The Atlantic world and the establishment of the Nago hegemony in the Bahian Candomble

Historical data indicates that critical Jeje and Nagô religious practices of West African origin were already well consolidated in Salvador (Bahia, Brazil) in the 1860s, suggesting their rooting in the period of the slave-trade. While the Yoruba ethnogenesis and the racial and cultural nationalism o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Luis Nicolau Parés
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2010-06-01
Series:Esboços
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/esbocos/article/view/14758
Description
Summary:Historical data indicates that critical Jeje and Nagô religious practices of West African origin were already well consolidated in Salvador (Bahia, Brazil) in the 1860s, suggesting their rooting in the period of the slave-trade. While the Yoruba ethnogenesis and the racial and cultural nationalism of the “Lagosian Renaissance” in the 1890s may have indirectly contributed to the late 19th-century Bahian “Nagôization” of Candomblé, the paper suggests that the increasing religious predominance of the Nagô “nation” was mainly the result of competitive local Creole micro-politics.
ISSN:1414-722X
2175-7976