Battle of Pungo Andongo

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Battle of Pungo Andongo
Pungo Andongo, Malange, Angola, 2008.JPG
Rocky outcrops in the vicinity of Pungo Andongo
DateFebruary 1671 - 18 November 1671
Location
Pungo Andongo
Result

Portuguese victory.

  • Pungo Andongo occupied.
Belligerents
Flag Portugal (1640).svg  Portugal Kingdom of Ndongo
Commanders and leaders
Luís Lopes de Sequeira

Dom João Hari

  • Dom Diogo Cabanga

The Battle of Pungo Andongo, also known as the siege of Pungo Andongo was a military engagement in what is today Angola between Portugal and the Kingdom of Ndongo (Andongo in Portuguese) whose capital, Pungo Andongo, also known as Pedras Negras, was besieged and after a nine-month encirclement taken by storm, plundered and occupied by the Portuguese.

Contents

The entire royal family of Andongo was captured, and a fort built on Pungo Andongo. The Kingdom of Andongo therefore ceased to exist.

Background

In 1670, the Portuguese were routed at the Battle of Kitombo by the forces of the Count of Soyo Estevão da Silva, supported by the Dutch. Meanwhile, the pro-Portuguese King Luís was driven from the throne of Kitombo by a rival, Dom António Carrasco, who likewise slaughtered the Portuguese then in the settlement. [1]

Encouraged by such setbacks, the King of Ndongo Dom João Hari (Ngola Hari) took the chance to revolt against Portuguese suzerainty, cut all communications between Luanda and the Portuguese-allied Kingdom of Cassanje and attacked Portuguese trade caravans. [2] He dispatched envoys to a number of neighbouring chiefdoms, among them the kingdom of Matamba, seeking to rally them to his cause against the Portuguese. [2]

The then Portuguese governor of Angola Francisco de Távora reacted to these events accordingly, requesting reinforcements from Portuguese Brazil, and quickly dispatching to the Portuguese fort at Ambaca a small forward contingent under the command of Luís Lopes de Sequeira, who had previously distinguished himself at the Battle of Mbwila. Bloody skirmishes between the Portuguese and the forces of Andongo had already taken place before a large Portuguese fleet arrived in Luanda at the sound of powerful salvos, bearing significant reinforcements from Brazil. [2] Furthermore, as many Portuguese soldiers and cannibal Imbangala mercenaries as possible were assembled from the garrisons at Ilamba, Lumbo, Massangano, Cambambe, Muxima and elsewhere. [2]

The projected campaign was to be the largest military campaign the Portuguese had yet undertaken in Angola. [2]

The siege

The Portuguese marched their forces from Ambaca to Pungo Andongo on August 2, under constant harassment by African skirmishes, who sought to prevent the Europeans from closing in on the stronghold. [3] Sequeira nevertheless managed to reach the settlement and set up camp in its vicinity. [4] All attempts at diplomatic talks were met with vigorous and violent rejection by the besieged, hence the Portuguese initiated the construction of siege-works in expectation for a drawn-out siege, digging trenches and erecting barricades, while the forces of Andongo frequently conducted sallies against them. [2]

On August 27 1671, a particularly vigorous attack commanded by Dom Diogo Cabanga, brother of the king of Andongo, on Portuguese lines was repulsed by small arms and cannon fire. [2] As Portuguese reinforcements flowed in to their camp from Luanda, king João sent a gift of slaves to the Portuguese commander, and proposed to give himself in after the siege had been lifted; the siege was not lifted, but the king was informed he'd be treated mercifully if he surrendered - this message went unanswered. [2]

As reports reached Sequeira that Matamba was preparing a large relief force, he ordered that Pungo Andongo be taken by storm as soon as possible. [5] Thus on the night of November 18 the Portuguese scaled the rocky outcrops surrounding the fortified settlement under cover of the darkness; the first to breach the fortified perimeter was captain Manuel Nunes Cortês, at the head of a party of African auxiliaries. [5] A violent melee ensured, but the settlement was eventually subdued. [5] Many died in the fight and ensuing plunder, some jumping from the high cliffs to escape capture by the Portuguese. [5]

Aftermath

The Portuguese took many prisoners, among them many nobles and the entire royal family of Andongo. King João Hari had fled to Libolo, but he was captured and delivered to the Portuguese, and executed. [6] The rest of the royal family of Andongo was then forced into exile either in Portuguese Brazil or to live in monasteries in Portugal. [6] The Kingdom of Andongo was therefore dissolved and its lands annexed to the Portuguese Crown. A fort was then built on Pungo Andongo. [7] Some of the captives were found to be worth nothing to the Portuguese, as they were nobles protected by prior terms from being taken captive and ransomed. [6]

See also

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References

  1. Gastão de Sousa Dias: Os Portugueses Em Angola, Agência Geral do Ultramar, 1959, p. 155.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Dias, 1959, p. 156.
  3. Dias, 1959, pp. 156-157.
  4. Dias, 1959, p. 157.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Dias, 1959, p. 158.
  6. 1 2 3 Silvia Hunold Lara: DEPOIS DA BATALHA DE PUNGO ANDONGO (1671): O DESTINO ATLÂNTICO DOS PRÍNCIPES DO NDONGO in Revista Histórica de São Paulo, 2016
  7. Angola - The Defeat of Kongo and Ndongo, Country Studies US