Kesse-Adu Institute of Journalism.

Kesse-Adu Institute of Journalism. Kwame Kesse-Adu Institute of Professional Journalism.

05/02/2026

GHANA DID NOT CREATE THE ASANTEHENE — AND NO REGIONAL GRIEVANCE CAN REDUCE HIM

To those who insist on dragging the Asantehene down to the level of “just another paramount chief,” let us have an honest conversation, one rooted in history, law, and reality, not envy dressed up as constitutionalism.

Yes, Ghana is a constitutional republic.
But Ghana did not begin in 1992.
And power did not start with the Fourth Republic.

The Asantehene’s authority was not donated by Accra, licensed by Parliament, or manufactured by the Constitution. His power predates colonialism, survived imperial war, negotiated coexistence with the British Crown, outlived independence, and remains fully operational in modern Ghana. Ghana did not crown the Asantehene. Ghana met him, and wisely chose accommodation over denial.

That single fact already separates him from every argument being made.

The Constitution is often quoted selectively to make emotional points. Article 270 of the 1992 Constitution does not “equalize” chiefs. It guarantees chieftaincy as it exists under customary law and usage. That phrase is fatal to the claim that all traditional authorities are equal in rank, scope, or influence. Customary law does not flatten history. It preserves hierarchy.

Under customary law, long before colonialism, the Asantehene was never a paramount chief. He does not need a gazette because he does not belong in that category. A paramount chief presides over a traditional area. The Asantehene presides over a confederacy of traditional areas. He sits above paramountcy, not beside it.

This is not semantics. It is structure.

The Asantehene creates paramountcies. He has done so from pre-colonial times to the present day. Over seventy-seven paramount chiefs currently owe their stools to the Golden Stool, and more continue to be created. More importantly, those same paramount chiefs can be destooled by the Asantehene. No paramount chief in Ghana creates other paramount chiefs. No paramount chief receives allegiance from fellow paramount chiefs. No paramount chief sits atop an empire of stools. The Asantehene does all three.

That alone ends the argument.

The Chieftaincy Act, 2008 (Act 759) does not contradict this reality; it protects it. The Act deliberately defers to customary law in determining rank, allegiance, and jurisdiction. It does not impose artificial equality. The state does not manufacture chiefs; it recognizes institutions already legitimated by history. Ghana’s courts have repeatedly affirmed this principle, holding that customary hierarchy, not administrative convenience, determines traditional authority.

This is also why the Asantehene has what no ordinary chief has: his own official seal, a structured traditional bureaucracy, and permanent state security stationed at Manhyia Palace. The Ghana Police Service does not permanently guard palaces for aesthetics. That deployment is an acknowledgment that the Asantehene’s person is a matter of national stability. His safety is not a regional concern; it is a national one.

So when the Inspector-General of Police honours the Asantehene with a parade, or visits Manhyia during Akwasidae, this is not a republic bowing to monarchy. It is a modern state recognizing a pre-existing power whose moral authority still stabilizes millions of citizens.

To complain that other paramount chiefs do not receive similar treatment is to misunderstand influence itself. Influence is not allocated by fairness. It is accumulated by history, structure, continuity, and relevance. Equality before the law does not mean equality of legacy.

The tired claim that “Ghana is not a monarchical state” misses the point entirely. Article 276 bars chiefs from active partisan politics; it does not silence them, reduce them, or strip them of their civilizational weight. Ghana rejected monarchy as a system of government, not as a repository of indigenous authority. The republic did not abolish kingship; it constitutionalized its limits.

That is why the Asantehene speaks on international platforms, engages institutions like the World Bank and IMF, receives presidents and global leaders at Manhyia, and is accorded diplomatic courtesies even outside Ghana, including the use of state aircraft when national interest demands it. He does not do so as a rival to the President, but as Ghana’s most powerful symbol of indigenous legitimacy and soft power, something elections cannot manufacture.

What truly unsettles some people is not constitutional principle, but the uncomfortable visibility of relevance. The Asantehene’s continued prominence exposes a hard truth: some institutions command authority not because the state permits them to, but because history refuses to let them die.

He was not made by the republic.
The republic inherited him.

And no amount of regional agitation, selective constitutional quotation, or rhetorical resentment will rewrite centuries of settled reality.

History is not democratic.
And it does not apologise.

Douglas Peters Writes ✍️

16/10/2025
19/10/2024

At the peak of the transatlantic slave trade, the Benin Kingdom supplied 3000 slaves every year.

Benin was one of the mightiest powers on the eastern Slave Coast and it was there that the Portuguese purchased their first large slave cargoes.

Before 1650, Benin exported slaves not only to the New World but also to Europe and the Gold Coast.

