During the early decades of the
Atlantic slave trade, slaving ports
located on the Atlantic side of the
continent and some localities far removed from the
coast became centers where cultural
patterns emerged that transformed these places into
Atlantic Creole cities. The
Portuguese were the first Europeans to establish some of the
early cultural centers in Atlantic
Africa--Elmina in 1482 and Luanda in 1575. Although
they visited and African courts like
Benin city in the 1470s and Mbanza Kongo/São
Salvador in the 1480s, Mbanza Kongo
stands out as a unique case of where the kings
(and nobles) set in place a social
engineering agenda as a result of contact with the
Portuguese that changed the physical
and cultural landscape and contributed to new ideas
concerning Kongo identity. In
time the city came to possess European style churches,
supported a wide range of cultural
institutions that the churches promoted, and life for the
African elite as well as commoners came
to be defined by the rhythms of the Christian
religious calendar. What was unique
about the Kongo experiment was that during the
period that the city flourished as a
Christian city, Kongo kings and nobles defrayed the
economic cost of the experiment. They
were the ones who carefully grafted Christian
religious ideas and cultural practices
onto the city’s physical and human landscape to
create a unique Atlantic African Creole
culture. Exploring how Mbanza Kongo/São Salvador developed during this
period can provide deep insights into how cultural
borrowings of the elite shaped
consumption patterns and had other significant
consequences as well. Studying
social investment in this period of Kongo’s might in turn
allow us to reflect on wealth and
poverty in the longue duree...
Mbanza Kongo, which means
city (or large central place) of Kongo in Kikongo,
served as the court of Nzinga Nkuwu,
the reigning Kongo king when the Portuguese first
arrived in the area in the 1487.
Mbanza Kongo’s roots go back to the 13th
century when
Nzinga Nkuwu’s ancestors conquered it.
Oral traditions identify Mbanza Kongo as the
first place that the conquerors of what
became the Kongo Kingdom settled once they
crossed the River Zaire.
The invaders chose Mbanza Kongo
because of its strategic
location, for it is situated on a flat,
well-watered mountaintop some 10 miles in
circumference. From the time of
its original occupation until the kingdom became part of
Portuguese Angola in 1914, Mbanza Kongo
(called São Salvador from the 1570s) served
as both the real and symbolic center of
the Kongo Kingdom.
Mbanza Kongo already had a distinctive
layout which the earliest visitors to the
area noted. The first description of
the physical layout of the city comes from a 1491
letter of the Ambassador of Milan to
Lisbon which noted that the king had “a terra [land]
encircled by a wall as large as Evora
and is inland, some 60 leagues from the sea, all full of
houses better than are found in all of
Guinea.”
Since Évora was the second
largest city in Portugal, the fact that Mbanza Kongo was compared to it
suggests that Portuguese visitors
were impressed by the size and
appearance.
We know little more of the physical
layout of the capital or of the religious,
political or economic life of the
residents in the period before King Nzinga Nkuwu
greeted the first Portuguese visitors
who arrived at his court. It underwent significant
physical transformation, however,
beginning in 1491 when the king and members of his
court were baptized in a lavish
religious ceremony at the palace to celebrate their
conversion to the Catholic faith.
At that time Mbanza Kongo contained 60,000 people.
From 1491 to 1678 when the city was
temporarily abandoned, Kongo kings oversaw the
physical transformation of the city
that allowed it to have more in common with
Portuguese Luanda than with the
capitals of other African court cities such as Benin City,
for example. The city’s physical
transformation of was most noticeable in the new
materials that were used to rebuild the
wall around the court and the many new buildings
that were constructed. The size of the
city occupied also increased as new settlements
grew up around the court. In addition
to its physical transformation, Mbanza Kongo
became a Christian religious center as
churches and institutions connected to them
replaced or took over earlier places
that had served as spaces for precontact political and
political and religious activities.
The lifestyle of city residents also
changed as celebrations connected to the
Christian religious calendar came to
dominate city life. As the social experiment
continued all aspects of life in the
city, from politics to economic and recreation created
demands for trained personnel and for
the good required to support the activities of the
church. Church personnel from Europe,
along with the religious items that informed church life were high in demand,
and the kings spared no effort in acquiring the
wherewithal to pay the expenses of the
European and African church personnel that
staffed the church and for the variety
of Christian religious items that came from Europe.
