There is a gap in the archaeological record between the Early
Iron Age and the Later Iron Age, from about 1050 - 850 years BP. The time after the Early Iron Age can be broken into "two broad categories based on vessel shape, decoration, and the presence or absence of European trade groups."The first of the two categories will be referred to as Phase 1 Later Iron Age which dates from approximately 850 - 450 years BP. The second of the two categories will be referred to as Phase 2 Later Iron Age: The Historic Period, which dates from about 450 - 50 years BP.
Phase 1 Later Iron Age Very few sites could be definitely dated to Phase 1 of the Later Iron Age. Denbow suggests that this could be due to population patterns shifting from "dispersed, small settlements during the Early Iron Age to a more centralized pattern in which small villages coalesced into larger towns."
Loubanzi Loubanzi is a large Phase 1 Later Iron Age site that has dated to approximately 535 - 317 years BP, the date was supported by the fact that no European trade goods were found at the site. One possible scenario, suggested by Denbow, is that Loubanzi "was an early ward or precinct on the outskirts of the larger settlement of Bouali (Bwali), the capital of the
Loango kingdom described in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries." Ceramics shaped like
chamber pots, as well quartzite and chert, oyster shells and fragments of iron were recovered from the site.
Phase 2 Later Iron Age: Historic Period Very few actual excavations have been done on Phase 2 Later Iron Age Sites, mostly only surface reconnaissance. Indigenous ceramics with woven motifs were found in association with European porcelain and earthenware. Historical records from Peter Van den Broecke, a Dutch cloth trader, and Andrew Battell, "a long-term resident of Loango," both describe the capital city of Bwali. Van den Broecke described Bwali as "lying close to the show and surrounded by a wall." Battell describes Bwali as having a "royal compound separated from the rest of the town, a royal court where war and other matters of national import were deliberated, and a great market." ==References==