Online Encyclopedia

KONG

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 892 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KONG  , the name of a

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town,
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district and range of hills in the N.W. of the Ivory Coast colony, French West Africa . The hills are
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part of the
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band of high ground separating the inner plains of West Africa from the coast regions . In maps of the first
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half of the 19th century the range is shown as part of a
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great mountain chain supposed to run east and west across Africa, and is thus made to appear a continuation of the Mountains of the Moon, or the snow-clad heights of
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Ruwenzori . The culminating point of the Kong
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system is the Pic
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des Kommono, 4757 ft. high . In general the summits of the hills are below 2000 ft. and not more than 700 ft. above the level of the country . The " circle of Kong," one of the administrative divisions of the Ivory Coast colony, covers 46,000 sq. m. and has a population of some 400,000 . The inhabitants are negroes, chiefly Bambara and
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Mandingo . About a
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fourth of the population profess Mahommedanism; the remainder are spirit worshippers . The town of Kong, situated in 9° N., 4°20' W., is not now of great importance . Probably Rene Caillie, who spent some time in the western part of the country in 1827, was the first
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European to visit Kong . In 1888 Captain L . G .

Binger induced the native chiefs to

place themselves under the
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protection of France, and in 1893 the
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protectorate was attached to the Ivory Coast colony . For a time Kong was overrun by the armies of Samory (see
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SENEGAL), but the capture of that chief in 1898 was followed by the peaceful development of the district by France (see IVORY COAST) .

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