- Source: Indians in Portugal
Indians in Portugal, including recent immigrants and people who trace their ancestry back to India, together number around 104,000 (2024 Indian Ministry of External Affairs data) − 120,000 (2021 Indian embassy data data). They thus constitute 0.98% – 1.13% of the total population of Portugal.
In the 6 years between 2018 and 2023 around 45,000 Indians have settled the country, mostly in the Lisbon metropolitan area, Porto, the Algarve and the Districts of Beja, Santarém and Leiria.
The majority of Indians in Portugal trace their background to Goa, Daman and Diu, Gujarat and, more recently, from Punjab and Haryana.
History
In sixteenth century southern Portugal, there were Chinese slaves but the number of them was described as "negligible", being outnumbered by East Indian, Mourisco, and African slaves. Amerindians, Chinese, Malays, and Indians were slaves in Portugal but in far fewer number than Turks, Berbers and Arabs. China and Malacca were origins of slaves delivered to Portugal by Portuguese viceroys.
A Portuguese woman, Dona Ana de Ataíde owned an Indian man named António as a slave in Évora. He served as a cook for her. Ana de Ataíde's Indian slave escaped from her in 1587. A large number of slaves were forcibly brought there since the commercial, artisanal, and service sectors all flourished in a regional capital like Évora. Rigorous and demanding tasks were assigned to Mourisco, Chinese, and Indian slaves. Chinese, Mouriscos, and Indians were among the ethnicities of prized slaves and were much more expensive compared to blacks, so high class individuals owned these ethnicities.
A fugitive Indian slave from Evora named António went to Badajoz after leaving his master in 1545. António was among the three most common male names given to male slaves in Evora.
Antão Azedo took an Indian slave named Heitor to Evora, who along with another slave was from Bengal were among the 34 Indian slaves in total who were owned by Tristão Homem, a nobleman in 1544 in Evora. Manuel Gomes previously owned a slave who escaped in 1558 at age 18 and he was said to be from the "land of Prester John of the Indias" named Diogo.
In Evora, men were owned and used as slaves by female establishments like convents for nuns. A capelão do rei, father João Pinto left an Indian man in Porto where he was picked up in 1546 by the Evora-based Santa Marta convent's nuns to serve as their slave. However, female slaves did not serve in male establishments, unlike vice versa.
Japanese Christian Daimyos mainly responsible for selling to the Portuguese their fellow Japanese. Japanese women and Japanese men, Javanese, Chinese, and Indians were all sold as slaves in Portugal.
Traits such as high intelligence were ascribed to Indians, Chinese, and Japanese slaves.
Notable people with Indian ancestry
Kalidás Barreto - Former Portuguese politician
Mariano Barreto - Portuguese football manager
Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho – Former Portuguese military officer
Matheus de Castro – First Indian bishop of the Catholic church
Narana Coissoró- Portuguese Speaker of the House
Alfredo Bruto da Costa – Former Portuguese politician
Alfredo Nobre da Costa- Former Prime Minister of Portugal
Antonio Costa – former Prime Minister of Portugal
Orlando da Costa – Portuguese writer
José Pereira Coutinho – Macanese politician
Ileana D'Cruz – Indian-born Portuguese actress who predominantly appears in Hindi, Telugu, and Tamil language films
Mortó Dessai – Luso-Indian medical analyst
Rogério de Faria – Luso-Indian businessman
Catarina Furtado – Portuguese television presenter
João Leão – Former Finance Minister of Portugal
André Pereira dos Reis – Portuguese captain, pilot and cartographer
Gabriel Mithá Ribeiro – Portuguese politician
Rosendo Ribeiro – Portuguese physician and diplomat
António de Bettencourt Rodrigues – doctor, Portuguese diplomat and politician
Manuel António de Sousa – Portuguese merchant
Sabrina De Sousa – Portuguese-American ex-CIA operative
Teotónio de Souza – Portuguese historian and the founder-director of the Xavier Centre of Historical Research (XCHR), at Alto Porvorim
Jorge Barreto Xavier – Portuguese cultural manager, university professor and politician
See also
Hinduism in Portugal
Immigration to Portugal
Indian diaspora
India–Portugal relations
Romani people in Portugal
References
External links
https://web.archive.org/web/20070218220705/http://www.indembassy-lisbon.org/uk/ind_personorigin.html
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Vasco da Gama
- Malaysia
- Orang India
- Invasi Goa
- Demam karet Amazon
- Perkawinan sejenis
- Pelayaran Christopher Columbus
- Sejarah demokrasi
- Raj Britania Raya
- Penjelajahan Amerika Utara
- Indians in Portugal
- Luso-Indian
- Annexation of Goa
- Indian diaspora
- Portuguese Indian rupia
- Portugal
- Portuguese Indian escudo
- Immigration to Portugal
- Portuguese India
- Ethnic groups in South Asia