fbpx
Wikipedia

Lubumbashi

Lubumbashi (former names: Élisabethville (French); Elisabethstad (Dutch)) is the second-largest city in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, located in the country's southeasternmost part, along the border with Zambia. The capital and principal city of the Haut-Katanga Province, Lubumbashi is the center of mining in the region, acting as a hub for many of the country's largest mining companies.[3] No definite population figures are available, but the population of the city's urban area is estimated to be around 2,584,000 in 2021.[2]

Lubumbashi
Provincial capital and city
Ville de Lubumbashi
Lubumbashi, 2006
Nickname: 
L'shi – Lubum
Lubumbashi
Location in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Coordinates: 11°39′51″S 27°28′58″E / 11.66417°S 27.48278°E / -11.66417; 27.48278
CountryDemocratic Republic of the Congo
ProvinceHaut-Katanga
Founded1910
Government
 • MayorMartin Kazembe[1]
Area
 • Land747 km2 (288 sq mi)
 • Urban
747 km2 (288 sq mi)
Elevation
1,208 m (3,963 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • Urban2,584,000
 • Urban density3,500/km2 (9,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+02:00 (Central Africa Time)
ClimateCwa

History Edit

Élisabethville under Belgian rule Edit

The Belgian government established the modern-day government in the city of Élisabethville (sometimes Elizabethville, both in French, or Elisabethstad in Dutch) in 1910, named in honour of Queen Elisabeth, consort to King Albert I of the Belgians.[4] By that time, the government had taken over the colony from King Leopold II, and renamed it as the Belgian Congo. This site was chosen by Vice-Governor-General Emile Wangermée because of its proximity to the copper mine of Etoile du Congo and the copper ore smelting oven installed by Union Minière du Haut Katanga on the nearby Lubumbashi River.

The Comité Spécial du Katanga (CSK), a semi-private concessionary company set up in 1900, had its headquarters in Élisabethville throughout the colonial era. It enjoyed major privileges, mainly in terms of land and mining concessions, in the Katanga province.

The city prospered with the development of a regional copper mining industry.[5] Huge investments in the 1920s, both in the mining industry and in transport infrastructure (railline Elisabethville-Port Francqui and Elisabethville-Dilolo), developed the Katanga province into one of the world's major copper ore producers. The population of the city grew apace from approx. 30,000 in 1930, to 50,000 in 1943 and 180,000 in 1957. It was the second city of the Belgian Congo, after Léopoldville.

 
The Belgian Quarter in Lubumbashi

As was customary with European colonies, the city centre of Élisabethville was reserved for the minority white (European) population. This consisted mainly of Belgian nationals, but the city also attracted important British and Italian communities, as well as Jewish Greeks. Congolese were allowed in the white city only during the day, except for the house servants ("boys") who often lived in shanty dwellings ("boyeries") located in the backyards of the European city houses.

Many men in the black population were labour immigrants from neighbouring regions in the Belgian Congo (Northern Katanga, Maniema, Kasaï), from Belgian Rwanda and Burundi, and from British Northern Rhodesia (present-day Zambia).[6] The black population lived initially in a so-called cité indigène called Quartier Albert (now Kamalondo), south of the city centre and separated from the white city by a 700-metres-wide neutral zone. With population growth, new indigenous quarters were created. These still form the main suburbs of present-day Lubumbashi: Kenia, Katuba, and Ruashi. The work and businesses related to the mines made Élisabethville the most prosperous region of the Congo during the last decade of Belgian rule. In 1954, there were 8,000 black homeowners in the city while thousands more were skilled workers. It was estimated that black Africans living in Élisabethville had a higher standard of living than anywhere else on the continent at that time.[7]

 
Lubumbashi Palace of Justice, c. 1920s

Miners in Élisabethville conducted a strike in December 1941 to protest the increasingly severe forced-labour regime that the Belgians imposed on the population because of the "war efforts".[8] A rally in the Union Minière football stadium got out of hand. Police opened fire and numerous protesters were killed. In early 1944, the city was again in the grip of severe tensions and fear of violent protests, following a mutiny of the Force Publique (army) in Luluabourg.[9]

Starting in 1933, the Belgian colonial authorities experimented with a limited form of self-governance by establishing the cité indigène of Élisabethville as a so-called centre extra-coutumier (a centre not subject to customary law). It was administered by an indigenous council and presided over by an indigenous chief. But due to constant interference from the Belgian authorities, the experiment soon proved a failure.[10] The first indigenous chief – Albert Kabongo – appointed in 1937, was dismissed in 1943 and not replaced.

In 1957, Élisabethville was established as a fully autonomous city; it held the first free municipal elections in which the Congolese could vote. The people of Élisabethville gave a vast majority to the nationalist Alliance des Bakongo, which demanded immediate independence from Belgium.

Élisabethville functioned as the administrative capital of the Katanga province. It was also an important commercial and industrial centre, and a centre of education and health services. The Benedictine Order and missionary Order of Salesians offered a wide range of educational facilities to Europeans and Congolese alike, including vocational training (Kafubu). The Belgians established the University of Élisabethville in 1954–1955 (now the University of Lubumbashi).

 
Lubumbashi: Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral
 
Lubumbashi in 2011

Lubumbashi from 1960 Edit

Élisabethville served as the capital and centre of the secessionist independent state of Katanga during the 1960–1963 Congolese civil war. Moise Tshombe proclaimed Katangan independence in July 1960. Congolese leaders arrested him and charged him with treason in April 1961; however, he agreed to dismiss his foreign advisers and military forces in exchange for his release. Tshombe returned to Élisabethville but repudiated these assurances and began to fight anew. United Nations troops opposed Katangan forces and took control of the city in December 1961 under a strong mandate. Roger Trinquier, well known for his published works on counter-insurgency warfare, served as a French military advisor to President Tshombe until international pressure, led by Belgium, caused his recall to France.

