Akuapem
Location:
Southern Ghana
Language:
Akuapem (Akan cluster of Twi)
Neighboring Peoples:
Dagomba, Senufo, Malinke, Guro, Ewe, Yaure
Types of Art:
Woodcarving includes
stools, which are recognized as "seats" of power, and wooden dolls (akua
ba) that are associated with fertility. There are also extensive traditions
of pottery and weaving throughout Akan territory. Kente cloth, woven on
behalf of royalty, has come to symbolize African power throughout the world.
History:
Akuapem are one
group of several Akan peoples living in southern Ghana and southeastern
Côte d'Ivoire. Akan is a generic term which refers to a large number
of linguistically related peoples. The largest and best known ethnic groups
include Asante and Fante peoples, who live in southern Ghana, and Baule
and Anyi peoples in southeastern Côte d'Ivoire. The rise of the early
Akan centralized states can be traced to the 13th century and is related
to the opening of trade routes established to move gold throughout the
region. It was not until the end of the 17th century, however, that the
grand Asante Kingdom emerged in the central forest region of Ghana, when
several small states united under the Chief of Kumasi in a move to achieve
political freedom from the Denkyira. The Asante confederacy was dissolved
by the British in 1900 and colonized in 1901. Although there is no longer
a centralized Akan confederacy, Akan peoples maintain a powerful political
and economic presence.
Economy:
Early Akan economics
revolved primarily around the trade of gold and enslaved peoples to Mande
and Hausa traders within Africa and later to Europeans along the coast.
This trade was dominated by the Asante who received firearms in return
for their role as middlemen in the slave trade. These were used to increase
their already dominant power. Various luxury goods were were also received
and incorporated into Asante symbols of status and political office. Local
agriculture includes cocoa cultivation for export, while yams and taro
serve as the main staples. Among the Fante who live along the coast, fishing
is very important. The depleted forests provide little opportunity for
hunting. Extensive markets are run primarily by women who maintain considerable
economic power, while men engage in fishing, hunting, and clearing land.
Both sexes participate in agricultural endeavors.
Political Systems:
Royal membership
among Akan is determined through connection to the land. Anyone who traces
descendency from a founding member of a village or town may be considered
royal. Each family is responsible for maintaining political and social
order within its confines. In the past, there was a hierarchy of leadership
that extended beyond the family, first to the village headman, then to
a territorial chief, then to the paramount chief of each division within
the Asante confederacy. The highest level of power is reserved for the
Asanthene, who inherited his position along matrilineal lines. The Asantahene
still plays an important role in Ghana today, symbolically linking the
past with current Ghanaian politics. Religion: Akan believe in a supreme
god who takes on various names depending upon the particular region of
worship. Akan mythology claims that at one time the god freely interacted
with man, but that after being continually struck by the pestle of an old
woman pounding fufu, he moved far up into the sky. There are no priests
that serve him directly, and people believe that they may make direct contact
with him. There are also numerous gods (abosom), who receive their power
from the supreme god and are most often connected to the natural world.
These include ocean and riverine spirits and various local deities. Priests
serve individual spirits and act as mediaries between the gods and mankind.
Nearly everyone participates in daily prayer, which includes the pouring
of libations as an offering to both the ancestors who are buried in the
land and to the spirits who are everywhere. The earth is seen as a female
deity and is directly connected to fertility and fecundity.
Gateway-Africa.Com
/ Afridesign.Com
|