In 1506, a slave typically cost between 12 and 15 manillas (brass bracelets); by 1517, the price had risen to 57 manillas.

After the 1520s, cowry shells replaced manillas as the most popular “money” in the slave trade (in 1522, fifty manillas were equal to 6,370 cowries).

Goods such as hats, beads, etc. were also bartered for slaves.

From 1580 to 1690, Benin never sold its own citizens, but only female captives (including Igbo, Sobo, Ijaw, and others) captured in war or purchased from neighboring peoples.

In fact, the West India planters preferred the slaves of Benin to those of any other part of West Africa.

20/04/2024

21 Most Famous and Powerful kingdoms/Empires in the History of Africa.

1) The Songhai Empire (1401-1600) - Niger 🇳🇪, Mali 🇲🇱, Mauritania 🇲🇷, Senegal 🇸🇳, Nigeria🇳🇬, Guinea 🇬🇳, The Gambia🇬🇲, Algeria (south) 🇩🇿, Burkina-Faso🇧🇫, and Ivory Coast 🇨🇮, Chad 🇹🇩

2) The Kingdom of Egypt - Egypt 🇪🇬

3) The Aksumite( Axum) Empire(100-940 CE) - Ethiopia/Eritrea 🇪🇹/🇪🇷

4) The Mali Empire (1235 to 1670)- Mali 🇲🇱, Senegal 🇸🇳, Burkina Faso 🇧🇫, Niger 🇳🇪, Guinea 🇬🇳, The Gambia 🇬🇲, Guinea-Bissau 🇬🇼, Ghana 🇬🇭

5) The Great Benin Empire(1440-1897) - Nigeria 🇳🇬

6) The Empire of Ghana( Wagadugu 601 - 1240) - Mauritania 🇲🇷, Senegal🇸🇳

7) The Great Zimbabwe Empire (1220-1450 CE)- 🇿🇼

8) The Ethiopian Empire ( Abyssinia ) 1270 (beginning of Solomonid Dynasty) until 1974 - Ethiopia 🇪🇹

9) The Kingdom of Kush (1069 BCE and 350 CE) - Sudan/ South Sudan 🇸🇩/🇸🇸

10) The Kingdom of Kongo ( 1301 - 1665 ) - Angola 🇦🇴 DRC 🇨🇩 Congo 🇨🇬 and Gabon 🇬🇦

11) The Oyo Empire.(1300s-1835) - Nigeria 🇳🇬
12) The Carthage Empire (814 BC–146 BC)- Tunisia 🇹🇳
13) Kanem-Bornu Empire. (1396-1893)- Nigeria 🇳🇬
14) The Mutapa Empire (c. 1450-1629)- Zimbabwe/Mozambique 🇿🇼/🇲🇿

15) Ashanti Empire. (1701 to 1901)- Ghana 🇬🇭
16) The Aro Confederacy (1690–1902)- Nigeria 🇳🇬
17) The Jolof Empire. (1350 to 1549)- Senegal 🇸🇳
18) The Kingdom of Nri (800AD until 1911)- Nigeria 🇳🇬
19) The Luba Empire.(1585–1889) - DRC 🇨🇩
20) The Nok Civilization.(1500 BC — c. 500) AD- Nigeria 🇳🇬
21) The Zulu Empire (1816-1897)- South Africa 🇿🇦 ゚viralシ

16/04/2024

Kings of the medieval Bono kingdom
Bonohene Nana Yeboa Ananta (1595–1609)

The new King, Nana Yeboa contrived to re-establish order within a couple of years. He bought guns from Danish merchants on the coast and with these defeated the Mande. He received the posthumous praise-name of 'Ananta', 'Danish gun.'

A minstrel song eulogizes him thus: Nkron ne nkron nua wosɛ din na wonsɛ nko mmrane. Onipa a ɔwɔ din, na wɔbɔ ne din sa no nko mmrane. ('Take nine, take nine bothers. Their names are the same but not their deeds. He who is famous for his deeds alone deserves new titles of praise.')

Nana Yeboa Ananta re-established the divine kingship; and though said to have often insisted that gold symbolizes the King, and silver the Queen, nevertheless had a spinning basket made for the Queen in gold rather than silver.

During this time, sections of Fante mostly women living at Bonomanso decided to establish a new town. Takyi Firi, a grandson of Nana Yaa Nyamaa, a niece of Amoasanka, therefore left Bono-Manso for a village some ten miles away, then inhabited by Dwomo/Dwomo. He enlarged it into Takyiman, which soon became one of the largest town.

