By PROF. A.K. AWEDOBA
ABSTRACT
Baobab tree |
This is a detailed survey of the socio-demographic patterns
of the peoples who inhabit the Northern half of Ghana.
this article gives an account of the indigenous language
patterns of the different ethnic groups, their social customs and distinctive
customs.
Among the main ethnic groups
Northern Ghana
comprises the three northernmost administrative regions of Ghana: the Upper
West Region, Upper East
Region and Northern Region.
These lie roughly north of the Lower Black Volta River, which together with its
tributaries the White and Red Voltas and the Oti and Daka rivers, drain the
area that comprises Northern Ghana.
Northern Ghana shares international boundaries with the Burkina Faso to
the North, Togo to the east and Cote d’Ivoire to the lower southwest. To the
south Northern Ghana shares regional boundaries with the Brong Ahafo Region and
the Volta Region.
In colonial times the area now
covered by these three regions constituted the Northern Territories of the Gold
Coast and were administered by a Chief Commissioner who was responsible to the
Governor of the Gold Coast for its administration. The area and its people were designated as
the 'Tribes of the Ashanti Hinterland' by the Gold Coast anthropologist, Capt.
R.S. Rattray who wrote a two volume account on that title describing the social
institutions of the communities in this part of modern Ghana. The effective
colonization of this portion of Ghana came after the British had established
their hegemony over the rest of the country. Ashanti it would appear had for
long served as a buffer preventing direct access to the Northern parts of the
country. The conquest of Ashanti at the dawn of the Twentieth century opened
the way to the North. Even before then Britain had made efforts to control the
area through the treaties that it made with local rulers and opinion leaders through
George Ekem Ferguson. These treaties became necessary owing to a desire to
control the commercial activities and the international trade that converged in
Salaga in the precolonial period. Salaga was where savanna produce of various
descriptions were exchanged for forest produce – principally
Kolanuts. Whoever controlled this Northern emporium of Salaga was well
positioned to control and exploit the International trade. Several European
powers were in contention including the Germans, the French and the British. Initially
they agreed on a neutral zone that extended northwards from the White
Volta-Daka confluence as far as 10ÚN. And westward from 0Ú 33' E. as far as 1Ú
27' W. The agreement did not hold and
although the British eventually came into possession of the bulk of the North,
stretching up to the 11Ú parallel they did not control Eastern Dagbon including
its capital, Yendi, the lands of the Chokosi (Anufo), the Konkomba, the Nanumba
and other peoples straddling the now Ghana –Togo border in the North.
These fell to the Germans. Between
their defeat at the battle of Adibo in 1896 and the end of the First World War,
the kingdom of Dagbon was partitioned between the British and the Germans. Unification
of that Kingdom came in 1919 when Eastern Dagbon and some of the other northern
parts of what used to be German Togoland were ceded to the British to be
administered as part of the Northern Territories Protectorate. These parts
eventually became part of Ghana after the UN plebiscite of 1957 in which most
of the affected northern people voted to remain with the rest of Ghana.
Northern Ghana today is home to
a number of different peoples speaking a variety of related languages and
exhibiting considerable cultural similarities. Some of these peoples claim to
be autochthonous while others like the dominant or aristocratic lineages among
the Dagomba, Mamprusi and Gonja claim descent from warrior immigrant groups
that invaded the area and imposed their rule over the indigenous peoples. They
intermarried with these peoples whose daughters they took as wives and whose
languages and social norms they eventually adopted. Their traditions of foreign
origin and the associated exploits remain and are recited by professional court
drummers and fiddlers. These have been
recorded by modern historians. Thus, in the traditional states of Northern
Ghana migrant groups and indigenes coexist.
On ritual occasions the
differentiation may be dramatized in rituals which highlight complementation
and opposition. Migrant groups, usually
the conquering minority have often adopted the local languages and absorbed the
social features of the indigenes among whom they found themselves. The
integration has in many cases been so effective that a visitor, unless told,
could not possibly guess the differences. However, in some parts the
differences between royals and commoners still matter in local affairs.
Many Northern people, though not
all, had until recently facial markers that were either for ethnic and clan
identification or for therapeutic and aesthetic purposes. By these marks it was
possible to tell an individual's ethnic origin. Though a few old individuals still spot
facial features these marks are now rare and out of vogue. In some communities
traditional leaders are campaigning against facial marks.
Much of Northern Ghana falls within the savannah vegetation
belt. Rainfall is modest in many parts of the area and
Allows for the cultivation of
cereal crops and legumes. Agriculture and agro-based industries still remain
the main stay of the peoples of this zone. Varieties of millet and sorghum as
well as rice are cultivated. Rice cultivation in the low lying areas close to
the banks of the Volta and its tributaries is of some commercial importance. The
rice industry may have declined somewhat from what it used to be in the 1970s
but it still remains an important local industry. Tubers are cultivated as
staples in the middle and southern parts of the area which today supplies the
bulk of the countries
Requirement for yam. Animal husbandry has since traditional times
been an integral feature of agriculture in these parts of Ghana. The industry
is declining however. In addition to agriculture trade and craft production are
important to the people of the Northern zone.
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