City of Blood: A People Because of War
City of Blood: A People Because of War
City of Blood: A People Because of War
This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
Page | 1
CITY OF
BLOOD
A PEOPLE BECAUSE OF WAR
on patriarchy, gunnery & trade
- the institution of human sacrifice -
slavery & cult in a city of Kumasi
before british colonialism
compiled by
amma birago
When Prempeh returned, to what had once been known as ‘the city of blood’, he
was a cultured, elderly gentleman, who took his place at the head of the Kumasi
town council, and his old capital had become almost a city, with many fine and
imposing buildings. Rattray & the Construction of Asante History
The region between the Pra and the Ofin - the Adansie and Amansie districts of present-day Asante - had also
become overpopulated by the seventeenth century, and migration north (away from political turmoil and towards
vacant land) was a powerful attraction. But north lay the unconquered forest, and the name of the early state of
Kwaman (Kwae Oman -"forest state") reflects the effort to domesticate aspects of nature.
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History -
Akyeampong and Obeng
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
The Asante were obsessed with order and feared disorder. The
forest or bush constituted "an area of disorder, potential power
and danger."
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History -
Akyeampong and Obeng
Under the reign of his nephew, Osei Tutu (c.1685-1717?), the Oyoko state
in Kwaman was renamed Kumase and the clan-states of Kumase, Kokofu, Nsuta, Bekwai, Dwaben,
and Mampon merged to form the Asante union. Osei Tutu became the first king of Asante with his lineage as the
royal line. It is revealing of Asante notions of power that the new nation was rooted not only in military victories,
but also in complex spiritual engineering that created a sense of shared destiny. Kingship was given
a divine flavor and surrounded with mystery.
The Asante were and are acutely aware that their culture, in the most literal
sense, was hacked out of nature. And this understanding … engendered the
abiding fear that, without unremitting application and effort, the fragile
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
This suggestive reconstruction is followed by the superb 'Land, Labor, Gold, and the Forest Kingdom of Asante', a
piece in which Wilks' forensic skill draws explanations of the embedding of matriliny, the rise of the accumulating
'big man' [obirempon] and the mythico-historical origins of the Kumase dynasty from the most implacable of source
Page | 3
materials. Lastly in 'Founding the Political Kingdom: The Nature of the Akan State' he provides a chronological
framework for and a detailed account of the founding of the Asanteman by Osei Tutu and Komfo Anokye in the
later 17th century.
Accumulation, Wealth And Belief In Asante History: Part II The Twentieth Century
T. C. McCaskie
which allowed the Asante to trade this asset as vigorously as they did. … At such a time in human history when
obtaining food and merely surviving captured the majority of a human being’s time, what would drive a person to
waste a good deal of their hunting and gathering time mining, cleaning, and hoarding an asset which seems to have
no direct value to human life? In other words, what is the value of gold in pre-colonial Africa?
Page | 4
… the great abundance of all gold deposits within Western Africa lay directly beneath the territory which the
Asante had come to settle. No other known area in West Africa exists where the gold deposits are so densely
concentrated. The vast abundance of gold in this small region enabled the Asante people to trade this asset with a
seemingly inexhaustible supply line. In contrast to the other main trade items that the Asante utilized to expand
their network, gold is unique in multiple ways.
The most important property of gold which distinguishes it from other trade commodities is that gold is not
necessary to sustain life. There is no human need for gold which could explain its high demand throughout Africa
which allowed the Asante to trade this asset as vigorously as they did. Therefore, the question must be asked: At
such a time in human history when obtaining food and merely surviving captured the majority of a human being’s
time, what would drive a person to waste a good deal of their hunting and gathering time mining, cleaning, and
hoarding an asset which seems to have no direct value to human life? In other words, what is the value of gold in
pre-colonial Africa?
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History -
Akyeampong and Obeng
The defeat of Denkyira (1701) it sought to control the trade on the Gold Coast (Ghana) and by the beginning of the
19th century it had assumed the role of the greatest middleman state in the country. This achievement was possible
because of the importance the Asante Kotoko Court attached to trade. Indeed, the politics and the trading activities
of the Asante were inseparable.
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History - Page | 5
Akyeampong and Obeng
The name Asante did not appear in any written record until Bosman and Barbot mentioned it as a young but a strong
nation at the beginning of the 18th century. (Asante had just defeated the Denkyira). Nevertheless, there is on the
Dutch map of the Gold Coast 1629 a reference made to a tribe Acanij , who were described as the "most principal
merchants who trade gold with us". The area marked Acanij could unmistakably be associated with Adanse, where
the Asante evolved as a people and later (c 1640's) started to migrate northwards' to occupy the areas marked on the
Dutch map as Inta, western part of Akim or Great Acanij, Akan etc. It seems long before these Twi-speakers began
to trade with Kankan-Abrofo, that is, the Portuguese, they had trade contacts with the northern markets.
When rituals are being performed to show unity with the ancestors,
women join in feasting and dressing up, but not in sacrificing.
Among the Akan, women feature prominently in ritual dances and singing, as in mmommome, a war support ritual of
singing that is specifically a female activity. When rituals are being performed to show unity with the ancestors,
women join in feasting and dressing up, but not in sacrificing. There is a prohibition, however, against women
wearing masks, even when the ancestor being represented is a woman. Men have arrogated to themselves the
prerogative of representing the spirits that shaped the history and the destiny of the community. Exclusion of women
from such community rituals has obvious political and social implications and may lie behind men’s unwillingness
to have women in positions of responsibility that include authority over men.
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
In Kokofu, the Oyoko leader Kwabia Amanfi died, and his successor, Oti Akenten, initiated the move to Kwaman.
Established clan communities already existed in Kwaman, and the most powerful of these were Dornaa, Tafo,
Kaase, and Wonoo. Oral traditions stress that the new immigrants were pitched into a struggle for survival in
Kwaman. The migratory phase and the conflicts in Kwaman, spawned the successive leadership of Kwabia Amanfi,
Oti Akenten, and Obiri Yeboa. The role of the chief became a historical reality in the long struggle to survive in
Kwaman. It is possible that parallel developments among immigrant Oyoko groups in Kokofu, Nsuta, Bekwai,
Dwaben, and the Bretuo group in Mampon promoted chieftaincy there.
