Battle of Atakpamé

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Battle of Atakpamé

Top
Battle of Atakpamé
Date 1764
Location Atakpamé, Togo, West Africa
Result Decisive Oyo-Dahomey victory; Establishment of border between Oyo and Asanteman
Belligerents
Ashanti Empire Oyo Empire
Kingdom of Dahomey

The Battle of Atakpamé (1764) was an armed confrontation between the Ashanti Empire and the Yoruba Oyo Empire, in and around the Yoruba settlement of Atakpamé in Togo. The battle also included troops from the Kingdom of Dahomey, a vassal of Oyo.

Contents

Prelude

During the 18th century, the Ashanti Empire was beset by a host of rebellions. This was due in large part, to the empire's policy of allowing conquered rulers a fair amount of autonomy as long as they paid tribute and provided military contingents when ordered.[1] The asantethene during this period was Kusi Oboadum, who had ascended the throne in 1750. During his reign, the southern states under Asante's influence such as Denkyira, Wassa, Twifo and Akyem became openly hostile and threatened the empire's commercial routes to the coast. This was not only a threat to Asante's commercial interests but to its national security, since its supply of firearms came from the coast.[2]

Casus Belli

In 1763, the Asante vassal state of Akyem made contact with the Kingdom of Dahomey while planning a rebellion with other dissidents within the empire, including the Kwahu and Brong.[1] Meanwhile, the bantamahene, one of the major Asante military officers,[3] had been relentlessly pressuring Asantehene Kusi Oboadum for war. Bantamahene Adu Gyamera had even gone so far as to threaten the ruler's impeachment. The asantehene did not order an invasion, however, until learning that the Akyem had sought out aid from the Oyo Empire.[2]

The battle

Sometime in 1764, the Ashanti army marched out to invade the Dahomey. The exact size of neither force is known. What historians are sure of is that the Ashanti army was ambushed in or near Atakpamé in what is now Togo. A force of Dahomean infantry, including the kingdom's elite Ahosi corps of female soldiers, as well as levies from the Oyo Empire, inflicted a crushing defeat on the Ashanti army.[1] During the battle, the Juabenhene (head of the royal clan of Oyoko) was killed.[2] The Ashanti army never reached Dahomey and was forced to retreat.

Aftermath

News reached European merchants trading with the Yoruba that Oyo had inflicted a severe defeat on the Ashanti.[1] The consequences were far reaching in that the unpopular asantethene was removed and replaced by the more youthful Osei Kwadwo.[2] There were less documented confrontations between Ashanti and Dahomey in the early 19th century, but peace was the norm between them.[1] This particular battle did, however, define the boundary between Asanteman and Oyo which remained the powerful states in the region.[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e Fage, page 315
  2. ^ a b c d Pescheux, page 449
  3. ^ Thornton, page 68
  4. ^ Thornton, page 79

Sources

  • Fage, J.D. and Roland Oliver (1975). The Cambridge History of Africa Volume 4 c. 1600 - c. 1790. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 811. ISBN 0-521-20981-1. 
  • Thornton, John K. (1999). Warfare in Atlantic Africa 1500-1800. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 1-85728-393-7. 
  • Pescheux, Gérard (2003). Le royaume asante (Ghana): parenté, pouvoir, histoire, XVIIe-XXe siècles. Paris: KARTHALA Editions. pp. 582. ISBN 2-84586-422-1. 


Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

Copyrights: