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Asante people

The Asante, also known as Ashanti (/əˈʃɑːnt/ ), are part of the Akan ethnic group and are native to the Ashanti Region of modern-day Ghana. Asantes are the last group to emerge out of the various Akan civilisations. Twi is spoken by over nine million Asante people as a first or second language.[1][2][3]

Asante
Akanfoɔ
Akan dancers in Ghana
Regions with significant populations
Ashanti Region ( Ghana)
Languages
Religion
Related ethnic groups
Akan (Agona, Akuapem, Akwamu, Akyem, Bono, Coromantee, Fante, Kwahu, Wassa, Sefwi)

The Asante people developed the Ashanti Empire, along the Lake Volta and Gulf of Guinea.[4] The empire was founded in 1670, and the capital Kumase was founded in 1680 by Asantehene Osei Kofi Tutu I on the advice of Okomfo Anokye, his premier.[4] Sited at the crossroads of the Trans-Saharan trade, Kumase's strategic location contributed significantly to its growth.[5] Over the duration of the Kumase metropolis' existence, a number of peculiar factors have combined to transform the Kumase metropolis into a financial centre and political capital.[5] The main causal factors included the unquestioning loyalty to the Asante rulers and the Kumase metropolis' growing wealth, derived in part from the capital's lucrative domestic-trade in items such as gold, slaves, and bullion.[5]

Nomenclature edit

PeopleAsantefoɔ
LanguageAsante Twi
CountryAsanteman

In the Asante dialect of Twi, Asantefo; singular masculine: Asantenibarima, singular feminine: Asantenibaa. The name Asante "warlike" is traditionally asserted by scholars to derive from the 1670s as the Asante went from being a tributary state to a centralized hierarchical kingdom.[4][6] Asantehene Osei Tutu I, military leader and head of the Asante Oyoko clan, founded the Asante Empire.[4][6] Osei Tutu I obtained the support of other clan chiefs and, using Kumase as the central base, subdued surrounding Akan states.[4][6] Osei Tutu challenged and eventually defeated Denkyira in 1701,[4][6] and this is the asserted modern origin of the name.[4]

Geography edit

The Ashanti Region has a variable terrain, coasts and mountains, wildlife sanctuary and strict nature reserve and national parks, forests and grasslands,[7] lush agricultural areas,[8] and near savannas,[7] enriched with vast deposits of industrial minerals,[8] most notably vast deposits of gold.[9]

The territory Asante people settled is home to a volcanic crater lake, Lake Bosumtwi, and Asante is bordered westerly to Lake Volta within the central part of present-day Ghana.[10] The Asante (Kingdom of Asante) territory is densely forested, mostly fertile and to some extent mountainous.[10] There are two seasons—the rainy season (April to November) and the dry season (December to March).[10] The land has several streams; the dry season, however is extremely desiccated.[10] Ashanti Region is hot year round.[10]

Today Asante people number upwards of 10 million. Asante Twi, the majority language, is a member of the Central Tano languages within the Kwa languages.[1][11] Asante political power combines Asantehene Otumfuo Nana Osei Tutu II as the political head of the Asantes and the Ashanti Region,[12][13] with Asante semi-one-party state representative New Patriotic Party,[14] and since the Ashanti Region (and the Kingdom of Asante) state political union with Ghana,[15] the Asante remain largely influential.[16]

Asantes reside in Asante and Brong Ahafo Regions in Ghana.[16] Kumase metropolis, the capital of Asante (Kingdom of Asante), has also been the historic capital of the Asante Kingdom.[16] The Ashanti Region currently has a population of 11 million (11,000,000).

Today, as in the past, the Ashanti Region continues to make significant contributions to Ghana's economy.[17] Asante is richly endowed with industrial minerals and agricultural implements, Asante is responsible for much of Ghana's domestic food production and for the foreign exchange Ghana earns from cocoa, agricultural implements, gold, bauxite, manganese, various other industrial minerals, and timber.[17] Kumase metropolis and Ashanti Region produces 96% of Ghana's exports.[8][9]

History edit

Asante Empire edit

In the 1670s the Ashanti went from being a tributary state to the centralized hierarchical Denkyira kingdom. Asantehene Osei Kofi Tutu I, military leader and head of the Oyoko clan, founded the Asante kingdom. Osei Tutu obtained the support of other clan chiefs and using Kumase as the central base, subdued surrounding states.[6] Osei Tutu challenged and eventually defeated Denkyira in 1701,[4][6] and presumptuously from this, the name Asante came to be.[4][6]

Realizing the weakness of a loose confederation of Akan states, Osei Tutu strengthened centralization of the surrounding Akan groups and expanded the powers judiciary system within the centralized government.[18] Thus, this loose confederation of small city-states grew into a kingdom or empire looking to expand its land.[18] Newly conquered areas had the option of joining the empire or becoming tributary states.[18] Opoku Ware I, Osei Tutu's successor, extended the borders.[19]

