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chap, xiv                               DIU                                           29
of which is better than that of Surat and of Suwâlï,1 and the shelter is very commodious for vessels.
The Portuguese, on their first establishment in India, kept a fleet at Diu composed of galleys, brigantines, and smaller vessels, with which they made themselves, for a very long time, masters of all the commerce of the places about to be enume­rated, so that no one was able to trade without taking out a passport from the Governor of Diu, who franked it in the name of the Viceroy of Portugal at Goa. The revenue he obtained from these passports sufficed to support the fleet and garrison, and the Governor, who was only appointed for three years,2 did not omit to accumulate wealth for himself during that time.
Thus, according to the force established in this place, great benefit would result. The Portuguese, feeble as they are at present, do not fail to profit by not having to pay duty for the money they convey into the Kingdoms of the Great Mogul and the King of Bïjâpur, nor for the goods which they take there.
When the rainy season is over, the wind being nearly always north or north-east, one can go from Diu to Surat in light boats in three or four tides, but if large vessels are laden, it is necessary for them to coast all round. A man on foot going by land to a small borough named the Gauges,3 and from thence crossing the end of the Gulf, can go from Diu to Surat in four or five days, but if the season prevents him from making this passage, he cannot reach Surat from Diu in less than seven to eight days, because he must then make the circuit of the Gulf.
The town does not possess any territory outside the bound­aries, but it would not be difficult to arrange with the Räjä, or Governor of the Province, and obtain from him as much as may be required for the convenience of the inhabitants. The soil of the neighbourhood is not fertile, and the population around is the poorest in all the Empire of the Mogul. Never-
1  Suwäli or Swälly, see vol. i, p. 5. No important river falls into the sea at Diu.
2  See i. 153 above.
* Gogò or Gogha on the western side of the Gulf of Cambay (Barbosa, ed. Dames, i. 134 f. : Imperial Gazetteer, xii. 301 f.).