Kongo is the first kingdom on the …

Years: 1396 - 1539
Kongo is the first kingdom on the west coast of central Africa to come into contact with Europeans.

The earliest such contact occurs in 1483 when the Portuguese explorer Diogo Cão reaches the mouth of the Congo River.

After the initial landing, Portugal and Kongo exchange emissaries, so that each kingdom is able to acquire knowledge of the other.

Impressed by reports from his returning subjects, Nzinga Nkuwu, the manikongo, asks the Portuguese crown for missionaries and technical assistance in exchange for ivory and other goods.

The ruler who comes to power in 1506 takes a Christian name, Afonso.

He too admires European culture and science, and he calls on Portugal for support in education, military matters, and the conversion of his subjects to Christianity.

Many historians, in fact, maintain that Afonso behaved more like a ''Christian" than most of his teachers.

Afonso, therefore, soon comes into conflict with Portuguese bent on exploiting Kongo society.

The most insidious and lasting aspect of this exploitation is the slave trade.

Not long after Afonso becomes king, Portugal begins to turn its attention to the exploration of Asia and the Americas.

As Portugal's interest in another of its colonies, Brazil, increases, its interest in Africa declines.

Over time, the Portuguese crown comes to view Kongo primarily as a source of slaves.

Slaves are used first on the sugar plantations on nearby Portuguese-claimed islands but later are sent mainly to Brazil.

Once Kongo is opened to the slave trade, halting or limiting it becomes impossible.

Afonso's complaints to the Portuguese crown about the effects of the trade in his lands are largely ignored.

By the 1520s, most of the missionaries have returned to Portugal, and most of the remaining whites are slave traders who disregard the authority of the manikongo.

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