Wilks highlights the role of aberempon ("big men") as estate developers in forging the basis of the Akan state. Their
control over slaves, and their exploitation of arable land and mines, led to the emergence of "berempon-doms." We
rather We rather emphasize conflict, conquest, and diplomacy in the emergence of the Akan states that formed the
Asante union. Akan elders often refer to the age of atutu atutuo (migration) as a period of intense insecurity and the
survival of the fittest. Founders of villages were eager to attract settlers for defensive purposes, not necessarily
because they were far-sighted estate developers motivated by entrepreneurial instincts. As villages expanded, the
principle of "first comers versus late comers" introduced internal stratification. This process of social differentiation
may have been augmented by the attachment of slaves or unfree labor. Diverse groups within the community
resulted in competing interests, and the resolution of internal conflicts did not necessarily privilege the interests of
the earliest settlers. Ongoing negotiations around the ideals, identities, and expectations of the community facili-
tated continuous realignment in social relations. Although traditions are not clear about leadership before Kwabia
Amanfi and whether the Oyoko clan always provided the leaders, the military successes of Obiri Yeboa assured
Oyoko ascendancy and forged the nucleus of the Oyoko state of Kwaman.
Under the reign of his nephew, Osei Tutu (c.1685-1717?), the Oyoko state in Kwaman was renamed Kumase and
the clan-states of Kumase, Kokofu, Nsuta, Bekwai, Dwaben, and Mampon merged to form the Asante union. Osei
Tutu became the first king of Asante with his lineage as the royal line. It is revealing of Asante notions of power that
the new nation was rooted not only in military victories, but also in complex spiritual engineering that created a
sense of shared destiny. Kingship was given a divine flavor and surrounded with mystery.
Max Weber perceptively pointed out the unsuitability of patriarchal leadership, born out of routine economic
activities, in terms of crisis. What is needed in crisis is charismatic leadership, a certain quality of an individual
personality by virtue of which he is set apart from ordinary men and treated as endowed with supernatural,
superhuman, or at least specifically exceptional powers or qualities. Osei Tutu's greatest achievement was his ability
to "routinize charismatic authority," to utilize another Weberian term, in making kingship permanent in Asante and
Century Gold Coast. Kea argues that the period from the late seventeenth century witnessed the emergence of
militarized, territorially expansionist states-Asante being a prime example-based on imperial-agrarian formation. Page | 7
The 'Big Bang' Theory Reconsidered:
Framing Early Ghanaian History
Gérard Chouin
The point of this story. Guns, originally muskets, have long been a potent icon of manhood status in Asante. They Page | 8
were mythologically charged, for they were instrumental in the creation of Asante. …. Guns literally made Asante,
and magical guns are features of many traditions. Throughout Asante history guns were also politically charged, for
they were the irreducible tools of force and power. Nineteenth-century Asantehenes stored the latest model guns in
royal arsenals so as to offset any challenge to their own authority.
Guns literally made Asante, and magical guns are features of many traditions. Throughout Asante history guns were
also politically charged, for they were the irreducible tools of force and power. Nineteenth-century Asantehenes
stored the latest model guns in royal arsenals so as to offset any challenge to their own authority.
In this scheme of things, the office of the chief held a nodal position since it
stood between the living who were considered the guardians of “the fortunes and
affairs of the whole body corporate” (ibid., 172) and the ancestors (asamanfoɔ)
who had absolute power over the former.
In Asante thought the spirit world was seen to parallel the lived world as the hierarchies that prevailed among the
living were also considered to prevail among the ancestors. Hence, a dead chief was still a chief: “he occupied the
same status and role, and had the same needs and requirements – wives, servants, cloths, gold, food” as he had had
in his this-worldly existence (McCaskie 1989, 428). In order to provide for some of these needs human sacrifices
had to be performed, and in the past they formed a significant part of the royal funerals. It was the obligation of the
surviving relatives to see that the sacrifices were carried out properly, thereby enabling the departed spirit of the
deceased to continue his life in the spirit world. Otherwise, the ancestors would have been disgraced and have
withdrawn their support, and the crucial connection between the living and the dead mediated by the ruler would be
at risk of collapsing (ibid.).
Two factors exercised profound influence on early Asante social organization: the forest environment, and the
matrilineal clan system (mmusua, sing. abusua). Akan groups from the basin of the Pra-Ofin rivers had began
migrating north into the sparsely populated areas of the forest zone that later became Asante from the fifteenth
century, partially as a response to the demand for gold and kola from the Mande region. The original clan -
communities that later merged to form the Asante state-Kwaman (later renamed Kumase), Nsuta, Bekwai, Kokofu, Page | 12
Dwaben, and Mampon - were among Akan groups that migrated north from the basin of the Pra and Ofin rivers
probably in the sixteenth century. Migration north accelerated when the emergence of Denkyira and Akwamu as
powerful states in the mid-seventeenth century generated political instability. The region between the Pra and the
Ofm-the Adansie and Amansie districts of present-day Asante - had also become overpopulated by the seventeenth
century, and migration north (away from political turmoil and towards vacant land) was a powerful attraction. But
north lay the unconquered forest, and the name of the early state of Kwaman (Kwaeman -"forest state") reflects the
effort to domesticate aspects of nature. Although oral traditions on the origins of the Asante state focus on Asante's
military successes and the elaboration of the state, evidence of the earlier struggles against nature, and the social
organization this struggle spawned, is discernible in Asante religion, ritual, philosophy, and the history of abusua.
This is not to assume that Asante religion and philosophy consist of static bodies of knowledge, unchanging over
time. What is instructive in Asante religion, philosophy, rituals, and proverbs, is their ability to contain and reflect
divergent and/or opposing views of the Asante world.
