Gyaaman

Gyaman (Gyaaman)
Jamang (Jaman)
1450 (15th century)–1895 (19th century)
Capital Sampa
Languages Akan languages
Religion Ashanti Ancestor worship religion and mythology
Government Monarchy
History
   Established 1450 (15th century)
  Renamed Jaman North and Jaman South of Brong-Ahafo on the Ashantiland Peninsula 1957
   Dissolved into Ashanti Empire 1895 (19th century)
Succeeded by
Ashanti Empire
[[Brong-Ahafo]]

Gyaman (or Gyaaman) also spelled Jamang (or Jaman), (1450-1895) was a medieval Akan people state, located in what is now the peninsula Ashantiland and Côte d'Ivoire. Gyaman was founded by the Abron, a branch of the Akan, in the late 15th century. The Abron then proceeded to conquer the Kulangos, Nafanas, Ligbis, and other ethnic groups of the area.

In the pre-colonial Gyaman government, a paramount chief known as the Gyamanhene ruled the kingdom from Amanvi, but his four provincial chiefs held the kingdom's real power. The kingdom's economy centered on the capital Sampa and the Dyula market town of Bonduku.

In the nineteenth century, Gyaman was subjugated by the Ashanti, though it briefly regained its independence following the Anglo-Asanti Wars and the Ashanti nation's War of the Golden Stool victory against the British. In 1888, Gyamanhene Agyeman signed a treaty of protection with France, but the French failed to establish a post in the kingdom, leaving it vulnerable to Samori's 1895 invasion. The French later expelled Samori in 1897, incorporating Gyaman into French West Africa.

Jamang was Jaman District, a district of Brong-Ahafo for a time, though it has now been divided into Jaman North District and Jaman South District of Brong-Ahafo on the peninsula Ashantiland.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.