Sovereignty and independence edit

 
Asante yam ceremony, 19th century by Thomas Edward Bowdich

Because of the long history of mutual interaction between Asante and European powers, the Asante have the greatest amount of historiography in all of sub-Saharan Africa.[20] In the 1920s the British catalogued Asante religion, familial, and legal systems in works such as R. S. Rattray's Asante Law and Constitution.[21] The Asante state strongly resisted attempts by Europeans, mainly the Kingdom of Great Britain, to conquer them.[21] The Asante limited British influence in the Asante State,[21] as Britain annexed neighbouring areas.[21] The Asante were described as a fierce organized people whose king "can bring 200,000 men into the field and whose warriors are evidently not cowed by Snider rifles and 7-pounder guns".[21]

The Ashanti Empire was one of the few African states that seriously resisted European colonization.[21] Between 1823 and 1896, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland fought four wars against the Asante kings: the Anglo-Asante Wars.[21] In 1901, the British finally defeated the state following the 1900 War of the Golden Stool and the Ashanti Empire was made a a British protectorate, in 1902, and the office of Asantehene was discontinued with the Asante capital Kumasi annexed into the British empire; however, the Asante still largely governed themselves.[22][23] Asante gave little to no deference to colonial authorities.[22][23] In 1926, the British permitted the repatriation of Asantehene Prempeh I – whom they had exiled to the Seychelles in 1896[22][23] – and allowed him to adopt the title Kumasehene, but not Asantehene. However, in 1935, the British finally granted the Asante self-rule sovereignty as Kingdom of Asante, and the Asante King title of Asantehene was revived.[24]

Culture and traditions edit

 
Akwasidae Celebration in Manhyia Palace in 2009.
 
An Asante funeral in 2020.

Asante culture celebrates Adae, Adae Kese, Akwasidae, Awukudae and Asante Yam festival.[25] The Seperewa, a 10-14 stringed harp-lute, as well as the Fontomfrom drums are originally from the Bono Akan people. Kente cloth]]ing.[26]

Society and Customs edit

Asante are a matrilineal society where line of descent is traced through the female.[27] Historically, this mother progeny relationship determined land rights, inheritance of property, offices and titles.[27] It is also true that the Asante inherit property from the paternal side of the family.[27]

 
Asante soulwasher (Ashanti Sunsum Washer)

Though not considered as important as the mother, the male interaction continues in the place of birth after marriage.[27]

Historically, an Asante girl was betrothed with a golden ring called "petia" (I love you), if not in childhood, immediately after the puberty ceremony.[27] They did not regard marriage "awade" as an important ritual event, but as a state that follows soon and normally after the puberty ritual.[27] The puberty rite was and is important as it signifies passage from childhood to adulthood in that chastity is encouraged before marriage.[27] The Asante required that various goods be given by the boy's family to that of the girl, not as a 'bride price', but to signify an agreement between the two families.[27]

Asante Womanhood edit

In the Asante culture, Womanhood is marked by Puberty rites termed "bragoro."[28] Bragoro is a ceremony that is conducted for girls in the community from the ages of 13 to 20.[29] The precursor to bragoro puberty rites is onset by the beginning of Menstruation in a girl’s life.[28] The purpose of bragoro rites is to enable women to get married, showcase them to society, teach them how to be wives and mothers, and signify the coming of age of girls.[28] The cultural symbolism in the ceremony represents the meaning of womanhood in Asante.

In the bragoro puberty rites, girls’ heads are shaved and dyed black.[28] Every day during the rites, young girls in the community feed the chosen girls boiled eggs, fish, and eto.[30][31] Alongside, the older women in the community, called mmerewa, teach the girls about marriage, motherhood, and morality. The merewa bathe the girls in a neighboring stream.[28] Then, the mmerewa dress the young ladies in white cloth (ntoma) and gold jewelry.[28] Afterward, the girls are showcased to the entire community with songs, dances, and praises.[29]

For the Asante, every color and object has cultural significance meaning, which reflects the meaning of womanhood in Asante culture.

Ntoma/Cloth

The white color of the ntoma/cloth that the girls are dressed in signifies vitality, sanctity, victory, and purity.[29][32]

Gold Jewelry

The gold/yellow color of the jewelry that the girls are adorned with signifies royalty, continuous life, and wealth.[29][32] This is related to the matrilineal system of the Asante.[30] The matrilineal system of the Asante culturally gives women a sense of authority, continuity, and the right to become a breadwinner and make money.[30][33] This is displayed in the roles of adult women in society, obaapanin (female elder), and the ohemaa (queen) stool, which ranks higher than the male counterpart.[30][33]

Fish

In the bragoro rites, eating fish signifies the obtaining of wisdom and knowledge.[29] Wisdom and Knowledge are seen as a keen part of womanhood for Asantes.[30] In Asante royalty, the Asantehemaa (queen mother) is seen as the advisor of the Asantehene (king), full of wisdom and knowledge.[30] This thought is carried through Asante culture and society to characterize the everyday woman, and convey a key aspect of Asante womanhood–being an advisor.[30]


Law and legal system edit

In the cataloguing of Asante familial and legal systems in R.S. Rattray's Asante Law and Constitution Asante law specifies that sexual relations between a man and certain women are forbidden, even though not related by blood.[20] The punishment for offense is death, although it does not carry quite the same stigma to an Asante clan as incest.[20] Sexual relations between a man and any one of the following women is forbidden:[20]

  1. A half-sister by one father, but by a different clan mother;[20]
  2. A father's brother's daughter;[20]
  3. A woman of the same father;[20]
  4. A brother's wife;[20]
  5. A son's wife;[20]
  6. A wife's mother;[20]
  7. An uncle's wife;[20]
  8. A wife of any man of the same "company";[20]
  9. A wife of any man of the same guild or trade;[20]
  10. A wife of one's own slave;[20]
  11. A father's other wife from a different clan.[20]

Language edit

 
Asante Twi greeting phrases; "akwaba" (welcome) and "ɛte sɛn" (how are you).
An Asante Twi speaker.