In 'Wangara, Akan, and Portuguese in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries' Wilks explores the inter-national
competition for the trade of the Akan goldfields between Western Sudanic and European merchants. This suggestive
reconstruction is followed by the superb 'Land, Labor, Gold, and the Forest Kingdom of Asante', a piece in which
Wilks' forensic skill draws explanations of the embedding of matriliny, the rise of the accumulating 'big man'
[obirempon] and the mythico-historical origins of the Kumase dynasty from the most implacable of source
materials. Lastly in 'Founding the Political Kingdom: The Nature of the Akan State' he provides a chronological
framework for and a detailed account of the founding of the Asanteman by Osei Tutu and Komfo Anokye in the
later 17th century. The next four essays deal with wealth, with the spatial and temporal dimensions of Asante history
and with the vexed issue of 'human sacrifice'.
The earliest mention of the metal, gold; is in stories which state that Neolithic man discovered nuggets of gold in
riverbeds around the 6th millennium B.C.E.; however, they didn’t find the metal to be strong enough to be useful for
any of their present needs and therefore, didn’t develop methods of utilization for this metal. It has been estimated
that the majority of a person’s working hours were spent finding, collecting or hunting, and preparing food; before
hierarchical structures were formed in societies.
After hierarchical structures were formed in societies, the few people at the top now had a large portion of their day
free from food-related activities. The Egyptian civilization is a good example of the first well documented
hierarchical structured society. It was therefore, not until the time of the ancient Egyptian civilization that gold
became a commodity to be regarded as valuable by mankind. By the time of the Egyptians, people within the
society had divided themselves into different economic classes. Some, like the ruling families of Egypt were so
wealthy compared to the rest of society that they were able to hire people to take care of all their needs. This
‘freeing up’ of their time allowed them to focus on more trivial matters. This is when objects of beauty became
valuable to the world because, the wealthy were willing to pay money to obtain them and the poor needed the money
to purchase food so that they too could extract themselves from the daily activity of food procurement.
After the fall of the Egyptian empire many smaller scaled civilizations came into existence throughout the continent.
A number of these traded with the Asante for their gold deposits and were instrumental in building up the Asante’s
wealth and reputation.
In fact, Wilks does not draw on a body of evidence strong enough to argue that, prior to the fifteenth century, forest
subsistence strategies consisted of hunting and foraging. Subsequently, the proposed transformation to agricultural
production during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, coupled with extensive social change arising from the
import of slaves, integrated into the society through matriclans, and the position of the forest economy in the world
bullion market, needs further exploration and testing.
The third article in Forest of Gold about the genesis of the Akan order is entitled “Founding the Political Kingdom:
The Nature of the Akan State”. It is in this article, which deals mainly with the early history of the Asante, that
Wilks enunciates his ‘big bang’ theory: “I advance, contrary to his [Rattray’s] evolutionary view, a “big bang”
theory of Akan history. It comprises several theses. First, in the course of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and in
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
the forest country between the Ofin and the Pra, a foraging mode of production gave way to an agricultural
one...Second, that in the course of this transformation the forest people reorganized themselves in a way such that
the bands appropriate to the older mode of production were replaced by the matriclans appropriate to the newer...But
third, that the transformation also engendered the emergence of political structures of a new kind: the aman.”
Here, the emergence of the aman - the Akan polities - is presented as a chain reaction like process where those who
controlled gold production and commercialization were also able to buy slaves. Using slave labour, they could clear Page | 15
large tracts of forest, which they then claimed as property. They formed a new class of “entrepreneurs” who quickly
built states from their original estates.
The ‘big bang’ theory incorporates the most substantive historical facts known for the late fifteenth- and early
sixteenth century Akan forest and shapes them into interpretive hypotheses: the existence of the world bullion
market, the importation of slaves from Benin, and the possible emergence of matriclans. Drawing mainly on Asante
oral traditions, Wilks proposes an appealing model in which small territories developed into complex polities. In so
doing, he tries to fill the gap between an alleged society of hunter-gatherers and a kingship - based society already
attested in European sources of the sixteenth century. Once again, however, his theory is constrained by limited
source material, and by retro-diction, that is writing history by glossing later sources to reconstitute the history of
earlier, undocumented periods.
Asantehene Kwaku Dua Panin reportedly explained to the missionary Freeman, “If I
were to abolish human sacrifices, I should deprive myself of one of the most effectual
means of keeping the people in subjection”. This raises the question of whether he was
mistranslated by Freeman, and really was referring to the need of capital punishment in
order to maintain order in Asante and to confirm his power over life and death.
The majestic bearing of the latter, their "bold and stately step," and their display
of a fine array of "rich cloths of native manufacture" (kente cloths) truly amazed
Freeman. He pondered over how the position of the ruling chiefs in Kumase
could be reconciled with what he called "the known despotism of the Ashantee
Government ... It naturally excites the inquiry of the reflecting traveller how
such strange contrarieties can exist in apparent harmony and concord?" (The
Western Echo).
The idea of universal indebtedness is mirrored in a number of Asante proverbs, one of which states: if there be a
debt in the village that owns no master, … it is a debt of the head of the village; if there be a thing found in the
village without an owner it belongs to the head of the village. This focus on ownership and the assignment of an
owner to all things and people within Asante may again stem from the deep-rooted awareness that nature continued
to threaten the established culture of Asante. It seems that all people were given to an ‘owner’ to protect them from
the reign of nature and its inherent threats. “If you have no master, a beast will catch you”.
Page | 17
Free people were not the only group integral to the creation and maintenance of the Asanteman. Slaves also played
an essential part. They were often allowed to own property, their own slaves, marry, and they could become heirs to
their masters. In addition, to kill a slave required official permission from a central authority, for the right to decide
over life and death was reserved exclusively for the Asantehene. He alone could decide on the execution of slaves
and criminals alike. This power underlined his connection with the world of the deceased. Acting on behalf of the
dead he could control the administration of death within Asante. It also emphasized once again the value placed on
people – they were viewed as so important to the well-being of the Asanteman that it should not be easy to diminish
their number.
