Mbongo

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Mbongo (also called Mbengo, Nambongo, and Nembongo) is the common ancestor of the Sawa peoples of Cameroon according to their oral traditions. Sawa genealogies usually place Mbongo at the head of the lineage.[1] Mbongo's son, usually given as Mbedi a Mbongo, lived at Piti, Cameroon on the Dibamba River. From there, Mbongo's grandsons migrated south toward the coast to found the various Sawa ethnic groups.[2] Some stories make these migrants Mbongo's sons rather than grandsons.[3]

Mbongo does not seem to be a historical figure. Rather, he is a

mythological age.[4] Edwin Ardener calls him a "shadowy" figure and ascribes him to a "proto-tradition" of the coastal peoples.[5] Edwin Ardener and Shirley Ardener place Mbongo in the "legendary or mythical stratum" of Sawa oral histories.[6]

The Sawa highly esteem descent from Mbongo as a marker of ethnic inclusion. A Bakweri

Old Calabar, known as Calborch to the Dutch, may also derive from Calbongo, and ultimately Mbongo.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ However, there are rival traditions, such as a Bakweri myth that claims Mbongo as the brother of Ewale a Mbedi. (Austen and Derrick 14).
  2. ^ Austen and Derrick 10.
  3. ^ a b c Ardener 16.
  4. ^ Ardener and Ardener 364.
  5. ^ Ardener 28.
  6. ^ Ardener and Ardener 363.
  7. ^ Austen and Derrick 14.
  8. ^ Dapper, Dr. O. (1668). Naukeurige Beschrijvinge der Afrikanische Gewesten. Amesterdam. Quoted in Ardener 14.
  9. ^ Ardener 15–16.
  10. ^ Barbot, John (1732). "An abstract of a voyage to New Calabar river, or Rio Real, in the year 1699 . . ." In Awnsham ChurchillZChurchill, Messers (1732). A Collection of Voyages and Travels, some now printed for the first time from Original Manuscripts . . . . London. Quoted in Ardener 15.

References

  • Ardener, Edwin (1996). Kingdom on Mount Cameroon: Studies in the History of the Cameroon Coast, 1500–1970. New York: Bergahn Books.
  • Ardener, Edwin, and Ardener, Shirley (1996). "Preliminary chronological notes for the Cameroon coast". Kingdom on Mount Cameroon: Studies in the History of the Cameroon Coast, 1500–1970. New York: Bergahn Books.
  • Austen, Ralph A., and Derrick, Jonathan (1999): Middlemen of the Cameroons Rivers: The Duala and their Hinterland, c. 1600–c.1960. Cambridge University Press.
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