Monday, May 9, 2022

S3E21: The Rise of Kofi Kakari

 

Ashanti Royal Executioner in Traditional Garb

 In 1867, the city of Kumasi experienced the bloodiest week it had yet seen. Following the death of Asantehene Kwaku Dua, who had ruled the Ashanti Empire for more than four decades, the city fell into a state of mourning. Parades of mourners gathered around the city to showcase their sadness caused by the king's passing.

However, the head royal executioner, or adumhene, decided to make a power play. The death of the asanthene was traditionally accompanied by the mass execution of his personal slaves, or Akyere. However, the unexpected nature of Kwaku Dua's death meant that nobody had prepared the Akyere for execution, and that they were spread throughout the city, going about their usual tasks. The adumhene lured many back to the palace, by informing them of a "special cleaning assignment." Once they arrived, they were promptly locked in the palace and killed by the royal executioners. The executioners began roving around the city, killing any other Akyere who had not fallen for his ruse. The confused citizens of Kumasi, not aware of what was happening, went into a panic. Many fled the city, while many others assumed that civil war was starting, and decided to fight back. Soon, the executioners were killing not only Akyere, but ordinary civilians as well. The massacre continued for several more days, until Kwaku Dua's body was finally buried and the official mourning period ended.

The massacre was a power play by the adumhene, allowing him to showcase his strength in Kumasi. As the massacre ended, the various nobility, bureaucrats, and other notables convened in Kumasi to choose Kwaku Dua's replacement. With the backing of the Adumhene, the convened Ashanti elected Kofi Kakari, the son of the Asantehemaa Afua Kobi

Kobi, pictured many years after the events of this episode
Kobi had been selected as Asantehemaa due to her weak ties to the royal dynasty. However, with the support of the adumhene and a few military generals, she managed to place her son, Kofi Kakari on the golden stool, ostensibly to act as a placeholder for the paternal grandson of Kwaku Dua, a young man named Kwaku Dua II. To secure his position of power, Kofi Kakari decided to undo many of Kwaku Dua's unpopular but necessary policies, including the unpopular estate taxes he had levied to fund an enormous debt relief program to help rural peasants escape debt peonage.

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