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History -
Akyeampong and Obeng
Order and Conflict in the Asante Empire: A Study in Interest Group Relations
Thomas Bowdich, for example, noted in 1817 that when the amanhene attended national assembly
meetings in Kumase, each had "the dignitaries of his own province or establishment to his right and left;
and it was truly 'Concilium in Concilio' " (1819: 58). Reverend Thomas Birch Freeman, who visited
Asante several times between 1839 and 1848, observed that the chiefs enjoyed "more or less of a kind of
feudal independence" and assumed "almost regal state" in their own capitals. After a visit to Dahomey, he
was struck by the contrast between the submissive attitude of Dahomean chiefs and officials and the
"sense of aristocratic independence" of the Asante chiefs. The majestic bearing of the latter, their "bold
and stately step," and their display of a fine array of "rich cloths of native manufacture" (kente cloths)
truly amazed Freeman. He pondered over how the position of the ruling chiefs in Kumase could be
reconciled with what he called "the known despotism of the Ashantee Government .... It naturally excites
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
the inquiry of the reflecting traveller how such strange contrarieties can exist in apparent harmony and
concord?" (The Western Echo).
Order and Conflict in the Asante Empire: A Study in Interest Group Relations
Agnes A. Aidoo
Page | 18
The provinces-like the Ashantis mainly Akan-speaking peoples were considered and treated as part of a Greater
Ashanti 'political structure'. The 'protectorates' were treated as allies or protected peoples according as economic or
political circumstance dictated. The tributaries formed the economic and manpower base of the Ashanti expansion.
But it must be noted that these relationships were fluid, and fluctuated with Ashanti military and political fortunes
The Structure of Greater Ashanti (1700-1824)
Kwame Arhin
holders and authority-holders, that is, the chief executives of the state and their appointed subordinates, who were
permitted to accumulate and exhibit wealth within the framework of the Asante economy, and that the aim of the
management of the economy was not the spread of wealth among the generality of the Asante people but the
maintenance of the political order. This political order was based on a regulated ranking system which, so the
power- and authority-holders held, might be subverted by the spread of wealth: wealth, like power, was regarded as
the privilege of the well-born and those they favoured and, therefore, the spread of wealth must be controlled.
Page | 19
Trade, Accumulation and the State in Asante in the Nineteenth Century
Kwame Arhin
Page | 20
There was, indeed, differentiation within Asante on the basis of proximity to Kumasi and the corresponding
presumed relative participation in its culture. The people of Kwabere and Atwima, within 8-12 miles of Kumasi,
who were the main suppliers of the Kumasi markets and were in daily touch with it, were supposed to be more
"civilized" (womo ani ate) than the peoples of Amansee, Mponua, Asante Akyem, Sekyere, Ahafo, and Brong, who
lived farther off and came to Kumasi annually to the Odwira festival or on summons to the court. In other words, the
culture of Kumasi, which was becoming increasingly urbanised, was seen as drawing within its orbit the peoples of
Asante in degrees determined by their spatial distance from Kumasi. In Asante, then, there was an awareness of a
Kumasi culture, moulded out of courtly practices, the intermingling of various ethnic groups, and encounters with
representatives of foreign cultures, that differed from the purely indigenous culture but progressively influenced it. It
may be difficult, as Fallers points out in the case of Buganda, to estimate the extent and scope of the difference
between the two "cultures" and the degree of mutual awareness of their differences in culture between the Kumasifo
and nkurasefo. However, all of the 19th-century travellers to Kumasi commented on the elaborate culture of urban
Kumasi in contrast to the simplicity of the villages, and the shouting of "kuraseni" as a term of abuse at an
antagonist clearly antedated colonial rule, just as it had long been known that Kumasifo ani ate (lit. "the eyes of
Kumasi dwellers are open," i.e., "they know the ways of the world").
Peasants in 19th-Century Asante -
Kwame Arhin
Slaves became an important pillar to the kingdom of Asante in two ways: they
helped in the creation of culture within the ever-encroaching forest, and they
were the basis of wealth for many powerful men in Asante, in addition to the
gold resources within the country.
Page | 21
The Asante were and are acutely aware that their culture, in the most literal
sense, was hacked out of nature. And this understanding … engendered the
abiding fear that, without unremitting application and effort, the fragile
defensible place called culture would simply be overwhelmed or reclaimed by
an irruptive and anarchic nature.
T.C. McCaskie
and create civilization out of wilderness. At the second stage, as Asante no longer relied on the constant influx of
labor, slaves were exported in order to obtain European goods: arms and luxury items for the rich and powerful.
After the transatlantic slave trade came to an end, gold was again exported, this time to continue the import of
European goods. This shift is crucial and deserves more attention.
Originally, when gold left the country it had brought in another resource crucial for the functioning of the state –
people. But gold leaving the country for the acquisition of luxury goods indicates a shift in priorities. As one crucial Page | 22
state resource was leaving the country, it was not being replaced by another equally productive one.
At first, gold was exported in order to acquire slaves to build the Asante state,
strengthen its matrilineages, and create civilization out of wilderness. …This
shift is crucial and deserves more attention. Originally, when gold left the
country it had brought in another resource crucial for the functioning of the state
– people. But gold leaving the country for the acquisition of luxury goods
indicates a shift in priorities. As one crucial state resource was leaving the
country, it was not being replaced by another equally productive one.
Tarnishing the Golden Stool
Fenna Maximiliane Wächter
Order and Conflict in the Asante Empire: A Study in Interest Group Relations
Agnes A. Aidoo
Thomas Bowdich, for example, noted in 1817 that when the amanhene attended national assembly meetings in
Kumase, each had "the dignitaries of his own province or establishment to his right and left; and it was truly
'Concilium in Concilio' " (1819: 58). Reverend Thomas Birch Freeman, who visited Asante several times between
1839 and 1848, observed that the chiefs enjoyed "more or less of a kind of feudal independence" and assumed
"almost regal state" in their own capitals. After a visit to Dahomey, he was struck by the contrast between the
submissive attitude of Dahomean chiefs and officials and the "sense of aristocratic independence" of the Asante
chiefs. The majestic bearing of the latter, their "bold and stately step," and their display of a fine array of "rich cloths
of native manufacture" (kente cloths) truly amazed Freeman. He pondered over how the position of the ruling chiefs
in Kumase could be reconciled with what he called "the known despotism of the Ashantee Government .... It
naturally excites the inquiry of the reflecting traveller how such strange contrarieties can exist in apparent harmony
and concord?" (The Western Echo).
