Pende people

[1] Much like the Yaka and Suku peoples, the Pende originally lived in the strip between the Atlantic Ocean and the Cuanza River, in modern-day Angola.

They migrated to their current region of the modern-day Democratic Republic of the Congo in around 1620 as a consequence of the expansion of the Kingdom of Lunda.

[1] In around 1885, the powerful Chokwe ethnic group began expanding and gained control over the Eastern Pende but this period was brought to an end by the arrival of European colonists and the creation of the Congo Free State.

[2] The Pende have a matrilineal culture and family kinship plays an important role in structuring social relations.

[1] The Pende traditionally speak their own language, known as Kipende, which is part of the Central Bantu group.

Kipoko mask, Eastern Pende, West Kasai, Congo. On display at Cantor Art Center , Stanford.
Stool with "Caryatid" Figures. Brooklyn Museum 22.1389
Ivory miniature carved in the form of a mask. Tropenmuseum .