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A Few Words that Changed the World: Introduction - Mbemba to King of Portugal

A Few Words that Changed the World
Introduction - Mbemba to King of Portugal
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table of contents
  1. Table Of Contents
  2. Welcome to a Few Words that Changed the World
  3. Introduction - Treaty of Tordesillas
    1. Text
  4. Introduction - Mbemba to King of Portugal
    1. Text
  5. Introduction - Edicts Against Christianity
    1. Text
  6. Introduction - Royal Proclamation
    1. Text
  7. Introduction - Treaty of Allahabad
    1. Text
  8. Introduction - Rights of Man and Citizen
    1. Text
  9. Introduction - Haiti's Constitution
    1. Text
  10. Introduction - Unequal Treaties
    1. Text
  11. Introduction - Declaration of Sentiments
    1. Text
  12. Introduction - Origin of Species
    1. Text Introduction
    2. Text Conclusion
  13. Introduction - Scramble for Africa
    1. Text
      1. Ch. 1: Declaration relative to the liberty of commerce in the basin of the Congo
      2. Ch. 2: Declaration concerning the slave trade
      3. Ch. 3: Declaration relative to the neutrality of the territories
      4. Ch. 4: Act of navigation to the Congo
      5. Ch. 5: Act of navigation to the Niger
      6. Ch. 6: Declaration relative to the conditions essential to be fulfilled
      7. Ch. 7: General dispositions
  14. Appendix: Syllabi

II

Nzinga Mbemba to the King of Portugal (1526)

Introduction

In 1483, the Portuguese sailor Diogo Cao arrived at the mouth of the Congo River, claiming Africa for Portugal under the authority granted that kingdom by the Vatican. At that time, the Kingdom  was one of the largest on the continent. There were twelve provinces covering parts of Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Congo, Gabon, Namibia, and Zambia. It was an important player in the African trade in gold, copper, ivory, cloth and pottery, into which Cao hoped to integrate Portuguese commerce.

Things moved quickly in the 1480s. Cao had taken several nobles to Portugal after his initial visit and by 1485, the ruling King Nzinga a Nkuwu converted to Christianity. He was baptized in 1491, when Catholic priests arrived in the kingdom. Over the decades that followed, there was considerable back and forth between the Kongo and Portugal.

Nkuwu’s successor, Nzinga Mbemba, is the author of this module’s document. Trained by Catholic priests during the late fifteenth century, when he took power in 1509, he established the Catholic Church as the Kingdom’s state religion, built schools for the elite, and sent many nobles to train in Europe; his son became the Kingdom’s first Catholic bishop.

By 1526, forty years of trade and diplomacy with Portugal had led to the development of a fairly extensive trade in slaves, some heading to Sao Tomé, a previously uninhabited island off Africa’s west coast that Portugal had developed to grow sugar. Initially, plantation workers were enslaved as part of warfare on Kongo’s frontiers. Over time, though, the source of slaves became unclear, and – in Mbemba’s view – bypassed Kongo law and sovereignty.

As you read through these letters ask yourself:

  • How does Mbemba relate to Portuguese king Joao III?
  • What is the relationship between Christianity and commerce?
  • What solutions does Mbemba see to the problem of the Portuguese slave trade? What does this teach us about the Kongo state?
Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Kongo issued to King Affonso I (Wikimedia Commons)

This module was last updated in December 2021.

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Copyright © 2022

                                by Thomas Peace

            A Few Words that Changed the World by Thomas Peace is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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