Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:50:28.315Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The vanishing Mpongwe: European contact and demographic change in the Gabon River1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

K. David Patterson
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Extract

A drastic decline of aboriginal populations has been an important by-product of European commercial and imperial expansion in many parts of the world. Europeans have been aware of this phenomenon from the early days of Spanish exploration and conquest when Fray Bartolome de las Casas deplored the rapid collapse of Indian populations in the Caribbean. The problem still seemed acute in the nineteenth century. For example, the young Charles Darwin, describing the decline of the Australian Aborigines, placed most of the blame on alcoholism, introduced diseases, and the loss of hunting grounds. But these factors did not fully explain what appeared to be the impending extinction of a variety of peoples. ‘Besides these several evident causes of destruction,’ he wrote,

there appears to be some more mysterious agency at work. Wherever the European has trod, death seems to pursue the aboriginal. We may look to the wide extent of the Americas, Polynesia, the Cape of Good Hope, and Australia, and we find the same result.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1975

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

2 Darwin, Charles, Journal of Researches by Charles Darwin into the Natural History and Geology of the Countries Visited During the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle Under the Command of Capt. Fitz Roy, R.N., (2nd ed., reprinted, New York, 1957), 397.Google Scholar

3 Curtin, Philip D., The Image of Africa: British Ideas and Action, 1780–1850 (Madison, 1964), 373–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 Ibid. 375.

5 ‘Mr. Wilson's Journal’, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Letterbooks, ABC 15.1, v. 2, no. 119, 1842Google Scholar. The correspondence of the American Board Missionaries is held by the Houghton Library, Harvard University.

6 du Bellay, Griffon, ‘Le Gabon’, Le Tour du monde, XII (1865), 288.Google Scholar

7 Porter, Rollin to Anderson, Rufus, 1 10 1851, ABC 15.1, v. 3, no. 325.Google Scholar

8 Kingsley, Mary H., Travels in West Africa; Congo Français, Corisco and Cameroons (3rd ed., reprinted, London, 1965), 226, 229.Google Scholar

9 Archives Nationales, Section d'Outre-Mer (AO-M), Gabon, III, I, ‘Rapport de A. Aymes à contre-amiral Bourgois’, April 1872.

10 Kingsley, , Travels, 400, 402.Google Scholar

11 Kingsley, , Travels, 409.Google Scholar

12 Chaillu, Paul B. Du, Explorations and Adventures in Equatorial Africa (rev. ed., reprinted, New York, 1971), 432, 121Google Scholar. Emphasis in original.

13 e.g. Bushnell, Albert to Anderson, Rufus, 25 05 and 23 06 1866, ABC 15.1, v. 4, nos. 121 and 122.Google Scholar

14 AO-M, Gabon, III, I, ‘Rapport de A. Aymes’.

15 Curtin, , Image, 408–9Google Scholar; speech of Faidherbe, Louis, cited in Johnson, G. Wesley, The Emergence of Black Politics in Senegal: The Struggle for Power in the Four Communes, 1900–1920 (Stanford, 1971), 29.Google Scholar

16 Burton, Richard F., Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo (2 vols., reprinted, New York, 1967), I, 71.Google Scholar

17 Burton, , Two Trips, I, 77.Google Scholar

18 Reade, Winwood W., Savage Africa; Being the Narrative of a Tour in Equatorial, Southwestern, and Northwestern Africa (New York, 1864), 400–9.Google Scholar

19 Reade, , Savage Africa, 400.Google Scholar

20 Reade, , Savage Africa, 417.Google Scholar

21 Patterson, K. David, The Northern Gabon Coast to 1875 (Oxford, 1975 forthcoming), ch. 6.Google Scholar

22 Weinstein, Brian, Gabon: Nation-Building on the Ogooue (Cambridge, Mass., 1966), 36–9.Google Scholar

23 Alexandre, Pierre, ‘Proto-histoire du groupe beti-bulu-fang: essai de synthèse provisoire’, Cahiers d'études africaines, XX (1965), 503–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 Pereira, Duarte Pacheco, Esmeraldo de Situ Orbis, edited by Kimble, G. H. T. (London, 1937), 135–7Google Scholar. It is possible that Pacheco Pereira's impression was correct and that sixteenth-century trade contacts, for which only the most scattered references exist, caused a sharp population decline comparable to that in the Caribbean region. There are no data to support or refute such speculation; at any rate observers after 1600 seem not to have encountered large populations. See Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 1.Google Scholar

