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Angola
is situated on the west coast of Africa, and is bordered on the north by Congo
and north and northeast by the Democratic Republic of Congo, on the Southeast by
Zambia and on the south by Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean.
Visitor's can expect to experience majestic mountains and
valleys, harsh desert and rain forests, waterfalls and 1,600 km of
coast line on touring this beautiful country. The country's landscape consists mainly of broad tablelands varying from
915
to 1,525 metres in altitude; a high plateau in the south ranges from 1,220 to 2,300
metres. The highest point in Angola is Mount Moco (2,615 metres) in the Benguela region
and Mount Navil (2,480 metres) in the Cuanza Sul.
All year round good
tropical weather, large rivers, beautiful waterfalls and inviting beaches offer
peaceful moments in perfect harmony with nature. The climate is hot and humid but
surprisingly dry owing to the cool Benguela
Current which prevents moisture from easily condensing into rain. Frequent fog
prevents temperatures from falling at night even during the completely dry
months from June to October. There are beaches near
the cities, with or without coconut palm trees and some almost deserted of
people, but on all beaches the sand is white and the water clear, clean and
warm. 30 years of war has not changed the warm hospitality characteristic of the
Angolan people. Good fish, meat, shellfish, with strong spices and many
culinary specialties complimented by competent chefs, result in one of the best
gastronomies of Africa.
Luanda is the capital and largest city of Angola. Located on Angola's coast with
the Atlantic Ocean, Luanda is both Angola's main seaport and administrative
center. It is the world's most expensive city for expatriates to live in and,
with a population of approximately 4 million, is the capital city of Luanda
Province. Luanda is divided into two parts, the baixa de luanda (lower Luanda,
the old city) and the cidade alta (upper city or the new part). Lower Luanda is
situated next to the port and has narrow streets and old colonial buildings.
Luanda is the seat of a Roman Catholic archbishop. It is also the location of
most of Angola's educational institutions, including the private Catholic
University of Angola and the public University of Agostinho Neto. It is also the
home of the colonial Governor's Palace and Estádio da Cidadela, Angola's main
stadium, with a total seating capacity of 60,000.
Kissama National Park
(Quicama) lies in northwestern Angola. The park is
approximately 70 km from Luanda. The park covering a surface area of 12,000 km² is bordered on
the west by 120 km's of the Atlantic Ocean's west coast. The Cuanza River forms the
northern boundary, while the Longa River constitutes the southern border. What
is now Kissama National Park was formed as a game reserve in 1938. It was
proclaimed a national park in January 1957. The park once was home to an
abundance of large game animals such as elephants and Giant Sable, but after
wide-scale poaching during 25 years of civil war, the animal population was
virtually eliminated. In 2001, the Kissama Foundation, a group of Angolans and
South Africans, initiated Operation Noah's Ark to transport animals, especially
elephants, from neighboring Botswana and South Africa. These animals, who were
from overpopulated parks in their home countries, adapted well to the move.
Noah's Ark was the largest animal transplant of its kind in history and has
given the park momentum to be restored to its natural state.
Iona National Park (Parque Nacional do Iona) is
situated in Namibe Province of Angola. It is about 200 Km from the city of
Namibe and, at 9420 km², the largest in the country. Before the Angolan Civil
War, Iona was an "animal paradise, rich in big game". However, as is true for
most Angolan national parks, illegal poaching and the destruction of
infrastructure have caused considerable damage to the once rich park. The park
is also known for unique flora and incredible rock formations.
Cameia National Park is located in the Moxico
province of Angola, located at about 1,100 m above sea level. It shares its name
with the nearby municipality of Cameia. The Cameia–Luacano road forms the
northern boundary of the park with the Chifumage River forming the southern
portion of the eastern boundary and the Lumege and Luena rivers the
south-western boundary. Much of the park consists of seasonally inundated plains
that form part of the Zambezi river basin, with the northern half of the park
draining into the Chifumage river. There are also extensive miombo woodlands,
similar to those in the Zambezi basin of western Zambia. The park is a sample of
nature not occurring elsewhere in Angola. Two lakes, Lago Cameia and Lago Dilolo
(the largest lake in Angola) lie outside the park boundaries and both have
extensive reed beds and grassy swamps that are rich in aquatic birds. The area
now known as Cameia National Park was established as a game reserve in 1938 and
proclaimed a National Park in 1957. The wildlife in the park has been almost
completely wiped out after the civil war wrought devastation to the park,
including uncontrolled poaching and the destruction of infrastructure. There is
a serious lack of staff, resources and support for the park.
