Gonja/Guans: The ORIGINAL INHABITANTS of modern day Ghana

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Great Value Man
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I'm making this thread b/c there is a common misconception that the Akans were the main inhabitants of modern day ghana but that may not the case: In any even they've basically been absorbed by larger groups while still maintaining their own identity as well.

Guan
The Guan are believed to have begun to migrate from the Mossi region of modern Burkina around A.D. 1000. Moving gradually through the Volta valley in a southerly direction, they created settlements along the Black Volta, throughout the Afram Plains, in the Volta Gorge, and in the Akwapim Hills before moving farther south onto the coastal plains. Some scholars postulate that the wide distribution of the Guan suggests that they were the Neolithic population of the region. Later migrations by other groups such as the Akan, Ewe, and Ga-Adangbe into Guan-settled areas would then have led to the development of Guan-speaking enclaves along the Volta and within the coastal plains. The Guan have been heavily influenced by their neighbors. The Efutu, a subgroup of the Guan, for example, continue to speak Guan dialects, but have adopted (with modifications) the Fante version of some Akan institutions and the use of some Fante words in their rituals. As far as the other Guan subgroups are concered, the Anum-Boso speak a local Ewe dialect, whereas the Larteh and Kyerepong have customs similar to Akwapim groups.
Constituting about a quarter of the Guan, the Gonja to the north have also been influenced by other groups. The Gonja are ruled by members of a dynasty, probably Mande in origin. The area is peopled by a variety of groups, some of which do not speak Guan. The ruling dynasty, however, does speak Guan, as do substantial numbers of commoners. Although neither the rulers nor most of the commoners are Muslims, a group of Muslims accompanied the Mande invaders and have since occupied a special position as scribes and traders.

The Gonja founded one of several northern kingdoms. In the eighteenth century, they, like their neighbors, were defeated by the expanding Asante Empire. Gonja became part of the British Northern Territories after the fall of Asante. Even though long-distance commerce led to the development of major markets, the Gonja continued to be subsistence farmers and migrant workers.
Ghana Ethnic Groups: Guan
 
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No modern day West Africans been in West Africa(especially coastal West Africa) for a long time. Almost all recently migrated there. Are the Guan people a pygmy type people?
not quite...

here's an excerpt from this webpage
The Guan speaking people live mostly in Ghana though there are some pockets in Togo, Benin and Cote D’Ivoire. Modern historians more or less agree that since time immemorial the Guans have been the original inhabitants of Ghana, because unlike the Akan who arrived from Bouna in the north west, the Ewe from Notsie in Togo in about 1720, the Ga-Adangbe from certain parts in Nigeria and the Mossie-Dagomba group of state who emigrated from the north-east ,the Guans, on the other hand, migrated from nowhere thus Ghana is the ancestral homeland of the Guans. Another school of thought is that the Guans migrated from Israel through Nubia in East Africa to the west of Africa with their capital at Timbuktu.

Even the pockets of the Guans in Togo (The Anyanga), those In Benin (The Gbede, Wese, Okomfo) and the Baule In Cote D'Ivoire claim migrant origin from Ghana. There are numerous studies, which support Guans claim to their autochonous (i.e. aboriginal) status. There is a factual information provided by Professor Adu Boahene who says; neither the Akan nor the Ga-Adangbe found the coastal district of Ghana unoccupied.

It is clear from oral tradition as well as the linguistic evidence that these immigrants met the Guans who were living in these areas in different degrees of concentrations and political organization”. These Guans are represented today by the Anum, Kyerepong, Larteh, Basa, Breku, Etsii, Afutu, and Asebu.

When these immigrants arrived, they pushed the Guans eastwards and southwards and either totally or partially assimilated the Guan culturally and ethnically (vide: a thousand years of west African history 1970.page.167).

By 1482, when the Portuguese led by Don Diogo d’Azambuja negotiated with the local chief of Edena for the construction of a fort, there were not any Fante, Ga, Ewe on the coast. The Edena people originated from one of the ancient Guan kingdoms namely Aguafo, the rest were Asebu, Fetu near Capecoast, Agona in the Central Region and Guan kingdom in the Afram plains under the Ataaras, they were all state builders.

Gonja is the oldest Guan settlement, but whether or not it is the nursery ground and the guans ideas or institutions, is one of the problems which archaeologists are now called upon to solve. But one thing is certain, and that is the patrilineal groups so typical of the Guans definitely evolved here.

Historians assert that the growing power of the Songhai empire pushed the Mossi-Dagomgba ancestors south of Niger bend, so that by AD 1333 they become a threat to the very survival of the Guans in the Gonjaland , these waves of Guans moved southwards in search of nucleated settlements

Akuapem Guan
 

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Many of the Guan people today still speak one of many ancient guan languages in addition to the language of the major group they reside among.

My gandfather(rip) spoke a Guan language. My mother and most of her side of the family still do.

But I can't say it or I'd be basically revealing my identity since its only spoken in a few towns/villages :mjgrin:
 

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What do you mean by a "long time" historically speaking?

Exactly THAT. A "long time" i.e. No modern Coastal West African have been in that area no longer than MAYBE the 5th-7th century BC around the time of dynastic Egypt. Anything before that most of the ancestors of modern day West Africans lived in Upper West Africa in what is Mauritania or the green Sahara(neolithic).

Most of Coastal West Africa was dense forest before and populated by pygmy like people which is why I asked are the Guans pygmy.
 

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Exactly THAT. A "long time" i.e. No modern Coastal West African have been in that area no longer than MAYBE the 5th-7th century BC around the time of dynastic Egypt. Anything before that most of the ancestors of modern day West Africans lived in Upper West Africa in what is Mauritania or the green Sahara(neolithic).

Most of Coastal West Africa was dense forest before and populated by pygmy like people which is why I asked are the Guans pygmy.

As I noted in the Peopling of Africa thread, coastal West Africans can be described as descended from three main migrations. Rice growers (like the Mande) who came to dominate the far western portion of the region. The Asante and other related peoples who migrated south from the Sahel into modern day Central Ghana and finally the yam growers who spread out from what is now Central Nigeria as far west as modern-day Ghana.

The migrations below began starting from 2,000 years ago:
NwIS9eH.jpg
 

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As I noted in the Peopling of Africa thread, coastal West Africans can be described as descended from three main migrations. Rice growers (like the Mande) who came to dominate the far western portion of the region. The Asante and other related peoples who migrated south from the Sahel into modern day Central Ghana and finally the yam growers who spread out from what is now Central Nigeria as far west as modern-day Ghana.

The migrations below began starting from 2,000 years ago:
NwIS9eH.jpg

Point is that they are no older than the Green Sahare timeline.
 

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When this video got put on facebook a ton of ghanaians were confused since the Suriname/kromanti man wasn't speaking twi. SOme even said it wasnt real

turns out he was speaking some similar to Nzema which is a Guan dialect. The Nzema people are also not far from the Fante/capecoast region which was home to Fort Amsterdam(Suriname was a dutch colony BTW)

 
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Yehuda

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When this video got put on facebook a ton of ghanaians were confused since the Suriname/kromanti man wasn't speaking twi. SOme even said it wasnt real

turns out he was speaking some similar to Nzema which is a Guan dialect. The Nzema people are also not far from the Fante/capecoast region which was home to Fort Amsterdam(Suriname was a dutch colony BTW)



:ahh:
 
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