Jump to content

Nkon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Capetien (talk | contribs) at 01:26, 21 December 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Bankon
Horus represented as a Falcon, the totem of the historical Bankon (or Bakon) Chiefdom of Manduka.
Regions with significant populations
Northern Abo (Manduka), Southern Abo (Mian)
Languages
Bankon
Religion
Christian
Related ethnic groups
Bankon or Bakon (Northern Abo), Southern Abo

The Nkon (Bankon, Bakon, Abo or Abaw) are a people of the Littoral region of Cameroon which lives in the Abo country. They are closely related to the Duala and Cameroon's coastal peoples, the Sawa. These Abo are an Aboriginal people from Hindu-Kush who speak a Proto-Austronesian language (presence of the locative suffix "an" with nouns and even verbs) which is akin to Ancient Egyptian, Greek and Semitic. They descent from Pharaoh Neferkare Sabakon of the Twenty-fifth Dynasty, King of Egypt from 721 BC to 707 BC, son of King Kashta of Napata, an Hindu-Kushite. Their clan bears the name of their ancestor SaBakon. Objects brought by them from Egypt, traces of Egyptian civilization and religion, have been found in Cameroon.

Egyptian and Nubian Gods were similar to Indian. In Hindu astrology, one's past Karma manifests in the forms of kashta (difficulty), duka (sorrow), nashta (loss) or anishta (misery). Duka is the name of Bankon Chiefdom.

It is the word Abo, city, which, with the article prefixed, becomes Tabo, or Thebes, the capital of Ancient Egypt. The word still remains in Medineh Tabo, the village in the western suburb of that city. Abo is a Syriac word which means "pater, father". Abaw means "father" in Hebrew. The name became popular in the Middle Ages when the heads of religious orders adopted it. The French form is Abbé.

Geography

The Abo country is located at the north of the town of Douala, separated from it by the tiny territory occupied by Pongo and Nso peoples of the Wouri (or Cameroon) river's right bank, the river which gave its name to the modern state of Cameroon. Halfway between this river and the Moungo valley, the Abo country has the form of a parallelogram hardly lengthened from North to South. It is crossed to South-East by the Abo river, a Wouri tributary.

On the administrative level, the Abo country is attached to the Moungo department, one of the four departments of the Littoral region, with Wouri, Nkam and Sanaga Maritime. Bonalea (it means descendants of Lea) commune is divided into two cantons, the original cantons of Northern Abo and Southern Abo, respectively located on the Abo river's left and right sides.

On the traditional level, each canton has its Chiefdom, Manduka in the North, and Mian in the South; they are respectively administrated by Their Majesties, Higher Chiefs Emmanuel NGOM PRISO and Jean-Jacques MAKOLLE EBONGUE.

History

The stela depicts Pharaoh Sabakon offering the hieroglyph to the gods Horus of Pe and Wadjet.

According to the anthropologist Idelette Dugast, the Abo country is inhabited by two different clans of the Old Race of Anu of the Upper Nile, an offshoot from original stock of Hindu-Kush : the Bankon (or Northern Abo) and the Southern Abo.

The Southern Abo belong to the Mian clan; they are closely related to the Barombi (Kunbi or Ombi) clan, located to the South-West region of Cameroon. The Ombi are Ombo descendants, a people about which many ancient authors wrote, originating from Kom Ombo in Egypt. The Ombo migration reached Central Africa during the 12th century.

Around 1610, a long time after the Southern Abo, arrived from the Wouri valley, the Bankon. According to many concordant oral traditions confirmed by archaeological, linguistic and ethnological data, these Bankon, descendants of Pharaoh Sabakon, left Egypt around the seventh century of Christian Era; their departure coincides with Prophet Mohamed's advent, the Islam's founder. They went to Sudan, then to Lake Chad, from where they reached Cameroon. When they arrived in the country they occupy now, they found the Southern Abo of the Mian clan, they set up close them. Few years after, they definitely set up as masters beside the first occupants and on their land. Until the end of 19th century, nobody could venture on their land without their goodwill.