Mupa National Park is located in Angola's Cunene
province in the south. It was proclaimed a National Park on 26 December 1964
while Portugal still occupied Angola. It is significant for its expected wide
avifauna. Many Angolans reside within the park, which, along with nomadic
pastoralists and mineral prospecting threatens to destroy the park's birdlife.
According to one article, "Even though the park was initially proclaimed to
protect the giraffe sub-species, Giraffa camelopardalis angolensis, by
1974 none were left. Other mammals which occurred, include lion, leopard, wild
dog and spotted hyena".
Benguela (São Felipe de Benguela) is a city in
western Angola, south of Luanda, and capital of Benguela Province. It lies on a
bay of the same name. Benguela was founded in 1617 by the Portuguese under
Manhoel Cerveira Pereira. It was long the centre of an important trade,
especially in slaves to Brazil and Cuba. Ships anchor about one and a half km
off the shore, in 7 to 11 m depth and transfer loads to smaller boats which use
five or six jetties in the town. However the nearby deep-water sheltered harbour
of Lobito is a much larger port.
Lubango is the capital city of
the Angolan province of Huíla.
History - The
area was inhabited in prehistoric times, as attested by remains
found in Luanda, Congo and the Namibe desert, but it was only
thousands of years later, at the beginning of recorded history that
more developed peoples arrived.
The first to settle were the Bushmen, great hunters, similar to
pygmies in stature and with light brown skin. At the beginning of
the sixth century AD, more advanced peoples with black skin, already
in possession of metal-working technology, began one of the greatest
migrations in history. They were the Bantu, and they came from the
north, probably from somewhere near the present day Republic of
Cameroon. When they reached what is now Angola they encountered the
Bushmen and other groups considerably less advanced than themselves,
who they easily dominated with their superior knowledge of
metal-working, ceramic and agriculture. The establishment of the
Bantu took many centuries and gave rise to various groupings who
took on different ethnic characteristics, some of which persist to
this day. The first large political entity in the area, known to
history as the Kingdom of Congo, appeared in the thirteenth century
and stretched from Gabon in the north to the river Kwanza in the
south, and from the Atlantic in the west to the river Cuango in the
east. Their wealth came mainly from agriculture. Power was in the
hands of the Mani, aristocrats who occupied key positions in the
kingdom and who answered only to the all-powerful King of the Congo.
Mbanza was the name given to a territorial unit administered and
ruled by a Mani; Mbanza Congo, the capital, had a population of over
fifty thousand in the sixteenth century.
The Kingdom of Congo was divided into six provinces and included
some dependent kingdoms, such as Ndongo to the south. Trade was the
main activity, based on highly productive agriculture and increasing
exploitation of mineral wealth. In 1482, Portuguese caravels
commanded by Diogo Cão arrived in the Congo. Other expeditions
followed, and close relations were soon established between the two
states. The Portuguese brought firearms and an interesting religion;
in return, the King of the Congo could offer slaves, ivory, and
minerals. The King of the Congo was soon converted to Christianity,
and adopted a similar political structure to the Europeans; he
became a well-known figure in Europe, to the point of receiving
missives from the Pope himself.
To the south of the Kingdom of the Congo, around the river Kwanza,
there were various important states, of which the Kingdom of Ndongo,
ruled by the Ngola (King), was the most significant. At the time of
the arrival of the Portuguese, Ngola Kiluange was in power, and by
maintaining a policy of alliances with neighbouring states, managed
to hold out against the foreigners for several decades. Eventually
he was beheaded in Luanda. Years later, the Ndongo rose to
prominence again when Jinga Mbandi, known as Queen Jinga, took
power. A wily politician, she kept the Portuguese in check with
carefully-prepared agreements. After undertaking various journeys
she succeeded in 1635 in forming a grand coalition with the states
of Matamba and Ndongo, Congo, Kassanje, Dembos and Kissamas. At the
head of this formidable alliance, she forced the Portuguese to
retreat.
