Begho

Begho

Begho (also "Bighu" or "Bitu") was an ancient trading town located just south of the Black Volta at the transitional zone between the forest and savanna (present-day Ghana, north-western Brong-Ahafo region). The town was of considerable importance as an entrepot frequented by northern caravans from around 1100 AD until its abandonment in the 18th century. Goods traded included ivory, salt, leather, gold, kola nuts, cloth, and copper alloys. Today, there is a village called Hani located in the vicinity of the Begho site.

Excavations have laid bare walled structures dated between 1350 and 1750 AD, as well as pottery of all kinds, smoking pipes, and evidence of iron smelting. With a probable population of over 10 000, Begho was one of the largest towns in the southern part of West Africa at the time of the arrival of the Portuguese in 1471. As the Gonja kingdom rose to the north in the late seventeenth century, they traded their slaves and kola through Begho for the gold of the Akan to the south.

Begho, like many trade towns of this period, was divided into various quarters based largely on religious and ethnic identities. The earliest quarter was Nyarko, where occupation pre-dated the arrival of the Mandé traders by 200-300 years, traders who 'probably came into contact with people already resident in the area who were exploiting locally available gold resources' [.] The Mandé themselves occupied the Kramo quarter, a term, according to Posnansky (1987:17), which means 'people of the book', and is thus an obvious indicator of a former Muslims presence. … The third quarter, Dwinfour, was the artisanal area, while the largest quarter, Brong, was interpreted as the centre of the town's ritual life.

A variety of evidence was recovered from the excavations supporting the existence of functional differentiation between the four quarters at Begho and, more importantly, seemingly attesting to a Muslim presence in the Kramo quarter: burials following a consistent orientation pattern; evidence of flat-roof and multi-storied architectural forms resembling the architecture of the more northern areas, such as the Mandé homelands where less rain fell and flat roofs were more useful; spindle whorls nearly identical to those from Djenné; the technology of brass casting as well as various brass vessels which were imported from the Islamic world, such as bowls of 'Syrio-Egyptian' (Mamluk) origin dating from the mid-fourteenth-mid-fifteenth centuries; and a further practical benefit introduced to the peoples of the West African forest and its fringe through contacts with the Muslim Mandé included accurate systems of weights and measures. At Begho 'chipped, shaped potsherds'were found which conform closely to the Islamic "mithqal" and "wakia" standards.

References

*Anquandah, James (2002) 'Ghana: early towns & the development of urban culture : an archaeological view', in Adande, Alexis B.A. & Arinze, Emmanuel (eds.) "Museums & urban culture in West Africa". Oxford: James Currey, 9–16.
*Crossland, L.B. (1989) "Pottery from the Begho-B2 site, Ghana" (African occasional papers, 4). Calgary: University of Calgary Press. ISBN 0-919813-84-4
*Effah-Gyamfi, Kwaku (1987) 'Archaeology and the study of early African towns: the West African case, especially Ghana', "West African Journal of Archaeology", 17, 229–241.
*Jack Goody, "The Mande and the Akan Hinterland", in: "The Historian in Tropical Africa", J.Vansina, R.Mauny and L.V.Thomas eds., 1964, London, Oxford University, 192-218.
*Timothy Insoll, 'The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa'. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-65702-4


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Begho — (auch Bighu oder Bitu) war eine alte Handelsstadt im heutigen Ghana, die in der Nähe des heutigen Dorfes Hani (südlich des Schwarzen Volta) (7° 50 60N/ 2° 28 60W) am Fluss Nimpeni liegt. Die Stadt hatte vom elften bis zum 18. Jahrhundert einige… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Königreich Gyaman — Gyaman, historisch auch Djaman, Jaman oder in ähnlichen Schreibweisen, war ein Staatswesen in Westafrika, das zwischen dem 17. und dem 20. Jahrhundert auf dem Gebiet des heutigen Ghana und der heutigen Republik Elfenbeinküste Bestand hatte. Es… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Nafaanra (Sprache) — Nafaanra Gesprochen in Elfenbeinküste, Ghana Sprecher 61.000 Linguistische Klassifikation Niger Kongo Atlantik Kongo Volta Kongo nördliches Volta Kongo Gur Senufo …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Nafaara — Nafaanra Gesprochen in Elfenbeinküste, Ghana Sprecher 61.000 Linguistische Klassifikation Niger Kongo Atlantik Kongo Volta Kongo nördliches Volta Kongo Gur Senufo …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Nafana — Nafaanra Gesprochen in Elfenbeinküste, Ghana Sprecher 61.000 Linguistische Klassifikation Niger Kongo Atlantik Kongo Volta Kongo nördliches Volta Kongo Gur Senufo …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Pantera-Fantera — Nafaanra Gesprochen in Elfenbeinküste, Ghana Sprecher 61.000 Linguistische Klassifikation Niger Kongo Atlantik Kongo Volta Kongo nördliches Volta Kongo Gur Senufo …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Côte d'Ivoire — Republic of Côte d Ivoire République de Côte d Ivoire …   Wikipedia

  • Djenné —   Commune and town   …   Wikipedia

  • Nafaanra language — language familycolor=Niger Congo name=Nafaanra states=Ghana, Côte d Ivoire region=North west corner of the Brong Ahafo region in Ghana, east of Bondouko in Côte d Ivoire speakers=61,000 fam1=Niger Congo fam2=Atlantic Congo fam3=Volta Congo… …   Wikipedia

  • Ligbi language — language name=Ligbi states=Ghana region=Brong Ahafo region, adjacent part of Côte d Ivoire speakers=10,000 familycolor=Niger Congo fam2=Mande fam3=Western Mande fam4=Central fam5=Manding Jogo fam5=Jogo iso2=nic|iso3=ligLigbi (or Ligby) is a Mande …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”