Ngoyo

{{Short description|13th century–1885 coastal kingdom in west Central Africa}}

{{Infobox country

| conventional_long_name = Kingdom of Ngoyo

| common_name = Ngoyo

| image_flag =

| flag_type =

| event_start =

| year_start = pre 13th century

| event1 =

| date_event1 =

| date_start =

| event_end = Treaty of Simulambuco

| year_end = 1885

| p1 =

| image_p1 =

| s1 = Cabinda Province{{!}}Portuguese Congo

| image_map = Ngoyo carte 1648.jpg

| image_map_alt =

| image_map_caption =

| capital = Mbanza Ngoyo

| common_languages = Iwoyo (or Kiwoyo, Ciwoyo) Amélia Arlete MINGAS, ETUDE GRAMMATICALE DE L'IWOYO (ANGOLA), UNIVERSITE RENE DESCARTES PARIS - UFR DE LINGUISTIQUE GENERALE ET APPLIQUEE, 1994 (in French)

| religion = Bukongo

| government_type = Monarchy

| leader1 =

| year_leader1 =

| leader2 =

| demonym =

| area_km2 =

| area_rank =

| GDP_PPP =

| GDP_PPP_year =

| HDI =

| HDI_year =

| today =

}}

{{coord missing|Angola|Democratic Republic of the Congo}}

{{Angola state}}

Ngoyo was a kingdom of the Woyo ethnic group, located in the south of Cabinda and on the Atlantic coast of Central Africa, just north of the Congo River. In the 13th century it formed part of a confederation led by Vungu.{{Citation |title=The Development of States in West Central Africa to 1540 |date=2020 |work=A History of West Central Africa to 1850 |pages=16–55 |editor-last=Thornton |editor-first=John K. |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/history-of-west-central-africa-to-1850/development-of-states-in-west-central-africa-to-1540/CE71122CF8DFD7B4B188BA34F8F65BFC |access-date=2024-09-21 |series=New Approaches to African History |place=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-56593-7}}{{Rp|pages=24-25}} Ngoyo tradition held that the kingdom's ancestors were among the earliest settlers in the area, leading their chiefs to title themselves the nfumu nsi ("lords of the earth"). The capital was Mbanza Ngoyo.

In the 1630s Ngoyo was invaded by the forces of Soyo, and the son of the ruler of Soyo was installed as ruler of Ngoyo. It is not clear who the following rulers were for the next few decades.John K. Thornton, History of West Central Africa to 1850. Cambridge University Press, 2000. p. 201

In the 1680s Ngoyo had various relations with Soyo. It also had several English merchants present. When Antonio II Baretto da Silva invaded, the English forces tried to stop him and protect the interests of Ngoyo, but they were unsuccessful and Baretto da Silva imposed for peace terms.Thornton. West Central Africa, p. 203

By 1700, Cabinda had become the leading slave port north of Luanda, and Ngoyo's economy rested heavily on the sale of slaves.Ana Lucia Araujo, The Gift: How Objects of Prestige Shaped the Atlantic Slave Trade and Colonialism (Cambridge University Press, 2024)

In 1783, Ngoyo joined forces with the neighboring state of Kakongo to destroy a Portuguese fort. However, the kingdom was soon undone by the growing financial burden that the kingship entailed. With fewer and fewer possible claimants seeking the office, the kingdom effectively disintegrated in the 1830s after the nobles failed to elect a new king. In 1885, the Ngoyo signed the Treaty of Simulambuco with Portugal, and became a protectorate of that nation.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

  • Martin, Phyllis M. "Family Strategies in Nineteenth-Century Cabinda." The Journal of African History 28.1 (1987): 65-86.