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
The Asante were and are acutely aware that their culture, in the most literal sense, was hacked out of nature. And
this understanding … engendered the abiding fear that, without unremitting application and effort, the fragile
defensible place called culture would simply be overwhelmed or reclaimed by an irruptive and anarchic nature. …
The successes achieved in the battle to hack culture out of nature are mirrored in reports by European travelers who
visited Asante. They discovered a country with an elaborate infrastructure and a sophisticated bureaucratic system.
Asante's capital Kumasi, which had expanded throughout the eighteenth century, was well connected with other
towns within the federation by means of wide roads. Page | 23
… the subject of mobility in Asante in greater detail with special emphasis on the involvement of slaves and people
of servile origin in the process of political and social mobility in pre-colonial Asante. Mobility in this context refers
to the movement of persons as individuals or in groups from one social position to another either horizontally or
vertically.
Osei Tutu … institutionalised the proverb 'obi nkyere obi ase' (No one should disclose the origins of another) and
some non-Asantes became citizens. The Process of mobility reached a climax during the reigns of Asantehene
Opoku Ware (1717-1750) and Osei Kwadwo (1764-1777) when succession to political office in Asante became
based not only on birth but on merit and achievement. The precedent which had been set in the 17th century was
carried on into the 18th century.
Order and Conflict in the Asante Empire: A Study in Interest Group Relations
Agnes A. Aidoo
… the African Times of London urged the invasion of Asante in October 1873 because the empire had "one of the
richest goldfields in the world" and the British could reap "thirty or forty millions sterling value of gold per year, for
many, many years to come" (XII, 148, 10/30/1873: 195-96). The war correspondent, H.M. Stanley, argued: "King
Coffee [Kofi Karari] is too rich a neighbour to be left all alone with his riches, with his tons of gold dust and
accumulations of wealth to himself." He estimated that the loot from Kumase would pay "twenty times over" the
cost of Woseley's expedition (1874: 18).
Asante's known and unknown wealth acted as a powerful magnet for British commercial speculators and political
agitators. Thus, the African Times of London urged the invasion of Asante in October 1873 because the empire had
"one of the richest goldfields in the world" and the British could reap "thirty or forty millions sterling value of gold
per year, for many, many years to come". The war correspondent, H.M. Stanley, argued: "King Coffee [Kofi Karari]
is too rich a neighbour to be left all alone with his riches, with his tons of gold dust and accumulations of wealth to
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
himself." He estimated that the loot from Kumase would pay "twenty times over" the cost of Woseley's expedition
(1874: 18).
A great deal of the wealth that fired the imagination of the Englishmen came as a result of the intense and sustained
economic changes in Asante. Travelers' accounts from 1839-1848 and 1869-1874 show that prosperity was general,
and it affected other social groups besides the king and his chiefs. Extensive farms and abundant supplies of yams,
cocoyams, corn, plantains, rice, groundnuts, tomatoes, onions, oranges, bananas, and pineapples were reported Page | 24
everywhere in Adanse, Bekwae, Kumase, and Dwaben. Weaving, pottery, and goldsmithing were invigorated;
builders improved the quality of houses, towns, roads, and market centers (Freeman, 1868; Ramseyer and Kuhne,
1875). It was the time when wealthy com moners could ask for the king's permission to wear the nyawoho cloth.
The ruling chiefs, however, showed most conspicuously the social effects of all the economic changes. In Kumase,
Adanse, and Dwaben, they imported coastal carpenters to build their houses. In the latter two states the houses were
imposing one and two-storey mansions. This was also the period in the 1840s when Asante hene Kwaku Dua I
hosted splendid state dinners for Reverend Freeman, Governor William Winniet, and other visiting British officials
with a brilliant display of European silverplate and assorted wines. Dressed in European clothes com plemented with
the impressive Asante gold regalia, the asantehene and his guests were entertained on these occasions by a special
band of musicians trained by the Dutch at Elmina (Freeman, 1868: 138-43; Western Echo, sup plement). Kwaku
Dua I designed most of his own rich kente and nwontoma cloths at this time; he also created new stools (offices) for
specially skilled goldsmiths who fashioned his impressive gold and silver regalia (Rattray, 1927: 235-49;
Kyerematen, n.d. [1961] : 13; IAS/AS 14: Asomfuo stool history).
In order to avoid knowing that killing - sacrificial death - lies at the core
of the ideology of nationalism, we treat violence as if primitive and morally suspect:
a “failure of social structure rather than an elemental component.” When violence
occurs it is presented as a “last resort,” a “challenge to civilized modernity.”
We prefer not to say that violence is inherent in the nature of the nation-state.
Blood Sacrifice and the Nation: Totem Rituals and the American Flag
Review by Richard A. Koenigsberg, Library of Social Science.
… the foundation of the Asante kingdom and the distribution of rights and
privileges to the different chiefs was a ritual process: a direct consequence of
sacrificial exchanges. …to grasp the enormous difference between the pre-
colonial and colonial conceptions of chieftaincy and kingship in Asante. …
Analysts of Asante society usually attribute the superiority of the Asantehene’s
office to its “aura of mystical preeminence”, which is derived from its
connection to the Golden Stool (Sika Dwa Kofi, lit. ‘Friday’s Golden Stool’)
(Fortes 1969, 142).
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History -
Akyeampong and Obeng
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
The asantehene was, among other things, okomfo panyin (chief priest)
of Asante: in periods of interregnum, spirit possession ceased until a
new asantehene was installed.
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History -
Akyeampong and Obeng
Page | 26
Religious beliefs envisaged different states of the afterlife
for the power elite and others. It was held that members of the ruling group
enjoyed the same status in the after-life as in their lifetime, which justifies
the ritual execution of commoners of both sexes. Commoners,
correspondingly, carried on their servile activities in the afterlife.
