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AFRICA · ENDANGERED

Engolo

A combat art of the Cunene region of Angola, practised by the Nyaneka-Nkhumbi group and played in a circle: kicks delivered from inverted positions, hands braced on the ground, evasions.

ORIGINS & SOCIAL FUNCTIONS

A combat art of the Cunene region of southern Angola, practised by the Nyaneka-Nkhumbi group, the pastoral highlands whose age-grade training culture Desch-Obi placed at the source of the Atlantic's inverted-kick lineage.

THE GAME

Played in the circle: kicks launched from inverted positions, hands planted on the ground, evasions, the body upside down as a fighting stance, not an acrobatic ornament.

PLACE IN THE FAMILY

The engolo is the family's great Angolan matrix: its inverted kicks are the direct kin of capoeira's rabo-de-arraia and of the diamanga's back-turned heel. It anchors the thesis's Atlantic argument, the kinship of the games residing in their internal logic, carried by people across the ocean and re-created, not copied, on the American shore.

SOURCES

Olivier Malo, La capoeira et les arts de combat noirs : histoire effacée, techniques invisibles, 1905–1984, doctoral thesis in History, Université des Antilles, 2020.

HOW TO CITE THIS ENTRY

MALO, Olivier. Engolo. In: The Atlas of the Black Combat Arts [online]. Black Combat Arts Institute, 2026. Available from: https://www.blackcombatarts.com/atlas-en/engolo [accessed date].

RELATED PRACTICES

→ Capoeira, Inverted kicks, hands as support

→ Diamanga (Daka), Kicks from inverted positions

→ Kandeka, Angolan combat games

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