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The fourth edition of Historical Dictionary of Guinea-Bissau relates the history of Guinea-Bissau through a chronology, an introductory essay, a bibliography, and hundreds of cross-referenced dictionary entries on significant persons, events, places, organizations.
Guinea-Bissau --- History
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Despite high degrees of cultural and ethnic diversity as well as prevailing political instability, Guinea-Bissau’s population has developed a strong sense of national belonging. By examining both contemporary and historical perspectives, A Creole Nation explores how creole identity, culture, and political leaders have influenced postcolonial nation-building processes in Guinea-Bissau, and the ways in which the phenomenon of cultural creolization results in the emergence of new identities.
Creoles (Guniea -Bissau). --- Guinea-Bissau --- Ethnic relations.
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Portugal. --- Parachute troops. --- Revolution (Angola : 1961-1975) --- Revolution (Guinea-Bissau : 1963-1974) --- Revolution (Mozambique : 1964-1975) --- 1961-1975 --- Angola --- Guinea-Bissau --- Mozambique --- History
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As the end result of a multidisciplinary investigation project conducted in Africa (PTDC/AFR/64207/2006, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia), this publication about Poverty and Peace in the Portuguese-speaking African Countries has the purpose, on one hand, of presenting the main conclusions of the studies conducted in these countries and, on the other, to provide a collection of guidelines for future research relevant to the comprehension of the combination of both phenomena.
Sociology --- Africa --- poverty --- peace --- Mozambique --- Angola --- Guinea-Bissau --- São Tome and Principe --- África --- Moçambique
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National liberation movements --- Guinea-Bissau --- Cabo Verde --- Politics and government. --- Politics and government
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Ce tome présente le Ta:rikh Mandinka, un manuscrit rédigé en Arabe et en Mandinka, originaire du village de Bijini en Guinée-Bissau. Inédit jusqu’à présent, le manuscrit consiste en une compilation structurée et très originale sur le Kaabu, réunissant divers récits et chroniques focalisant les débuts mythiques et la chute de cet « empire » païen au milieu du 19ième siècle. Deux versions du manuscrit et plusieurs interprétations (lectures) du Ta:rikh sont reproduites, transcrites, traduites et analysées en tenant compte de questions philologiques, historiques et anthropologiques. L'analyse regarde la communauté cléricale de Bijini en tant que lieu de transmission de savoirs dans un contexte local et régional. Le point focal du livre est l’importance de la diaspora cléricale des Mandinka et Jaakanka (Jakhanké) dans le processus de la construction de l’histoire de l’ « empire » sòoninkee du Kaabu en Sénégambie. Le tome contient un glossaire des noms et des termes mentionnés par les sources, des illustrations, des tableaux, des cartes et des photographies. This volume presents a hitherto unpublished manuscript written in Arabic and Mandinka from the Muslim village of Bijini in Guinea-Bissau, the Ta:rikh Mandinka, a unique and structured compilation unfolding the pagan 'empire' of Kaabu from its mythical beginnings to its downfall in the nineteenth century. Two existing manuscript versions and several oral interpretations of the Ta:rikh are reproduced, transcribed, translated, compared and analysed considering philological, historical and social-anthropological issues (chaps. 1-3). The fourth chapter deals with the clerical community of Bijini as a place of knowledge-transfer in its local setting and within regional networks. The focus of the book is on the importance of the Mandinka and Jakhanka clerical diaspora in the making of the history of the Sooninkee 'empire' of Kaabu in Senegambia. The volume contains a glossary of names and terms mentioned in the sources and is illustrated with maps, photographs and drawings.
Mandingo (African people) --- Soninke (African people) --- Aswanik (African people) --- Dyakanke (African people) --- Gadyaga (African people) --- Marka (West African people) --- Saracole (African people) --- Sarakole (African people) --- Sarawule (African people) --- Serahuli (African people) --- Silabe (African people) --- Toubakai (African people) --- Wakore (African people) --- Ethnology --- Malinke (African people) --- Mandé (African people) --- Manding (African people) --- Mandingue (African people) --- Mandinka (African people) --- Mandino (African people) --- Maninka (African people) --- Maninkaalu (African people) --- Soce (African people) --- Sosse (African people) --- History. --- Social life and customs. --- Bijine (Guinea-Bissau) --- Kaabu Empire --- Gabou (Kingdom) --- Gabu Empire --- Bijini (Guinea-Bissau) --- Mandingo (African people) - Guinea-Bissau - Bijine - History. --- Mandingo (African people) - Guinea-Bissau - Bijine - Social life and customs. --- Soninke (African people) - Guinea-Bissau - Bijine - History. --- Soninke (African people) - Guinea-Bissau - Bijine - Social life and customs. --- Kaabu Empire - History. --- Bijine (Guinea-Bissau) - History. --- Bijine (Guinea-Bissau) - Social life and customs.
