Agostinho Neto
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- In full:
- António Agostinho Neto
- Born:
- September 17, 1922, Icolo e Bengo, Angola
- Also Known As:
- Antônio Agostinho Neto
- Title / Office:
- president (1975-1979), Angola
- Political Affiliation:
- Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola
Agostinho Neto (born September 17, 1922, Icolo e Bengo, Angola—died September 10, 1979, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.) was an Angolan poet, physician, and politician who served as the first president (1975–79) of the People’s Republic of Angola.
Neto first became known in 1948, when he published a volume of poems in Luanda and joined a national cultural movement that was aimed at “rediscovering” indigenous Angolan culture (similar to the Negritude movement of the French-speaking African countries). His first of many arrests for political activities came shortly thereafter in Lisbon, where he had gone to study medicine.
Neto returned home as a doctor in 1959 but was arrested in the presence of his patients in June 1960 because of his militant opposition to the colonial authorities. When his patients protested his arrest, the police opened fire, killing some and injuring 200. Neto spent the next two years in detention in Cape Verde and in Portugal, where he produced a new volume of verse. In 1962 he managed to escape to Morocco, where he joined the Angolan liberation movement in exile. At the end of 1962 he was elected president of the Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola (MPLA).
When in 1975 Angola became independent, it was divided among its three warring independence movements. The MPLA forces, however, with Cuban help, held the central part of the country, including the capital, and Neto, a Marxist, was proclaimed president. He served until his death in 1979.
Neto was widely recognized as a gifted poet. His work was published in a number of Portuguese and Angolan reviews and was included in Mário de Andrade’s Antologia da poesia negra de expressão portuguesa (1958).