The History of Gabon

Douglas A Yates
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Abstract

Primeval rainforest at the Equator on the west coast of Africa, the land we know as Gabon, was settled prehistorically by Pygmies during the late Stone Age, and then by Bantu-speaking migrants during the Iron Age. These culturally diverse peoples did not develop a common language or political system with one another until after their violent conquest by Europeans during the colonial era. The Age of Discovery in the 15th century brought European explorers to the coast. The Atlantic triangle trade, with its slave barracoons and entrepôts, transformed some African communities along the coast into centralized kingdoms, and turned other clan-based societies of the forested interior into hunted peoples suspicious of any and all outsiders, European or African. The Scramble for Africa brought military expeditions into Gabon in the 19th century, when French colonial rule was established. Colonialism bestowed on the ethnic groups of Gabon a protonational identity of being “Gabonese,” although this nationalist impulse was muted in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by the effort of French authorities and missionaries to assimilate black Africans into France’s culture and civilization. Unassimilated colonial subjects in the interior of the newly conquered territory violently resisted French colonial rule until the world wars, by which time the assimilation project had sufficiently fashioned a new coastal French-educated Gabonese elite. The two world wars weakened France and led these assimilated elites to a call for political reforms, at first taking the form of mono-ethnic-based political parties, but eventually coalescing around multiethnic coalitions, largely francophone in outlook, while retaining many elements of older precolonial identities. Independence in 1960 brought to power three authoritarian rulers—Léon Mba, Omar Bongo, and Ali Bongo—as well as consolidation of an oil-rentier state and an oxymoronic dynastic republic. “Gabonese” national identity emerged, an imagined community constructed out of African music, literature, and art, yet incorporating French as its lingua franca.
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加蓬的历史
非洲西海岸赤道的原始雨林,也就是我们所知的加蓬,在石器时代晚期由史前的俾格米人定居,然后在铁器时代由讲班图语的移民定居。这些文化多样的民族直到被欧洲人在殖民时期暴力征服后才发展出共同的语言或政治制度。15世纪的大发现时代把欧洲探险家带到了海岸。大西洋三角贸易,连同它的奴隶营车和entrepôts,把沿海的一些非洲社区变成了中央集权的王国,并把其他以部落为基础的内陆森林社会变成了被猎杀的民族,对任何外来者,无论是欧洲人还是非洲人都心存疑虑。19世纪,法国在加蓬建立了殖民统治,对非洲的争夺使军队进入了加蓬。殖民主义赋予加蓬各民族以“加蓬人”的民族身份,尽管这种民族主义冲动在19世纪末和20世纪初被法国当局和传教士努力使非洲黑人融入法国的文化和文明而减弱。在新征服的领土内部,未被同化的殖民地臣民猛烈地反抗法国的殖民统治,直到世界大战爆发,同化计划才充分塑造了一批受法国教育的沿海新加蓬精英。两次世界大战削弱了法国,导致这些被同化的精英们呼吁政治改革,起初采取以单一民族为基础的政党的形式,但最终围绕多民族联盟联合起来,主要是法语国家,同时保留了许多旧的前殖民身份的元素。1960年的独立带来了三位独裁统治者——拉马森•巴姆、奥马尔•邦戈和阿里•邦戈,同时巩固了一个石油食利者国家和一个矛盾的王朝共和国。“加蓬人”的民族认同出现了,这是一个由非洲音乐、文学和艺术构建而成的想象共同体,并将法语作为其通用语。
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