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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 August 2012
The Luimbi-speaking people occupy a region in the centre of Angola. This area is of a somewhat irregular shape, approximately 200 miles from north to south, between latitudes 10° 30′ and 14° S. and varying from 30 to 100 miles in width roughly between longitudes 17° and 19° E. In general their home thus lies along the Quanza valley from the source of that river to near its confluence with the Luandu river. To the east is the 150-mile stretch of the ‘hungry country’, a sandy but in parts fertile and well-wooded region which is, nevertheless, uninhabited because, by local tradition, it ‘lies under the curse of a king’. This divides the Luimbi from the arrogant, fierce, and once cannibal Chokwe who, however, are tending to infiltrate both south and north.
page 427 note 1 My wife and I lived among these people for twelve years, and our elder son, Peter, was born there and adopted by the clan of the chief of Chaneka mbala and given the latter's name of Kambonge meaning ‘Little Fort’. This capital village is mentioned by Arnot, F. S. (Garenganze, 1889, pp. 136–45).Google Scholar
page 427 note 2 Childs, G. M., Umbundu Kinship and Character, London, 1949, p. 171.Google Scholar
page 428 note 1 Smith, and Dale, , The Ila-speaking Peoples of Northern Rhodesia, London, 1920, pp. 25–28.Google Scholar
page 428 note 2 Correia, Mendes, Raças do Império, Oporto, 1943.Google Scholar
page 428 note 3 Africa, Jan. 1949, p. 53.
page 429 note 1 McCulloch, M., The Southern Lunda and Related Peoples, London, 1951.Google Scholar
page 429 note 2 Doke, C.M., Bantu; Modern Grammatical, Phonetical and Lexicographical Studies, London, 1945.Google Scholar
page 429 note 3 Guthrie, M., Classification of Bantu Languages, London, 1948.Google Scholar