The Asante people speak Asante Twi, which is the official language of the Ashanti Region and the main language spoken in Asante and by the Asante people.[34][35][36][37] Asante language is spoken by over 9 million ethnic Asante people as a first or second language.[34][35] The Asante language is the official language utilized for literacy in Asante, at the primary and elementary educational stage (Primary 1–3) K–12 (education) level, and studied at university as a bachelor's degree or master's degree program in Asante.[34][35][36][37]

The Asante language and Asante Twi have some unique linguistic features like tone, vowel harmony and nasalization.[34][35][36][37]

Religion edit

The Asante follow Akan religion and the Asante religion (a traditional religion which seems to be dying slowly but is revived only on major special occasions—yet is undergoing a global revival across the diaspora), followed by Christianity (Roman Catholicism and Protestantism) and Islam.[38]

Asante people received the religion of Islamic North Africa within their talismanic tradition, making amulets with Quranic citations, name of the Arabic angels or Jinn. Amulets were also set in the corners of houses or soaked in water to produce liquids for drinking and for washing that were believed to have thaumaturgical properties.[39]

Asante diaspora edit

The Asante live in the Ashanti Region, specifically in the capital of Kumase, and, due to the Atlantic slave trade, a known diaspora of Asante exists in the Caribbean, particularly in Jamaica. Slaves captured and sold to the European slave traders along the coasts were sent to the West Indies, particularly Jamaica, Barbados, Netherlands Antilles, British Virgin Islands, the Bahamas, Guyana, Suriname, etc. Asante were known to be very opposed to both the Fante Confederacy and the British, as the Asante only traded with the Dutch in times of their ascension to becoming a hegemony of most of the area of present-day Ghana.

Notable People of Asante Origin edit

Coromantee, the English-language term for enslaved Akan people, came from the original name of the Dutch slave fort of Fort Amsterdam (Fort Kormantse). This was despite this fort being primarily occupied by the Dutch during its history and having no records of trade to Jamaica while being under Dutch ownership.[40] Evidence of Asante and Akan-day names and Asante and Akan-surnames (but mispronounced by the English), Adinkra symbols on houses, Anansi stories and the dialect of Jamaican Patois being heavily influenced by Twi, can all be found on the island of Jamaica. White planter Edward Long, like other planters before him, described "Coromantees" the same way that the British in the Gold Coast would the "Asantes", which was to be "warlike". Edward Long states that others around "Asantes" and "Coromantees" feared them the same way as they were feared in Jamaica and from the hinterlands of the Gold Coast.[41]