Pharaoh Neferkare Meriamon Sabakon

Sabakon Stone on display in The British Museum

Until recently, there was a chapter of history that largely went untold. Only in the past four decades have archaeologists resurrected their story and come to recognize that the Black Pharaohs didn’t appear out of nowhere. They sprang from a robust African civilization that had flourished on the southern banks of the Nile for 3,000 years BC, going back at least as far as the first Egyptian dynasty.

We have certain information of the Nubians being a powerful nation (971 BC) when they assisted King Shishak of Egypt in his war against Judaea "with very many chariots and horsemen". Sixteen years after this, we have an account of Judaea being again invaded by an army of a million Nubians. From the Scripture narrative, it appears that the Nubians had made considerable progress in the art of war, and were masters of the navigation of the Red Sea, and at least a part of the Arabian peninsula.

The Nubian power gradually increased until its monarchs invaded Egypt in 732 BC and took the throne of Egypt, establishing the Twenty-fifth Dynasty which ruled until 656 BC, where four of them reigned in succession, Usermaatre Piye (from 732 BC to 721 BC), Neferkare Sabakon, called So in Scripture (from 721 BC to 707 BC), Djedkare Sebichos (from 707 BC to 690 BC), and Khuinefertemre Tarakos (from 690 BC to 664), the Taharka of Scripture, Bakare Tanutamun (from 664 to 653). Pharaoh Tanutamun lost control of Upper Egypt in 656 BC when Psammetichus I extended his authority into Thebes in that year. Tanutamun successors came to settle at Napata, where they established a Kingdom (656 - 590 BC) then later, at Meroe (590 BC - 4th century AD).

From the books of Manetho (it means Etho's child in Bankon), the most famous Egyptian historian and priest from Sebennytos (ancient Egyptian : Tjebnutjet) who lived during the Ptolemaic era (3rd century BC), we learn that Sabakon the Ethiopian took Pharaoh Bocchoris of the Twenty-fourth Dynasty prisoner in war, and caused him to be burnt alive; Herodotus tells us that Sabakon, the King of Ethiopians, marched through Egypt with a mighty army of his people; and the King of Egypt fled into the marshes. Sabakon was a mild ruler, and did not punish any Egyptian with death.

Pharaoh Sabakon died in year 707 BC and left the Empire over Napata and Egypt to his nephew Sebichos - Sabakon was Piye's brother, it was the custom in Nubia for brothers of a ruler to have priority over the sons in succession. Some cartouches with the name of Pharaoh Sabakon have been discovered in the ruins of Sennacherib's palace at Nineveh (Assyrian Empire). Marriage alliances with Pharaoh Psemtek (Psammetichus I) of the Twenty-sixth Dynasty are proved by three inscriptions.

Pharaoh Sabakon's rules extended over the whole of Egypt, and he appears to have ruled from Memphis. Sabakon followed the policy of earlier Pharaohs and appointed a son, Horemakhet (it means Horus in the horizon), as High Priest of Amun at Thebes. Pharaoh Taharka followed similar policies as his predecessors. His daughter was installed as eventual successor to Shep-en-apet II; a son was appointed as Second Prophet of Amun at Thebes; Sabakon grandson, Horkhebi, succeded his father as High Priest. Taharka's successor, Tanutamun, confronting Assyrian invasions, adopted the same pragmatic approach to the Lybian rulers, accepting their allegiance when they came to pay fealty. The Assyrians, too, confirmed and reappointed dynasts who have previously been loyal to the Twenty-fifth Dynasty.

The Bankon descent from the Prince and High Priest Horkhebi son of the Prince and High Priest Horemakhet son of Pharaoh Sabakon son of King Kashta of Napata.

The Duka in Ancient Egypt

The Bankon canton of North Abo has seven villages : Manduka (it means Duka's child) the Chiefdom, Besungkan, Mangamba (it means Gamba's child), Fiko (or Kiko), Bansen (= plural of Nsen), Kunan, Mpobo (or Mpoo).

Marduka (or Manduka) and his dragon, from a Babylonian cylinder seal.