Mobutu Sese Seko ultimately assumed power of the Congo, which he renamed Zaïre. He renamed Élisabethville as "Lubumbashi" in 1966 and in 1972 renamed Katanga as "Shaba."

In May 1990, the university campus of Lubumbashi was the scene of a brutal killing of students by Mobutu's security forces. In 1991–92 ethnic tensions between the Luba from Katanga and the Luba from Kasaï, resident in the city, led to violent confrontations and the forced removal from the city of the latter.

Congo entered another genocidal civil war in the late 1990s. The Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo rebels captured Lubumbashi in April 1997. Rebel leader Laurent-Désiré Kabila spoke from Lubumbashi to declare himself president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 17 May 1997 after Mobutu Sese Seko fled Kinshasa.

When Laurent-Désiré Kabila decided to appoint a transitional parliament, in 1999, he decided to install the Parliament in Lubumbashi, in order to consolidate the fragile unity of the country. The parliament was installed in the building of the National Assembly of secessionist Katanga (the former city theatre), which had its capital in this city as well, in the 1960s. Lubumbashi was therefore the Legislative capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 1999 to 2003, when all the country's central institutions were brought back to Kinshasa.

On 7 September 2010 a large prison break happened in Lubumbashi after gunmen attacked a prison on the outskirts of the city. 960 prisoners managed to escape, including the Mai-Mai leader Gédéon Kyungu Mutanga.[11] On 23 March 2013 a militia group of 100 fighters attacked Lubumbashi and seized a United Nations compound, which was surrounded by Congolese soldiers and members of the president's Republican Guard.[3]

Geography Edit

Lubumbashi lies at around 1,208 m (3,963 ft) above sea level. The high altitude serves to cool the climate, which would otherwise be very hot. The Kafue River rises along the Zambian border near the city and meanders through north-central Zambia to the Zambezi River, cutting a long, deep panhandle into the country.

Climate Edit

Lubumbashi has a dry-winter humid subtropical climate (Cwa, according to the Köppen climate classification), with warm rainy summers and pleasant, dry winters, with most rainfall occurring during summer and early autumn. Annual average rainfall is 1,238 mm (48.75 inches).

Climate data for Lubumbashi
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 26
(79)
26
(79)
26
(79)
27
(81)
26
(79)
25
(77)
25
(77)
27
(81)
30
(86)
31
(88)
28
(82)
26
(79)
27
(81)
Daily mean °C (°F) 21
(70)
21
(70)
21
(70)
20.5
(68.9)
18
(64)
16.5
(61.7)
16.5
(61.7)
18
(64)
21
(70)
23
(73)
22
(72)
21
(70)
20.0
(67.9)
Average low °C (°F) 16
(61)
16
(61)
16
(61)
14
(57)
10
(50)
8
(46)
8
(46)
9
(48)
12
(54)
15
(59)
16
(61)
16
(61)
13
(55)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 253
(10.0)
257
(10.1)
202
(8.0)
60
(2.4)
4
(0.2)
1
(0.0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
4
(0.2)
37
(1.5)
163
(6.4)
257
(10.1)
1,238
(48.9)
Average rainy days 24 23 21 9 2 0 0 0 1 5 17 24 126
Source: https://www.weather2travel.com/climate-guides/congo-kinshasa/lubumbashi.php
Maximum UV index for Lubumbashi
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average Ultraviolet index 11+ 11+ 11+ 11+ 10 9 9 11 11+ 11+ 11+ 11+ 10.8
Source: weather2travel.com [12]

Demography Edit

Languages Edit

French is the official language, but the main spoken lingua franca in Lubumbashi is Kiswahili. The dialect of Kiswahili spoken all down the east side of Congo (including the provinces of North Kivu, South Kivu, Maniema, Katanga and Oriental, Western Kasai and Eastern Kasai) and almost all the way across to the Katangan border with Angola is called Kingwana.[13] As many people have moved into Lubumbashi for employment from rural areas, they have brought many other local languages including Kiluba, Chokwe, Bemba and Kisanga. Kiswahili has been the chief language shared by most people.[14]

Religious expression Edit

Religious places of worship in Lubumbashi are predominantly Christian: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lubumbashi (Catholic Church), Kimbanguist Church, Baptist Community of Congo (Baptist World Alliance), Baptist Community of the Congo River (Baptist World Alliance), Assemblies of God, Province of the Anglican Church of the Congo (Anglican Communion), Presbyterian Community in Congo (World Communion of Reformed Churches).[15] On April 5, 2020, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced plans to construct a temple in Lubumbashi, its second temple in the country.[16] There are also Muslim mosques.

Economy Edit

 
Commercial Bank of Congo
 
Storefronts in Lubumbashi

Lubumbashi serves as an important commercial and national industrial centre. Manufactures include textiles, food products and beverages, printing, bricks, and copper smelting. The city is home to the Simba brewery, producing the famous Tembo beer.

The city hosts the headquarters of one of the country's largest banks, Trust Merchant Bank. The area also has a daily newspaper.

Mining Edit

Lubumbashi, the mining capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is a base for many of the country's biggest mining companies. The Democratic Republic of Congo produces "more than 3 percent of the world's copper and half its cobalt, most of which comes from Katanga."[3]

Transport Edit

 
Lubumbashi International Airport

The city serves as a distribution centre for such minerals as copper, cobalt, zinc, tin, and coal.

