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Famine and disease in the history of Angola c. 1830–1930*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Extract

In Angola, climatic instability contributed to maintaining a precarious balance between food resources, population and disease long before the nineteenth century. Periods of exceptionally irregular rainfall, lasting several years, were preceded or accompanied by plagues of locusts which caused famines at least once every decade. The coastal lowland and the extreme south were especially vulnerable. Prolonged hunger crises led to malnutrition, lowered resistance to disease and epidemic outbreaks, especially of smallpox. A rhythm of drought and smallpox can be discerned in Angola, at least since the seventeeth century. From the 1830s the gradual decline of the overseas slave trade and rise of commerce in raw materials and cash crops brought important demographic changes. These contributed to the worsening famines and epidemic crises of the late nineteenth century. Commercial instability and rural depopulation hindered the growth of Portuguese plantation prosperity. Soon after, however, similar crises aided Portuguese military conquest in Angola by weakening African ability to mobilize effective resistance. In the twentieth century malnutrition continued to be the most widespread problem of Angola's Africans and on occasion it drove them to revolt.

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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

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95 AHU, Angola, 2a Repartição 2a Secção, pasta i, letter of the king of Kongo, 8 June 1873, enclosed in letter 173 of the Governor General, i July 1873.

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99 AHU, Angola, CG, 2a Repartição 2a Secção, pasta i, report of the chefe of Massangano, enclosed in letter 157 of the Governor General, i June 1973.

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111 The social and political implications of losses of land and cattle within African societies in southern Angola is analysed by Gervase Clarence-Smith in ‘Underdevelopment and Class Formation’, Slaves, Peasants and Capitalists and ‘Capitalist Penetration among the Nyaneka’.

112 Correia, Silva, ‘O Clima’, 414.Google Scholar

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120 BOGPA, 1882, 20 (20 05), 344.Google Scholar

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122 AHU, Angola, 2a Repartição 2a Secção, pasta 14, letter 322 of the Governor General, 11 August 1890.

123 AHU, Angola, 2a Repartição 2a Secccedil;ão, pasta i, report of the chefe of Malange, enclosed in letter of the Governor General, 1873.

124 British Foreign Office, Annual Series, Diplomatic and Consular reports on Trade and Finance, nos. 1105, 1065, 1333.

125 Barroso, , ‘O Congo’ 109Google Scholar; de Serpa Pimentel, Jaime Forjaz, ‘Clima do Congo: Ligeiros Dados sôbre as Condiccedil;ões Meteorológicas do Districto do Congo e Duas Palavras acerca de seu clima”, Revista Portugueza Colonial e Marítima, 1°; ano, 2° semestre (Lisboa, 18971898), 665–72.Google Scholar

126 BOGPA, 1889, 25 (22 06), 404Google Scholar; 37 (14 September), 570.

127 Barroso, , ‘O Congo’, 113.Google Scholar

128 Childs, , Umbundu Kinship and Character, 209–10.Google Scholar

129 AHU, Angola, 2a Reparticao 2a Secção, Curadoria Geral, no. 4, Alfredo Trony to the Minister of the Navy and Overseas Affairs, 26 October 1877.

130 This assessment relates to the following concelhos: Muxima, Massangano, Cam-bambe, Pungo Andongo, Icolo e Bengo, Barra do Bengo, Barra do Dande, Alto Dande, Golungo Alto, Nzenza do Golungo, Calumbo and Dembos. The population of these districts was calculated at between 200,000 and 300,000 in censuses taken from the 1820s onwards. In 1876 the population was said to total around 228,435. In 1898 it was down to 115,172: compare Ferreira Ribeiro, Estudos, 254 and Annuário Estatístico, 1898,3. While far from accurate, these figures reflect an obvious and dramatic trend. In 1928, the population of the district of Cuanza-Norte was put at 140,527: see Ornelas, Augusto and de Mesquita, Bruno, Relatório da Missão Médica de Assistência aos Indígenas do Cuanza (1929), 15.Google Scholar See also de Sousa, Jacinto, Relatório da Missão Médica Volante de Assistência aos Indigenas do Dande (Lisboa, 1928).Google Scholar

131 See, for example, da Silva, Avelino Manuel, Serviço de Assistencia aos Indigenas no Distrito do Congo, 1930 (Lisboa, 1930).Google Scholar

132 See, for example, Leitao, Maia, Relatorio, 127–8.Google Scholar

133 Elderly inhabitants of Golungo Alto questioned in 1900 agreed that sleeping sickness was first noticed in the area around 1873. However, doctors also learned that the disease was not unknown previously, knowledge of it having been handed down through the generations: see Leitão, Maia, Relatorio, 15, 44–5 and 98–9.Google Scholar

134 BOCPA, 1870, 52 (24 12), 723Google Scholar; 1871, 27 (8 July), 335.

135 AHU, Angola, 2a Repartição 2a Secção, reports of the chefes of Barra do Bengo, Nzenza do Golungo and Massangano, enclosed in pasta 45, letter 94 of the Governor General, 30 July 1875; pasta 46, letter 26, 22 January 1876; and pasta 47, letter 386, 25 October 1877.

