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- Nzinga of Matamba in a new perspective - Cambridge University Press . . .
Nzinga of Matamba, the seventeenth-century African monarch known primarily for her enmity to the Portuguese in Angola, also faced hostility from her own Mbundu people and the opposition of neighbouring African rulers throughout her long career
- Nzinga of Matamba in a New Perspective - JSTOR
Journal of African History, XVI 2 (1975), pp 2oI-2i6 201 Printed in Great Britain NZINGA OF MATAMBA IN A NEW PERSPECTIVE' BY JOSEPH C MILLER QUEEN NZINGA of Matamba, the seventeenth-century Mbundu monarch who fought Portuguese armies, kept African politics in a state of turmoil, and helped to develop the Angolan slave trade from the i620S to
- AfricaBib | Nzinga of Matamba in a New Perspective
Describes how queen Nzinga of Matamba, the seventeenth-century Mbundu monarch, who was disqualified by her sex from many Mbundu political offices reserved for males, overcame these disadvantages by skilful manipulation of the alien Imbangala warrior bands present on the Mbundu borders, the Portuguese, and the Dutch, and dominated Mbundu polities
- Journal of African History, xvi 2 (1975), pp. 201-21 Printed in Great . . .
2O2 JOSEPH C MILLER The proliferation of Nzinga's historical images seems to call for a new synthesis that might reintegrate her seemingly split personality One plausible hypothesis, emerging from re-reading the familiar documentary sources in the light of what may be reconstructed of seventeenth-century
- Enslaved. org
Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2017 Miller, Joseph C “Nzinga of Matamba in a New Perspective ” The Journal of African History 16, 2 (1975): 201-216
- Njinga Ana de Sousa - South African History Online
The Matamba Ndongo Kingdom in the 1630s Source: Miller, Joseph C 1975 “Njinga of Matamba in a New Perspective” in The Journal of African History, Vol 16, No 2 (1975), Cambridge University Press In the 1640s events in Europe would aid Njinga's struggle against the Portuguese
- Nbandi, Ana Nzinga “Queen Ginga” - Michigan State University
Joseph Miller (1975) has argued, how she “[overcame] the disadvantages of her lowly origins, her alienation from the kin groups of her state, doubts about her occupation of a title whose previous occupant she had murdered, and her sex” (p 213)
- Vol. 16, No. 2, 1975 of The Journal of African History on JSTOR
The Journal of African History (JAH) publishes articles and book reviews ranging widely over the African past, from the late Stone Age to the present The Kisra Legend and the Distortion of Historical Tradition Download; XML; Nzinga of Matamba in a New Perspective Download; XML; The Vanishing Mpongwe: European Contact and Demographic Change
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