Road Edit

The city is crossed by Transafrican Highway 9 (TAH 9), which connects it to the cities of Lusaka and Kolwezi.[17]

Rail Edit

Lubumbashi is the center of the railway lines from Cape to Cairo Railway, which serves as a link with the cities of Ilebo, Kindu, Tenke, Sakania and Ndola.[18]

In Tenke, the city connects with Kolwezi and Lobito, through the Benguela railway.[19]

Air Edit

Lubumbashi is home to the modern Lubumbashi International Airport.[20]

Education Edit

 
University of Lubumbashi

The largest institution of higher education is the University of Lubumbashi, founded in 1955, with also the teaching institutions Protestant University of Lubumbashi and the Graduate Institute of Health Sciences.

The Belgian international school École Privée Belge de Lubumbashi and the French international school Établissement scolaire français Blaise-Pascal are in the city.

Urban infrastructure Edit

Parks Edit

Muyambo Kyasa popularized the concept of parks. Muyambo Park opened in 2010. Located about 15 km from Lubumbashi, it is a large garden where children can play games, and adults relax. Other parks (or farms) include Mikembo and Futuka (once a reserve, now closed) on Kasenga Road in the city's outskirts.

Zoo Edit

The zoo of Lubumbashi is one of the most visited tourist attractions. It was created during the colonial period, and is considered the most attractive zoo in the country. During the years of war, it deteriorated but it has been rehabilitated by AZLU, a non-profit organization. By 2007, great animals had been acquired for the zoo. AZLU is keeping the zoo "for education purposes, and the protection of the natural heritage of the country," as it can be read on signs. Today, it has almost been restocked with lions, tigers, monkeys, apes, pelicans, wart hogs, crocodiles, snakes, turtles, monitor lizards, eagles, parrots, ostriches, gazelles, etc. Apart from animals, the zoo features a restaurant, a veterinary center, and a termite museum.

Culture Edit

Attractions in the city include a botanical garden, a zoo, and the regional archaeological and ethnological National Museum of Lubumbashi. Every two years, the Biennale of Lubumbashi is held across the city, showcasing works by artists from the region. In an interview in Ocula Magazine in 2019, the Biennale's artistic director, Sandrine Colard explained, 'The Congo is a country that is perpetually in the future. All of these different periods coalescing in one city is something I wanted to address.'[21]

Art Edit

Bogumił Jewsiewicki says that contemporary Lubumbashi art making is weak, especially when compared to the Kinshasan. He writes,

"No Lubumbashi popular painter has had an international career like that of the Kinshasa artist Chéri Samba, and there are in fact a number of artists and musicians in Kinshasa whom the whirlwind of international success has whisked farther from local audiences than any artist in Lubumbashi, and not only in Lubumbashi but in the surrounding province of Katanga."[22]

He names painters like Pilipili, Mwenze, Angali, Nkulu wa Nkulu, Maka, Tshimbumba, Dekab, and others.

Cinema Edit

Ciné Bétamax, formerly "Ciné Palace" and "Ciné Eden",[23] are the only modern movie theaters in the city which generally show popular recent Hollywood productions as well as NC-17 films. However, they also show movies about Congolese and African recent history like Mister Bob, Sniper: Reloaded, SEAL Team 8: Behind Enemy Lines, and Tears of the Sun. Before films, they both showed Congolese and international music videos, and US wrestling. The communication department of the University of Lubumbashi has collaborated with the movie theater to show students’ films.

Ciné Bétamax in particular also screens great football matches, and local singers’ concerts and Christian meetings are regularly held here.

Nigeria's Nollywood films are also, as in many other parts of the DRC and Africa, popular among the residents. These films are often sold on VCD and DVD platforms.

Music Edit

The popular music from Kinshasa is much appreciated and played in Lubumbashi. Jean-Bosco Mwenda is likely the most famous Katangese musician. Many of his songs have become classical, and are endlessly remixed by new young artists. Modern Lubumbashi singers fall into two groups: those who play Soukous, such as Jo Kizi and Képi Prince, and those who play international urban music, such as Ced Koncept, Tshumani, M-Joe, RJ Kanyera, Oxygène, Agresivo, Nelson Tshi, and Da Costa on the other. Most artists are influenced by successful Dj Spilulu's productions, Kinshasa singers Fally Ipupa, Ferre Gola and World Music.

Lubumbashi music is characterized by the use of many languages (Swahili, Lingala, Tshiluba, French and some English) in the lyrics. It is rare to hear songs composed in only one language. This code switching and mixing expresses the cosmopolitan character of the city, but some critics think it weakens the lyrics, which seem to be particularly made for teenagers anyway. Serge Manseba and Karibyona are humorist-singers featured by G'Sparks.

French cultural influence Edit

The "Institut Français" (formally known as "Centre Culturel Français"), located in the heart of the city, contributes a great deal to the cultural and artistic life of Lubumbashi. Students and researchers spend time in its library; it shows European and other French-language films; produces plays and other shows in its theater; and features local singers’ records for sale on display at the entrance.

Radio Okapi's cultural participation Edit

Radio Okapi's Lubumbashi presenters participate each Saturday evening in "métissage," the cultural program of the radio. The whole country is informed of the cultural activities in the city.

Media Edit

National channel (RTNC/Katanga) Edit

RTNC (Congolese National Radio and Television) has a provincial station located in Lubumbashi district at the junction of Lubilanshi and Sandoa. It has been very influential from the 1960s to the mid-1990s, at the end of the one-party system, and before the information technology revolution.

Independent channels Edit

Zenith Radio, the first independent radio station in the city, started broadcasting in 1996; since then numerous radio and television stations have been established. They can be classified in three groups: religious channels (Zenith, RTIV, Canal de Vie, RNS, etc.), commercial channels (RTA, Mwangaza, Nyota, RTLJ, Malaïka, Kyondo, etc.), and mixed ones like Wantanshi Radio and Television.

Notable people Edit

Sports Edit

Football Edit

Football is the most popular sport in Lubumbashi. The city is home to football clubs of the top national level such as FC Saint Eloi Lupopo, CS Don Bosco and TP Mazembe. TP Mazembe is the most successful club in national competitions and the most successful Congolese club in international football achieving 5 Africa's Champions League and reaching a FIFA Club World Cup final. The Chairman of Mazembe is the former governor of the province of Katanga Moïse Katumbi Chapwe.

Until 1960, Congolese football was segregated between whites-only and blacks-only leagues and competitions. In 1911 the whites-only Ligue de Football du Katanga was founded in Elisabethville, organising in 1925 the first official local championship called the B. Smith Cup.[24] The Katanga tournament was won by teams from Lubumbashi every recorded season except 2005. Simultaneously three blacks-only regional tournaments were played in the country. In 1950, the 'black' Elisabethville Football Association (FASI, Fédérations et Associations Sportives Indigènes) had over 30 affiliated clubs competing in four leagues divided over 3 divisions.

Both black and white tournaments in Lubumbashi and the country were played simultaneously until 1960, when they were unified. Since then the traditionally black clubs have dominated both local and national football.[25]

The 'black' Ligue de Football du Elisabethville, now renamed the Ligue de Football du Lubumbashi, is the city's football tournament, organized since 1960 by the city's federation EFLU. FC Saint-Eloi Lupopo won the EFLU league 25 times in all up to 2003 being the most successful club in the seasons for which records are known (some are not known).

Basketball Edit

Basketball players Myck Kabongo and Bismack Biyombo are from Lubumbashi.[26] Oscar Tshiebwe, the consensus 2022 NCAA Division I men's player of the year at the University of Kentucky, is also from Lubumbashi.

Sister city Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Ngandu, Junior (25 January 2023). "Lubumbashi: le nouveau Maire promet de relever les défis sécuritaires et de lutter contre l'insalubrité". Politico.cd (in French). Retrieved 25 January 2023.
  2. ^ a b "PopulationStat.com". from the original on 28 January 2021. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Michael J. Kavanagh (23 March 2013). "Congolese Militia Seizes UN Compound in Katanga's Lubumbashi". from the original on 25 March 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  4. ^ Britannica, Lubumbashi 8 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine, britannica.com, USA, accessed on July 7, 2019
  5. ^ Brion, R. and J.-L. Moreau (2006), De la mine à Mars, La genèse d'Umicore, Tielt : Lannoo.
  6. ^ Fetter, Bruce (1976), The Creation of Elisabethville, 1910–1940, Stanford: Hoover Institution Press.
  7. ^ John Gunther,Inside Africa, Hamish Hamilton Ltd. London, 1955, page 640
  8. ^ Dibwe dia Mwembu, Donatien (2001), Histoire des conditions de vie des travailleurs de l'Union Minière du Haut-Katanga et Gécamines, 1910–1999, Lubumbashi : Presses Universitaires de Lubumbashi.
  9. ^ Rubens, Antoine (1945), Dettes de guerre, Lubumbashi: L'essor du Congo.
  10. ^ Grévisse, F. (1951), Le Centre Extra-Coutumier d’Elisabethville, Elisabethville-Bruxelles: CEPSI-Institut Royal Colonial Belge.
  11. ^ "UN voices concern after mass prison outbreak in DR Congo". UN News Center. 7 September 2011. from the original on 22 April 2012. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  12. ^ "Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of the Congo – Monthly weather forecast and Climate data". weather2travel.com. from the original on 29 June 2019. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  13. ^ "Kingwana". facultystaff.richmond.edu. from the original on 7 May 2021. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  14. ^ "Fancy fountain!". from the original on 17 November 2018. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  15. ^ J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann, ‘‘Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices’’, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2010, p. 777
  16. ^ "Prophet Announces Eight New Temples at General Conference". 5 April 2020. from the original on 1 April 2021. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  17. ^ Adamatzky, Andrew. Bioevaluation of World Transport Networks. Singapure: World Scientific Publishing Co. September 2012. p. 39-44.
  18. ^ Cape to Cairo Railway 20 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine. Rhodesian Study Circle.
  19. ^ Benguela : les infrastructures ferroviaires au service de l’extractivisme 1 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Investig'Action. 18 de dezembro de 2018.
  20. ^ Lubumbashi International Airport profile 2 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Aviation Safety Network. 2022.
  21. ^ Balogun, Emmanuel (13 December 2019). "Sandrine Colard on the 6th Lubumbashi Biennale". Ocula Magazine. from the original on 16 December 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  22. ^ Brassinne, J. and Kestergat, J. (1991). Qui a tué Patrice Lumumba? Paris : Duculot. P 141. ISBN 2-8011-0979-7.
  23. ^ Jewsiewicki, B. (1999). A Congo Chronicle: Patrice Lumumba in Urban Art. New York: The Museum for African Art. P 13. ISBN 0-945802-25-0
  24. ^ "DR Congo (Zaire) - Katanga Champions". RSSSF. from the original on 1 September 2018. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  25. ^ "Congo-Kinshasa (DR Congo; formerly Zaire) - Regional Champions". RSSSF. from the original on 6 May 2018. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  26. ^ Rothbart, Davy (20 June 2011). "What's Your Deal? This month's guest: Bismack Biyombo". Grantland. from the original on 23 June 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
  • (in French). MONUC. 17 December 2007. Archived from the original on 17 December 2007. Retrieved 9 May 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

