Luebo

Luebo

Luebo

Commune in Kasai, DR Congo


Luebo or Lwebo is a town (officially a commune) of Kasai Province in south-central Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is also the seat of the territory of the same name. As of 2009 it had an estimated population of 40,115.[1]

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History

The town was founded in November 1885 by Ludwig Wolf and a group of other European colonists as an outpost of King Leopold II of Belgium's Congo Free State. The state used this outpost to claim the surrounding region, despite it already being inhabited, notably by the nearby Kuba Kingdom. The trading post was sold to the Sanford Exploring Expedition, an American company, in December 1886, and it was sold again to 1888 to the Société anonyme belge pour le commerce du Haut-Congo. A mission was founded in the town three years later, by William Henry Sheppard and Samuel Lapsley. In 1904 it again became property of the Congo Free State. In 1908, it was incorporated into the Belgian Congo.[2][3]

A bridge over the Lulua River opened in the town in the late 1950s, shortly before the Democratic Republic of the Congo gained its independence.[2]

Transport

The town is on the N20 highway,[4] and is served by Luebo Airport.


References

  1. "Congo (Dem. Rep.): largest cities and towns and statistics of their population". World Gazetteer. Retrieved January 21, 2009.[dead link]
  2. Vansina, Jan (2010). Being Colonized. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 20–23, 180, 321.
  3. Phipps, William E. (2002). William Sheppard: Congo's African American Livingstone. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-664-50203-4.

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