GOA
AGUADA FORT
Aguada Fort stands tall as one of the most known representatives of the
Goan history. The fort was constructed in 1612 by the Portuguese
afearing an attack from the Marathas and the Dutch. The fort had a fresh
water spring that provided for the water requirements of all those who
used to pass through the place. The giant fort served as crucial point
for all the important operations of the Portueguese
The fort was constructed in 1613 to guard against the Dutch and the Marathas. It was a reference point for the vessels coming from Europe at that time. This old Portuguese fort stands on the beach south of Candolim, at the shore of the Mandovi River. It was initially tasked with defense of shipping and the nearby Bardez sub district.
A freshwater spring within the fort provided water supply to the
ships that used to stop by. This is how the fort got its name: Aguada,
meaning Water. Crews of passing ships would often visit to replenish
their fresh water stores. On the fort stands a four-storey Portuguese
lighthouse, erected in 1864 and the oldest of its kind in Asia. Built in
1612, it was once the grandstand of 79 cannons. It has the capacity of
storing 2,376,000 gallons of water, one of the biggest freshwater
storages of the time in whole of Asia. This fort is divided in two
segments: the upper part acted as fort and watering station, while the
lower part served as a safe berth for Portuguese ships. Whereas the
upper part has a moat, underground water storage chamber, gunpowder
room, light house and bastions, it also has a secret escape passage to
use during time of war and emergency. The lighthouse at initial stage is
used to emit light once in 7 minutes. In 1834 it was changed to emit
light creating eclipse every 30 seconds, however it was abandoned in
1976.
Fort Aguada was the most prized and crucial fort of Portuguese. The
fort is so large that it envelops the entire peninsula at the south
western tip of Bardez. Built on the mouth of river Mandovi, it was
strategically located and was the chief defence of Portuguese against
the Dutch and Marathas.
During the Salazar Administration, Fort Aguada was repurposed for use as a prison primarily, some claim, for Salazar's political opponents. Many of its inmates are Western tourists serving time for drug-related crimes.
Fort Aguada and its lighthouse is a well-preserved seventeenth-century Portuguese fort standing in Goa, India, on Sinquerim Beach, overlooking the Arabian Sea.
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