To this day Asante is a notably hierarchical society, avid for money and everything else that supports status. It is an
unequal, striving, noisy, and even bombastic culture with strong investments in its own sense of virtue. I have lost
count of all the times I have been told what a misfortune it is for me that I was not born Asante.
A piece I wrote in 1986 on Komfo Anokye drew an unusually
large (in those days) postbag. I was praised for attempting to “open up”
African history, and condemned for doing the same thing. Page | 27
McCaskie, Asante History
That is, throughout much of its eighteenth and nineteenth-century history, Asante was a highly centralised state with
the locus of government firmly rooted in Kumase. … And the Asante of the early colonial period was in itself a
"peculiar institution." Briefly, and I have explored the matter elsewhere, from the reign of Opoku Ware (ca. 1720-
1750) to that of Kwaku Dua Panin (1834-1867), the political history of Asante is that of the systematic
aggrandisement of Kumase and its office-holders at the expense of the territorial divisions and provinces. However,
this centralizing tendency was sharply reversed in the last two decades of the nineteenth century; …. Consequently,
the Kumase observed by Rattray was a rump structure, leaderless and severely (and rapidly) weakened in the course
of a generation. Moreover, at least until the mid-1930s, British overrule deliberately maintained Kumase in its
truncated condition, at the same time sedulously reinforcing - in the interest of functional colonial government - the
principle of decentralization.
R.S. Rattray and the Construction of Asante History: An Appraisal
T. C. McCaskie
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
The point of this story. Guns, originally muskets, have long been a potent icon of manhood status in Asante. They
were mythologically charged, for they were instrumental in the creation of Asante. Authoritative tradition associates
Komfo Anokye with the magical power of Asante weapons and with the occult enfeeblement of enemy guns. At the
epochal battle of Feyiase (1701) he is said to have made a tree swell itself to receive all the musket fire of the
Denkyira, and then resume its normal size so that the Asante volleys found their mark.
Guns literally made Asante, and magical guns are features of many traditions. Throughout Asante history guns were
also politically charged, for they were the irreducible tools of force and power. Nineteenth-century Asantehenes
stored the latest model guns in royal arsenals so as to offset any challenge to their own authority. Then, during the
chaotic dynastic wars of the 1880s, Kumasi 'youngmen' or non-office holders (nkwankwad) forced access to the
rapidly evolving industrial products of European gunmakers - weapons with rifling, breech-loading magazines, ever
higher rates of fire and killing power - and used them to compensate for their lack of a political voice as
marginalized commoners.
The gun has been salient as an icon of power throughout Asante history. Its cultural politics are suffused with
signifiers. Like other key components of Asante identity its intentional status is complex, but also ambiguous. It has
served both to assert and to challenge received socio? political hierarchy and order in, it should not be forgotten, a
culture marked by violence and bloodletting.
Gun Culture In Kumasi
T.C. McCaskie
The city of Kumasi was the seat of the Asantehene and thus the centre of power of the ancient kingdom. The
paramount chiefs of the ‘provincial’ chiefdoms took an ancestral oath of allegiance to the Asantehene directly and
their ‘sub-chiefs’ did it through their overlords. The chains of allegiance that linked the chiefs to the common centre
were crosscut by relations of kinship, marriage, and friendship between the different stools, the nature of which were
decreed by complicated principles of seniority (see Kallinen 2004, 69 – 134). The structure of the capital city of the
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
kingdom was somewhat different from the common type described …. While the Kumasi army was also divided
into task-oriented fighting units, the basic difference lay in the fact that in Kumasi each unit was composed of
several offices (and their subjects) of diverse lineage and clan origins. In fact, such a unit comprised a group of
chiefdoms, each of which was organized internally according to the traditional model. Consequently, a member of a
group was theoretically capable of waging war either as a component of his own group (and the Kumasi army) or
separately as an independent chiefdom.
Page | 29
The primacy of politics (and later the economy) in Western ideology often deters our understanding of different
kinds of ideologies. As a result, in the classic anthropological studies of divine kingship, the divinity of the ruler and
the rituals he performed were often separated from the political sphere and seen as a part of a cultural superstructure
which only reflected the more fundamental social order (McKinnon 2000, 41- 42).
Peasants in 19th-Century Asante -
Kwame Arhin
Asantehene Kwaku Dua Panin reportedly explained to the missionary Freeman, “If I
were to abolish human sacrifices, I should deprive myself of one of the most effectual
means of keeping the people in subjection”. This raises the question of whether he was
mistranslated by Freeman, and really was referring to the need of capital punishment in
order to maintain order in Asante and to confirm his power over life and death.
Tarnishing the Golden Stool
Fenna Maximiliane Wächter
"The odour of putridity is the air approved by its inhabitants. The sight they love is severed necks, and spouting....
The people positively like to have the odour of dead flesh in their nostrils."
Somewhat less sanguinary, but still exaggerated, are many missionary accounts of Asante. Missions generated more
enthusiasm among missionaries and more generosity among donors by painting the Asante as savage. It is in the
context of Asante society, not Victorian values, that we need now to view human sacrifice. Ancestors formed the
custodians of moral and ethical behavior in Asante "traditional" society, and they required sacrifice, among other Page | 30
things.
Asante: Human Sacrifice Or Capital Punishment?
An Assessment Of The Period 1807-1874 Clifford Williams
In a country with such customs and laws it seems that the number of
misdeeds ought to be less than in other countries; yet the opposite is the
case. Where is as much stolen as here? … They play with death like
children. … Their theft is very often punished by death. Help from
above, oh, that many hearts may pray for Aschante!"
The Ramseyer Manuscript,
"Four Years in Asante": One Source or Several?