25 Barbot, John, A Description of the Coasts of North and South Guinea and of Ethiopia Inferior, Vulgarly Angola (London, 1752), 396, 390Google Scholar. For nineteenth-century data, see the sources for Table 1. Barbot, (Description, 393)Google Scholar and some contemporaries mention a 50–60 canoe Mpongwe naval expedition, which must have involved at least 1000 men if the story is accurate. See Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 1.Google Scholar

26 Bosman, Willem, A new and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea (London, 1814), 402.Google Scholar

27 Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 2.Google Scholar

28 Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 5.Google Scholar

29 ‘Wilson's Journal’, ABC 15.1, v. 2, no. 119. Of course twentieth-century census figures for Africa are also often very weak, especially for the early colonial period.

30 Bushnell, Albert to Anderson, Rufus, 21 06 1861, ABC 15.1, v. 4, no. 47Google Scholar; ‘Twenty-Seventh Annual Report, for 1868’, 6 Jan. 1860, ABC 15.1, v. 4, no. 9 1/2.

31 AO-M, Gabon, I, 3, b, ‘Rapport annuel-Établissements de la Côte d'Or et du Gabon’, by de Ladebat, Laffon, 17 02 1865.Google Scholar

32 Bellay, Du, ‘Le Gabon’, 288.Google Scholar

33 Touchard, F., ‘Notice sur le Gabon’, Revue maritime et coloniale (10, 1861), 9.Google Scholar

34 AO-M Gabon, III, I, ‘Rapport de A. Aymes’; Catteloup, Enseigne, ‘Notes sur le Gabon’, Revue maritime et coloniale, 43 (1874), 972–3.Google Scholar

35 Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 3.Google Scholar

36 Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 1.Google Scholar

37 Wilson, John Leighton, Western Africa: Its History, Condition, and Prospects (New York, 1856), 265–7Google Scholar; Walker, William, ‘Mpongwe Laws or Customs’Google Scholar, unpublished MS., n.d., William Walker Papers, Box I, State Historical Society of Wisconsin.

38 Berre, R. P. Le, ‘De l'Esclavage au Gabon’, Bulletin général de la Congrégation du Saint-Esprit, XCII (12 1873), 757–9Google Scholar. ‘Mpongweization’ was also encouraged by the use of the Mpongwe language in schools and churches by both missionary groups until the government insisted on French in 1883. I am grateful to Dr David E. Gardinier, who is preparing a study on the missions, for this suggestion.

39 Walker, William Diary, v, 20 09 1847Google Scholar, William Walker Papers, Box 2.

40 Wheeler, Douglas L., ‘A Note on Smallpox in Angola, 1670–1875’, Studia, 13–14 (1965), 356–8.Google Scholar

41 Walker, to Rufus Anderson, 22 09 1864, ABC 15.1, v. 4, no. 311.Google Scholar

42 Bushnell, to Anderson, 5 12 1865, ABC 15.1, v. 4, no. 101.Google Scholar

43 Bushnell, to Anderson, 1 03 1865Google Scholar, ABC 15.1, v. 4, no. 104; and 14 Apr. 1865, ABC 15.1, v. 4, no. 106. For the effects of the epidemic in the interior, see Chaillu, Paul B. Du, A Journey to Ashango-Land (reprinted, New York, 1971), 124–38.Google Scholar

44 AO-M, Gabon, I, 5, Laffon de Ladebat to Min. Marine, 23 Jul. 1865.

45 See Table 1.

46 The dramatic impact of smallpox on the West African coast was noted in Boyle, James, A Practical Medico-Historical Account of the Western Coast of Africa (London, 1831), 400Google Scholar; and Daniell, William F., Sketches of the Medical Topography and Native Diseases of the Gulf of Guinea, Western Africa (London, 1849), 48–9Google Scholar. For the effects of smallpox epidemics on the peoples of the upper Ogowe, see Marche, Alfred, Trois voyages en Afrique occidentale: Sénégal, Gambie, Casamance, Gabon, Ogowe (Paris, 1879), 327Google Scholar; and DrLecompte, , ‘Rapport sur les opérations de vaccination pratiquées dans l'Ogooué (Congo Français) en 1896–1897’, Annales de médicine et le pharmacie coloniale, II (1899), 98103.Google Scholar