According to BioMed Central (BMC biology) in 2012, the average Jamaican has 60% of Asante matrilineal DNA and, today Asante is the only ethnic group by name known to contemporary Jamaicans.[42] Famous Jamaican individuals such as: Marcus Garvey and his first wife, Amy Ashwood Garvey, are of Asante descent. It is commonplace for many Jamaicans to have this descent.[43] Also are Jamaican freedom fighters during slavery: Nanny of the Maroons (now a Jamaican National Heroine), Tacky and Jack Mansong or Three-finger Jack. The names Nanny and Tacky are English corruptions of Asante words and names: "Nanny" is a corruption of the Asante word Nana, meaning "king/queen/grandparent", the name Tacky is a corruption of the Asante surname Takyi, and Mansong is a corruption of the Asante surname Manso, respectively.[44]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. University of Michigan. Archived from the original on 2016-05-15. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  2. ^ . ofm-tv.com. Archived from the original on 2017-04-30. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  3. ^ Sheard, K. M. (2011). Ashanti Warlike Meaning (Llewellyn's Complete Book of Names for Pagans, Wiccans, Witches, Druids). Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 9780738723686.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i . asantekingdom.org. Archived from the original on 2015-08-11. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  5. ^ a b c . asantekingdom.org. Archived from the original on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Kevin Shillington, History of Africa, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1996 (1989), p. 194.
  7. ^ a b "Issues Of Tropical Forest Transformation in Ashanti Region". ajol.info. African Journals OnLine.
  8. ^ a b c "Meet-the-Press: Ashanti Region". Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  9. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Ashanti Region Executive Summary". Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  11. ^ . ofm-tv.com. Archived from the original on 2017-04-30. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  12. ^ . asantekingdom.org. Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  13. ^ "The Asantehene » Personality Profile". Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  14. ^ Kumasi (1 August 2015). . The Chronicle. Archived from the original on 7 October 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  15. ^ "1956: Gold Coast to get independence". BBC. 11 May 1956.
  16. ^ a b c . asantekingdom.org. Archived from the original on 2015-09-25. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  17. ^ a b . asantekingdom.org. Archived from the original on 2015-09-25. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  18. ^ a b c Giblert, Erik Africa in World History: From Prehistory to the Present 2004
  19. ^ Shillington, loc. cit.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g The Newfoundlander. The Newfoundlander. 16 December 1873. p. 6500.
  21. ^ a b c . Kreol International Magazine. 2012. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
  22. ^ a b c "Asantehene visits Seychelles". Modern. 5 July 2007. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  23. ^ "Ashanti.com.au". Retrieved 24 July 2015.
  24. ^ "The Adae Kese Festival". Retrieved 27 July 2015.
  25. ^ Noam (Dabul) Dvir (22 July 2012). "Peres hosts Ashanti king in Jerusalem". Ynetnews. Ynet. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h Peter Herndon. "Family Life Among the Ashanti". yale.edu. Yale University. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  27. ^ a b c d e f De La Gorgendière, Louise (1999). "Women's life stories and the next generation in Ghana: 'Educate a woman....'". The International Journal of Anthropology. 43 (1): 53–72. JSTOR 23166558 – via JSTOR.
  28. ^ a b c d e Sarpong, Peter (1991). Girls' Nubility Rites in Ashanti. Oxford, United Kingdom: African Books Collective Ltd. p. 101. ISBN 978-9964103651.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Akyeampong, Emmanuel; Obeng, Pashington (1995). "Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 28 (3): 481–508. doi:10.2307/221171. JSTOR 221171 – via JSTOR.
  30. ^ Antwi, Joseph Kofi; Okyere-Manu, Beatrice (2018). "Bragro as an Akan African Indigenous Knowledge System pedagogical System: An ethical critique". In Intersecting African Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Western Knowledge Systems: Moral Convergence and Divergence. Pietermaritzburg, South Africa: Cluster Publications. ISBN 9781920620240.
  31. ^ a b "African Kente cloth: patterns, colors, and sacred meaning". national clothing.org. May 8, 2018.
  32. ^ a b Clark, Grace (Dec 1999). "Mothering, Work, and Gender in Urban Asante Ideology and Practice". American Anthropologist. 101 (4): 717–729. doi:10.1525/aa.1999.101.4.717. JSTOR 684049 – via JSTOR.
  33. ^ a b c d . University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. University of Michigan. Archived from the original on 2016-05-15. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  34. ^ a b c d . ofm-tv.com. Archived from the original on 2017-04-30. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
  35. ^ a b c "Ashanti (Twi) – Ashanti language". amesall.rutgers.edu.
  36. ^ a b c Language The Alternation Strategies in Multilingual Settings. Peter Lang. 2006. p. 100. ISBN 0-82048-369-9.
  37. ^ Dix, Dom Gregory (26 February 2015). The Shape of the Liturgy, New Edition. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 417. ISBN 978-0-567-66329-0.
  38. ^ Bos, Gerrit; Conrad, Lawrence (October 1, 1995). "Medical and para-medical manuscripts in the Cambridge Genizah Collections". Med. Hist. 39 (4): 516–518. doi:10.1017/S0025727300060579. ISSN 0025-7273. OCLC 8139058359. PMC 1037050. (here cited p. 516)
  39. ^ . slavevoyages.org. Archived from the original on 2015-06-29.
  40. ^ The History of Jamaica. T. Lowndes, in Fleet-Street. 1774.
  41. ^ Deason, Michael L.; Salas, Antonio; Newman, Simon P.; MacAulay, Vincent A.; St a Morrison, Errol Y.; Pitsiladis, Yannis P. (2012). "Interdisciplinary approach to the demography of Jamaica". BMC Evolutionary Biology. BioMed Central. 12 (1): 24. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-12-24. PMC 3299582. PMID 22360861.
  42. ^ Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Vols 17-18, Duke University Press, 1997, p. 124.
  43. ^ "Tacky's Rebellion". jamaicans.com.

Literature edit

  • Robert B. Edgerton, 1995, The Fall of the Asante Empire. The Hundred-Year War for Africa's Gold Coast. New York, ISBN 0-02-908926-3
  • Ernest E. Obeng, 1986, Ancient Asante Chieftaincy, Ghana Publishing Corporation, ISBN 9964-1-0329-8
  • Alan Lloyd, 1964, The Drums of Kumase, London: Panther
  • Alfred Kofi Quarcoo, 1972, 1994, The Language of Adinkra Symbols Legon, Ghana: Sebewie Ventures (Publications), PO Box 222, Legon. ISBN 9988-7533-0-6
  • Kevin Shillington, 1995 (1989), History of Africa, New York: St. Martin's Press,
  • N. Kyeremateng, K. Nkansa, 1996, The Akans of Ghana: their history & culture, Accra: Sebewie Publishers
  • Dennis M. Warren 1986, The Akan of Ghana: An Overview of the Ethnographic Literature, Accra: Pointer