Bibliography Edit

External links Edit

  • Bilingual site about the city (in English and French)
  • Site about Lumbashi (in French)
  • Historic map of the Belgian Congo including Lubumbashi
  • GigaCatholic
  • Lubumbashi population
  • Market gardening in Lubumbashi
  • The Guardian: Human catastrophe in Katanga

lubumbashi, elisabethville, redirects, here, belgian, ocean, liner, elisabethville, belgian, community, birtley, county, durham, birtley, belgians, former, names, Élisabethville, french, elisabethstad, dutch, second, largest, city, democratic, republic, congo,. Elisabethville redirects here For the Belgian ocean liner see SS Elisabethville For the Belgian community in Birtley County Durham see The Birtley Belgians Lubumbashi former names Elisabethville French Elisabethstad Dutch is the second largest city in the Democratic Republic of the Congo located in the country s southeasternmost part along the border with Zambia The capital and principal city of the Haut Katanga Province Lubumbashi is the center of mining in the region acting as a hub for many of the country s largest mining companies 3 No definite population figures are available but the population of the city s urban area is estimated to be around 2 584 000 in 2021 2 LubumbashiProvincial capital and cityVille de LubumbashiLubumbashi 2006FlagSealNickname L shi LubumLubumbashiLocation in the Democratic Republic of the CongoCoordinates 11 39 51 S 27 28 58 E 11 66417 S 27 48278 E 11 66417 27 48278CountryDemocratic Republic of the CongoProvinceHaut KatangaFounded1910Government MayorMartin Kazembe 1 Area Land747 km2 288 sq mi Urban747 km2 288 sq mi Elevation1 208 m 3 963 ft Population 2021 Urban 2 2 584 000 Urban density3 500 km2 9 000 sq mi Time zoneUTC 02 00 Central Africa Time ClimateCwa Contents 1 History 1 1 Elisabethville under Belgian rule 1 2 Lubumbashi from 1960 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Demography 3 1 Languages 3 2 Religious expression 4 Economy 4 1 Mining 5 Transport 5 1 Road 5 2 Rail 5 3 Air 6 Education 7 Urban infrastructure 7 1 Parks 7 2 Zoo 8 Culture 8 1 Art 8 2 Cinema 8 3 Music 8 4 French cultural influence 8 5 Radio Okapi s cultural participation 9 Media 9 1 National channel RTNC Katanga 9 2 Independent channels 10 Notable people 11 Sports 11 1 Football 11 2 Basketball 12 Sister city 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksHistory EditFurther information Timeline of Lubumbashi Elisabethville under Belgian rule Edit The Belgian government established the modern day government in the city of Elisabethville sometimes Elizabethville both in French or Elisabethstad in Dutch in 1910 named in honour of Queen Elisabeth consort to King Albert I of the Belgians 4 By that time the government had taken over the colony from King Leopold II and renamed it as the Belgian Congo This site was chosen by Vice Governor General Emile Wangermee because of its proximity to the copper mine of Etoile du Congo and the copper ore smelting oven installed by Union Miniere du Haut Katanga on the nearby Lubumbashi River The Comite Special du Katanga CSK a semi private concessionary company set up in 1900 had its headquarters in Elisabethville throughout the colonial era It enjoyed major privileges mainly in terms of land and mining concessions in the Katanga province The city prospered with the development of a regional copper mining industry 5 Huge investments in the 1920s both in the mining industry and in transport infrastructure railline Elisabethville Port Francqui and Elisabethville Dilolo developed the Katanga province into one of the world s major copper ore producers The population of the city grew apace from approx 30 000 in 1930 to 50 000 in 1943 and 180 000 in 1957 It was the second city of the Belgian Congo after Leopoldville nbsp The Belgian Quarter in LubumbashiAs was customary with European colonies the city centre of Elisabethville was reserved for the minority white European population This consisted mainly of Belgian nationals but the city also attracted important British and Italian communities as well as Jewish Greeks Congolese were allowed in the white city only during the day except for the house servants boys who often lived in shanty dwellings boyeries located in the backyards of the European city houses Many men in the black population were labour immigrants from neighbouring regions in the Belgian Congo Northern Katanga Maniema Kasai from Belgian Rwanda and Burundi and from British Northern Rhodesia present day Zambia 6 The black population lived initially in a so called cite indigene called Quartier Albert now Kamalondo south of the city centre and separated from the white city by a 700 metres wide neutral zone With population growth new indigenous quarters were created These still form the main suburbs of present day Lubumbashi Kenia Katuba and Ruashi The work and businesses related to the mines made Elisabethville the most prosperous region of the Congo during the last decade of Belgian rule In 1954 there were 8 000 black homeowners in the city while thousands more were skilled workers It was estimated that black Africans living in Elisabethville had a higher standard of living than anywhere else on the continent at that time 7 nbsp Lubumbashi Palace of Justice c 1920sMiners in Elisabethville conducted a strike in December 1941 to protest the increasingly severe forced labour regime that the Belgians imposed on the population because of the war efforts 8 A rally in the Union Miniere football stadium got out of hand Police opened fire and numerous protesters were killed In early 1944 the city was again in the grip of severe tensions and fear of violent protests following a mutiny of the Force Publique army in Luluabourg 9 Starting in 1933 the Belgian colonial authorities experimented with a limited form of self governance by establishing the cite indigene of Elisabethville as a so called centre extra coutumier a centre not subject to customary law It was administered by an indigenous council and presided over by an indigenous chief But due to constant interference from the Belgian authorities the experiment soon proved a failure 10 The first indigenous chief Albert Kabongo appointed in 1937 was dismissed in 1943 and not replaced In 1957 Elisabethville was established as a fully autonomous city it held the first free municipal elections in which the Congolese could vote The people of Elisabethville gave a vast majority to the nationalist Alliance des Bakongo which demanded immediate independence from Belgium