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The short-reigning Asantehene Kwaku Dua II pictured in the center of the frame. He was the first asantehene to be photographed during his rule.
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The Ashanti civil war was rooted in the aftermath of the impeachment of Asantehene Mensa Bonsu. Following the old king's exile, a short succession dispute broke out between Mensa Bonsu's brother (also a previously impeached Asantehene) Kofi Kakari, and the official heir to the stool elected by the asantemanhyiamu, Kwaku Dua II. Kwaku Dua II, with the help of his father Owusu Koko, managed to defeat Kakari's supporters. Rather than reconciling with his defeated enemies, Kwaku Dua II lured Kakari's remaining supporters into a trap by promising amnesty before mass-executing them all. Kakari himself was killed shortly after, marking the first time in history that a former Asantehene was executed.
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The rebuilt royal compound at Bekwai (pictured in 1900.) |
The brutal killing of Kakari's supporters restored stability for a brief period. However, Kwaku Dua II died of (ostensibly) natural causes shortly thereafter. Due to the brutal trap that the king had sprung on Kakari's supporters, few Ashanti elites were willing to risk travelling to Kumasi to elect a new asantehene. As a result, for the first time since the foundation of the state, the golden stool was empty in 1884, and would remain so for four years. This time is periodized as the "Civil Wars" era of Ashanti history, and for good reason. The lack of a central authority resulted in Asanteman collapsing into a series of localized conflicts. Conflicts that ordinarily would have been small, brief disputes, such as questions of the succession of minor omanhene stools, escalated into outright wars when there was no central authority to arbitrate them. Omanhenes also engaged in freebooting conflicts, such as when the omanhene of Bekwai decided to try and reconquer the breakaway province of Adansi. The Adansi king managed to frustrate the Bekwaihene's attempt, and even launched a counterattack on Bekwai, killing the Bekwaihene in the process. The new Bekwaihene managed to reverse course though, and conquered Adansi in a particularly bloody fashion, depopulating much of the region in the process.
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Ashanti kingdom in 1886 |
The Ashanti kingdom remained disunited until 1888, when a political movement led by the future Asantehene Kwaku Dua III, more commonly known by his later nickname Agyeman Prempeh I, reunited the state and ended the period of civil war.
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