meaning/usage overlaps with.... | 剛果(統稱) |
英文.... | Style and culture of the group of more or less closely related Bantu-speaking peoples occupying the adjoining areas of Zaïre, Angola (including the enclave of Cabinda) and the Republic of the Congo. The Kongo area stretches from both sides of the mouth of the Zaïre River on the Atlantic coast, north to Pool Malebo (formerly Stanleypool) and south into Angola. The main peoples of the group include the Kakongo, Vili, Yombe, Nkanu, Woyo and Boma. Especially famous for their power figures (often referred to as ‘fetishes’), the Kongo peoples have produced a wide range of arts, including stone and ceramic funerary sculptures, masks, regalia in wood, metal and ivory, and figurative pot-lids. Examples of Kongo art are held by most museums with African collections. |
剛果(剛果西南部與安哥拉)............ | [AS-Academia Sinica] |
................. | AAT-Taiwan 借詞編輯與使用原則 (2013) |
Kongo............ | [VP] |
................. | Bascom, African Art in Cultural Perspective (1973) 133 |
................. | Baumann, Völker Afrikas (1975-1979) 676 |
................. | Murdock, Africa (1959) 292 |
................. | Gillon, Breve historia del arte africano (1984) 34 |
................. | AAT-Ned (1994-) |
Bakongo............ | [VP] |
................. | Bascom, African Art in Cultural Perspective (1973) 133 |
................. | Murdock, Africa (1959) 292 |
Subject:............ | [Bureau AAT] |
................. | CDMARC Subjects: LCSH (1988-) Kongo kingdom |
................. | Winkler Prins Encyclopedie (1990) |