47 ‘D.R.’, ‘The Passage from the Gold Coast to the Kingdome of Benni, or Rio de Benni, and Rio Floreado: The Citie, Court, Gentry, Apparell: Also Other Places Adjoyning, Described’ (in Purchas, Samuel, ed., Hakluytus Posthumus or Purchas His Pilgrimes, VI [Glasgow, 19051907], 362).Google Scholar

48 Bosman, , Coast of Guinea, 510.Google Scholar

49 Boteler, Thomas, Narrative of a Voyage of Discovery to Africa and Arabia, 2 vols. (London, 1835), II, 382.Google Scholar

50 Congdon, John R., ‘Private Journal Kept on the Bark Montgomery of Providence R.I., 28 08 18461809 06 1847’Google Scholar, entry for 3 Jan. 1847. Congdon's papers were consulted at the Rhode Island Historical Society in Providence.

51 ‘Rapport du Frère Antoine (Roussel) sur les divers postes de la mission du Gabon’, 17 Jul. 1853, Archives de la Congrégation des Pères du Saint-Esprit (Paris), Boîte 148, III; Lestrille, , ‘Note sur le comptoir du Gabon’, Revue Coloniale, XVI (10 1856), 437Google Scholar; Neu, R. P., ‘Travail du R. P. Neu sur le Gabon’, MS. c. 1885Google Scholar in Arch. Cong. St. Esp., Boîte 148, 1, 70, 122. The tradition of ‘ménagère’ lasted well into the 1900's and eventually resulted in a substantial métis population; Lasserre, Guy, Libreville, la ville et sa région (Paris, 1958), 242–5.Google Scholar

52 Bellay, Du, ‘Le Gabon’, 288Google Scholar; Catteloup, ‘Notes’, 972–3. Du Bellay, a government doctor, had to treat 43 Europeans and 47 Senegalese and Krumen for venereal diseases in a two year period. (‘Rapport médicale sur le Service de l'Hôpital flottant la Caravane mouillé en rade du Gabon’, Archives de médicine navale, I [1864], 25–7.)Google Scholar

53 Bowdich, T. E., Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee (3rd ed. reprinted, London, 1966), 444.Google Scholar

54 Lestrille, ‘Comptoir du Gabon’, 425. Abbé André Raponda Walker and Roger Sillans mention seven plants used to combat syphilis and eleven for other venereal diseases in their massive Les Plantes utiles du Gabon (Paris, 1961).Google Scholar

55 Aubry, S., ‘Note sur le commerce du Gabon et de ses dépendances’, Revue coloniale, XIII (1854), 471Google Scholar; AO-M, Senegal, IV, 40 d, ‘Rapport sur la situation du Gabon pendant le 3e Trimestre 1854’, 1 Oct. 1854.

56 ‘Report for 1849’, ABC 15.1, v. 3, no. 5.

57 Walker, William to Clark, N. G., 20 10 1869Google Scholar, ABC 15.1, v. 4, no. 346.

58 ‘Rapport du Frère Antoine’; ‘Rapport du Frère Pierre sur la Mission du Gabon, 1853’, Arch. Cong. St. Esp., Boîte 148, III; Neu, ‘Travail’, 103.

59 Bellay, Du, ‘Le Gabon’, 288Google Scholar; Catteloup, , ‘Notes’, 972–3Google Scholar; de Compiègne, Marquis, L'Afrique Équatoriale: Gabonais, Pahouins, Gallois (Paris, 1875), 192.Google Scholar

60 Dumett, Raymond E., ‘The Social Impact of the European Liquor Trade on the Akan of Ghana (Gold Coast and Ashanti), 1875–1910’, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, V (1974), 70–3.Google Scholar

61 Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 6Google Scholar. Chaillu, Du (Exploration and Adventures, 386)Google Scholar greatly exaggerates the number of witchcraft executions.

62 Compiègne, De, L'Afrique Équatoriale, 192Google Scholar; Walker, William to Prudential Committee, 28 12 1843Google Scholar, ABC 15.1, v. 2, no. 28.

