1892 Sack of Salaga

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1892 Sack of Salaga
Location
Salaga, Ghana
8°33′N 0°31′W

The 1892 Sack of Salaga was a Gonja civil war for the control of the town of Salaga that occurred on December 5, 1892. A rebellion led by and assisted by his Dagomba and Nanumba allies overthrew who died in exile in the same year.

Yaa Naa Andani, the King of Dagbon at that time was against the disruption in the region, and sent a strongly worded letter to the incumbent in 1894 to quell the internecine struggles to avoid further hurting trade in the slave market.[1] The war led to a mass exodus of mostly Zongo people out of the region, significantly depleting its population and giving birth to a wave of Islamic proselytizing in the forest areas of modern Ghana.[2]

See also[]

  • Konkomba-Nanumba conflict

References[]

  1. ^ Abdulai Iddrisu (2009). Contesting Islam: "Homegrown Wahhabism," Education and Muslim Identity in Northern Ghana, 1920--2005. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. p. 283. ISBN 9781109220643.
  2. ^ John O. Hunwick, R. Rex S. O'Fahey (2003). Arabic Literature of Africa, Volume 4: The Writings of Western Sudanic Africa. BRILL. p. 814. ISBN 9789004124448.

Coordinates: 8°33′N 0°31′W / 8.550°N 0.517°W / 8.550; -0.517

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