136 AHU, Angola, ia Repartição 2a Secção, pasta 5, ‘Relatório da Viagem ao Bembe do Cônego António José de Sousa Barroso’, published in Angolana, ii, 447. Many of the slaves imported into Martinique from the Congo region in 1869 were infected with sleeping sickness: see Lambrecht, Frank L., ‘Aspects of the Evolution and Ecology of Tsetse flies and Trypanosomiasis’, Journal of African History v, i (1964), 19.Google Scholar

137 Lambrecht, , ‘Tsetse flies and Trypanosomiasis’, 59.Google Scholar

138 Mora, A. Damas, A Luta contra a Moléstia do Sono em Angola (Luanda, 1934), 223.Google Scholar Similar conditions existed in Uige.

139 Compare AHU, Angola, CG, statistical chart of population, 20 February 1878 and Annu´rio Estatístico, 1898, 3.Google Scholar

140 Dias, ‘Changing Patterns of Power’, forthcoming; the number of labourers on the Cazengo plantations was apparently reduced to around 4,000 by 1895: see Birmingham, , ‘The Coffee Barons of Cazengo’, 529.Google Scholar During 1914, a total of around 13,000 labourers were employed in the same district, roughly 5,000 of whom were day labourers: Diniz, F., Negócios Indigenas (Lisboa, 19131918), 11 (1914), 73.Google Scholar

141 Mora, Damas, A Luta, i.Google Scholar

142 Ibid. 4. Silva, , Serviço de Assistência aos Indígenas no Congo, 1011Google Scholar; Sarmento, Alexandre, ‘História breve de uma grande obra: O Combate à Doença do Sono em Angola’, Boletim Clinico e Estatistico (Hospital do Ultramar), ii serie, ano vii, no. 3 (1953), 25.Google Scholar

143 The exception was Maia Leitão, Relatório. But see Annibel Bettencourt, Ayres Kopke, José de Rezende junior, Gomes and Mendes, Anníbel Correia, Doençdo somno. Trabalhos executados até 6 de Agosto de 1902 pela missão enviada a Angola pelo Exmo. Ministro da Marinha (Lisboa, 1902).Google Scholar See also Damas Mora, A Luta; Sarmento, O Combate a Doença do Sono, etc.

144 Leitao, Maia, Relatorio, especially 127–8.Google Scholar

145 See Sarmento, particularly, O Combate á Doença do Sono, 26Google Scholar, quoting from the report of Dondo's medical officer, Dr Annunciação Velho in 1911. See also Mattenklodt, , ‘Die Kisama’, in Koloniale Völkerkunde, i (Jahrgang, 6, 1944), 75.Google Scholar I am grateful for this last reference to Dr Beatrix Heintze. See also BOGPA, 1903, 13 (28 03), 192.Google Scholar

146 BOGPA, 1899 (12 03)Google Scholar; by contrast, in Luanda, only one death was listed from sleeping sickness out of a total of 60 recorded during the same month.

147 AHA, avulsos, maço 16–9–4, commandant of Nhangue Apepe to the chefe of Cambambe, 15 April 1899.

148 See BOGPA, 1903, 30 (25 07), 447, 40 (3 10), 600Google Scholar; 190, 14 (2 April), 229; 27 (2 July), 478–9, etc. The psychological impact of sleeping sickness in Dondo around the turn of the century is skilfully evoked in the novel by de Assis Junior, Antonio, O Segredo da Morta, 1935 (reprinted, Lisboa, 1978).Google Scholar

149 Portugal em Africa, 10 (1903), 347.Google Scholar

150 See Damas Mora, A Luta; Sarmento, O Combate á doença do Sono. For legislation, see BOGPA, 1911, 33 (19 08Google Scholar) et passim; also BOGPA, 32, i° Serie, 2 08 1926.Google Scholar

151 See Ribeiro, Ferreira, Estudos, 194Google Scholar, footnote. The most acute form of the disease was referred to as palustre perniciosa at this date (pernicious malaria). Of 29 known cases in Luanda in 1871, 21 ended in death. Altogether there were i,130 cases of malarial fevers recorded in this year in Luanda hospital, with a total of 31 deaths: see Correia, Silva,.‘O Clima’, 413.Google Scholar

152 Correia, Silva, ‘O Clima’, 416Google Scholar; see also BOGPA, 1904, 27 (2 07), 478–9Google Scholar: malaria was said to be ‘raging’ in Dondo in this year.