The Duka clan was known in Ancient Egypt history. In "A dictionary of Christian Biography, Literature, sects and Doctrines A to D", Mister William Smith wrote : "Early in 356 Syrianus, the Duka of Egypt began the open persecution of the Catholics at Alexandria, and Constantina when appealed to, confirmed his actions and meet Heraclius to head over all the churches to the Arians, which was done with great violence and cruelty. George of Cappadocia was intruded into the church, and Athanasius was forced to hide in the desert. In the same year, Hilary of Poitiers was banished from Phrygia." Many Duka still live nowadays in Egypt.

Manduka was called in Egypt Scarabaeus Beetle. Scarabaeus were principally used for their rings, necklaces and other ornamental trinkets, as well as for funeral purposes. Some of a larger size frequently had a prayer, or legend connected with the dead, engraved upon them; and a winged Scarabaeus was generally placed on those bodies which embalmed according to the most expansive process. The Scarabaeus may then be considered an emblem of the Sun; of Ptah the creative of power, and of Ptah Tore; of Ptah-Sokari-Osiris; of the world; connected with astronomical subjects and with funeral rites. The French historian Frédéric Caillaud discovered a beetle in Meroe (the actual Sudanese Sennar) which he thought likely to be the Egyptians original sacred beetle, because of its golden green colour.

Manduka (Marduk or Marduka in Akkadian) was the Babylonian name of a late-generation god from ancient Mesopotamia and patron deity of the city of Babylon, who, when Babylon became the political center of the Euphrates valley in the time of Hammurabi (18th century BC), started to slowly rise to the position of the head of the Babylonian pantheon, a position he fully acquired by the second half of the second millennium BC. Marduk was also regarded as the son of Ea (Sumerian Enki) and Damkina and the heir of Anu.

Manduka means frog in Sanskrit. In Egypt, Hekt, wife of Khnum, is a frog goddess, and moon deity.

Relations between Bankon and Semitic

Elephantine Island, known to the Ancient Egyptians as Abo.
Temple of Ramesses II, at Abo Simbel.

The Aboriginal word Logon which means God in Bankon, was adopted by the Semitic.

Acoording to Joseph A. Fitzmyer, the Jesus Aramaic statement "ton Logon" means "the God (who is) the leader in speaking" or "of words".

In the Hebrew concept of God as a plural structure, the Elohim were of degree and rank as an order of spirit beings, who achieved their unity with Eloah from the emanation of the Logon; individual manifestations of which been refered to as the Logos or Logoi in plural form. In the Assyrian Theory of Soul, Logon is the Father of all existent things, and the Holy Spirit.

Nkon (plural = Bakon), derived from the Hebrew verb KQI, "to purify". It always means "to cleanse, expurgate, decontaminate" (Milgrom 1991 : pages 232, 253). It is required when an individual or a community commits an inadvertent sin (as in Lev. 4), or when a person is under the influence of a severe impurity (Lev. 12-15). The names Nkon and Kon were found several times in Aramaic documents from Ancient Egypt.

Many Semitic idioms are similar to those of the Bankon language : Abo, Abaw, Nkon and Bakon (= plural of Nkon) the generic names of Bankon; Duka, the historical Chiefdom of Bankon canton; Lea, the commune's name; but also Bankon villages names (Gamba, Kiko, Nsen, Kunan, Mpoo), belong to these similarities.

Bankon Language

(Bankon ( Abo or Abaw) is a language spoken in the neighbourhood of the Wuri River, in the Cameroons. It is classified No. A42 by Malcom Guthrie (Sir Harry Hamilton Johnston's No. 212), under the Basa language.

According to the languages expert Mrs Lilias Homburger, Bankon is a Kumaoni (KUM) language. The Kumaoni (कुमाँऊनी) language is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by the people from Kumaon region of Uttarakhand, India. According to the historian Drusilla Dunjee Houston, the Kumaoni language was brought to Egypt and Nubia by the Old Race of Hindu-Kush. It is an admitted fact that many Egyptian and Nubian priests were Hindu-Kushites; they adored gods identical with those of Egypt, Chaldea and Nubia.