Adam Jones
… a sudden death plunged the palace and the town into great grief. On our [daughter] Rosa's birthday the 2nd crown
prince Mensa Kuma died, at sixteen years of age. The deceased prince had besides several wives of royal blood,
three of low birth, who when they heard of his death ran away and hid themselves. The king supplied their places by
other girls, who, painted white, and hung with gold ornaments, sat around the coffin to drive away the flies-and were
strangled at the funeral. The same fate befell six pages, who, similarly ornamented and painted, crouched around the
coffin which was carried out at midnight. [...] Page | 31
From the 1st to the 10th of September, the slaughter continued. The King himself actually killed some members of
the royal house, many slain corpses lay exposed, and in forty days the same dreadful doings were to be repeated.
As noted above, the ancestors were considered to be benevolent towards their successors, but shameful deeds by the
living that disgraced the ancestors invited punishment (ibid., 191–192). Hence, the kinship relation between the
ancestors and the living was not severed by death and the descendants of the dead chiefs were perceived as the most
appropriate persons among the living to approach the ancestral spirits with offerings and petitions (Busia 1968
[1951], 23–37).
As Fortes (1963, 59) put it, the Asante matrilineages were committed to being “of pure freeborn descent” because Page | 32
“their entire social existence hinges on their prerogatives of hereditary office and rank; and these would be
jeopardized if the established laws of kinship, descent, inheritance and succession were set aside in the slightest
particular”. In other words, the imperative of keeping the lineage, from which the chiefs were elected, a closed
group ultimately arose from the relationship between the living and the ancestors, which had its nexus in the office
and its occupant. The principal occasion for ancestral sacrifice was the Adae ritual that took place twice during
every ‘month’ of the Asante calendar, that is to say, in every successive period of forty-two days (adaduanan).
George Goodspeed.
Atonement in non-Christian religions.
Archbishop Magee has collected in his Dissertations on Atonement "an array of facts showing beyond a doubt that
human sacrifices in antiquity were widely regarded as the most potent means of propitiating an offended deity. The
Phoenicians and Carthaginians gave up their children because these were their dearest treasures, and hence the Page | 33
devoting of them was most likely to secure divine favor." Similar explanations of the same rite by Greek and Roman
writers make it clear that such was the notion held in classical antiquity.
"An exceptional emergency demanded a human victim," because such a one was the best mankind could offer. "The
ancient Germans laid it down," says Brinton, "that in time of famine beasts should first be slain and offered to the
gods. Did these bring no relief, then men must be slaughtered; and if still there was no aid from on high, then the
chieftain of the tribe himself must mount the altar; for the nobler and dearer the victim, the more pleased were the
gods!" And accordingly we are told that when in Carthage slave boys were substituted for the children of the nobles
in the offerings to the gods, the deities were angry and brought greater woe upon the state. The doctrine that
suffering was the sign of and punishment for " sin" was a commonplace of ancient religion.23
Rather, violent acts performed by society are inherent to the nature of the nation-state. …
The authors conclude that cohesion in enduring groups requires violence as a “structural rather than contingent
social force.” Contained within each nation is a sacred idea or ideal. The truth of this sacred ideal is established
when members of society die (or are maimed) for it. Warfare constitutes a “representation of society to itself.”
Sacred truth comes into being through a “blood sacrifice ritual performed on the bodies of supplicants.”
To understand how war is ritual sacrifice, recall that the raw material of society is bodies. Organizing and disposing
of them is the fundamental task of all societies. The social is quite literally constructed from the body and from
specific bodies that are dedicated and used up for the purpose. The enduringness of any group depends at least partly
on the willingness of its members to sacrifice themselves for the continuing life of the group. … the underlying cost
of all society is the violent death of some portion of its members. … Our deepest secret, the collective group taboo,
is the knowledge that society depends on the death of this sacrificial group at the hands of the group itself. This is
the totem principle concretized. According to Durkheim, the group becomes a group by agreeing not to disagree
about the group-making principle.
The asantehene was, among other things, okomfo panyin (chief priest)
of Asante: in periods of interregnum, spirit possession ceased until a
new asantehene was installed.
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
On Victor Turner.
When sacrificial destruction is seen as the expression of a particular politics, in which whole groups are categorized
as expendable while others are designated as beneficiaries, the more generous aspects of the rite begin to disappear.
No matter how fully camouflaged it is by a bureaucratized role in a modern system of exchange, regardless of the
context in which it appears, sacrificial thinking invariably reduces at some points to its fundamental identification
with ritual violence.
Her main point on strictly theoretical grounds - that sacrifice holds societies together by victimizing one category of
creatures or people to the benefit of the collective - is unvarnished Durkheimianism.
The Science of Sacrifice:
American Literature and Modern Social Theory
Susan L. Mizruchi
The legitimization of such an economic rebate has very important implications for the practice and the theory of
sacrifice. On the one hand it allows the sacrifice to be performed with much greater frequency than would certainly
be the case if the sacrificial material was always destroyed. On the other hand it necessitates special beliefs about the
manner in which the gods or spirits take their fill. Either they must be satisfied with the killing and display of the
sacrificed object, or they must be satisfied to consume its least valuable portions, or to absorb some immaterial
aspect or equivalent of it. In other words, the practice of reservation of the sacrificial material for the human
participants almost inevitably demands some theory of essences, representations or symbols.
Offering and Sacrifice: Problems of Organization
Raymond Firth
In order to endure as a sacred object, the nation requires that people kill and die in its name.
However, for the ritual of war to remain effective, societies must remain unconscious of the relationship between the
institution of warfare and the maintenance of the idea of the nation. Our deepest secret, the authors claim - the
“collective group taboo”– is the knowledge that society depends for its existence on “violent, sacrificial death at the
hands of the group itself.”
To admit that we kill our own is unacceptable, for if there is not shared agreement about who will be sacrificed, Page | 35
violence may become chaotic instead of ordered; the group may be destroyed. To keep the sacrificial secret, an
acceptable pretext to slaughter group members must be created. What Girard calls the ritual victim constitutes this
pretext. In the nation-group context, this is the enemy.
… three factors were the main causes that held the Asanteman together: gold, an intricate system of social relations
and civic duty, and sunsum. Gold was a means of rewarding civic duty and fostering accountability, and
strengthening relations within the federation and among the Amanhene. It also encouraged people to strive for
working for the good of Asante and increasing its wealth. As long as wealth continued to increase and gold
regulated civic actions, rulers were found to be ruling in accordance with sunsum and their power was thus
legitimized.