63 Bellay, Du, ‘Le Gabon’, 282Google Scholar; Lestrille, , ‘Comptoir du Gabon’, 433.Google Scholar

64 Walker, ‘Mpongwe Laws’; Wilson, , Western Africa, 266.Google Scholar

65 Sautter, Gilles, De l'Atlantique au fleuve Congo; une géographie du sous-peuplement, 2 vols. (Paris and The Hague, 1966), II, 801.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

66 Wilson, , Western Africa, 266.Google Scholar

67 Dorjahn, Vernon R., ‘The Factor of Polygyny in African Demography’, in Bascom, William R. and Herskovits, Melville J., eds., Continuity and Change in African Cultures (Chicago, 1959). 110–12.Google Scholar

68 Lestrille, , ‘Comptoir du Gabon’, 438–9.Google Scholar

69 Devereaux, G., ‘A Typological Study of Abortion in 350 Primitive, Ancient, and Pre-Industrial Societies’, in Rosen, H., ed., Abortion in America (Boston, 1967), 97152.Google Scholar

70 Boteler, , Narrative, II, 385Google Scholar; Lestrille, , ‘Comptoir du Gabon’, 439.Google Scholar

71 As was the case with the Vili of Loango (Bruel, Georges, La France Équatoriale Africaine. Le Pays, ses habitants, la colonisation, les pouvoirs publiques [Paris, 1935], 304)Google Scholar. The Okande of the upper Ogowe also practiced abortion on a significant scale (de Montaignac, J., ‘L'Ogooué: ses populations et son avenir commercial’, Revue des deux mondes [1 11 1884], 193)Google Scholar. Walker, and Sillans, , Les Plantes utilesGoogle Scholar, describe six plants used to prepare abortive agents.

72 Himes, N. E. briefly discusses traditional birth control methods in Africa in Medical History of Contraception (Baltimore, 1936), 512Google Scholar. Walker and Sillans do not list plants with contraceptive powers in Les Plantes utiles.

73 Wilson, , Western Africa, 269Google Scholar; Chaillu, Du, Explorations and Adventures, 382.Google Scholar

74 Lestrille, , ‘Comptoir du Gabon’, 439.Google Scholar

75 Burton, , Two Trips, I, 72Google Scholar; Lasserre, , Libreville, 242–5.Google Scholar

76 Rivers, W. H. R., ‘The Psychological Factor’, in Rivers, , ed., Essays on the Depopulation of Melanesia (Cambridge, England, 1922), 93–7.Google Scholar

77 Pentony, B., ‘Psychological Causes of Depopulation of Primitive Groups’, Oceania, 24 (1953), 142–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

78 Turnbull, Colin M., The Mountain People (New York, 1972).Google Scholar

79 Patterson, , Gabon Coast, ch. 6.Google Scholar

80 Rivers, , ed., Depopulation of Melanesia, passim.Google Scholar

81 Sutter, Jean and Tabah, Leon, ‘Les Notions d'isolat et de population minimum’, Population, VI (0709 1951), 493–6.Google Scholar

82 Sautter, , De l'Atlantique, II, 998.Google Scholar

83 Alexandre, , ‘Protohistoire’, 503–4Google Scholar; Wilson, , Western Africa 242Google Scholar; Ardener, Edwin, Coastal Bantu of the Cameroons (London, 1956), 1718, 21Google Scholar; Serval, P. A., ‘Le Gabon, description de la rivière Rhamboe et de ses affluents’, Revue maritime et coloniale (1861), 404Google Scholar; Bouët-Willaumez, Louis Edward, Commerce et traite des noires aux côtes occidentales d'Afrique (Paris, 1848), 153Google Scholar; Dugast, I., Inventaire ethnique de Sud-Cameroun (Douala, 1949), 1620.Google Scholar

84 Wrigley, E. A., Population and History (New York, 1969), 96–7, 150, 174–5Google Scholar. This book is a superb introduction to historical demography.

85 Basic concepts of epidemiology are lucidly explained in SirBurnet, Macfarlane and White, David O., Natural History of Infectious Disease (4th ed., Cambridge, U.K., 1972).Google Scholar

86 Rouget, Fernand, L'Expansion coloniale au Congo Français (Paris, 1906), 343CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Challaye, Felicien, Le Congo Français: La Question internationale du Congo (Paris, 1909), 23.Google Scholar

87 Bruel, , La France Équatoriale, 308.Google Scholar

88 Sautter, , De l'Atlantique, II, 796801Google Scholar. The Mpongwe numbered about 1800 in 1954 and their decline may have been arrested. See Hauser, André, ‘Notes sur les Omyene du Bas-Gabon’, Bull. de l'IFAN, sér. B, XVI (1954), 403–4Google Scholar; and Sautter, , De l'Atlantique, II, 802.Google Scholar

89 Kingsley, , Travels, 226, 229Google Scholar; Haug, Ernest, ‘Le Bas Ogooué: notice géographique et ethnographique’, Annales de géographie, XII (1903), 169–71Google Scholar; Hauser, , ‘Notes sur les Omyene’, 403.Google Scholar