As the city grew it became increasingly
divided into two social groups. On the one hand
was the king, his court, nobles who
were recognized by their mixed European African
clothing, their literacy, made their
connections to the various religious institutions, and on
the other hand a large population
(almost half of the city residents) who were slaves and
freemen who were only marginally
integrated into the new lifestyle. Although in many
ways the social distance between the
two groups diverged, in many ways the social
experiment brought slaves and freemen
closer to the members of the nobility. The
European missionaries and secular
European (mainly Portuguese merchants) and church
personnel who lived in the city also
added another social dimension to city life. They had
their own quarter with a wall as well.
Mbanza Kongo’s physical transformation
immediately after the first Portuguese
cultural mission arrived early in 1491.
This mission brought Portuguese religious teachers
and skilled workers, including
carpenters, masons, bakers, Christian women, and “farmers
with their tools and a bell for the
church.” In the months following, the king and his nobles
mobilized thousands of Kongo laborers
to build the church, the first major public work
project in the city after the
conversion. The thousands of Kongo laborers worked under the
supervision of Portuguese craftsmen
were able to complete the project in record time.
They began on 6 May and had completed
the building by 1 June. The church, called Our
Lady of Conception was the first
European-like structure in the city and thousands of stones and pounds of
mortar were used to build it.
Before this project, the people
in
Mbanza Kongo had never used stone or
mortar to construct their houses or public buildings
but instead used thatch. A rich trove
of letters penned by Kongo officials, Portuguese
residents and visitors to the city
beginning in the early 1500s describe the continuing
physical transformation of the city as
more churches and other stone structures went up in
the years following. The most
spectacular of these was the stone wall built around the
court, and the beginning of the
construction of a stone palace that the laborers began to
build for famous Christian king Afonso
I (1509-1542). During Afonso’s reign many more
stone houses were constructed for the
Portuguese who called the city home.
The city’s continued physical
transformation was the brainchild of King Afonso
who implemented elaborate plans for the
Mbaza Kongo’s physical transformation into a
Christian city. He largely financed the
upkeep of the skilled workmen and paid for the
supplies that several Portuguese
cultural missions brought to Kongo during his long reign.
In 1509, for example, he welcomed
masons and carpenters who King Manuel of Portugal
had sent to build churches as well as
to rebuild his residence so that stone buildings could
replace the thatched ones. One of
the most impressive results of this Kongo-Portuguese
collaboration was the building of a
mile long 20 feet high stone wall that separated the
royal residences from the rest of the
city. Although in 1514 Afonso complained that the
masons had not completed the stone
residence that they were building for him because they
were more interested in trading in
slaves despite the money he paid them, he pushed for the
building of more stone structures in
the city. For example, to make sure that his relatives and other nobles in his
household were exposed to the new knowledge the priests from
Portugal brought he “gathered together
all our brothers and children and cousins and the
children of our criados in such a way
that there were 400 young men and children and…we
ordered a great wall made with many
thorns on top so they could not climb it and flee and
we entrusted the fathers with teaching
them, and we also ordered other walls made… for
the fathers to live together.”
In addition, he also ordered the
construction of walled
enclosures for priests and a large
walled enclosure with houses for the “1,000 sons of
nobles with their teachers and
dependants so that the priests could teach them “reading,
writing, grammar and the things of our
holy faith.”
Construction of stone buildings was not
limited to Afonso’s palace for he also gave
permission to the Portuguese to build a
somewhat smaller wall around the stone houses that
they built as well. Between the
walled enclosures that he had built was a large open space
in the city “where the principal church
was built.” Beyond this every noblemen built their
own city residence, although each of
them also had villas located outside the city.
Afonso
was very concerned about the upkeep of
these buildings, and in 1517 and again in 1526 he
asked the king in Portugal to send him
more stonemasons and carpenters to complete the
churches that were under construction.
