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Bakongo, D.R.C
Location:The Bakongo
people (aka. the Kongo) dwell along the Atlantic coast
of Africa from Pointe-Noire, Congo (Brazzaville) to
Luanda, Angola. In the east, their territory is
limited by the Kwango River and in the northeast by
Malebo (Stanley) Pool, in the Congo River. The Bakongo
thus live in Congo (Brazzaville), Congo (Kinshasa),
and Angola.
The Kongo peoples
migrated into their current location during the 13th
century from the northeast under the leadership of
Wene. In 1482 the Portuguese arrived on the coast, and
the Bakongo began diplomatic relations which included
sending Bakongo nobles to visit the royal assemblage
in Portugal in 1485. Bakongo leaders were targeted for
conversion by Christian missionaries, and often
divisions between followers of Christianity and
followers of the traditional religions resulted. In
1526 the Portuguese were expelled, but the Bakongo
peoples were then invaded by the Jagas in 1568, and
the Bakongo were forced to look to the Portuguese for
help. The Kongo kingdom never regained its former
power. In the ensuing years the Bakongo alternatively
fought for and against the Portuguese, eventually
being colonized in 1885. The Bakongo political party
Abako played an important part in national
independence in 1960.
In its heyday, the
Kingdom exacted taxes, forced labor, and collected
fines from its citizens in order to prosper. At times,
enslaved peoples, ivory, and copper were traded to the
Europeans on the coast. The important harbors were
Sonyo and Pinda. When the Kongo Kingdom was at its
political apex in the 15th and 16th centuries, the
King, who had to be a male descendant of Wene, reigned
supreme. He was elected by a group of governors,
usually the heads of important families and
occasionally including Portuguese officials. The
activities of the court were supported by an extensive
system of civil servants, and the court itself usually
consisted of numerous male relatives of the King. The
villages were often governed by lesser relatives of
the King who were responsible to him. All members of
government were invested with their power under the
auspices of a ritual specialist.
The Bakongo religion
centers on ancestor and spirit cults, which also play
a part in social and political organization. A strong
tradition of prophetism and messianism among the
Bakongo has given rise in the 20th century to
nativistic, political-religious movements, mostly
xenophobic. The most prolific art form from this area
is the nkisi objects, which come in all shapes,
mediums, and sizes. The stratification of Bakongo
society resulted in much of the art being geared
toward those of high status, and the nkisi figures
were one of the only forms available to everyone.
They numbered about
10,220,000 at the end of the 20th century. Their
language is part of the Benue-Congo branch of the
Niger-Congo languages. The Bakongo cultivate cassava,
bananas, corn (maize), sweet potatoes, peanuts
(groundnuts), beans, and taro. Cash crops are coffee,
cacao, urena, bananas, and palm oil. Fishing and
hunting are still practiced by some groups, but many
Bakongo live, work and trade in towns. Descent is
reckoned through the female line, and tribes are
grouped in lineages. The main characteristic of their
social organization is fragmentation: nearly every
village is independent of its neighbours, and almost
nothing remains of the ancient Kongo kingdom.
Information kindly provided by Emuseum - Written by:
Takanori Shimodate
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