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BANKOE V. DOME: TRADITIONS AND PETITIONS IN THE HO-ASOGLI AMALGAMATION, BRITISH MANDATED TOGOLAND, 1919–39

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2005

BENJAMIN N. LAWRANCE
Affiliation:
University of California, Davis

Abstract

This article investigates Ewe engagement with British administrative policy via the story of a chieftaincy dispute in Ho, British Mandated Togoland, that erupted when Britain attempted to amalgamate two neighboring chieftaincies, Ho-Dome and Ho-Bankoe, by deploying a model with an ‘ethnic stamp’, that of the neighboring Akan states. Colonial-era chieftaincy has received substantial scholarly attention. This article argues that the relationship between the models deployed to reorganize chiefly power and the roles of protagonists is just as significant as the layered conflicts within chieftaincies and their respective clans. Two responses to ‘Akanized’ amalgamation are investigated: the petitions of its opponents, and the rituals developed by chiefs, priests and peasants to herald the amalgamations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

The author thanks Richard Roberts, Emily Osborn, Walter Hawthorne, Paul Nugent, Kate Collier, Sara Berry, Cynthia Brantley, Bettina Ng'weno and Ruby Andrew for their comments.