According to the British explorer, administrator and great Bantu linguistic expert Sir Harry Hamilton Johnston (1858-1927), "Bankon has been strongly influenced by the languages of the North-East of Africa". In fact Bankon is the Proto-Austronesian language of the Old Race of Anu, closed to the Kumaoni language, spoken by the Indu-Kushites priests of Ancient Egypt and Nubia. Its relationship to the more typical African Eastern Bantu languages may be deduced from the following table of noun-classes :

Sebichos donation stela
Prefixes English Bankon Ganda Nyanja Swahili
Mu Man Mut Omu-ntu Mu-ntu M-tu
Va Men Bot Aba-ntu A-ntu Wa-tu
Mu Heart Muem Omu-tima M-tima M-tima
Mi Hearts Miom Omi-tima Mi-tima Mi-tima
Ki Thing Ki-om Oki-ntu Chi-ntu Ki-tu
Vi Things Bi-om Obi-ntu Zi-ntu Vi-tu
Ni House Ndaw Onju Numba Numba

Bankon is related to Ancient Egyptian and Semitic languages : Mut of Bankon corresponds with Mut of Napata (Meroe) and Mut of Karnak (Egypt). The vocable Mut (meaning Human being) is attested in Akkadian and early West Semitic pronoun names in the Hebrew Bible.

Ancient Egyptian English Bankon English
Nta I am not Nta I am not
Nta dja I do not eat Nta djé I do not eat
Nineteenth dynasty statue of Mut, 1279-1213 BC, Luxor Museum
Granite sphinx of Pharaoh Taharka
Ancient Egyptian English Bankon English
Sah Country Sa We
Is Eye Dis Eye
Me, I Me, I
Ks Bone Kifés Bone
Ka Cosmic energy To talk
Nu This, That Nu (or Anu) This, That
Mw Water Maléw Water
Beb Bad Bad
Djo To say To say
Mut Woman Mutan=Mut-an Woman
Dja A sort of bread Djé To eat
Ibhw Tooth Ison Tooth
Betk To beat Bòm To beat
Ikhps Arm Ikaa Arm
Teka To look, to see Tâh To look, to see
Meneme Identity Mè nè mè I see I
Per-ndaw Small house Ndaw House

Ancient deities An, Anu and Ki in Bankon language

An, Anu and Ki are often used in Bankon : Anu (or Nu) means "this", "that"; Ki means "the", "of".

In Ancient Egypt, the tale of An was similar to that of Ra of the Egyptians where Isis refers to the Supreme God. The Egyptians called An a form of Osiris, meaning sun or moon god.

Anuket (Anukis in Greek) is an ancient Egyptian goddess of the cataracts or rapids on the Nile River in the region of Abu (or Abo) Island in the south of Egypt. She is the sister or daughter to Satet, another Nile goddess of the area of the First Cataract, and the two of them plus Khnum, a local Ram-God, made up the Elephantine Triad from Middle Kingdom times (2040-1640 BC). Anuket is associated with the gazelle, as Satet is with the antelope, and both animals were linked with water in the Egyptian mind.

Some say the name Anu is the Akkadian form of An, High God of heaven. The goddess Nammu who personified the eternal primeval sea is the mother of the Sumerian sky god An. With Ki, the earth goddess, An became the father of the God of air Enlil. In later times Enlil superseded An as chief of the Sumerian pantheon. Semitic Assyrians referred to Anu and Anatu (Anath) as god and goddess of heaven. Anu (or An) was part of the Sumerian trial of high gods : An, Enlil and Ninhusag. Some say the trinity was An, Enlil and Enki.

Ur III Sumerian cuneiform for An or Anu (and determiner for deity Dingir).
Enki
Bankon English
Man Child
Nyan Mother
San Father
Wan To buy
Nsan Peace
Ntan Slave
Ngan A lot
Nkan Root
Ilôtâk ki ndaw House's wall
Kolà ki san Father's basket
Ki kèé ki kwô The tree which falls
Anu mutan a lòn That (this) woman is singing
Anu mut a yé bê That (this) human being is bad
Anu molom a ton ndaw yes That (this) man wants our house
Anu man a ta tsaw ni bes That (this) child does not play with us