90 Nassau, Robert Hamill, My Ogowe: Being a Narrative of Daily Incidents During Sixteen Years in Equatorial Weit Africa (New York, 1914), 36, 77, 91, 115Google Scholar; Bruel, Georges, Notes géographiques sur le bassin de l'Ogoowe (Paris, 1911), 72.Google Scholar

91 Lecompte, , ‘Opérations de vaccination’, 98103Google Scholar; Walker, R. B. N., ‘Relation d'une tentative d'exploration en 1866 de la rivière de l'Ogowe et de la recherche d'un grand lac devant se trouver dans l'Afrique centrale’, Annales des voyages, I (1870), 72, 79, 139–40Google Scholar; Brunschwig, Henri, Brazza Explorateur: L'Ogooué 1874–1879 (Paris, 1966), 74.Google Scholar

92 DrGeorgelin, , ‘Notes médicales sur le Gabon. Les facteurs de dépopulation’, Annales de médicine et le pharmacie coloniale, XVIII (1920), 62–3Google Scholar. A study in 1936 showed that about 30% of adult females in the lower Ogowe were childless. Balandier, Georges, The Sociology of Black Africa; Social Dynamics in Central Africa (New York, 1970), 173.Google Scholar

93 Balandier, , Sociology, 160–1.Google Scholar

94 Georgelin, , ‘Notes médicales’, 60.Google Scholar

95 Estève, H., ‘Enquête démographique comparative en pays Fang. District d'Oyem (Gabon), 1952–1955’, Médicine tropicale, XVII (1957), 96–7.Google Scholar

96 Estève, , ‘Enquête’, 96.Google Scholar

97 Balandier, , Sociology, 94.Google Scholar

98 Estève, , ‘Enquête’, 100–1.Google Scholar

99 Lasserre, , Libreville, 241.Google Scholar

100 Sautter, , De l'Atlantique, II, 801Google Scholar; Balandier, , Sociology, 172–3, 186.Google Scholar

101 Sautter, , De l'Atlantique, II, 983–6Google Scholar; Coquery-Vidrovitch, Catherine, Le Congo au temps des grandes compagnies concessionnaires 1898–1930 (Paris, 1972), 487506.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

102 Sautter, , De l'Atlantique, I, 255, 624–5.Google Scholar

103 Lotte, A-J., ‘Aperçu sur la situation démographique de l'A.E.F.’, Médicine tropicale, XIII (1953), 306–7Google Scholar: Kimble, George H. T., Tropical Africa, 2 vols. (New York, 1960), I, 117.Google Scholar

104 Sautter, , De l'Atlantique, I, 252–6Google Scholar. Sautter thinks that social disruption is a major factor in this region.

105 Romaniuk, A., ‘Infertility in Tropical Africa’, in Caldwell, John C. and Okonjo, Chukuka, eds., The Population of Tropical Africa (New York, 1968), 214–24Google Scholar. Based largely on data from Equateur Province, Romaniuk believes that venereal diseases are a major cause of low fertility.

106 Hair, P. E. H., ‘Ethnolinguistic Continuity on the Guinea Coast’, J. Afr. Hist., VIII (1967), 248.Google Scholar

107 Curtin, Philip D., ‘Epidemiology and the Slave Trade’, Political Science Quarterly, LXXXIII (06 1968), 216Google Scholar. Emphasis in the original.

108 Cook, Sherburne F. and Borah, Woodrow, Essays in Population History: Mexico and the Caribbean (Berkeley, 1971)Google Scholar; Dobyns, Henry F., ‘Estimating Aboriginal American Population, I: An Appraisal of Techniques with a New Hemispheric Estimate’, Current Anthropology, VII (1966), 395416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

109 Lessa, William A., ‘Depopulation on Ulithi’, Human Biology, XXVII (1955), 161–83Google Scholar; Lambert, S. M., The Depopulation of Pacific Races (Honolulu, 1934).Google Scholar

110 Curtin, , ‘Epidemiology’, 199200Google Scholar. S. F. Cook stresses the key role of new diseases in ‘Demographic Consequences of European Contact with Primitive Peoples’, Annals of the American Academy of Political Sciences 237 (1945), 107–11Google Scholar. Smallpox and other diseases were probably spread in the Sudanic zone by North African merchants and could possibly have reached the coast by overland trade contacts.

111 Klein, Martin A., ‘African Social History’, African Studies Review, XV (1972), 97–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar