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Short
history
When the first Portuguese arrived in 1482, led by captain named Diogo
Cão, highly organized societies already existed in the territories
that were later to become the country of Angola - the Kingdom of the
Congo, (for example, with its vasssels of Loango, Koakongo, Ngoyo, Bata
and Ndongo), or the Kingdom of Lunda with its neighbours Luba and Kozembe
(traditional communities governed by similar social systems such as the
case of Yakason Bateke tribes and, in the south and center, the Bushman
tribes who had no knowledge of farming or animal-rearing, nor learned
to work iron.
At the start, relations were cordial between the Portuguese and the local
authorities who allowed the new arrivals to spread the word of Christianity.
The Congo even changed its name and became the Kingdom of Don Afonso I,
while its capital became São Salvador.
Later, with the development of manufacturing in the Americas the Portuguese
engaged themselves in the slave trade. The slaves were capture and transported
to America, São Tome and Brazil (these las two were Portuguese
colonies).
The slaves trade grew in important and it was too late when the King of
Congo finally tried to stop it. Wars of conquest and of devastation were
to continue sucessively for more than a century - Ndongo in 1670, for
example, was a Kingdom in ruins, among those that had resisted the Portuguese
conquest the most valiantly, and the exploits of Queen Nzinga are memorable.Let
us mention a few of all those unforget table names who wrote the history
of a people refusing slavery - Ngola Kanini who carried to perfection
the tactic of attacking the economic centers of colonialism, the Jagas
who were distinguished in guerrilha warfare, Kuikui II who set up the
first bases in the region of Bailundo specially to keep the people independent
of the invader, and Mutu Ya Kavela and Tulante Bula who fought resolutely
against all forms of oppression.
These are a few examples among many. The Portuguese were able to advance
into the country thanks to the divisions that they created amongst the
Angolan peoples. But it was only about 1900 that they succeeded in controlling
the whole of this vast territory which constitutes today the Republic
of Angola. They practically ruined it during the intervening years. The
Angolan people continued to resist Portuguese domination even after 1900.
Resistance to the invader finally attained its day of triumph, after four
centuries of ferocious oppression and intensive exploitation: on 11 November
1975 (date of the proclamation on of National Independence) victory was
achieved after a long war of liberation, conducted since 1961 by the People´s
Movement for the Liberation of Angola, the MPLA - political moviment that
united all the true patriots decided to overcome Portuguese colonialism
by armed warfare.
After independence, the MPLA had to cope with militarist and neo-colonialistic
at- tempts to return to the previous situation by using puppet movements
the FNLA and the UNITA. Then MPLA had to resist local invasions provoked
by the former South African apartheid regime.
The Angolan people, firm and decided under the guidance of the MPLA and
the President of the Republic of Angola, José Eduardo dos Santos,
is maintaining alive the flame of combat for national unity, democracy,
freedom, independence and progress of the country.
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