External links edit

  • Profiles history and other aspects of the Asante.
  • at the Ethnographic Atlas, maintained at Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing, University of Kent, Canterbury
  • Asante Kingdom at the Wonders of the African World, at PBS
  • contains a selected list of Internet sources on the topic, especially sites that serve as comprehensive lists or gateways
  • Africa Guide contains information about the culture of the Asante

asante, people, asante, also, known, ashanti, ɑː, part, akan, ethnic, group, native, ashanti, region, modern, ghana, asantes, last, group, emerge, various, akan, civilisations, spoken, over, nine, million, first, second, language, asanteakanfoɔakan, dancers, g. The Asante also known as Ashanti e ˈ ʃ ɑː n t iː are part of the Akan ethnic group and are native to the Ashanti Region of modern day Ghana Asantes are the last group to emerge out of the various Akan civilisations Twi is spoken by over nine million Asante people as a first or second language 1 2 3 AsanteAkanfoɔAkan dancers in GhanaRegions with significant populationsAshanti Region Ghana LanguagesTwi a native dialect of Akan EnglishReligionChristianityIslamAkan religionRelated ethnic groupsAkan Agona Akuapem Akwamu Akyem Bono Coromantee Fante Kwahu Wassa Sefwi The Asante people developed the Ashanti Empire along the Lake Volta and Gulf of Guinea 4 The empire was founded in 1670 and the capital Kumase was founded in 1680 by Asantehene Osei Kofi Tutu I on the advice of Okomfo Anokye his premier 4 Sited at the crossroads of the Trans Saharan trade Kumase s strategic location contributed significantly to its growth 5 Over the duration of the Kumase metropolis existence a number of peculiar factors have combined to transform the Kumase metropolis into a financial centre and political capital 5 The main causal factors included the unquestioning loyalty to the Asante rulers and the Kumase metropolis growing wealth derived in part from the capital s lucrative domestic trade in items such as gold slaves and bullion 5 Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Asante Empire 4 Sovereignty and independence 5 Culture and traditions 5 1 Society and Customs 5 1 1 Asante Womanhood 5 2 Law and legal system 5 3 Language 5 4 Religion 6 Asante diaspora 7 Notable People of Asante Origin 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 11 Literature 12 External linksNomenclature editPeopleAsantefoɔLanguageAsante TwiCountryAsantemanIn the Asante dialect of Twi Asantefo singular masculine Asantenibarima singular feminine Asantenibaa The name Asante warlike is traditionally asserted by scholars to derive from the 1670s as the Asante went from being a tributary state to a centralized hierarchical kingdom 4 6 Asantehene Osei Tutu I military leader and head of the Asante Oyoko clan founded the Asante Empire 4 6 Osei Tutu I obtained the support of other clan chiefs and using Kumase as the central base subdued surrounding Akan states 4 6 Osei Tutu challenged and eventually defeated Denkyira in 1701 4 6 and this is the asserted modern origin of the name 4 Geography editThe Ashanti Region has a variable terrain coasts and mountains wildlife sanctuary and strict nature reserve and national parks forests and grasslands 7 lush agricultural areas 8 and near savannas 7 enriched with vast deposits of industrial minerals 8 most notably vast deposits of gold 9 The territory Asante people settled is home to a volcanic crater lake Lake Bosumtwi and Asante is bordered westerly to Lake Volta within the central part of present day Ghana 10 The Asante Kingdom of Asante territory is densely forested mostly fertile and to some extent mountainous 10 There are two seasons the rainy season April to November and the dry season December to March 10 The land has several streams the dry season however is extremely desiccated 10 Ashanti Region is hot year round 10 Today Asante people number upwards of 10 million Asante Twi the majority language is a member of the Central Tano languages within the Kwa languages 1 11 Asante political power combines Asantehene Otumfuo Nana Osei Tutu II as the political head of the Asantes and the Ashanti Region 12 13 with Asante semi one party state representative New Patriotic Party 14 and since the Ashanti Region and the Kingdom of Asante state political union with Ghana 15 the Asante remain largely influential 16 Asantes reside in Asante and Brong Ahafo Regions in Ghana 16 Kumase metropolis the capital of Asante Kingdom of Asante has also been the historic capital of the Asante Kingdom 16 The Ashanti Region currently has a population of 11 million 11 000 000 Today as in the past the Ashanti Region continues to make significant contributions to Ghana s economy 17 Asante is richly endowed with industrial minerals and agricultural implements Asante is responsible for much of Ghana s domestic food production and for the foreign exchange Ghana earns from cocoa agricultural implements gold bauxite manganese various other industrial minerals and timber 17 Kumase metropolis and Ashanti Region produces 96 of Ghana s exports 8 9 History editAsante Empire edit Main article Ashanti Empire In the 1670s the Ashanti went from being a tributary state to the centralized hierarchical Denkyira kingdom Asantehene Osei Kofi Tutu I military leader and head of the Oyoko clan founded the Asante kingdom Osei Tutu obtained the support of other clan chiefs and using Kumase as the central base subdued surrounding states 6 Osei Tutu challenged and eventually defeated Denkyira in 1701 4 6 and presumptuously from this the name Asante came to be 4 6 Realizing the weakness of a loose confederation of Akan states Osei Tutu strengthened centralization of the surrounding Akan groups and expanded the powers judiciary system within the centralized government 18 Thus this loose confederation of small city states grew into a kingdom or empire looking to expand