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- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false accessdate "2012-03-02".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false author "François Pyrard, Pierre de Bergeron, Jérôme Bignon".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false isCitedBy Chinese_community_in_India.
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false isCitedBy Kunhali_Marakkar.
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false location "LONDON : WHITING AND CO., SARDINIA STREET. LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false page "523".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false publisher "Printed for the Hakluyt society".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false quote "allied forces the remnants of the garrison marched forth. "First came 400 Moors, many of them wounded, with their children and wives, in such an impoverished condition that they seemed as dead. These the Samorin bade go where they pleased. Last of all came Kunhali with a black kerchief on his head, and a sword in his hand with the point lowered. He was at that time a man of fifty, of middle height, muscular and broad-shouldered. He walked between three of his chief Moors. One of these was Chinale, a Chinese, who had been a servant at Malacca, and said to have been the captive of a Portuguese, taken as a boy from a fusta, and afterwards brought to Kunhali, who conceived such an affection for him that he trusted him with everything. He was the greatest exponent of the Moorish superstition and enemy of the Christians in all Malabar, and for those taken captive at sea and brought thither he invented the most exquisite kinds of torture when he martyred them. "Kunhali walked straight to the Samorin and delivered to him his sword in token of submission, throwing himself at his feet with much humility. Some say that the Samorin, inasmuch as he had promised him life, had secretly advised the Chief Captain, when Kunhali should deliver himself up, to lay hands upon him, as though he were taking him by force; and so the Chief Captain did. For, as the Samoriu was standing by him, Andre Furtado advanced, and, seizing him by the arm, pulled him aside; while the other gave a great lurch so as to get free. As he was then at the brink of a hole, the Chief Captain was in risk of falling therein, had not his arm been seized by Padre Fr. Diogo Horaen, a Religious of the Order of the Glorious Father S. Francisco, who stood on one side; Diogo Moniz Barreto, who was on the other, fell into the hole and skinned all his leg." A tumult now arose among the Nairs, which the Samorin with difficulty suppressed. In the midst of it, Chinale and Cotiale, the pirate-chief's nephew, and the other captains, attempted to escape, but were seized and manacled by the Portuguese soldiery. Kunhali himself was led off under a strong guard to the Portuguese lines. Furtado, after entering the fort hand-iu-hand with the Samorin, prudently gave up the place to be sacked by the".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false title "The voyage of François Pyrard of Laval to the East Indies, the Maldives, the Moluccas and Brazil, Issue 80, Volume 2, Part 2".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false url "http://books.google.com/books?id=qmcMAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA523&dq=kunhali+chinese&hl=en&sa=X&ei=scxWT5qaFYn30gHj_KCRCg&ved=0CD0Q6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false volume "VOL. II, PART II".
- v=onepage&q=kunhali%20chinese&f=false year "1890".