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Titel
A history of West Central Africa to 1850 / John K. Thornton (Boston University)
VerfasserThornton, John In der Gemeinsamen Normdatei der DNB nachschlagen In Wikipedia suchen nach John Thornton
ErschienenCambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2020
Umfangxx, 365 Seiten : Karten
Anmerkung
Includes index
SerieNew approaches to African history ; 15
SchlagwörterZentralafrika <West> In Wikipedia suchen nach Zentralafrika West / Geschichte Anfänge-1850 In Wikipedia suchen nach Geschichte Anfänge-1850
ISBN978-1-107-12715-9
ISBN978-1-107-56593-7
Links
Download A history of West Central Africa to 1850 [0,15 mb]
Nachweis
Verfügbarkeit In meiner Bibliothek
Archiv METS (OAI-PMH)
Zusammenfassung

The Development of States in West Central African to 1540 -- The Struggle for Ambundu and the Founding of Angola -- Ndongo and Portugal at War -- Queen Njinga's Struggle for Ndongo -- The Thirty Years' War Comes to Central Africa -- The Emergence of Lunda -- The Weight of Lunda on the West -- Culmination: Lunda, Luba and the Ovimbundu

"For purposes of this study, I am defining West Central Africa largely by the watershed of the Congo River. If the region has a hydrographic center, it is the Lunda Plateau in eastern Angola, a relatively flat region at roughly 1000 meters elevation, origin of many of the largest effluents of the Congo. This highland continues eastward until it reaches the great range of mountains that define the Rift Valley, and separate it from the Nile system. Because human geography is not always identical to natural geography, there are additions to this defined space. An important addition is the rivers that drain from the low mountains that define the western end of the Congo watershed that flow westward into the Atlantic Ocean which are included in the study because many political units had borders that straddled the two, like the kingdoms of Ndongo and Kasanje which were regularly engaged on both sides of the Kwango watershed, or the Luyana Kingdom which lay squarely in the Zambezi River watershed but was in substantial communication with the Lunda Empire. I have also left out the river systems that flow southward into the Congo from the Central African Republic, and the great northern bend of the Congo that they nourish because there was very little engagement by areas lying south of that with them or that is identified in the present historiography"--