His mother Yaa Takyiwaa gave 'life' to Tano in a cave near the river Agyentoa. The Bonohemaa Kuruwa I, the daughter of a Fante priest, accepted the god by presenting Takyiwaa with a golden key, as symbol of her office as high-priestess to Tano. The king Yeboa Ananta gave gold dust to be poured into the source of river Tano when rites were performed.

Nana Yeboa Ananta specialized in cotton-growing, spinning and weaving, and imported weavers from the Wangara/Mande neighbours. Bonohemaa Kuruwa I decreed that spinning was an exclusively female pursuit, and introduced the art into her palace, which kept numerous girls busy. It was on this account that Yeboa Ananta gave her the golden spinning basket. He is remembered as a very spiritual man, who did nothing without consulting the divine oracles.

With equal punctilio he also consulted the various Queens who shared his reign, thus Bonohemaa Kuruwaa, Bonohemaa Afranewaa and Bonohemaa Afrakomaa respectively.

Reference: Meyerowitz, E. L. R.(1958) The Akan of Ghana and their ancient beliefs (pp. 115–117). Faber & Faber Limited. 24 Russell Square, London.

03/10/2023

The Unity of Asante was sealed with human blood. Not just any blood, but the blood of royals "Adehyie mogya". For four (4) Powerful traditional leaders to freely nominate themselves out of their own will to be killed (sacrifice) for Asante to stand shows the level of Great Commitment our ancestors made to see the formation of Asante Union.

(a) Nana Asenso Kofo, Adwumakasekesehene.
(b) Nana Dikopim I, Edwesohene (Ejisu).
(c) Nana Tweneboah Kodua, Kumawuhene.
(d) Nana Boahen Anantuo (Mamponghene).

Blood we all know is spiritual, it represents life, so for four human lives to join hands for a mission is the most powerful sacrifice humans can ever make. Even our Father in Heaven believes in the weight of such sacrifice that's why according to the Christian Bible, he sent His son Jesus to die to save humanity.

All these chiefs came from different families, Mmusuakuo Nan mogya, the blood of four (4) clans cemented the Great Asante Union;
°Adwumakasekesehene (Oyoko)
°Ejisuhene (Asona)
°Kumawuhene (Aduana)
°Mamponhene (Biretuo).

This even goes on to prove how our lineages were willing to do everything beyond their powers to unite for the Great Commission ahead. This is a sacred union of States "Amankuo". This is pure sacrifice, both spiritual and physical.

This is not any frɛfrɛkɔbɔ federation oo.

So somebody should tell Wampaamu that "Deɛ yɛde Nnipa mogya atwerɛ no, atwerɛdua ntumi mpepa" ("What is written with human blood, an ordinary pen cannot cancel it neither can an eraser erase it").

There is a reason why after all these sacrifices, Komfo Anokye declared that "Anywhere Asante goes, it will shine" because he believe in the power of such sacrifices. This is a prophecy that has manifested up to our time and it will continue till the world is no more. In our history, those who migrated from Asante out of misunderstanding, war, trade or for a special mission to different places, went and became great even in their newfound places. They still recognise themselves as Asantes and happily declare their identity as Asantefoɔ because our unity is spiritually bonded.

Do you think it is easy or ordinary, for one group of people to establish 4 recognized Regional Capitals in Ghana; Kumasi (The largest city in Ghana currently), Koforidua, Sunyani and Goaso?

Or you think it is normal for a group of people to fight their way out to strategically occupy the central or middle portion of a country? To occupy the centre of everything means you've taken the pivot or the nucleus of the country. We are spreading up our influence in the North, South, East and West. Because as people who occupy the Central/middle belt of a country, we automatically become the gateway to the Northern Sector as well as the gateway to the Southern Sector. Whether you like it or not.

The Asante Kingdom has passed through the thick and thin, the darkest moments and the heavy storms. From the British Empire to governments who purposely came to disunite us but in all, our Union stood the test of time.

Huhuhuhu nyɛ yɛ hu ɛfiri sɛ yɛn Nananom de aneɛden na ɛkyekyere Asanteman. One of the basic philosophies of our ancestors was "Fɛdeɛ ne owuo deɛ fanyinam owuo", "Etuo to na akoraboɔ/akoboɔ ankɔ a yɛde yɛn ti bɛto ho".

So you can only rant and be nagging like the woman you are "Kwadwo Besia" nanso ɛnkɔsi aga. Because the more anyone tries to break us, the more we become stronger and much more united. We are not an ordinary kingdom, we are a 'sophisticated' kingdom.

And as for our OTUMFUO, our KING, our MONARCH, our EMPEROR, our POPE! I bet you, He will never waste his voice on people who deserve his silence. Efiri sɛ ɔyɛ ASANTEHENE!

Piawwwwwwwww!!!!

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