During the period of Peshva Brahminical rule of the Mahratta confederacy, territory of Portuguese Bombay was sacked repeatedly whenever the Portuguese refused to pay the "protection tax" to stop Mahratta raids. Under the Peshva, Mahrattas seized and occupied most of the settlements, including the territorial administrative centre headquartered at Fort Bassein. A brother to the Peshva Brahmins, Chimaji Appa ordered the destruction and vandalism of nearly all Christian places in the area including Basilica of Mount Bandra (Bombay), the St. Michael's Church (Bombay) was one of the few structures spared. Mahratta jaatis (castes) didn't discriminate among the two religious groups,[citation needed] and many Norteiros switched loyalties, they also switched to speaking Marathi in place of Konknni in the Konkan region. When the English East India Company later took over the seven islands of Bombay from the Portuguese at Goa and Anjediva, and Bassein (Vasai) and Taana (Trombay) from the Mahrattas, they called the Norteiros "Bombay Portuguese".
After the involvement of England in Goan affairs as a result of the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars, England occupied Portuguese Goa for several years, ostensibly to protect it from a French takeover. The Goans were encouraged to migrate to Bombay and find employment. Because of the influx of Goans, called "Goan Portuguese" by the English, the "Bombay Portuguese" decided to rename themselves with a name emphasising their status as subjects of the English Crown, to distinguish them from the Goans, who were Portuguese citizens (since Pombal enfranchised Goa). These Norteiros began calling themselves "Bombay East Indians", to identify with the English East India Company which ruled them on behalf of England.
Other communities, such as that of Kristi creole people of Chaul, Damaon and Dio, continued to identify Luso-Indians.
Both the Damanese and the Kristi communities are often wrongly called Norteiro people,[citation needed] derived from the native Marathi people.[how?] However, the Dioese, Damaonese and Kristi Norteiros share a single trait, as compared to the Bombay East Indians who are culturally different from them.