Elisabethville functioned as the administrative capital of the Katanga province It was also an important commercial and industrial centre and a centre of education and health services The Benedictine Order and missionary Order of Salesians offered a wide range of educational facilities to Europeans and Congolese alike including vocational training Kafubu The Belgians established the University of Elisabethville in 1954 1955 now the University of Lubumbashi nbsp Lubumbashi Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral nbsp Lubumbashi in 2011Lubumbashi from 1960 Edit Elisabethville served as the capital and centre of the secessionist independent state of Katanga during the 1960 1963 Congolese civil war Moise Tshombe proclaimed Katangan independence in July 1960 Congolese leaders arrested him and charged him with treason in April 1961 however he agreed to dismiss his foreign advisers and military forces in exchange for his release Tshombe returned to Elisabethville but repudiated these assurances and began to fight anew United Nations troops opposed Katangan forces and took control of the city in December 1961 under a strong mandate Roger Trinquier well known for his published works on counter insurgency warfare served as a French military advisor to President Tshombe until international pressure led by Belgium caused his recall to France Mobutu Sese Seko ultimately assumed power of the Congo which he renamed Zaire He renamed Elisabethville as Lubumbashi in 1966 and in 1972 renamed Katanga as Shaba In May 1990 the university campus of Lubumbashi was the scene of a brutal killing of students by Mobutu s security forces In 1991 92 ethnic tensions between the Luba from Katanga and the Luba from Kasai resident in the city led to violent confrontations and the forced removal from the city of the latter Congo entered another genocidal civil war in the late 1990s The Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo rebels captured Lubumbashi in April 1997 Rebel leader Laurent Desire Kabila spoke from Lubumbashi to declare himself president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 17 May 1997 after Mobutu Sese Seko fled Kinshasa When Laurent Desire Kabila decided to appoint a transitional parliament in 1999 he decided to install the Parliament in Lubumbashi in order to consolidate the fragile unity of the country The parliament was installed in the building of the National Assembly of secessionist Katanga the former city theatre which had its capital in this city as well in the 1960s Lubumbashi was therefore the Legislative capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 1999 to 2003 when all the country s central institutions were brought back to Kinshasa On 7 September 2010 a large prison break happened in Lubumbashi after gunmen attacked a prison on the outskirts of the city 960 prisoners managed to escape including the Mai Mai leader Gedeon Kyungu Mutanga 11 On 23 March 2013 a militia group of 100 fighters attacked Lubumbashi and seized a United Nations compound which was surrounded by Congolese soldiers and members of the president s Republican Guard 3 Geography EditFurther information in French List of communes of Lubumbashi fr Lubumbashi lies at around 1 208 m 3 963 ft above sea level The high altitude serves to cool the climate which would otherwise be very hot The Kafue River rises along the Zambian border near the city and meanders through north central Zambia to the Zambezi River cutting a long deep panhandle into the country Climate Edit Lubumbashi has a dry winter humid subtropical climate Cwa according to the Koppen climate classification with warm rainy summers and pleasant dry winters with most rainfall occurring during summer and early autumn Annual average rainfall is 1 238 mm 48 75 inches Climate data for LubumbashiMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 26 79 26 79 26 79 27 81 26 79 25 77 25 77 27 81 30 86 31 88 28 82 26 79 27 81 Daily mean C F 21 70 21 70 21 70 20 5 68 9 18 64 16 5 61 7 16 5 61 7 18 64 21 70 23 73 22 72 21 70 20 0 67 9 Average low C F 16 61 16 61 16 61 14 57 10 50 8 46 8 46 9 48 12 54 15 59 16 61 16 61 13 55 Average rainfall mm inches 253 10 0 257 10 1 202 8 0 60 2 4 4 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 37 1 5 163 6 4 257 10 1 1 238 48 9 Average rainy days 24 23 21 9 2 0 0 0 1 5 17 24 126Source https www weather2travel com climate guides congo kinshasa lubumbashi php Maximum UV index for LubumbashiMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage Ultraviolet index 11 11 11 11 10 9 9 11 11 11 11 11 10 8Source weather2travel com 12 Demography EditLanguages Edit French is the official language but the main spoken lingua franca in Lubumbashi is Kiswahili The dialect of Kiswahili spoken all down the east side of Congo including the provinces of North Kivu South Kivu Maniema Katanga and Oriental Western Kasai and Eastern Kasai and almost all the way across to the Katangan border with Angola is called Kingwana 13 As many people have moved into Lubumbashi for employment from rural areas they have brought many other local languages including Kiluba Chokwe Bemba and Kisanga Kiswahili has been the chief language shared by most people 14 Religious expression Edit Religious places of worship in Lubumbashi are predominantly Christian Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lubumbashi Catholic Church Kimbanguist Church Baptist Community of Congo Baptist World Alliance Baptist Community of the Congo River Baptist World Alliance Assemblies of God Province of the Anglican Church of the Congo Anglican Communion Presbyterian Community in Congo World Communion of Reformed Churches 15 On April 5 2020 the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints announced plans to construct a temple in Lubumbashi its second temple in the country 16 There are also Muslim mosques Economy Edit nbsp Commercial Bank of Congo nbsp Storefronts in LubumbashiLubumbashi serves as an important commercial and national industrial centre Manufactures include textiles food products and beverages printing bricks and copper smelting The city is home to the Simba brewery producing the famous Tembo beer The city hosts the headquarters of one of the country s largest banks Trust Merchant Bank The area also has a daily newspaper Mining Edit Lubumbashi the mining capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo is a base for many of the country s biggest mining companies The Democratic Republic of Congo produces more than 3 percent of the world s copper and half its cobalt most of which comes from Katanga 3 Transport Edit nbsp Lubumbashi International AirportThe city serves as a distribution centre for such minerals as copper cobalt zinc tin and coal Road Edit The city is crossed by Transafrican Highway 9 TAH 9 which connects it to the cities of Lusaka and Kolwezi 17 Rail Edit Lubumbashi is the center of the railway lines from Cape to Cairo Railway which serves as a link with the cities of Ilebo Kindu Tenke Sakania and Ndola 18 In Tenke the city connects with Kolwezi and Lobito through the Benguela railway 19 Air Edit Lubumbashi is home to the modern Lubumbashi International Airport 20 Education Edit nbsp University of LubumbashiThe largest institution of higher education is the University of Lubumbashi founded in 1955 with also the teaching institutions Protestant University of Lubumbashi and the Graduate Institute of Health Sciences The Belgian international school Ecole Privee Belge de Lubumbashi and the French international school Etablissement scolaire francais Blaise Pascal are in the city Urban infrastructure EditParks Edit Muyambo Kyasa popularized the concept of parks Muyambo Park opened in 2010 Located about 15 km from Lubumbashi it is a large garden where children can play games and adults relax Other parks or farms include Mikembo and Futuka once a reserve now closed on Kasenga Road in the city s outskirts Zoo Edit The zoo of Lubumbashi is one of the most visited tourist attractions It was created during the colonial period and is considered the most attractive zoo in the country During the years of war it deteriorated but it has been rehabilitated by AZLU a non profit organization By 2007 great animals had been acquired for the zoo AZLU is keeping the zoo for education purposes and the protection of the natural heritage of the country as it can be read on signs Today it has almost been restocked with lions tigers monkeys apes pelicans wart hogs crocodiles snakes turtles monitor lizards eagles parrots ostriches gazelles etc Apart from animals the zoo features a restaurant a veterinary center and a termite museum Culture EditAttractions in the city include a botanical garden a zoo and the regional archaeological and ethnological National Museum of Lubumbashi Every two years the Biennale of Lubumbashi is held across the city showcasing works by artists from the region In an interview in Ocula Magazine in 2019 the Biennale s artistic director Sandrine Colard explained The Congo is a country that is perpetually in the future All of these different periods coalescing in one city is something I wanted to address 21 Art Edit Bogumil Jewsiewicki says that contemporary Lubumbashi art making is weak especially when compared to the Kinshasan He writes No Lubumbashi popular painter has had an international career like that of the Kinshasa artist Cheri Samba and there are in fact a number of artists and musicians in Kinshasa whom the whirlwind of international success has whisked farther from local audiences than any artist in Lubumbashi and not only in Lubumbashi but in the surrounding province of Katanga 22 He names painters like Pilipili Mwenze Angali Nkulu wa Nkulu Maka Tshimbumba Dekab and others Cinema Edit Cine Betamax formerly Cine Palace and Cine Eden 23 are the only modern movie theaters in the city which generally show popular recent Hollywood productions as well as NC 17 films However they also show movies about Congolese and African recent history like Mister Bob Sniper Reloaded SEAL Team 8 Behind Enemy Lines and Tears of the Sun Before films they both showed Congolese and international music videos and US wrestling The communication department of the University of Lubumbashi has collaborated with the movie theater to show students films Cine Betamax in particular also screens great football matches and local singers concerts and Christian meetings are regularly held here Nigeria s Nollywood films are also as in many other parts of the DRC and Africa popular among the residents These films are often sold on VCD and DVD platforms Music Edit The popular music from Kinshasa is much appreciated and played in Lubumbashi Jean Bosco Mwenda is likely the most famous Katangese musician Many of his songs have become classical and are endlessly remixed by new young artists Modern Lubumbashi singers fall into two groups those who play Soukous such as Jo Kizi and Kepi Prince and those who play international urban music such as Ced Koncept Tshumani M Joe RJ Kanyera Oxygene Agresivo Nelson Tshi and Da Costa on the other Most artists are influenced by successful Dj Spilulu s productions Kinshasa singers Fally Ipupa Ferre Gola and World Music Lubumbashi music is characterized by the use of many languages Swahili Lingala Tshiluba French and some English in the lyrics It is rare to hear songs composed in only one language This code switching and mixing expresses the cosmopolitan character of the city but some critics think it weakens the lyrics which seem to be particularly made for teenagers anyway Serge Manseba and Karibyona are humorist singers featured by G Sparks French cultural influence Edit The Institut Francais formally known as Centre Culturel Francais located in the heart of the city contributes a great deal to the cultural and artistic life of Lubumbashi Students and researchers spend time in its library it shows European and other French language films produces plays and other shows in its theater and features local singers records for sale on display at the entrance Radio Okapi s cultural participation Edit Radio Okapi s Lubumbashi presenters participate each Saturday evening in metissage the cultural program of the radio The whole country is informed of the cultural activities in the city Media EditNational channel RTNC Katanga Edit RTNC Congolese National Radio and Television has a provincial station located in Lubumbashi district at the junction of Lubilanshi and Sandoa It has been very influential from the 1960s to the mid 1990s at the end of the one party system and before the information technology revolution Independent channels Edit Zenith Radio the first independent radio station in the city started broadcasting in 1996 since then numerous radio and television stations have been established They can be classified in three groups religious channels Zenith RTIV Canal de Vie RNS etc commercial channels RTA Mwangaza Nyota RTLJ Malaika Kyondo etc and mixed ones like Wantanshi Radio and Television Notable people EditBismack Biyombo NBA player who is