A Journey from Tete to Zumbo' (Uma Viagem de Tete Ao Zumbo) by Albino Manoel Pacheco - (Fontes Historiae Africanae) (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Albino Manoel Pacheco was sent in 1861-2 to re-establish the Portuguese settlement at Zumbo at a time when Livingstone's Zambesi Expedition was still very active in the region.
- About the Author: Malyn Newitt's previous British Academy publication (Treatise on the Rivers of Cuama) was the winner of the 2011 Paul Hair Prize of the African Studies Association (US body)
- 220 Pages
- History, Modern
- Series Name: Fontes Historiae Africanae
Description
About the Book
A translation (with the original Portuguese text) of Albino Manoel Pacheco's account of his journey to Zumbo on the Zambesi in 1861-2, at a time when Livingstone's Zambesi Expedition was still very active in the region. The work contains unique information about the spirit mediums and traditional histories of the peoples of the middle Zambesi.Book Synopsis
Albino Manoel Pacheco was sent in 1861-2 to re-establish the Portuguese settlement at Zumbo at a time when Livingstone's Zambesi Expedition was still very active in the region. He wrote an account of his expedition which has long been recognised to be of exceptional importance, though it can only be found in obscure 19th century publications. In it he gives the first detailed description of the activities of the African spirit mediums and records the traditional history of the 'empire' of the Monomotapas. He also gives a history of the Zumbo settlement which draws on the traditions of the Africans of the area. Pacheco's text is exceptional in the extent to which he made use of African oral tradition and, although it is less well known than Gamitto's King Kazembe it is just as important for an understanding of African society on the eve of the 'scramble'. This edition and translation makes Pacheco's account fully available for Portuguese and English readers for the first time.
About the Author
Malyn Newitt's previous British Academy publication (Treatise on the Rivers of Cuama) was the winner of the 2011 Paul Hair Prize of the African Studies Association (US body)