For example in 1526 when only one carpenter
remained in the city he wrote to the
Portuguese king João III requesting five masons and 20
carpenters to finish one of the
churches called Nossa Senhora da Victoria. He noted that he
only had one carpenter left who “who
can repair and cover the churches.”
The basic layout of the city would
remain the same in the decades following
Afonso’s reign, although later kings
built additional churches, schools and convents,
cloisters and other buildings for the
missionaries, and nobles built residences to ensure that
they had a place in the center of
power. By the late 1500s the most prominent evidence
that Mbanza Kongo (by then renamed São
Salvador)
was not a typical African
city
were the churches, especially the
Cathedral located in the large square where outdoor
masses to accommodate thousands of
parishioners were held. The city’s physical
transformation continued in the 1600’s.
In the early 1600’s, for example, land was set
aside to build a monastery for the
Dominican missionaries, while in 1632 Alvaro 1V gave
the Jesuits who were beginning their
work in the city a site for a college as well as “other
lands for their upkeep.” He requested
them to build “a church for the college that can be
visited any time and continuous alms
that the people could give.”
Afonso, and the kings after him,
allocated funds not only for the building of the
stone structures but for the upkeep of
the churches and other structures that they had
constructed. The income to maintain
these buildings and their staff increased as the
number of churches grew. At the
end of Afonso’s reign in 1542 there were already
between six and eight churches in the
city, while by the late 1590s the number had risen to
twelve. In 1595 Antonio Viera noted
that although there were only six churches in the
city, many nobles kept their own
private chapels.
These churches were all dedicated
to
Christian saints and were located
throughout the city. Both the church of St. James and the
church of the Lady of Conception were
located within the place grounds, while the Nossa Senhora de Ajuda church was
located in the Portuguese quarters. The Jesuits also had
three unidentified churches and a
cloister in the part of the city that they occupied. By
1642 when a Dutch embassy visited the
city they were able to list by name at least ten
churches, although some were already in
ruins and others in need of repair. At that time
four of the churches -- St. James
Church, the Church of the Holy Ghost, the Church of St.
Michael and the Church of St’
Joseph—were located within the palace walls while the
others--Cathedral, the Church of Lady
of Conception, the Church of St. James, the Church
of Victory, Church of Seven Lamps, and
the Church of St. Anthony were located in various
parts of the city. Walls also
separated some of the churches form the surrounding area. For
example, the Church of Our Lady of
Conception was surrounded by a stone wall in an area
that also contained two very large
residences built with thatch giving the appearance of a
convent.
The city by this time had named
streets as well. Some, like St. James Street
took its name from the church that
stood on it while another street called Bacas de las
Almadias (Gulf of the canoes) was
located near a river.
Ollifert Dapper’s engraving
of
the city as it appeared in 1641-2
depicted several of the prominent features of the city.
The city’s growth as the Christian
center of the kingdom was also evident in the
large number of people who attended
church services. A 1619 a report observed that the
number of Christians in São Salvador
were so numerous that the Cathedral could not
accommodate the “innumerable multitude
of inhabitants”
and that the king and
population usually “stand outside the
church in the vast square to hear mass.” This
Christian community was not limited
just to Kongos for the Portuguese population had grown as well as many of the
1000 Portuguese who lived in Kongo had a residence in the
city as well.
By 1645 the mixed
African-Portuguese residents in the city had also
increased and numbered a total of 400
people, several of whom were priests.
Although it is impossible to present a
detailed accounting of the percentage of the
kings’ revenue that went into the
physical and social transformation of Mbanza Kongo, a
whole range of descriptive evidence
suggest that the kings did not spare any resources. In
the early years they spent liberally to
pay the skilled Portuguese workmen who worked in
the various construction projects and
to upkeep the churches and their personnel. Because
Kongo had an actual currency before the
Portuguese arrived, some of the payment was
made in it. In Kong the people
used zimbu shells fished in the shallow waters off the island
of Luanda and the kings and nobles used
it to assess taxes and to pay for the goods and
services they received. The highest
unit of account was the cofu which was worth 20,000
zimbu shells, while the lefuco was
worth 10,000 zimbu shells.
The Portuguese workers
who came during Afonso’s time were not
only paid in the local currency, but were paid in
kind. Moreover over the years the
thousands of slaves, ivory, silver manilas, local cloths,
and the like that Kongo kings sent to
their Portuguese counterparts (and at times to Rome)
covered a lot of the cost for priests,
the religious icons and other items that they received as
gifts from Portugal and Rome.
Some idea of the expenses that went
into the building projects in the early years of
the city’s transformation come from a
letter that Afonso wrote to King Manuel of Portugal
in 1514 in which he complained that the
masons who came from Portugal refused to work and instead “demand pay all the
time [for] building the house for me and my queen.”
Slaves who the king gave to the
representatives of the Portuguese as gifts to the Portuguese
kings or free Kongo subjects who the
Portuguese illegally enslaved also represented part of
the payments from the kings’ revenues
since slaves were valuable commodities among
both the Kongos and the Portuguese.
Afonso complained that the Portuguese who came to
work for him unlawfully enslaved and
sold as slaves also represented part of the cost that
he paid to for the skilled Portuguese
workmen who came to the city.
Part of the revenues that the Kongo
kings used to cover the Christian project came
in the form of the labor hours that
Kongo workers put into the building projects. These
laborers gathered the stones from
several miles outside the city and transported them to the
city center where the churches were
built. Kings also handed over large amounts of land
and the laborers to the priests who
managed the churches. Afonso and the kings after him
often referred in their letters to the
thousands of laborers they recruited to work on the
building projects.
The resources that Kongo kings plowed
into the building projects represented only
a part of the expenses they invested to
transform Mbanza Kongo into a Christian city. Over
the years as they deepened their
cultural ties with Portuguese monarchs who they
considered their brothers in
Christendom, and with the Papacy as well they allocated a part
of their revenues to cover the cost of
the recruitment and upkeep of the European expertsmainly priests and other
religious personnel who they believed were essential collaborators
in their Christian project. All
of the foreign experts along with the many Kongos they trained lived at one
time or other in the city and were in part supported by funds which
came from the kings and nobles.
During Afonso’s time when few
institutions existed for training members of the
local elite, the king provided the
funds for members of the nobility to travel to Portugal and
also to pay for their upkeep. In fact
in 1540 he actually requested a loan of 5.000 cruzados
from king João in Portugal to cover the
cost of his relatives who he had sent to Portugal
to study and to cover the expenses of
an embassy he had sent to Rome.
He promised to
pay him back in the local currency
which the Portuguese agents could use to purchase
slaves. As more missionaries
traveled to Kongo to manage the churches and to help in
the education and training of local men
and women, the cost of their upkeep fell on the
kings and nobles as well. Soon after
the arrival in the city of a group of missionaries from
Europe in 1548, one of them wrote back
to his colleagues noting that the king Diego 1
ordered his nobles to “bring us great
gifts” to help with their transition
Moreover, Diego
also paid for the salary of the
Portuguese linguist Pedro Alverez and carriers who he
supplied the missionary Father George
Vas. Several decades later Alvaro 11, writing to
the Pope Paulo V in 1613 attempted to
outline his efforts to assess the cost of up- keeping
the bishops and the canons at the
Cathedral. He insisted that the King of Portugal should
bear some of the cost, since “the
chaplains and curates instituted by his grandparents are
paid each year from his royal income.
Similarly Alvaro 111 writing to
Rome in 1615 to
request missionaries took pains to
assure papal officials that he would be able to pay for
their upkeep as the “kings my
predecessors” did. He noted that earlier kings always gave
the Royal chapel to their confessors
“with lands, rents, vassals and Lordship…which renders a good 2,000 cruzados,”
and promised that this amount would apply “from now
for ever to that dignitary.” Later
kings made similar financial commitments. In the 1623
invitation that King Pedro 11 made to
the Jesuits in his attempt to encourage them to return
to the city to work, he took pains to
remind them of the many churches that his
predecessors had built, noting that
they had “instituted and endowed the church of St.
James…to serve as a royal chapel.” He
also spelt out the funding he planned to spend on
the mission, agreeing to set aside “400
cofus of zimbo” in perpetuity for a Chaplain major
and for “successors in the office” to
run the operation.
Likewise in 1632 King
Alvaro
IV also reminded the head of Jesuits in
Rome that the kings of Kongo had funded the
College that they had established and
that he himself had given them “not only the site
for the college but also other lands
for farms for creation and recreation and planting.”
Later kings also did not waver when it
came to the financial upkeep of the churches and
their personnel. In 1652 King Garcia
blamed his some of immediate predecessors for
allowing four of the churches built in
the early years to fall into ruins and vowed to
“restore them and rebuild them from
their foundation.” In fact he impressed Father
Giacinto da Vetralla, a Capuchin priest
with his commitment even though the missionary
concluded that “this would cost a lot,
because it would be necessary to make them and
then transport them here.” At the same
time Garcia employed a large number of laborers
to rebuild the Church of St. Michael
for the use of the Capuchins.
Unfortunately by the
1660s because of the disastrous civil
war many more churches fell into ruin as tensions
between the elite led them to neglect
the churches. A 1660 Capuchin report reflecting on the several ruined churches
blamed the Portuguese in Angola who they accused of
preventing the Kongos from importing
“lime” and other materials used to repair the
churches and other building because of
the fear they would use it to build “fortifications.”
By the 1670s when the city was
temporarily abandoned São Salvador’s status was as a
showpiece of architecture and social
engineering was already doomed as the city was
already a shell of what it was during
its heyday.
When the city was at its peak the kings
and nobles provided financial support not
only to the churches and the many
chapels, but to the several dozen European and AfroEuropean priests, the
Bishop, canons and other church officials who made the city their
home. They also paid some of the
cost for the training of the thousands of Kongo-born lay
ministers who performed the crucial
work of bringing the new religious ideas and to the
population in the city and elsewhere.
Afonso’s commitment to the churches and the very
pious life he lived laid the
foundations for shaping the Christian character of the city. Most
of the Kongo kings who followed him
also worked to maintain the Christian character of
the city and to promote it as the
Christian capital of the kingdom. Christianity took roots
in the city with the annual arrival of
missionaries from Portugal and Rome who
concentrated on teaching the
people-from kings and nobles to slaves the core principles
of Christianity. Although the
number or priests were never enough and fluctuated from
as high as 50 to as low as 5 (in 1649
there were 16 European missionaries in the entire
kingdom) the number of residents who
were trained to teach the precepts were always
large. This was largely because
the kings supported the training of a local laity who
carried out the day to day teaching and
other duties of priests, even though they did not
do baptisms. Although the kings
and nobles and members of their households were the first people in the city to
be baptized, over the years the majority of the city’s residents,
whether slave or free were baptized.
In fact Inquisition accounts from the 1570s suggest
that most Kongos who lived in the city
(and indeed the entire kingdom) were being
instructed in the teachings of the
church. By the 1670s most people who lived in the city
in fact considered themselves
Christians. In the early years these baptisms were mostly
mass conversions, as occurred in 1548
when on 17 March the Jesuit Father Vas reported
that he had baptized 3,000 people who
attended the several churches, some of them elderly
Kongos between 60 and 80 years.
Of those baptized all 300 lived in the city.
By the
1640s although there were still mass
baptisms in the city, most people who were baptized
would have received some form of
religious education from the many priests who
officiated at masses in the city’s
several churches or from the lay Kongo and mixed KongoEuropeans who served as
their teachers.
By the early seventeenth as the city
grew in population and social complexity its
layout and social makeup made
Mbanza-Kongo very different not only from Luanda but
also from the capitals of other African
kingdoms of the time. Seventeenth century residents
and visitors often commented on the
layout and make-up of São Salvador. For example, in
1609 Antonio Viera, the confessor of
King Alvaro II testified in Lisbon that the city had
10,000 houses and that the bishop’s
residence was located next to the cathedral which
had a parish church, a college and a
hospital attached to it.
By the mid-1620s when the
Jesuit missionary João de Paiva arrived
in São Salvador he described the Portuguese
quarter of the city, noting also that
that the city was surrounded by “villages and neighboring hamlets.”
Descriptions from the early 1630s
noted that the Jesuits had their
own quarters in the city as well.
