Cape Verde and the Creole South Atlantic

A New History

November 2025 9781805264293 296 pp
Forthcoming Pre-order
Available as an eBook
EU Customers

Description

The Cape Verde Islands are now a popular tourist destination but, guide books apart, there is little in print in English that covers their history and culture. This book offers a readable account not only of the islands’ past, but also of their place in the wider story of the South Atlantic’s Portuguese-speaking communities.

First settled in the fifteenth century, the inhabitants of Cape Verde were of diverse origins. Some came from Portugal, others arrived as slaves from mainland Africa, and a third element comprised Jewish exiles from the Iberian Peninsula. From the earliest days, the islanders developed a mixed Creole culture with its own Creole Portuguese language. They had close relations with people of the upper Guinea coast, where many of them settled, and with the Guinea islands. Meanwhile the archipelago became a hub of the Atlantic slave trade.

Cape Verde has also had a strategic importance— its history has to be seen in a global context, broader than simply that of the Portuguese imperial story. Malyn Newitt also fills a major gap in the bibliography of Atlantic history, slavery and the history of the African diaspora in the Atlantic.

Author(s)

Malyn Newitt, the first Charles Boxer Chair in the History Department of King’s College London, has authored more than twenty books on African and Portuguese colonial history, including A Short History of Mozambique and The Zambezi: A History, both published by Hurst.

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