currently a free agent Grady Diangana Albert Kanta Kambala 1958 2008 Zaire international footballer Aime Ngoy Mukena 1954 2022 Politician Governor of Katanga Minister of National Defense Minister of Hydrocarbons Member of Parliament and Professor Freddy Mulongo born 1965 Congolese journalist Oscar Tshiebwe born 1999 Basketball player for the Kentucky Wildcats men s basketball team Lous and the Yakuza born 1996 singer rapper songwriter model and artist Tshala Muana 1958 2022 singer and dancer Baloji rapper born 1978 hip hop artist and actor Sports EditFootball Edit Football is the most popular sport in Lubumbashi The city is home to football clubs of the top national level such as FC Saint Eloi Lupopo CS Don Bosco and TP Mazembe TP Mazembe is the most successful club in national competitions and the most successful Congolese club in international football achieving 5 Africa s Champions League and reaching a FIFA Club World Cup final The Chairman of Mazembe is the former governor of the province of Katanga Moise Katumbi Chapwe Until 1960 Congolese football was segregated between whites only and blacks only leagues and competitions In 1911 the whites only Ligue de Football du Katanga was founded in Elisabethville organising in 1925 the first official local championship called the B Smith Cup 24 The Katanga tournament was won by teams from Lubumbashi every recorded season except 2005 Simultaneously three blacks only regional tournaments were played in the country In 1950 the black Elisabethville Football Association FASI Federations et Associations Sportives Indigenes had over 30 affiliated clubs competing in four leagues divided over 3 divisions Both black and white tournaments in Lubumbashi and the country were played simultaneously until 1960 when they were unified Since then the traditionally black clubs have dominated both local and national football 25 The black Ligue de Football du Elisabethville now renamed the Ligue de Football du Lubumbashi is the city s football tournament organized since 1960 by the city s federation EFLU FC Saint Eloi Lupopo won the EFLU league 25 times in all up to 2003 being the most successful club in the seasons for which records are known some are not known Basketball Edit Basketball players Myck Kabongo and Bismack Biyombo are from Lubumbashi 26 Oscar Tshiebwe the consensus 2022 NCAA Division I men s player of the year at the University of Kentucky is also from Lubumbashi Sister city Edit nbsp Liege BelgiumReferences Edit nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo portal Ngandu Junior 25 January 2023 Lubumbashi le nouveau Maire promet de relever les defis securitaires et de lutter contre l insalubrite Politico cd in French Retrieved 25 January 2023 a b PopulationStat com Archived from the original on 28 January 2021 Retrieved 21 January 2021 a b c Michael J Kavanagh 23 March 2013 Congolese Militia Seizes UN Compound in Katanga s Lubumbashi Archived from the original on 25 March 2013 Retrieved 23 March 2013 Britannica Lubumbashi Archived 8 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine britannica com USA accessed on July 7 2019 Brion R and J L Moreau 2006 De la mine a Mars La genese d Umicore Tielt Lannoo Fetter Bruce 1976 The Creation of Elisabethville 1910 1940 Stanford Hoover Institution Press John Gunther Inside Africa Hamish Hamilton Ltd London 1955 page 640 Dibwe dia Mwembu Donatien 2001 Histoire des conditions de vie des travailleurs de l Union Miniere du Haut Katanga et Gecamines 1910 1999 Lubumbashi Presses Universitaires de Lubumbashi Rubens Antoine 1945 Dettes de guerre Lubumbashi L essor du Congo Grevisse F 1951 Le Centre Extra Coutumier d Elisabethville Elisabethville Bruxelles CEPSI Institut Royal Colonial Belge UN voices concern after mass prison outbreak in DR Congo UN News Center 7 September 2011 Archived from the original on 22 April 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2011 Lubumbashi Democratic Republic of the Congo Monthly weather forecast and Climate data weather2travel com Archived from the original on 29 June 2019 Retrieved 29 June 2019 Kingwana facultystaff richmond edu Archived from the original on 7 May 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Fancy fountain Archived from the original on 17 November 2018 Retrieved 17 December 2017 J Gordon Melton Martin Baumann Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices ABC CLIO USA 2010 p 777 Prophet Announces Eight New Temples at General Conference 5 April 2020 Archived from the original on 1 April 2021 Retrieved 7 April 2020 Adamatzky Andrew Bioevaluation of World Transport Networks Singapure World Scientific Publishing Co September 2012 p 39 44 Cape to Cairo Railway Archived 20 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Rhodesian Study Circle Benguela les infrastructures ferroviaires au service de l extractivisme Archived 1 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine Investig Action 18 de dezembro de 2018 Lubumbashi International Airport profile Archived 2 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Safety Network 2022 Balogun Emmanuel 13 December 2019 Sandrine Colard on the 6th Lubumbashi Biennale Ocula Magazine Archived from the original on 16 December 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2020 Brassinne J and Kestergat J 1991 Qui a tue Patrice Lumumba Paris Duculot P 141 ISBN 2 8011 0979 7 Jewsiewicki B 1999 A Congo Chronicle Patrice Lumumba in Urban Art New York The Museum for African Art P 13 ISBN 0 945802 25 0 DR Congo Zaire Katanga Champions RSSSF Archived from the original on 1 September 2018 Retrieved 24 May 2018 Congo Kinshasa DR Congo formerly Zaire Regional Champions RSSSF Archived from the original on 6 May 2018 Retrieved 24 May 2018 Rothbart Davy 20 June 2011 What s Your Deal This month s guest Bismack Biyombo Grantland Archived from the original on 23 June 2011 Retrieved 22 June 2011 Villes de RD Congo Lubumbashi in French MONUC 17 December 2007 Archived from the original on 17 December 2007 Retrieved 9 May 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of LubumbashiExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lubumbashi Bilingual site about the city in English and French Site about Lumbashi in French Historic map of the Belgian Congo including Lubumbashi GigaCatholic Lubumbashi population Market gardening in Lubumbashi The Guardian Human catastrophe in Katanga Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lubumbashi amp oldid 1179064994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.