Total population | |
---|---|
1,400 (1930) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Benguela, Moçâmedes, Calulo, Luanda | |
Languages | |
German, Portuguese | |
Religion | |
Christianity | |
Related ethnic groups | |
German Brazilians, German Namibians, German South Africans, Afrikaners |
German Angolans are the descendants of German settlers in the nation of Angola.
German immigrants to Portuguese Angola started to appear in the mid-19th century. They took part in the founding and initial growth of the coastal city of Moçâmedes in the 1850s.
More German immigrants came to Angola in the 20th century, with about 1,400 immigrating between 1915 and 1930. After Angolan independence and the subsequent civil war that occurred, most German Angolans left the county for Europe (both Germany & Portugal, depending on their choice), though some families remain, mainly in the town of Calulo, as well as the capital, Luanda.[1] Other German Angolans left for Namibia, which was a German territory and where the remaining colonial German population lives and Portuguese and black Angolan refugees also left for, & others along with Portuguese settlers and black Angolans left for Portuguese-speaking country of Brazil, where there is a visible presence of German population & culture and where the largest German population outside Germany lives.
Until 1975, there was a German-language school in Benguela called the Deutsche Schule Benguela.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ Deutsche Farmer in Angola - Das Vermächtnis, 27 June 2012 der FAZ, retrieved 3 January 2017.
- ↑ "Deutscher Bundestag 4. Wahlperiode Drucksache IV/3672" (Archive). Bundestag (West Germany). 23 June 1965. Retrieved on 12 March 2016. p. 30/51.