its land 18 Newly conquered areas had the option of joining the empire or becoming tributary states 18 Opoku Ware I Osei Tutu s successor extended the borders 19 Sovereignty and independence edit nbsp Asante yam ceremony 19th century by Thomas Edward BowdichBecause of the long history of mutual interaction between Asante and European powers the Asante have the greatest amount of historiography in all of sub Saharan Africa 20 In the 1920s the British catalogued Asante religion familial and legal systems in works such as R S Rattray s Asante Law and Constitution 21 The Asante state strongly resisted attempts by Europeans mainly the Kingdom of Great Britain to conquer them 21 The Asante limited British influence in the Asante State 21 as Britain annexed neighbouring areas 21 The Asante were described as a fierce organized people whose king can bring 200 000 men into the field and whose warriors are evidently not cowed by Snider rifles and 7 pounder guns 21 The Ashanti Empire was one of the few African states that seriously resisted European colonization 21 Between 1823 and 1896 the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland fought four wars against the Asante kings the Anglo Asante Wars 21 In 1901 the British finally defeated the state following the 1900 War of the Golden Stool and the Ashanti Empire was made a a British protectorate in 1902 and the office of Asantehene was discontinued with the Asante capital Kumasi annexed into the British empire however the Asante still largely governed themselves 22 23 Asante gave little to no deference to colonial authorities 22 23 In 1926 the British permitted the repatriation of Asantehene Prempeh I whom they had exiled to the Seychelles in 1896 22 23 and allowed him to adopt the title Kumasehene but not Asantehene However in 1935 the British finally granted the Asante self rule sovereignty as Kingdom of Asante and the Asante King title of Asantehene was revived 24 Culture and traditions editThis article is about modern Ashanti culture For information on pre colonial Ashanti culture see Culture of the Ashanti Empire nbsp Akwasidae Celebration in Manhyia Palace in 2009 nbsp An Asante funeral in 2020 Asante culture celebrates Adae Adae Kese Akwasidae Awukudae and Asante Yam festival 25 The Seperewa a 10 14 stringed harp lute as well as the Fontomfrom drums are originally from the Bono Akan people Kente cloth ing 26 Society and Customs edit Asante are a matrilineal society where line of descent is traced through the female 27 Historically this mother progeny relationship determined land rights inheritance of property offices and titles 27 It is also true that the Asante inherit property from the paternal side of the family 27 nbsp Asante soulwasher Ashanti Sunsum Washer Though not considered as important as the mother the male interaction continues in the place of birth after marriage 27 Historically an Asante girl was betrothed with a golden ring called petia I love you if not in childhood immediately after the puberty ceremony 27 They did not regard marriage awade as an important ritual event but as a state that follows soon and normally after the puberty ritual 27 The puberty rite was and is important as it signifies passage from childhood to adulthood in that chastity is encouraged before marriage 27 The Asante required that various goods be given by the boy s family to that of the girl not as a bride price but to signify an agreement between the two families 27 Asante Womanhood edit In the Asante culture Womanhood is marked by Puberty rites termed bragoro 28 Bragoro is a ceremony that is conducted for girls in the community from the ages of 13 to 20 29 The precursor to bragoro puberty rites is onset by the beginning of Menstruation in a girl s life 28 The purpose of bragoro rites is to enable women to get married showcase them to society teach them how to be wives and mothers and signify the coming of age of girls 28 The cultural symbolism in the ceremony represents the meaning of womanhood in Asante In the bragoro puberty rites girls heads are shaved and dyed black 28 Every day during the rites young girls in the community feed the chosen girls boiled eggs fish and eto 30 31 Alongside the older women in the community called mmerewa teach the girls about marriage motherhood and morality The merewa bathe the girls in a neighboring stream 28 Then the mmerewa dress the young ladies in white cloth ntoma and gold jewelry 28 Afterward the girls are showcased to the entire community with songs dances and praises 29 For the Asante every color and object has cultural significance meaning which reflects the meaning of womanhood in Asante culture Ntoma ClothThe white color of the ntoma cloth that the girls are dressed in signifies vitality sanctity victory and purity 29 32 Gold JewelryThe gold yellow color of the jewelry that the girls are adorned with signifies royalty continuous life and wealth 29 32 This is related to the matrilineal system of the Asante 30 The matrilineal system of the Asante culturally gives women a sense of authority continuity and the right to become a breadwinner and make money 30 33 This is displayed in the roles of adult women in society obaapanin female elder and the ohemaa queen stool which ranks higher than the male counterpart 30 33 FishIn the bragoro rites eating fish signifies the obtaining of wisdom and knowledge 29 Wisdom and Knowledge are seen as a keen part of womanhood for Asantes 30 In Asante royalty the Asantehemaa queen mother is seen as the advisor of the Asantehene king full of wisdom and knowledge 30 This thought is carried through Asante culture and society to characterize the everyday woman and convey a key aspect of Asante womanhood being an advisor 30 Law and legal system edit Main article Ashanti law and legal system In the cataloguing of Asante familial and legal systems in R S Rattray s Asante Law and Constitution Asante law specifies