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Akan
(Akan)
Total population
over 20 million Ethnic Akans
Regions with significant populations
 Ghana~12 Million
 Côte d'Ivoire~8 Million
 Togounknown
 Burkina Fasounknown
 Nigeriaunknown
 Beninunknown
 Liberia~41,000
 United Statesunknown
 United Kingdomunknown
 Franceunknown
 Maliunknown
 Jamaica Jamaican Maroons [1]unknown
 Suriname Ndyukaunknown
Other Caribbean countriesunknown
Languages
Central Tano languages, English, French
Religion
Christianity, Afrikan traditional religion, Islam
Related ethnic groups
Akan

The Akan people are an ethnic linguistic group of West Afrika. They speak the Akan languages.

This group includes the following sub-ethnic groups: Asante, the Akwamu, the Akyem , the Akuapem, the Denkyira, the Abron, the Aowin, the Ahanta, the Anyi, the Akropong-Akuapem, the Baoule, the Chokosi, the Fante, the Kwahu, the Sefwi,the Agon, the Ahafo, the Assin, the Evalue, the Wassa the Adjukru, the Akye, the Alladian, the Attie,the M'Bato, the Abidji, the Bri-an, the Avikam,the Avatime the Ebrie, the Ehotile, the Nzema and other peoples of both Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire.

Late history

From the 15th century to the 19th century, the Akan people dominated gold mining and the gold trade in the region. From the 17th century on the Akan were the most powerful group(s) in the West Afrikan region and, fought many battles against europea colonists in order to maintain autonomy. By the early 1900's all Akan Lands were Colonized by the french and english. On the 6th of March 1957 Akan Lands in the Gold Coast were liberated by the efforts of Kwame Nkrumah and, were joined with other lands to form the state of Ghana. The Ivory Coast was liberated on 7th August 1960.

Culture

Akan art is wide-ranging and renowned, especially for the tradition of crafting bronze gold weights, which were made using the lost wax casting method. Branches of the Akan include the Abron and the Afutu. The Akan culture is the most dominant and apparent in present-day Ghana.

Some of their most important mythological stories are called anansesem. Anansesem literally means 'the spider story', but can in a figurative sense also mean "traveler's tales". These "spider stories" are sometimes also referred to as nyankomsem; 'words of a sky god'. The stories generally, but not always, revolve around Kwaku Ananse, a trickster spirit, often depicted as a spider, human, or a combination thereof.

Matrilineality

The Akan social and political organization was based on matrilineal lineages, which were the basis of inheritance and succession. A lineage was defined as all those related by matrilineal descent from a particular ancestress. Several lineages would be grouped into a political unit headed by a chief and a council of elders, each of whom was the elected head of a lineage. Public offices were thus vested in the lineage, as was land tenure and other lineage property. In other words, lineage property had to be inherited only by matrilineal kin.[2]

The political units above were likewise grouped into eight larger groups called abusua: Aduana, Agona, Asakyiri, Asenie, Asona, Bretuo, Ekuona and Oyoko; or sometimes more than these. The members of each such abusua were united by their belief that they were all descended from the same ancient ancestress – so marriage between members of the same group was forbidden. One inherited or was a lifelong member of the lineage, the political unit and the abusua of one's mother, regardless of one's gender and/or marriage.[2]

According to this source[3] of further information about the Akan, "A man is strongly related to his mother's brother (wɔfa) but only weakly related to his father's brother. This must be viewed in the context of a polygamous society in which the mother/child bond is likely to be much stronger than the father/child bond. As a result, in inheritance, a man's nephew (his sister's son) (wɔfase) will have priority over his own son. Uncle-nephew relationships therefore assume a dominant position."[3]

"The principles governing inheritance stress sex, generation and age – that is to say, men come before women and seniors before juniors." .... When a woman’s brothers were available, a consideration of generational seniority stipulated that the line of brothers be exhausted before the right to inherit lineage property passed down to the next senior genealogical generation of sisters' sons. Finally, "it is when all possible male heirs have been exhausted that the females" may inherit.[3]

Patrilineality

Other aspects of the Akan culture were determined patrilineally, rather than matrilineally. Thus their culture was both matrilineal and patrilineal, or ambilineal. There were 12 patrilineal Ntoro (which means life force, or spirit) groups, and everyone was a lifelong member of one's father's group. Each Ntoro group had its own surnames, taboos, ritual purifications and forms of etiquette – its own part of the Akan culture.[2]

Elements of Akan culture

Kente cloth


See also

Endnotes

  1. http://scholar.library.miami.edu/slaves/Maroons/individual_essays/leanna.html
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Encyclopaedia Brittanica, 1970. William Benton, publisher (The University of Chicago). ISBN 0852291353, Vol. 1, p.477. (This p. 477 Akan article was written by Kofi Abrefa Busia, formerly Professor of Sociology and Culture of Africa at the University of Leiden, Netherlands.)
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 http://ashanti.com.au/pb/wp_8078438f.html

References

  • Antubam, Kofi; Ghana's heritage of Culture, Leipzig 1963
  • Kyerematen, A.A.Y.; Panoply of Ghana, London 1964
  • Meyerowitz, Eva L. R.; Akan Traditions of Origin, London (published around 1950)
  • Meyerowitz, Eva L. R.; At the court of an African King, London 1962
  • Obeng, Ernest E.; Ancient Ashanti Chieftaincy, Tema (Ghana) 1986
  • Bartle, Philip F.W. (January 1978). "Forty Days; The AkanCalendar". Africa: Journal of the International African Institute.. (Edinburgh University Press) 48 (1): 80–84.
  • For the Akan, the first-born twin is considered the younger, as the elder stays behind to help the younger out.
  • Kente Cloth." African Journey. [email protected]. 25 Sep 2007.
  • Effah-Gyamfi, Kwaku (1979) Traditional history of the Bono State Legon: Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana.
  • Effah-Gyamfi, Kwaku (1985) Bono Manso: an archaeological investigation into early Akan urbanism (African occasional papers, no. 2) Calgary: Dept. of Archaeology, University of Calgary Press. ISBN 0-919813-27-5
  • Meyerowitz, E.L.R. (1949) 'Bono-Mansu, the earliest centre of civilisation in the Gold Coast', Proceedings of the III International West African Conference, 118–120.

External links

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