Kingdom of Orungu
The Kingdom of Orungu (c. 1700–1927) (Portuguese: Reino da Orungu, French: Royaume d'Orungu) was a small, pre-colonial state of what is now Gabon in Central Africa. Through its control of the slave trade in the 18th and 19th centuries, it was able to become the most powerful of the trading centers that developed in Gabon during that period.
Origins
The Kingdom of Orungu is named for its founders, the
Government
The Orungu Kingdom was made up of some 20 clans. One of these clans held the line to succession as king, while the others exercised control over maritime commerce coming from the interior.[1] The kingdom was unique in an area where the basic political unit was a clan ruling a village. The Orungu cast this aside for a single big chief/king , which their tradition maintains was descended from a legendary figure called the Mani Pongo[3] The titles of the kingdom's political offices were adopted from the kingdom of Loango as well as a sense of clan hierarchy. These institutions likely moved with the Orungu from the Chilongo district in Loango.[2] The king's title, Agamwinboni, seems to have its origin among the Orungu themselves and does not borrow from the "mani" prefix attached to kingdoms like Loango and Kongo.
Economy
The kingdom of Orungu developed a broker culture thanks to their position on the coast. In the 17th century, the Dutch dominated the coastal trade and ivory was the major export.[4] The Orungu were a metal-working and boatbuilding culture, which allowed them to dominate the riverine trade. Maritime commerce was divided among the non-royal clans and included trades in Ivory, beeswax, dyewood, copal and ebony.[1] By the start of the 19th century, the tiny but wealthy kingdom was able to import slaves from the interior.[5]
Slavery
The Gabon coast, like that of
Culture
Despite their reputation as the most prominent slave traders in the region, some visitors to the kingdom left favorable reviews of the region and its people. John Newton visited the area in 1743 and remarked that they seemed "the most humane and moral people I ever met with in Africa; and they were the people who had the least intercourse with Europe at that time".[4] This must not have remain true for very long. As time passed, the Orungu took on European dress and customs.[4] However, the Orungu people held strongly to their traditional beliefs and were hostile to European missionaries; the mission at Baraka was a diplomatic manoeuvre as part of their negotiations with anti-slavery forces. As a result, few gained western educations thus limiting their influence in colonial administration or post-colonial politics of Gabon. Today, the former slaver tribe is one of Gabon's smaller ethnic groups numbering around 10,000 people.[1]
Decline
The fall of the Orungu Kingdom was directly tied to the European suppression of the slave trade. The king had become dependent on it and was unable to maintain the custom of royal patronage without it. This caused the kingdom to disintegrate and in 1873, Chief Ntchengué signed a treaty granting the French a post on Orungu territory.[1] In 1927, the French disestablished the monarchy. The current agamwimboni is Mbongo Ntchounga.[9]
See also
- Rulers of Orungu
- History of Gabon
- Transatlantic slave trade
Footnotes
Sources
- Gates, Henry Louis & Kwame Anthony Appiah (1999). Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience. New York City: Basic Civitas Books. pp. 2095 Pages. ISBN 0-465-00071-1.
- Gray, Christopher J. (2002). Colonial Rule and Crisis in Equatorial Africa: Southern Gabon, CA. 1850-1940. Rochester: University of Rochester Press. pp. 304 Pages. ISBN 1-58046-048-8.
- Isichei, Elizabeth. (1997). A history of African Societies to 1870. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 590 Pages. ISBN 0-521-45599-5.
- Meyer, Lysle E. (1992). The Farther Frontier: Six Case Studies of Americans and Africa, 1848-1936. Toronto: Susquehanna University Press. pp. 267 Pages. ISBN 0-945636-19-9.
- Yates, Douglas A. (1996). The Renter State in Africa: Oil Rent Dependency and Neocolonialsm in the Republic of Gabon. Trenton: Africa World Press. pp. 249 Pages. ISBN 0-86543-521-9.