that sexual relations between a man and certain women are forbidden even though not related by blood 20 The punishment for offense is death although it does not carry quite the same stigma to an Asante clan as incest 20 Sexual relations between a man and any one of the following women is forbidden 20 A half sister by one father but by a different clan mother 20 A father s brother s daughter 20 A woman of the same father 20 A brother s wife 20 A son s wife 20 A wife s mother 20 An uncle s wife 20 A wife of any man of the same company 20 A wife of any man of the same guild or trade 20 A wife of one s own slave 20 A father s other wife from a different clan 20 Language edit nbsp Asante Twi greeting phrases akwaba welcome and ɛte sɛn how are you source source source source source source source source track An Asante Twi speaker Main article Asante dialect The Asante people speak Asante Twi which is the official language of the Ashanti Region and the main language spoken in Asante and by the Asante people 34 35 36 37 Asante language is spoken by over 9 million ethnic Asante people as a first or second language 34 35 The Asante language is the official language utilized for literacy in Asante at the primary and elementary educational stage Primary 1 3 K 12 education level and studied at university as a bachelor s degree or master s degree program in Asante 34 35 36 37 The Asante language and Asante Twi have some unique linguistic features like tone vowel harmony and nasalization 34 35 36 37 Religion edit The Asante follow Akan religion and the Asante religion a traditional religion which seems to be dying slowly but is revived only on major special occasions yet is undergoing a global revival across the diaspora followed by Christianity Roman Catholicism and Protestantism and Islam 38 Asante people received the religion of Islamic North Africa within their talismanic tradition making amulets with Quranic citations name of the Arabic angels or Jinn Amulets were also set in the corners of houses or soaked in water to produce liquids for drinking and for washing that were believed to have thaumaturgical properties 39 Asante diaspora editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Asante live in the Ashanti Region specifically in the capital of Kumase and due to the Atlantic slave trade a known diaspora of Asante exists in the Caribbean particularly in Jamaica Slaves captured and sold to the European slave traders along the coasts were sent to the West Indies particularly Jamaica Barbados Netherlands Antilles British Virgin Islands the Bahamas Guyana Suriname etc Asante were known to be very opposed to both the Fante Confederacy and the British as the Asante only traded with the Dutch in times of their ascension to becoming a hegemony of most of the area of present day Ghana Notable People of Asante Origin editCoromantee the English language term for enslaved Akan people came from the original name of the Dutch slave fort of Fort Amsterdam Fort Kormantse This was despite this fort being primarily occupied by the Dutch during its history and having no records of trade to Jamaica while being under Dutch ownership 40 Evidence of Asante and Akan day names and Asante and Akan surnames but mispronounced by the English Adinkra symbols on houses Anansi stories and the dialect of Jamaican Patois being heavily influenced by Twi can all be found on the island of Jamaica White planter Edward Long like other planters before him described Coromantees the same way that the British in the Gold Coast would the Asantes which was to be warlike Edward Long states that others around Asantes and Coromantees feared them the same way as they were feared in Jamaica and from the hinterlands of the Gold Coast 41 According to BioMed Central BMC biology in 2012 the average Jamaican has 60 of Asante matrilineal DNA and today Asante is the only ethnic group by name known to contemporary Jamaicans 42 Famous Jamaican individuals such as Marcus Garvey and his first wife Amy Ashwood Garvey are of Asante descent It is commonplace for many Jamaicans to have this descent 43 Also are Jamaican freedom fighters during slavery Nanny of the Maroons now a Jamaican National Heroine Tacky and Jack Mansong or Three finger Jack The names Nanny and Tacky are English corruptions of Asante words and names Nanny is a corruption of the Asante word Nana meaning king queen grandparent the name Tacky is a corruption of the Asante surname Takyi and Mansong is a corruption of the Asante surname Manso respectively 44 Gallery editAshanti cultural artifacts regalia and other forms of symbolism nbsp Ashanti National Emblem of the Ashanti Region nbsp Fontomfrom Ashanti talking drum and drums nbsp Ashanti Blowing Horn nbsp Ashanti Stool Dwa nbsp Ashanti Regalia Asante Gold plated spokesman rod and Asante combat stick nbsp 20th Century Asante Akrafena Ashanti Sword with Gold ring pommel nbsp Ashanti Gold plated ShieldSee also editList of rulers of AsanteReferences edit a b Ashanti Asante Twi Less Commonly Taught Languages University of Michigan College of Literature Science and the Arts University of Michigan Archived from the original on 2016 05 15 Retrieved 2015 08 01 Asante Asante Twi ofm tv com Archived from the original on 2017 04 30 Retrieved 2015 08 01 Sheard K M 2011 Ashanti Warlike Meaning Llewellyn s Complete Book of Names for Pagans Wiccans Witches Druids Llewellyn Worldwide ISBN 9780738723686 a b c d e f g h i United Asante States Under Nana Osei Tutu I asantekingdom org Archived from the original on 2015 08 11 Retrieved 2015 08 01 a b c History Of The Asante Confederay Restoration Of The Asante asantekingdom org Archived from the original on 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2015 08 01 a b c d e f g Kevin Shillington History of Africa New York St Martin s Press 1996 1989 p 194 a b Issues Of Tropical Forest Transformation in Ashanti Region ajol info African Journals