Olifert Dapper describing the city as
it was when the Dutch embassy arrived in
1645 noted that it contained streets
and pointed out that the public square (mabzi) which
was located between the enclosed court of
the king and the Portuguese enclosure had
become a central place for
celebrations. Even when the number of residents began to
decline in the 1650s, the city kept its
status as a center of Christianity in the kingdom.
When the missionary Antonio Cavazzi
visited it in 1664 at the beginning of the civil war
he put the population at a mere 5,000
people. Even by the 1670s when most of the
remaining population fled because of
the increased fighting between royal factions, the
remained as the symbolic religious
center of the kingdom and was eventually re-occupied
in 1705.
The kings, beginning with Afonso were
largely responsible for making the city
the religious and political center of
the kingdom. The city’s status grew over the years as
it was the place where every new king
following Afonso had to be crowned in the
cathedral by the bishop or a priest in
an elaborate ceremony. No king was considered
legitimate unless he came to the city
to be crowned, and where he was also required to
take an elaborate oath in front of the
thousands of city residents and Kongo notables and
their followers who traveled in from
the provinces to participate in the event. Moreover,
Kongo kings made it a point of staging
elaborate public ceremonies in the city to
welcome missionaries from Europe.
Moreover, kings and members of their households always attended the
weekly masses that were held in front of the Cathedral, led the many
public penances that the churches
encouraged, and participated in the religious
celebrations to honor the feast days of
various saints. Finally, burials in the cathedral
were also major public religious
events, as kings and members of noble family had to be
buried inside the cathedral in
elaborate Christian ceremonies.
The experience of the first
Carmelite mission which arrived on the outskirts of
the city ion 28 October 1583 provides
an excellent example of how important it was to
the kings to use the city as a center
of grandiose political and religious pageantry. When
Alvaro 1 who was reigning at the time
received the news that the members of the mission
had arrived, he ordered them to spend
the night outside the city while he prepared a great
procession to welcome them and to
receive the statute of the Virgin Mary and other relics
that they had brought from Rome.
The missionaries duly complied, and waited with
“some relics of the Eleven Thousand
Virgins, and a bone of one of the Ten Thousand
Martyrs”
until the following day. During
that time Alvaro was able to assemble over
30,000 persons who formed a grand
procession to lead the group into the city. This all took
place without the king being present,
since he had an ailment which prevented him from
walking, although he was able to view
the procession and image from his palace.
Such
public gatherings to welcome new
missionaries or to attend religious festivals were normal
for city residents. In 1619, for
example when missionaries arrived from Rome bringing
an altar and “… the ten thousand
medals, crown and similar things” the crowd that
gathered to witness the blessing of the
medals was so large that people most people had to remain outside the
cathedral. In fact by the first decades of the 1600s the Cathedral
did
not have enough space to accommodate
the large crowds that attended regular Sunday
services and these took place took
place in the square in front of the cathedral. In 1631,
for example, the missionary Francisco
de Soveral reported that Sunday services and
religious festivals were always held
outdoors.
Again in 1651 king Garcia 11 was
so
pleased that Pope had sent him an
official letter granting him several indulgences that he
had requested that he “decreed that
they be great celebration in the city, which lasted
three months, all to show how please he
was for the great extraordinary favors he
received from the Pope.”
The various religious brotherhoods that
flourished in the city and which had the
support of the Kongo kings and members
of the nobility also added another crucial
dimension to life in the city.
The first brotherhood in the city was founded sometime
before 1585, and they expanded in the
early1600s when several groups of Jesuit and
Dominican missionaries arrived and the
king honored their request to open more
brotherhoods. By 1609 Antonio
Viera noted that six confraternities operated in the city
and the king and nobles supported them
and that “every day masses are celebrated for the
souls of the dead.”
In fact in 1612 king Alvaro II
was so eager to show the newly
arrived Dominicans that he was a
devoted Christian that he agreed to their suggestion to
found “the Brotherhood of the Rosary,”
and actually oversaw the first procession of nobles and people in the city who
paraded in a way similar to the “way it was done in
Portugal.”