Bankon and Southern Abo rebellion of 1891

The trade in Abo country was only provided by palm oil revenue. However, at the 19th century, ten tons of palm oil were equivalent to a ton of ivory. It's in this context that in February 1891, the village of Miang inhabitants (Southern Abo canton) block the passage of the Abo river to Chancellor Leist. According to the "Annales coloniales" , the villages of Bonakwassi (Northern Abo canton) and Miang were set up in fortress. Always according to the "Annales coloniales", the stake of this battle was the Germany prestige and the maintenance of obedience by the German colonial administration of Cameroon. That's why the colonial administration used captain Hauptmann Karl Von Gravenreuth army, but also two German boats : the "Habicht" and the "Soden". On November 5, 1891, captain Von Gravenreuth perished in front of the Bankon village of Duka during the attack of this fortified village.

Whole villages were destroyed, the losses of Bankon and Abo of South populations were very high. A peace treaty was signed by the belligerents at the beginning of 1893.

Deido Ebele-Bankon clan origins

See also

References

  • Duhkha Kashta, by Imadādula Haka Milana.
  • Word as Mantra : the art of Raja Rao, by Robert L. Hardgrave, 1998.
  • Wonderful Ethiopians of the ancient Kushite Empire, by Drusilla Dunjee Houston, 1926.
  • A manual of ancient history, by William Cooke Taylor, Caleb Sprague Henry, L. L. Smith; page 14. Edition 5, 1844.
  • A concise dictionary of the Bible: comprising its antiquities, biography, geography, and natural history: being a condensation of the larger dictionary, by Sir William Smith, 1865.
  • The Negro-African Languages, by Lilias Homburger, 1949.
  • Political history of the Lushai people of Mizoram, India; compiled from the British India Government records, 1978.
  • Les descendants des pharaons à travers l'Afrique, par le Prince Dika Akwa nya Bonambela. Editions Osiris-Africa, 1985.
  • The Acts of the Apostles, by Joseph A. Fitzmyer, 1998.
  • Textbook of Aramaic Documents from Ancient Egypt : Ostraca, by Bezalel Porten, Ada Yardeni; 1999.
  • Mysticism and the origin of world religions, by Wade E. Cox, 2005.
  • A dictionary of Christian Biography, Literature, sects and Doctrines A to D; by William Smith.
  • The history of antiquity, by Maximilian Wolfgang Duncker; volume III, 2008.
  • Memphis and Mycena; an examination of Egyptian chronology and its application to the early history of Greece, by Cecil Torr.
  • Empires : perspectives from archaeology and history, by Susan E. Alcock.
  • The Cambridge ancient history, volume 3, by John Boardman.
  • Egyptian Hieroglyphics, by Samuel Sharpe.

Notes

  • Voyage à Méroé, au Fleuve Blanc, en 1819-22, by Frédéric Caillaud, 1824.
  • Précis du système hiéroglyphique des anciens Egyptiens, par Jean-François Champollion. Tome 1, page 152, 1828.
  • L'Egypte au temps des pharaons : la vie, la science et l'art, par Victor Loret, 1889.
  • Esquisse ethnique des principales populations de l'Afrique Equatoriale Française, par le Docteur Poutrin. Masson, Paris 1914.
  • Le milieu biblique avant Jésus Christ, par Charles-François Jean, 1936.
  • Inventaire ethnique du Sud-Cameroun, Idelette Dugast, 1949.
  • Die Sprache der Bo oder Bankon in Kamerun, par Friedrich Spellenberg, 1969.
  • Bànkón (A 40): éléments de phonologie, morphologie et tonologie. Gratien Atindogbé, 1996.
  • Austen, Ralph A., and Derrick, Jonathan (1999): Middlemen of the Cameroons Rivers: The Duala and their Hinterland, c. 1600–c.1960. Cambridge University Press.
  • A rapid appraisal survey of the Abo and Barombi speech communities, by Melinda Lamberty, Sil international, 2002.
  • Sepher Rezial Hemelach : The Book of the Angel Rezial, by Steve Savedow.
  • The rescue of Jerusalem : the alliance between Hebrews and Africans in 701 BC, by Henry Aubin, 2003.
  • Bankon: a language of Cameroon. Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (editor), 2005.