1940s in Angola

1940s in Angola

The 1940s in Angola saw the emergence of the first separatist agitation in the province of Cabinda. By the 1950s Angolan Communists actively campaigned against the Salazar government's control over Angola. Cabindans rallied for independence from Portugal in 1946. The Portuguese colonial authorities responded by deporting separatists to Baía dos Tigres where they held and tortured them.cite book|last=Mullen|first=J. Atticus Ryan|coauthors=Christopher A. Mullen|year=1997|title=Unrepresented Nations & Peoples Organization, Yearbook 1997|pages=57] Viriato da Cruz and others formed the Movement of Young Intellectuals, an organization that promoted Angolan culture, in 1948. Nationalists sent a letter to the United Nations calling for Angola to be given protectorate status under UN supervision.cite book|last=Wright|first=George|year=1997|title=The Destruction of a Nation: United States Policy Towards Angola Since 1945|pages=2, 8-11, and 57] cite book|last=Oyebade|first=Adebayo O|year=2006|title=Culture And Customs of Angola|pages=XI] cite book|last=|first=|year=1977|title=Africa Year Book and Who's who|pages=238] cite book|last=Tvedten|first=Inge|year=1997|title=Angola: Struggle for Peace and Reconstruction|pages=29-36]

Colonial authorities established the Mission of Angola in 1941 and the Center of Overseas Geography and "Anais", an annual publication, in 1946.cite book|last=Gann|first=Lewis Henry|coauthors=Peter Duignan|year=1973|title=Colonialism in Africa, 1870-1960|pages=28]

Agostinho Neto, the future President of Angola, traveled to Portugal in 1947, studying medicine at the University of Coimbra.cite book|last=Sellström|first=Tor|year=1999|title=Sweden and National Liberation in Southern Africa|pages=378]

Economy

By 1940 the white population in Angola had risen to forty thousand, 2% of the population. Most of these émigrés, illiterate and landless, took the best farming land, regardless of availability, without compensating existing landowners. Colonial authorities expelled and enslaved natives, forcing them to harvest maize, coffee, and beans. Natives could "volunteer" to work on the plantations or face conscription, working for $1.50 per month. Salazar's system of slavery prompted 500,000 Angolans to flee, creating a labor shortage, which in turn created the need for more slaves for the colonial economy. Marcello Caetano, Salazar's Minister of Colonies, recognized the inherent flaws in the system, which he described as using natives "like pieces of equipment without any concern for their yearning, interests, or desires". Parliament held a closed session in 1947 to discuss the deteriorating situation. Henrique Galvão, Angolan deputy to the National Assembly, read his "Report on Native Problems in the Portuguese Colonies". Galvão condemned the "shameful outrages" he had uncovered, the enslavement of "women, of children, of the sick, [and] of decrepit old men." He concluded that in Angola, "only the dead are really exempt from forced labor." As much as 30% of all Angolan slaves died. The government's control over the natives eliminated the slave-owner's incentive to keep his slaves alive because, unlike in other slave-master societies, the state replaced deceased slaves without directly charging the slave owner. Salazar ignored Galvão's report and had him arrested in 1952.cite book|last=Walker|first=John Frederick|year=2004|title=A Certain Curve of Horn: The Hundred-Year Quest for the Giant Sable Antelope|pages=100-101]

Colonial governors

#Manoel da Cunha e Costa Marquês Mano, High Commissioner of Angola (1939-1941)
#Abel de Abreu Souto-Maior, High Commissioner of Angola (1941-1942)
#Vasco Lopes Alves, High Commissioner of Angola (1943-1947)
#Fernando Falcão Pacheco Mena, High Commissioner of Angola (1947)

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Angola (Portugal) — Overseas Province of Angola Província Ultramarina de Angola (1951 1972) Colony; Overseas Province; State ← …   Wikipedia

  • Colonial history of Angola — History of Angola This article is part of a series Precolonial history (Prehistory–1575) …   Wikipedia

  • Cuban intervention in Angola — Location of Cuba (red), Angola (green) and South Africa (blue) In November 1975, on the eve of Angola s independence, Cuba launched a large scale military intervention in support of the leftist liberation movement MPLA against United States… …   Wikipedia

  • Norwegian films of the 1940s — This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. Cinema of Norway List of Norwegian films Pre 1930 1930s …   Wikipedia

  • Czech films of the 1940s — Czech cinema List of Czech films Pre 1920 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s …   Wikipedia

  • Argentine films of the 1940s — Films produced in Argentina in the 1940s ordered by year of release on separate pages: Contents 1 1940 2 1941 3 1942 4 1943 5 …   Wikipedia

  • Danish films of the 1940s — v · d · …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese films of the 1940s — This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. Cinema of China List of Chinese films 1905–1919 1920s 1930 …   Wikipedia

  • Mexican films of the 1940s — This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. Cinema of Mexico List of Mexican films 1896–1919 1920s …   Wikipedia

  • Portuguese West Africa — Infobox Former Country native name = Provincía Ultramarina de Angola conventional long name= Overseas Province of Angola common name = Angola continent = Africa region = Southwest Africa country = Angola empire = Portugal status = Colony era =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”