As members of the various religious
orders came to the city to work, they opened
more brotherhoods. The experience of
the Jesuit order in the city provides a telling
commentary of how the kings and nobles
used the brotherhoods to settle political
rivalries. In the early 1620s King
Pedro invited the Jesuits to return to work in the city
because; because as he explained he had
to strengthen Christian morality which he believed
was necessary to protect the kingdom
from the Portuguese who were sending armies into
Kongo’s southern provinces. One
of these invasions had proven disastrous to the Kongo
province of Mbamba where the invaders
had killed and enslaved thousands of Kongo
subjects. According to the Jesuit João
de Paiva who later became the rector of the college
the Jesuits built, “King Pedro...
[Believed] that only men of the Society of Jesus could
placate God for the Congo people… [And]
he gave letters to our rector at Luanda, to send
him some of the Society in order that
they erect a stable home in the royal city.”
Pedro and the kings after him gave
their full support to the Jesuits but they soon
realized that he hoped to use their
presence to support his rather weak claims to the
throne Kongo throne. In fact,
when the Jesuits sent some of members of the order to the
city to start construction of the
college, Pedro insisted that he should be considered the
founder of the college. He not
only selected the best site but offered the brothers food
and supplies and “was often present so
that by seeing him the workers might be urged in
their work.”
The first church that the Jesuits
built in São Salvador was dedicated to “Jesus and King Garcia” who had
succeeded his father Pedro and provided the funds to
continue the construction.
By the late 1620s the Jesuits had
erected their own residence, opened schools for
children of the nobility and also
opened brotherhoods in almost all eight churches that
were functioning in the city. The
presence of the Jesuits actually led to greeted social
divisions between the elites, the
Portuguese and the rest of the city’s population as well as
between elite women and other females.
For example, the Brotherhood of the Holy
Trinity restricted its membership to 12
year-old unmarried “noble adolescents” and
Portuguese, while another Jesuit
supported brotherhood located in the church of the Holy
Trinity was dedicated to St. Ignatius
and restricted membership to the nobility “either
married or bereaved of a spouse.” The
members of the brotherhood were required to take
a vow “to teach the Christian doctrine
to uncultured and ignorant men especially to the
members of their own household,” to
take communion once a month and to “engage in
other practices of Christian piety.”
Not to be outdone noble women in
the city clamored
for their husbands and sons to organize
a brotherhood for them, and by 1628 the city
boasted a brotherhood whose members
consisted of “whatever matrons are more
illustrious by birth…queens and wives
of former kings of these and the rest were moved
to virtue and holy morals.”
In time, the life of the city’s
elite came to be centered on
the many religious celebrations that
the brotherhoods organized to honor the patron saints
of this or the other brotherhood. There
was an underside to crucial role that brotherhoods came to have in the
city.
By the 1630s Kongo members of the
brotherhoods divided themselves not only according
to the various religious orders that
funded their brotherhoods (Jesuits, Dominicans, and
Capuchins) but also according to their
political allegiance. During the years members of
the brotherhoods often took political
sides, and might support one or the other contender
for the throne. Over the years the
religious and political affiliations of leading members
of the brotherhoods led to open warfare
in the city.
For example, in 1629 a members
of
one brotherhood whose members were
suspected of plotting against the king were
chained and dragged through the city
streets, while in 1630 a member of the brotherhood
was among fifty conspirators executed
for plotting against the king.
Despite the
political intrigues, the religious
activities of the brotherhoods contributed to the social
character of the city.
The financial support that Kongo kings
put into the physical transformation of the
city during more than a century and a
half gave rise to two social groups in the city. On
the one hand it boasted a population
made up of European missionaries, other European
residents (mostly Portuguese), and
members of the Kongo ruling elite, many of who were
descendants of past kings, as well as a
mixed race population. The Kongo members of the
group were literate in Portuguese and
even in Latin, owned slaves, dressed in a mixture of
European and Kongo clothing, and
devoted a lot of their time and resources to activities
connected to the church. The
members of the other group, comprising more than half of
the city’s population, were the Kongo
commoners, both free and enslaved. They provided the labor on which all
the other groups relied, but were excluded from the social and other
privileges that the members of the
elite enjoyed.
