Kingdom of Humbe


The Kingdom of Humbe, also known as the Humbe Kingdom, was an independent state that once existed in the territory that is now part of Angola. Its inhabitants belonged to the Nhaneca-Humbe ethnic group and were known as Humbes.
The kingdom was one of three Nhaneca-Humbe kingdoms, along with the Kingdom of Mulondo and the Kingdom of Camba. Of these three, only Humbe was considered powerful. It was originally founded by Ovimbundu and its military organisation was based on the quilombo.
The Humbe were mainly engaged in pastoralism and their traders sold mainly ivory. The Humbes made raids into the highlands to capture slaves from the neighbouring Huíla and Gambo populations, which they sold at the port of Benguela. Frequent wars between neighbouring peoples greatly reduced the population of the kingdom, and the Humbes both enslaved and were sold as slaves. Trade led to the arrival of Portuguese merchants and frontiersmen.
In 1856, the Portuguese governor of Moçâmedes attacked Gambos and Humbe with 80 soldiers, 4 cannons and 50,000 warriors from the chiefdom of Dumba.
Portugal founded a fort in Humbe in 1859 at the request of chief Chingue, who, being old and on bad terms with his nephew and heir, invited the Portuguese to establish a military garrison in his kingdom to keep him in power. Despite complaining to the district governor António Joaquim de Castro, the nephew did not obtain any support from the Portuguese against his uncle, but he was assured that he would succeed him to the throne when Chingue died, so he killed him. An ultimatum and war followed, but the Portuguese managed to restore peace by expelling the nephew to Dongoena, and soba Onkole was acclaimed in his place. However, the fort had to be abandoned four years after its foundation due to a lack of resources to ensure its security. The fort was re-established in 1880. The Humbes went to war with the Portuguese on three occasions, from 1885 to 1888, in 1891 and from 1897 to 1898.
Abandoned by order of Alves Roçadas in late 1914 after the German attack on Naulila, Humbe was reoccupied by General Pereira d'Eça's troops on 7 July 1915 and definitively integrated into Portuguese Angola.