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Bakongo
(redirected from Kongo people)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

Kongo

 or Bakongo

Bantu-speaking peoples living along the Atlantic coast in Congo (Kinshasa), Congo (Brazzaville), and Angola. They engage in subsistence agriculture and raise cash crops (including coffee, cacao, and bananas); many live and work in towns. Descent is matrilineal, and most villages are independent of their neighbours. A Kongo kingdom existed from the 14th century; its wealth came from trade in ivory, hides, slaves, and a shell currency. It broke up into warring chiefdoms in 1665.


Bakongo 

a people living around the lower reaches of the Congo River in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Zaire) and in the border regions of Angola and the People’s Republic of the Congo. Their combined population was 3.2 million according to a 1967 estimate. They speak Kikongo, one of the Bantu family of languages. The majority of Bakon-go retain local traditional beliefs, although some are Christians. Around the 14th century the Bakongo formed the ethnic nucleus of the early feudal state Kongo. The Bakongo retain a matrilinear kinship structure. Their chief occupations are hoe farming (cassava, bananas) and crafts. There is seasonal migration of agricultural workers to industrial employment.



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Cecile Alice Fromont traced the history of the relationship between the Portuguese and the Kongo peoples, emphasizing how Christian conversion and practices provided a method of control over the indigenous peoples.
This type of figure, commonly known as a fetish in the Western world but called an nkisi nkondi by the Kongo people, was believed to possess hidden, healing powers which allowed people to regain wholeness of mind and body, to settle disputes, and to swear solemn oaths.
She found that some sculptural details confirm these associations, though others show associations with the Western Kongo peoples.
 
 
 
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