OnLine a b c Meet the Press Ashanti Region Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b GHANGOLD Case Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b c d e Ashanti Region Executive Summary Retrieved 1 August 2015 Ashanti Asante Twi ofm tv com Archived from the original on 2017 04 30 Retrieved 2015 08 01 Kings Of Asante asantekingdom org Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2015 The Asantehene Personality Profile Retrieved 28 July 2015 Kumasi 1 August 2015 NPP Has Track Record of protecting the public purse says Nana Addo The Chronicle Archived from the original on 7 October 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2015 1956 Gold Coast to get independence BBC 11 May 1956 a b c Seventy Five Years After The Restoration of Asanteman asantekingdom org Archived from the original on 2015 09 25 Retrieved 2015 08 01 a b The Historic And Present Importance Of Asante Its Culture And Economy asantekingdom org Archived from the original on 2015 09 25 Retrieved 2015 08 01 a b c Giblert Erik Africa in World History From Prehistory to the Present 2004 Shillington loc cit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o David Luca 2005 The Ashanti Legal System daviddfriedman com Retrieved 27 July 2015 a b c d e f g The Newfoundlander The Newfoundlander 16 December 1873 p 6500 a b c The Exile of Prempeh in the Seychelles Kreol International Magazine 2012 Archived from the original on 23 January 2015 Retrieved 24 July 2015 a b c Asantehene visits Seychelles Modern 5 July 2007 Retrieved 1 August 2015 Ashanti com au Retrieved 24 July 2015 The Adae Kese Festival Retrieved 27 July 2015 Noam Dabul Dvir 22 July 2012 Peres hosts Ashanti king in Jerusalem Ynetnews Ynet Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b c d e f g h Peter Herndon Family Life Among the Ashanti yale edu Yale University Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b c d e f De La Gorgendiere Louise 1999 Women s life stories and the next generation in Ghana Educate a woman The International Journal of Anthropology 43 1 53 72 JSTOR 23166558 via JSTOR a b c d e Sarpong Peter 1991 Girls Nubility Rites in Ashanti Oxford United Kingdom African Books Collective Ltd p 101 ISBN 978 9964103651 a b c d e f g Akyeampong Emmanuel Obeng Pashington 1995 Spirituality Gender and Power in Asante History The International Journal of African Historical Studies 28 3 481 508 doi 10 2307 221171 JSTOR 221171 via JSTOR Antwi Joseph Kofi Okyere Manu Beatrice 2018 Bragro as an Akan African Indigenous Knowledge System pedagogical System An ethical critique In Intersecting African Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Western Knowledge Systems Moral Convergence and Divergence Pietermaritzburg South Africa Cluster Publications ISBN 9781920620240 a b African Kente cloth patterns colors and sacred meaning national clothing org May 8 2018 a b Clark Grace Dec 1999 Mothering Work and Gender in Urban Asante Ideology and Practice American Anthropologist 101 4 717 729 doi 10 1525 aa 1999 101 4 717 JSTOR 684049 via JSTOR a b c d Ashanti Ashanti Twi Less Commonly Taught Languages University of Michigan College of Literature Science and the Arts University of Michigan Archived from the original on 2016 05 15 Retrieved 2015 08 01 a b c d Ashanti Ashanti Twi ofm tv com Archived from the original on 2017 04 30 Retrieved 2015 08 01 a b c Ashanti Twi Ashanti language amesall rutgers edu a b c Language The Alternation Strategies in Multilingual Settings Peter Lang 2006 p 100 ISBN 0 82048 369 9 Dix Dom Gregory 26 February 2015 The Shape of the Liturgy New Edition Bloomsbury Publishing p 417 ISBN 978 0 567 66329 0 Bos Gerrit Conrad Lawrence October 1 1995 Medical and para medical manuscripts in the Cambridge Genizah Collections Med Hist 39 4 516 518 doi 10 1017 S0025727300060579 ISSN 0025 7273 OCLC 8139058359 PMC 1037050 here cited p 516 Search the Voyages Database slavevoyages org Archived from the original on 2015 06 29 The History of Jamaica T Lowndes in Fleet Street 1774 Deason Michael L Salas Antonio Newman Simon P MacAulay Vincent A St a Morrison Errol Y Pitsiladis Yannis P 2012 Interdisciplinary approach to the demography of Jamaica BMC Evolutionary Biology BioMed Central 12 1 24 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 12 24 PMC 3299582 PMID 22360861 Comparative studies of South Asia Africa and the Middle East Vols 17 18 Duke University Press 1997 p 124 Tacky s Rebellion jamaicans com Literature editRobert B Edgerton 1995 The Fall of the Asante Empire The Hundred Year War for Africa s Gold Coast New York ISBN 0 02 908926 3 Ernest E Obeng 1986 Ancient Asante Chieftaincy Ghana Publishing Corporation ISBN 9964 1 0329 8 Alan Lloyd 1964 The Drums of Kumase London Panther Alfred Kofi Quarcoo 1972 1994 The Language of Adinkra Symbols Legon Ghana Sebewie Ventures Publications PO Box 222 Legon ISBN 9988 7533 0 6 Kevin Shillington 1995 1989 History of Africa New York St Martin s Press N Kyeremateng K Nkansa 1996 The Akans of Ghana their history amp culture Accra Sebewie Publishers Dennis M Warren 1986 The Akan of Ghana An Overview of the Ethnographic Literature Accra PointerExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ashantis Asante People hand History Profiles history and other aspects of the Asante Asante Page at the Ethnographic Atlas maintained at Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing University of Kent Canterbury Asante Kingdom at the Wonders of the African World at PBS Asante Culture contains a selected list of Internet sources on the topic especially sites that serve as comprehensive lists or gateways Africa Guide contains information about the culture of the Asante Historical Notes and Memorial Inscriptions from Ghana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asante people amp oldid 1191981695, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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