Meanwhile, Portugal had been occupied by Spain, and their overseas
territories had taken second place. The Dutch took advantage of this
situation and occupied Luanda in 1641. Jinga entered into an
alliance with the Dutch, thereby strengthening her coalition and
confining the Portuguese to Massangano, which they fortified
strongly, sallying forth on occasion to capture slaves in the Kuata!
Kuata! Wars. Slaves from Angola were essential to the development of
the colony of Brazil, but the traffic had been interrupted by these
events. In 1648 a large force from Brazil under the command of
Salvador Correia de Sá retook Luanda, leading to the return of the
Portuguese in large numbers.
Jinga’s coalition began to fall apart; the absence of their Dutch
allies with their firearms, and the strong position of Correia de
Sá, delivered a deadly blow to the morale of the native forces.
Jinga died in 1663; two years later, the King of the Congo committed
all his forces to an attempt to capture the island of Luanda,
occupied by Correia de Sá, but they were defeated and lost their
independence. The Kingdom of Ndongo likewise submitted to the
Portuguese Crown in 1671. The Portuguese colony of Angola was
founded in 1575 with the arrival of Novais with a hundred families
of colonist and four hundred soldiers. Luanda was granted the status
of city in 1605. Trade was mostly with Brazil; Brazilian ships were
the most numerous in the ports of Luanda and Benguela.
Angola, a Portuguese colony, was in fact a colony of Brazil,
paradoxically another Portuguese colony. A strong Brazilian
influence was also exercised by the Jesuits in religion and
education. The philosophy of war gradually gave way to the
philosophy of trade. The great trade routes and the agreements that
made them possible were the driving force for activities between the
different areas; warlike states became states ready to produce and
to sell. In the Planalto (the high plains), the most important
states were those of Bié and Bailundo, the latter being noted for
its production of food and rubber. However, the colonial power,
becoming ever richer and more powerful, would not tolerate the
development of these states and subjugated them one by one, so that
by the beginning of last century the Portuguese had complete control
over the area.
From 1764 onwards, there was a gradual change from a slave-based
society to one based on production for domestic consumption. By 1850
Luanda was a great city, full of trading companies, exporting
(together with Benguela) palm and peanut oil, wax, copal, timber,
ivory, cotton, coffee, and cocoa, among other products. Maize,
tobacco, dried meat and cassava flour also began to be produced
locally. The Angolan bourgeoisie was born.
Meanwhile, the slave trade was abolished in 1836, and in 1844
Angola’s ports were opened to foreign shipping. The Berlin
Conference compelled Portugal to move towards the immediate
occupation of all its colonial territories. The territory of
Cabinda, to the north of the river Zaire, was also ceded to Portugal
on the legal basis of the Treaty of Simulambuko Protectorate,
concluded between the Portuguese Crown and the princes of Cabinda in
1885. After a difficult and complicated process of implementation,
the end of the nineteenth century saw the establishment of a
colonial administration based directly on the territory and the
people to be ruled.
With regard to the economy, colonial strategy was based on
agriculture and the export of raw materials. Trade in rubber and
ivory, together with the taxes imposed on the population, brought
vast income to Lisbon. Portuguese policy in Angola was modified by
certain reforms introduced at the beginning of the twentieth
century. The fall of the Portuguese monarchy and a favourable
international climate led to reforms in administration, agriculture,
and education. With the advent of the New State, extended to the
colony, Angola became a province of Portugal (Ultramarine Province).
The situation appeared
calm and stable. But in the second half of the twentieth century,
this calm was disrupted by the appearance of the first nationalist
movements. More overtly political organisations first appeared in
the 1950s, and began to make organised demands for their rights,
initiating diplomatic campaigns throughout the world in their fight
for independence. The colonial power, meanwhile, refused to accede
to the nationalist’s demands, thereby provoking the armed conflict
that came to be known as the ‘Armed Struggle’.
In this struggle, the
principal protagonist were the MPLA (Popular Movement for the
Liberation of Angola), founded in 1956, the FNLA (National Front for
The Liberation of Angola), which appeared in 1961, and UNITA
(National Union for the Total Independence of Angola), founded in
1966. After many years of conflict, the nation gained its
independence on 11 November 1975. |