Despite their difference, the one thing
that both groups shared was a common
Christian identity. City residents,
whether they were noble or enslaved called themselves
Moxicongo, a term that distinguished
them from their rural counterparts (mubhata) who
lived in the rural areas beyond the
city or in other provinces. The markers of Moxicongo
was the ability to speak the Kikongo
which residents of the city spoke, being baptized,
regular church attendance, Christian
marriages, church burials, and opportunities to
participate in the several celebrations
that took place. Familiarity with these aspects of city
life separated Mozicongos from their
rural and provincial counterparts.
The urban environment that nurtured
this Moxicongo identity was largely owing to
the financial investment that Kongo
kings, working alongside foreign missionaries poured
into the city. Their investment did not
create a city that was a copy of its European
counterparts as the foreign
missionaries hoped or that Afonso and some of the other kings
dreamed of. By the 1640s the
churches and other buildings in the city represented a
blend of Kongo and European elements,
constructed with stones and mortar but with
thatched roofs. Moreover, the services
held in the Cathedral and other places of worship
did not replicate services in Europe.
In fact on many occasions European priests
substituted palm wine for imported wine
during communion, and candles made from
palm oil often took the place of
imports from Europe. Furthermore the choirs that
accompanied the Catholic services in
were often sung hymns in Latin but were
accompanied by musicians who played
both European and African musical instruments.
Furthermore, more Kongolese in the city
learnt Church doctrine from Kongo lay preachers in Kikongo who served as
interpreters when priests were around or who were
solely responsible for bring church
teaching church doctrine to the population.
This cultural blend was most pronounced
visible in the celebrations that took
place in the city as well. On St.
James Day, the most important religious and cultural
celebration in the city, thousands of
Kongos from the provinces flocked to the city eager
to participate in the public
celebrations to honor St. James, Kongo’s patron Saint who
they believed helped king Afonso defeat
his pagan brother in 1509. Despite its religious
origin, the day was also one when
people paid respect to the kings by bringing the
traditional tribute and performing the
ensanga/sangamento, the pre-Christian military
dance.
Slavery which expanded as the city
changed also changed as well. Although slavery
pre-dated the physical and cultural
transformation of the city, between 1491 and the 1670s’s
however, slavery in the city had more
in common with the slave holding patterns found in
other Atlantic Creole cities than with
Mbanza Kongo before 1491. Whereas in the early
days most of the slaves in Mbanza Kongo
were captives brought to Mbanza Kongo from
conquests the kings made, by the 17th
century the city was a slave
trading and slave holding
emporium. Most members of the elite
--Kongos, Portuguese, and missionaries, merchants
sold and owned slaves. Many
commoners also owned a slave or two as well. Slaves in the
city found creative ways to participate
in the city’s culture.
The inequalities
associated
with meant that there were more
pronounced in the 1670s than in 1491 when the
Portuguese arrived. One longer
long term impact of the transformation of Mbanza-Kongo/São
Salvador was the appearance of a
consciousness of a Kongo identity. This consciousness
of a Kongo identity was not restricted
to the elites, but was evident among all Kongos.
Two aspects of this new identity stand
out. One of this was that each Kongo considered
himself a Christian and the other was
that he regarded the king of Kongo as the ruler with
Mbanza Kongo as the capital. The
investments that the kings put into the city not only
transformed the outlook of Kongos
residents but also spread throughout the kingdom.
The hundreds of thousands of Kongos who
were enslaved and carried to places such as
Brazil and elsewhere brought this Kongo
identity with them. The Brazilian folk festivals
call congadas had their origins in the
attempts of enslaved Kongo there to recreate the
Christian festivals, coronations and
other religious celebrations that had become an
essential part of life in Mbanza
Kongo.
In conclusion one might ask whether the
funds Kongo kings spent on building
churches, supporting priests and the
like in the city could have been better invested in
other more productive projects? Could
they have used it to diversify the economy and
reduce the place of slave trading and
slave holding in the city? Could the funds have
been invested in creating a strong
central army that could have imposed central power
more effectively on rebellious
provinces, or that could have defeated the Portuguese in
1665 and thus save the kingdom from the
prolonged decline it suffered.? Was the
appearance of a Kongo identity worth
the investment? |