Page | 36
Tarnishing the Golden Stool
Fenna Maximiliane Wächter
M. Bonnat and Kiuhne, who were in the street for a few moments, saw three odumfos rush upon a man standing
among the crowd, pierce his cheeks with a knife and order him to stand up; they then drove him before them with
his hands bound like a sheep to the slaughter.
… Somewhat later, at about five o'clock, Mr. D[awson] came to us in a great state of alarm, to see if perhaps we
knew the reason for this terrible tumult in the town. On the streets one sees nothing but people running back and
forth, catching chickens, cutting their throats and then throwing them away. Others are doing the same with sheep. Page | 37
The deceased prince had besides several wives of royal blood, three of low birth, who when they heard of his death
ran away and hid themselves. The king supplied their places by other girls, who, painted white, and hung with gold
ornaments, sat around the coffin to drive away the flies-and were strangled at the funeral. The same fate befell six
pages, who, similarly ornamented and painted, crouched around the coffin which was carried out at midnight. [...]
From the 1st to the 10th of September, the slaughter continued. The King himself actually killed some members of
the royal house, many slain corpses lay exposed, and in forty days the same dreadful doings were to be repeated. …
people were slaughtered; for one after the other the various chiefs from outside [Kumase] arrived, bringing their
victims with them. Many were also decapitated in the villages, whereupon their heads were sent here in earthern
basins. The King himself is said to have killed an ohene ba (king's child) and three ohene nena (king's
grandchildren). Even today many freshly slaughtered corpses are lying around. And even if the 'custom' is over for
the time being, in forty days the slaughter is to begin again.
The Ramseyer Manuscript,
"Four Years in Asante": One Source or Several?
Wealth could consist of gold, nkoa and slaves, and landed property. However, the only accepted currency for state
interactions was gold dust. All taxes were therefore paid in the form of gold dust, and people and land had a value
attached to them, measured in gold. Gold was both the currency of state power and the standard of value. It was also
in and of itself a status symbol as those who had reached a certain threshold of wealth were allowed to adorn
themselves and their wives with elaborate gold ornaments. Those men who were particularly successful in
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
accumulating wealth could choose to make a public display of all their wealth – parading through Kumasi their
wives and their slaves, as well as chests filled with their gold dust, themselves being covered in gold ornaments.
Gold dust also proved vital in hacking culture out of nature. It allowed for the purchase of slaves, to provide labor
for the Asante state. The importance of gold did not diminish as Asante had established itself and a labor surplus
was secured, however. It continued to play a vital role, it served as the blood in the veins of the administration of the
state. Page | 39
Religious beliefs envisaged different states of the afterlife
for the power elite and others. It was held that members of the ruling group
enjoyed the same status in the after-life as in their lifetime, which justifies
the ritual execution of commoners of both sexes. Commoners,
correspondingly, carried on their servile activities in the afterlife.
Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History -
Akyeampong and Obeng
The asantehene was, among other things, okomfo panyin (chief priest)
of Asante: in periods of interregnum, spirit possession ceased until a
new asantehene was installed
Finally, the treaty dealt with the issue of human sacrifice in Asante. This issue was a constant irritant in British-
Asante relations, and had an important influence on jurisdictional disputes between the governments. To what
degree the executions witnessed by English travelers were really human sacrifices as opposed to judicial executions,
is hard to determine. Some travelers claimed that during festivals, “criminals and prisoners of war were sacrificed in
unlimited numbers to the spirits of the dead kings”.
However, Dupuis observed that many of those killed on occasion of these festivals were “delinquents, and are so far
deserving that anathema, as having been convicted of … having violated the civil laws”. Asantehene Kwaku Dua
Panin reportedly explained to the missionary Freeman, “If I were to abolish human sacrifices, I should deprive
myself of one of the most effectual means of keeping the people in subjection”. This raises the question of whether
he was mistranslated by Freeman, and really was referring to the need of capital punishment in order to maintain
order in Asante and to confirm his power over life and death.
What is certain is that the Asante did perform human sacrifice during funerals of important individuals, in the belief
that this custom was providing servants for the afterlife of the deceased. Slaves were often used on these occasions,
as mentioned earlier. The reported numbers, however, seem greatly exaggerated, probably due to the keen interest
among Europeans to hear about them, and Williams asserts that it was often the case for judicial punishments to be
falsely reported as being human sacrifices. In addition to the public interest in hearing news of sacrifices, it also
proved to be a useful tool in matters of policy. To provide refuge for those running from being sacrificed, was more
easily legitimized than providing shelter for those who simply sought to escape punishment for criminal acts they
had committed. Especially as the nineteenth century progressed, the issue was exploited “for polemical purposes, to
justify … the European conquest of Africa”.
While bringing short term peace and stability to the region, the 1831 treaty thus laid the groundwork for a host of
issues that would bedevil Anglo-Asante relations in the future. It raised questions about trade, authority and
jurisdiction, and the civilizing mission of the British with regards to human sacrifice and law and justice within
Asante.
Through a system of group-forming rituals, a myth of blood sacrifice organizes the meaning of violent events after the fact. This retrospective
creation- sacrifice story is the totem myth. Myth transforms disordered violence into ordered violence that engenders the group - The Totem
Myth: Sacrifice and Transformation - C. Marvin
But nowhere does McCaskie give any evidence that the Asante state was really so
exploitative and onerous. Instead, he continually emphasizes throughout the text the
extent to which the state apparatus, located in the capital of Kumase, operated largely in
isolation from the rest of the society. Accordingly, his use of the Gramscian model--
which is of great value in itself, in helping one understand how the Asante state operated-
-attempts to resolve a problem for the existence of which there is no evidence. We never
see beyond the boundaries of Kumase.
Greene on McCaskie, 'State and Society in Pre-colonial Asante'
T. C. McCaskie - Reviewed by Sandra E. Greene