Tambor de Mina

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TypeSyncretic
ClassificationAfro-Brazilian
TheologyMixture of West African religions such as Yoruba and Dahomey religion, as well as Catholicism.
OriginSlave era
Maranhão, Brazil
Tambor de Mina
The interior of Casa das Minas, with a photo of the last complete initiation ceremony (boat of tobossis), in 1914. The floor is made of clay
TypeSyncretic
ClassificationAfro-Brazilian
TheologyMixture of West African religions such as Yoruba and Dahomey religion, as well as Catholicism.
OriginSlave era
Maranhão, Brazil

Tambor de Mina is an Afro-Brazilian religious tradition, practiced mainly in the Brazilian states of Maranhão, Piauí, Pará and the Amazon rainforest.[1]

Tambor means drum in Portuguese, and refers to the importance of the rhythmic element to worship. Mina is derived from the São Jorge da Mina castle in Ghana and refers to a designation given to enslaved African slaves in Brazil. Mina did not necessarily refer to slaves who had passed through the fortress of São Jorge da Mina itself, but rather to "different ethnicities over time and place".[2] For example, Mina-Popo was often the designation for people from Little Popo, originally Akan speakers who had migrated from west of the Volta River, and Mina-Nago and Mina-Congo were other designations sometimes found in Brazil.[2]

History

Slavery in Maranhão was concentrated in the Itapecuru Valley, the Baixada Maranhense, and São Luís, which is the capital of the Brazilian state of Maranhão. Cotton and sugar cane plantations contributed heavily to the development of larger cities. Colonial houses were built with slave labor with their unique design influenced by the harmony, beauty, and choreography of songs originating from ancient Africa.[1]

Beliefs

Temples and priesthood

References

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