-Karaikal War, Danish-Carical Conflict, and the Danish-Karaikal Conflict.