Jesuits have been in Africa since the founding of their order, yet their history there remains poorly researched. Although scholars have begun to focus on specific regions such as Congo, Ethiopia, and Zimbabwe, a comprehensive picture of the entire Jesuit experience on the continent has hitherto been lacking. In a condensed yet accessible way, Jesuits in Africa fills that lacuna. Narrating the story century by century from the time of St. Ignatius of Loyola (c.1491â1556), founder of the Jesuits, to that of Pedro Arrupe (1907â91, in office 1965â83), twenty-eighth superior general of the Society, this book makes Jesuit history in Africa available to a general readership while offering scholars a broad view in which specialized topics can be conceived and deepened.
Festo Mkenda, S.J., D.Phil. (2009, University of Oxford) is Academic Director of the Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu. He has lectured on African history and on Christianity in Africa, and his research focuses on Jesuit history in Africa.
Acknowledgments
âIntroduction
â1âSixteenth Century: Kongo, Ethiopia, Mozambique/Zimbabwe, and Angola
â2âSeventeenth Century: West Africa, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Angola, and Kongo
â3âEighteenth Century: Ethiopia, Mozambique, and Angola
â4âNineteenth Century: Algeria, Fernando Pó, Sudan, Egypt, Madagascar, Zambezi, and Congo
â5âTwentieth Century: Continuation, Consolidation, and Expansion
âConclusion
âBibliography
ââDocuments in the Monumenta historica Societatis Iesu (MHSI) Series
ââOther Published Primary Sources
ââSecondary Sources
ââOnline Sources
âIndex