Kongo in the Age of Empire, 1860–1913: The Breakdown of a Moral Order

Front Cover
University of Wisconsin Pres, 2015 - 218 pages
This richly documented account of the arrival of rubber traders, new Christian missionaries, and the Portuguese colonial state in the Kongo realm is told from the perspective of the kingdom's inhabitants. Jelmer Vos shows that both Africans and Europeans were able to forward differing social, political, and economic agendas as Kongo's sacred city of São Salvador became a vital site for the expansion of European imperialism in Central Africa. Kongo people, he argues, built on the kingdom's long familiarity with Atlantic commerce and cultures to become avid intermediaries in a new system of colonial trade and mission schools.

Vos underlines that Kongo's incorporation in the European state system also had tragic consequences, including the undermining of local African structures of authority—on which the colonial system actually depended. Kongo in the Age of Empire carefully documents the involvement of Kongo's royal court in the exercise of Portuguese rule in northern Angola and the ways that Kongo citizens experienced colonial rule as an increasingly illegitimate extension of royal power.

 

Contents

Introduction
3
1 The Kingdom of Kongo after the Slave Trade
19
2 Carrying Trade
41
3 Christian Revival in São Salvador
60
4 Portugal and the Agua Rosada
86
5 Forced Labor
109
6 Political Breakdown
128
Conclusion
144
Epilogue
149
Notes
153
Bibliography
191
Index
207
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2015)

Jelmer Vos is an associate professor of history at Old Dominion University.

Bibliographic information