Bangi language explained

Bangi
Nativename:Bobangi
States:Republic of Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Date:2000
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Niger-Congo
Fam2:Atlantic–Congo
Fam3:Volta-Congo
Fam4:Benue–Congo
Fam5:Bantoid
Fam6:Southern Bantoid
Fam7:Bantu (Zone C)
Fam8:Bangi–Ntomba
Fam9:Bangi–Moi
Dia1:Moi
Dia2:Liku
Dia3:Rebu
Dia4:   Derived languages:
Dia5:Lingala
Dia6:Bangala
Lc1:bni
Ld1:Bangi
Lc2:mow
Ld2:Moi
Guthrie:C.32
Glotto:bang1354
Glottoname:Bobangi
Glottorefname:Bobangi
Glotto2:moic1236
Glottoname2:Moi
Glottorefname2:Moi (Congo)

The Bangi language, or Bobangi, is a relative and main lexical source of Lingala spoken in central Africa. Dialects of the language are spoken on both sides of the Ubangi River and Congo River.

Use in trade

As the Bobangi people came to dominate the slave trade along the upper Congo River in the late 18th century, the Bangi language was used to facilitate trade between different ethnic groups in the region. Linguist John Whitehead claimed that the Moye, Likuba, Bonga, Mpama, Lusakani, and peoples all used Bangi for intercommunication in the 1890s.[1] [2] [3] At the height of indigenous trade along the upper river, the Bobangi dominated the 500 kilometer section of the Congo between the Kwah River and the equator, which most river trade passed through.[4] Other ethnic groups in this area were either assimilated into the Bobangi ethnic alliance, adopting the Bangi language, or were driven off.[5] However, the Bobangi dominance over trade was ended by Europeans in the late 19th century when colonial powers pushed local indigenous groups out of profitable trade. By the late twentieth century, there were very few Bobangi people remaining in the area they had controlled a century earlier, and the Bangi language is no longer widespread.

Sources and references

Notes and References

  1. Meeuwis . Michael . Linguistic gentrification: The Baptist Missionary Society and Bobangi (1882-1940) . Afrikanistik-Aegyptologie-Online . 24 January 2023 . 2023 . 5659 . 1–26.
  2. Book: Harns, Robert W.. River of Wealth, River of Sorrow: The Central Zaire Basin in the Era of the Slave and Ivory Trade, 1500-1891. Yale University Press. 1981. 0300026161. New Haven. 92–93.
  3. Meeuwis . Michael . 2019 . The linguistic features of Bangala before Lingala: The pidginization of Bobangi in the 1880s and 1890s . Afrikanistik-Aegyptologie-Online . 2019 . 5012 . 1–43.
  4. Book: Harms. River of Wealth, River of Sorrow. 7.
  5. Book: Harms. River of Wealth, River of Sorrow. 129–130.