The Battle for Brazil
Resistance, Renewal, and the War Against the Dutch, 1580–1654
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of New Mexico Press
Publishing:13th Jan '26
£26.99
This title is due to be published on 13th January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This book examines a crucial turning point in the colonial history of Brazil and especially the enduring consequences of local and trans-Atlantic resistance to Dutch colonialism.
From a desert death march in North Africa to the war-torn beaches of Bahia, The Battle for Brazil: Resistance, Renewal, and the War Against the Dutch, 1580–1654 integrates Portuguese prophecy, myth, and tradition with on-the-ground action. A remarkable moment in an enduring global contest, the Dutch challenge for Brazil was sparked by the 1580 Spanish claim of the Portuguese throne. The Netherlanders, already locked in battle against Habsburg Spain, turned on their old trading partners, and Portuguese trading posts fell to the Dutch East India Company’s relentless assaults. Then the Dutch turned west—to Brazil. In 1624, Portuguese soldiers, priests, and their indigenous allies pinned invading Dutch West India Company troops to the town of Salvador, Bahia. The following year, a joint Luso-Spanish armada helped oust the Dutch—a short-lived interlude in the battle for Brazil (1630–1654). As town by town fell to the enemy, and as the West India Company expanded control over the Brazilian northeast, it seemed that the contested colony would go Dutch.
By the end of 1640, the restoration of an independent Portugal ended sixty years of Spanish rule, but this did not end the kingdom’s trials. With Dom João IV of Braganza on the throne, the kingdom of Portugal now faced a two-front challenge—at home, from Spain, and abroad, from the Dutch. Within five years, lackluster support from Lisbon prompted a new phase of local resistance against the Dutch in Brazil.
This defiance manifested in what would become known as the “Divine War of Liberation”—and with it, an emergent Luso-Brazilian identity. On the ground, cross-class and transatlantic alliance and coordination, formed in the first Dutch assault, only strengthened during the next nine years. The Battle for Brazil highlights the actions of once-marginalized men and women of European, African, Indigenous, and mixed descent who helped force final Dutch surrender by 1654. On both sides of the Atlantic, the battle for Brazil proved a spiritual venture and a reckoning, shaping a new world to come.
“In a refreshing new take on Portuguese Brazil, Suzanne Litrel shows how disadvantaged groups seized opportunities to assert themselves in the long war with the Dutch. Her book not only details the role of Indigenous and Black men but also reveals the impact of women of all backgrounds as strong-willed patriots and valiant combatants.” -- Wim Klooster, author of Revolutions in the Atlantic World: A Comparative History
“Suzanne Litrel’s Battle for Brazil offers insight into the inter-Iberian tensions that existed before the Luso–Dutch War, and the strains it placed on Spain and Portugal’s awkwardly interwoven colonial systems and economies in sugar, silver, and slavery. Although her work offers an important and original view of European and colonial war, global early modern empire, and colonial economies, the most groundbreaking aspect of Litrel’s contribution is the immaculately researched analysis of the impact of Dutch occupation on Brazil’s marginalized populations. She succeeds in finding the human voice in the various colonial archives; and with exceptional clarity narrates how Indigenous, Africans and Afro-Brazilians, Jewish and New Christians, and women negotiated and re-negotiated alliances with one, or both, sides involved in the conflict. They challenged the racial, religious, and gender hierarchies entrenched in the Iberian colonial empires. Litrel introduces her reader to an emergent Brazilian people—not Portuguese—who shaped the resistance to, and the expulsion of, the Dutch occupiers. In their decades-long challenge to colonial structures, the author is arguing for a new understanding of the very origin of Brazil.” -- Zachary R. Morgan, author of Legacy of the Lash: Race and Corporal Punishment in the Brazilian Navy and the Atlantic World
“Portuguese King Sebastian’s legendary demise at the Battle of Alcácer-Quibir in 1578 and the challenges of Spanish rule and Dutch occupation immediately following profoundly shaped the Luso-Brazilian world. Suzanne Litrel confronts the mythologized narratives that sprang out of these critical years, showing how men and women from diverse backgrounds in Portugal, Brazil, and beyond navigated the tempestuous currents of this era—ultimately transcending the very myths that their stories would beget.” -- Erik Lars Myrup, author of Power and Corruption in the Early Modern Portuguese World
“Suzanne Litrel brings the seventeenth-century Atlantic world to life, showing how Brazil’s fate was forged not only by empires but by diverse people whose struggles and alliances changed history. Enriched by original findings from the archives, it is a narrative that stands alongside, and pushes beyond, the classic works of Boxer, Russell-Wood, and Alencastro.” -- Ian Read, author of The Hierarchies of Slavery in Santos, Brazil, 1822–1888
“For a long time, historians of colonial Brazil and early modern Portugal downplayed the importance of breaking down the Dutch dominance in northeastern Brazil, seeing it as a failed attempt by European invaders to establish an enclave in South America. Recently, groundbreaking research projects are contesting this perspective, and following that lead, Suzanne Litrel’s Battle for Brazil highlights the extreme challenge, the strategy, and the Portuguese willpower in fighting an Atlantic war on two fronts for its survival as a nation and a worldwide empire. This included maintaining Brazil at all costs. Myriad sources, used with fluid and impressive dexterity and sensibility, from different languages, geographies, and backgrounds, make this work a major contribution to Portuguese, American, Atlantic, and colonial History. The Battle for Brazil shall remain a milestone and a standard work in those fields for many years to come.” -- Rodrigo da Costa Dominguez, author of Fiscal Policy in Early Modern Europe: Portugal in Comparative Context and coeditor of Portugal in a European Context: Essays on Taxation and Fiscal Policies in Late Medieval and Early Modern Western Europe, 1100–1700
ISBN: 9780826369055
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
Weight: 243g
256 pages