The Financing of the Ashanti Expansion (1700–1820)
- 1 July 1967
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Africa
- Vol. 37 (3) , 283-291
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1158151
Abstract
Opening ParagraphThe arrival of Europeans, and the introduction of guns, first in the coastal areas JL and then into the interior of West Africa, altered the nature of warfare. Already in the seventeenth century, the Akan-Fanti, Akim, Akwamu, and other peoples on the Gold Coast no longer relied entirely on bows and arrows, spears, and javelins which were the traditional weapons but used guns and even a few cannon. Besides the change in weapons, wars were undertaken on a larger scale than ever before—a situation which was aggravated by participation in the slave trade. Among the peoples of the Gold Coast, now Ghana, none excelled the Ashanti in either the scale or intensity of their fighting. From the turn of the seventeenth and the eighteenth centuries, they fought major wars of conquest and minor ones of consolidation throughout the area of present-day Ghana, and after 1820 they were involved in four major clashes with the British until the latter dissolved their kingdom in 1900.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Four years in Ashantee /Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1878
- Journal of a residence in AshanteePublished by Smithsonian Institution ,1824