153 Ribeiro, Ferreira, Estudos, 38Google Scholar. By 1929, between 50 and 100 per cent of workers on European plantations in the Kwanza district were migrants from other districts: see Ornelas, and Mesquita, , Relatorio, 13.Google Scholar

154 See Curtin, , Feierman, , Thompson, and Vansina, , African History, 553.Google Scholar

155 See Clarence-Smith, and Moorsom, , ‘Underdevelopment and Class Formation’, 375Google Scholar; Clarence-Smith, , Slaves, Peasants and Capitalists, 59Google Scholar. Deaths from cattle disease, possibly rinderpest, were already raising the price of meat in Luanda in 1895: BOGPA, 1895, ii (16 03)Google Scholar. See also BOGPA, 1899, 2 (14 01), 21Google Scholar; 6 (ii February), 82.

156 AHU, Angola, ia Repartição 2a Secção, caixa 18, letter 295 of the Governor General, 21 March 1898.

157 See BOGPA, 1902, 4 (25 01), 34–5Google Scholar. Silva Correia, ‘A Varíola’. Similarly severe epidemics of smallpox were also reported from Guinea, Cape Verde and Mozambique in 1901–2: see Portugal em Africa, 8 (1901), 320, 375, 443 and 71.Google Scholar

158 Portugal em Africa, 8 (1901), 561, 623, 626 and 721Google Scholar; 10 (1903), 356.

159 Clarence-Smith, and Moorsom, ‘Underdevelopment and Class formation’, 375Google Scholar; Clarence-Smith, , Slaves, Peasants and Capitalists, 77.Google Scholar

160 Pelissier, , Les Guerres Grises, 188.Google Scholar

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162 See Almeida, Joao de, ‘Relatorio da Colona de Operações aos Dembos’, in Relatório da Secção de Agricultura do Governo Geral de Angola (Luanda, 1907), 101–63Google Scholar; Magno, David, Guerras Angolanas (Porto, 1934).Google Scholar

163 See British Foreign Office, Annual Series, Diplomatic and Consular Reports on Trade and Finance: Portugal, no. 1069.

164 See, for example, da Fonseca, F. Duque and Xabregas, Joaquim, ‘Problemas de Nutrição de Angola – Aspectos de Luanda’, Boletim do Jnstituto de Angola, 8 (1957)Google Scholar. Also compare Roberts, Zambia, ii.

165 See, for example, Ribeiro, Ferreira, Estudos, 246Google Scholar; Felgas, Hélio A. Esteves, As Populações Nativas do Congo Portugues (Carmona, 1958), 37Google Scholar; Clarence-Smith, , Slaves, Peasants and Capitalists, 70.Google Scholar

166 Leitao, , Relatorio, 12.Google Scholar

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168 Neuparth, Eduardo Augusto, Apontamentos para a Historia da Cotnpanhia Agrícola de Cazengo (Lisboa, 1904), 22.Google Scholar

169 Leitao, Relatorio. In this report, much of the mortality among labourers on the Cazengo plantations is attributed to yaws, or framboesia. See also da Costa, Alfredo Gomes, ‘A Higiene e a assistência clínica aos Trabalhadores das Fazendas Agricolas da Regiao do Amboim’, Revista Medica de Angola, ii, iv (1923), 367–75.Google Scholar

170 Diniz, , Negocios Indígenas, i (1913), 83.Google Scholar

171 Cuanza Norte, ii July 1918.

172 Cuanza Norte, ii July 1918.

173 A Provincia de Angola, 10 March 1932.

174 See A Provincia de Angola, 1933–4, passim.

175 AHU, Sala 12, Angola Diversos, caixa i, letter addressed to Dr Armindo Monteiro, 30 September 1932; also Angola 3, 31 03 1933.Google Scholar

176 A Província de Angola, 15 January 1934.

177 See particularly the article by Dr Damas Mora in A Provincia de Angola, 23 August 1932. Angola (3, 31 March 1933) pinpointed tuberculosis as having provoked a notable decline in population throughout the colony.

178 Simmons, James S., Global Epidemiology, a Geography of Disease and Sanitation, ii (Philadelphia, 1944), 325–34Google Scholar, cited by Wheeler, , ‘A note on smallpox in Angola’, 355.Google Scholar

179 A Provincia de Angola, 20 August 1940.

180 See O Estandarte, XI, 97 (1943)Google Scholar. I am grateful to Dorothy Keet for this reference.

181 See Correia, Silva, ‘O Clima’, 440–53Google Scholar; Mora, Damas, ’A Peste’, 317–29.Google Scholar

182 Angola. The Organ of the Angola Evangelical Mission, no. 2, vol. 12 (02 1914), iiGoogle Scholar. Nzambi was the High God and creater of all things, who controlled the condition of the whole natural world: see Roberts, , Zambia, 73.Google Scholar

183 Angola, The Organ of the Angola Evangelical Mission, op. cit.

184 See Pelissier, , Les Guerres Grises, 232–48.Google Scholar

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