Abstract :
This essay analyses the circulation of political models and administrative practices
drawn from the Enlightenment statecraft of metropolitan Portugal and their inscription
in specific colonial contexts of Angola in the mid-eighteenth century. The purpose here is to
show how these models had to be ‘unpacked’ when confronted with foreign contexts,
reconfigured and even reinvented for local circumstances. During the 1750s, the Lisbon
government conceived a new imperial project to territorialize the colony through the
intellectual and physical appropriation of this Central African space. In order to do so, three
levels of this administrative knowledge are distinguished: the quantification and systematization
of information, cartography, and the archive. For each, this essay demonstrates how they were
made available to, appropriated by or transformed by both the colonial and the African
societies in the colonial context.