Book

Forests of gold: essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante

Ohio University PressAthens, Ohio • Published In 1993 • Pages:

By: Wilks, Ivor.

Abstract
This is a detailed study of the cultural and political history of the Twi (Asanti, Ashanti) people of west Africa from approximately the fifteenth to the late twentieth centuries (1980s). Much of the earlier material deals with the Akan kingdom of the fifteenth to seventeeth centuries from which the modern Twi nation evolved. The book consists of ten chapters. Chapters 1-3 deal with the conditions under which Akan society emerged in its historic form. Chapters 4-7 describe various aspects of Ashanti culture, as for example, the pervasive importance of wealth in the society, the ‘mental mapping’ of the kingdom for purposes of trade and government, and with reference to so-called human sacrifice, the close relationship between the status of the living and the dead (p. xiii). Chapter 8 reviews the careers of the incumbents of the highest military offices in the administrative capital of Kumase, and Chapter 9, those of a number of functionaries in the civil administration. The last chapter (chapter 10) presents a biographical sketch of an Ashanti woman who, on the behalf of the ASANTEHENE (the king), conducted negotiations with British, Danish, and Dutch on the Gold Coast in 1831.
Subjects
History and culture change
External trade
Status, role, and prestige
Chief executive
Administrative agencies
External relations
culture
Akan
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Western Africa
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Historian
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 1994
Field Date
no date
Coverage Date
fifteenth century-1980s
Coverage Place
Ashanti; Ghana
Notes
Ivor Wilks
Includes bibliographical references (p. 363-375) and index
LCCN
93000473
LCSH
Ashanti (African people)/Ashanti (Kingdom)/Akan (African people)