Book

Fanti national constitution: a short treatise on the constitution and government of the Fanti, Asanti, and other Akan tribes of West Africa together with a brief account of the discovery of the Gold Coast by Portuguese navigators, a short narration of early English voyages, and a study of the rise of British Gold Coast jurisdiction, etc., etc.

Cass (3) • Published In 1968 • Pages: xxix, 273

By: Sarbah, John Mensah.

Abstract
Sarbah (b. 1864) was a Fante nationalist, lawyer, and scholar who wrote this major work on Fante history as a critique of British misrule in the Gold Coast. The local British administration was influenced by mercantile interests and acted in ignorance and disrespect of existing Fante political institutions, which Sarbah argued undermined the basic principles of good government. He complained that his countrymen were ‘being ruled as if we had no indigenous institutions, no language, no national characteristics, no homes.’ Originally published in 1906, this book was an attempt to correct that ignorance and mistreatment. It includes copies of treaties, court ordinances, court cases, government orders, and the proclamation of the Fante Confederation, which all document the history of Fante-English relations in the Gold Coast.
Subjects
External trade
Community structure
Territorial hierarchy
Chief executive
External relations
Legal norms
Judicial authority
culture
Akan
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Western Africa
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Lawyer
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ;1999
Field Date
not specified
Coverage Date
1472-1906
Coverage Place
Fanti; Ghana
Notes
By John Mensah Sarbah ; With a new introduction by Hollis R. Lynch
Includes bibliographical references and index
LCCN
68118857
LCSH
Akan (African people)