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" It is no exaggeration to say that the Hankey, a small British ship that circled the Atlantic in 1792 and 1793, transformed the history of the Atlantic world. This extraordinary book uncovers the long-forgotten story of the Hankey, from its altruistic beginnings to its disastrous end, and describes the ship's fateful impact upon people from West Africa to Philadelphia, Haiti to London. Billy G. Smith chased the story of the Hankey from archive to archive across several continents, and he now brings back to light a saga that continues to haunt the modern world. It began with a group of high-minded British colonists who planned to establish a colony free of slavery in West Africa. With the colony failing, the ship set sail for the Caribbean and then North America, carrying, as it turned out, mosquitoes infected with yellow fever. The resulting pandemic as the Hankey traveled from one port to the next was catastrophic. In the United States, tens of thousands died in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and Charleston. The few survivors on the Hankey eventually limped back to London, hopes dashed and numbers decimated. Smith links the voyage and its deadly cargo to some of the most significant events of the era-the success of the Haitian slave revolution, Napoleon's decision to sell the Louisiana Territory, a change in the geopolitical situation of the new United States-and spins a riveting tale of unintended consequences and the legacy of slavery that will not die"--
Yellow fever --- Epidemics --- Antislavery movements --- Abolitionists --- Abolitionism --- Anti-slavery movements --- Slavery --- Human rights movements --- Arbovirus infections --- Flaviviral diseases --- Disease outbreaks --- Diseases --- Outbreaks of disease --- Pestilences --- Communicable diseases --- History --- Outbreaks --- Hankey (Ship : 1784) --- Bolama Association. --- Bolama Island (Guinea-Bissau) --- Bulama Island (Guinea-Bissau) --- Ilha de Bolama (Guinea-Bissau) --- Bijagos Archipelago (Guinea-Bissau) --- Colonization. --- Pandemics --- HISTORY / Modern / 18th Century. --- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Slavery. --- HISTORY / Africa / West. --- HISTORY / Caribbean & West Indies / General. --- HISTORY / United States / Revolutionary Period (1775-1800). --- Epidémies --- Mouvements antiesclavagistes --- Abolitionnistes --- Biography --- Histoire --- Biographies
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Edition d'un récit en mandinka par Maalaŋ Galisa (octobre 1988) sur la constitution et les conditions de vie au Kaabu, territoire situé entre la Gambie, le Sénégal et la Guinée-Bissau, connu depuis le 16e siècle et détruit vers 1867. La gamme des sujets couvre: le peuplement, le gouvernement, les codes de conduite des guerriers, religieux, esclaves et 'hôtes étrangers', les règles de l'esclavage, du mariage et de la succession, la coexistence des religions, les relations entre groupes d'âge et de genre. Le texte diffère d'autres qui se focalisent sur un unique fondateur-patriarche, Tiramakan de l'épopée de Sunjata. Galisa parle du sud-est du Kaabu, à la frontière avec la Guinée. Il ajoute des couleurs locales au modèle mandinka, évoquant la puissance féminine et certains conflits violents. Edition of a recital in Mandinka by Maalaŋ Galisa (October 1988) on the political constitution and living conditions in Kaabu, a territory situated between present Gambia, Senegal and Guinea-Bissau, known since the 16th century, definitely destroyed in 1867. The narrative presents a range of topics covering governance, codes of conduct of warriors, clerics, slaves and 'strangers', rules of slavery, marriage and succession, the cohabitation of different religions, relations of age and gender. This text is distinctive from others focussing on a single founder-patriarch, Tiramakan of the Epic of Sunjata. Galisa focuses on South-eastern Kaabu, bordering on the region of Labé (Guinea). He adds local colours to the Mandinka model, depicting powerful women and violent conflicts resulting from injustice.
Mandingo (African people) --- Oral tradition --- Oral tradition. --- Tradition, Oral --- Oral communication --- Folklore --- Oral history --- Malinke (African people) --- Mandé (African people) --- Manding (African people) --- Mandingue (African people) --- Mandinka (African people) --- Mandino (African people) --- Maninka (African people) --- Maninkaalu (African people) --- Soce (African people) --- Sosse (African people) --- Ethnology --- History. --- Industries --- Kaabu Empire --- Africa --- Guinea-Bissau. --- Ginia Bisao --- Ginia Bisau --- Ginia Bisau Kyōwakoku --- Giniabisao --- Giniabisau --- Guiné-Bissau --- Guinée-Bissao --- Guinée-Bissau --- Gvinei͡a-Bisau --- Portuguese Guinea --- Republic of Guinea-Bissau --- República da Guiné-Bissau --- République de la Guinée-Bissau --- Gabou (Kingdom) --- Gabu Empire --- Mand�e (African people)
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National liberation movements --- Revolutionaries --- Revolutionists --- Dissenters --- Counterrevolutionaries --- Liberation movements, National --- Nationalism --- Revolutions --- Anti-imperialist movements --- History --- Cabral, Amílcar, --- Kabral, Amilkar, --- Lopes Cabral, Amílcar, --- Partido Africano da Independência da Guiné e Cabo Verde. --- PAIGC --- African Party for an Independent Guinea --- Afrikanska självständighetspartiet --- Partido Africano para la Independencia de Guinea y Cabo Verde --- Afrikanische Partei für die Unabhängigkeit von Guinea-Bissau und Kapverde --- P.A.I.G.C. --- African Party for Independence in Guinea and Cape Verde --- PAIGK --- P.A.I.G.K. --- Partido Africano da Independência de Cabo Verde --- Guinea-Bissau --- Cabo Verde
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Papel (African people) --- Children --- Mothers --- History & Archaeology --- Regions & Countries - Africa --- Child mortality --- Moium (African people) --- Oium (African people) --- Papei (African people) --- Pepel (African people) --- Ethnology --- Psychology --- Kinship --- Mortality --- Death --- Causes --- Death rate --- Kinship. --- Mortality. --- Psychology. --- Biombo (Guinea-Bissau) --- Social life and customs.
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