- History of Benin
:"Note: This article is about the modern nation of
Benin , which encompasses the former French colony ofDahomey , located west ofNigeria . It is easily confused with the historical empire governed by theOba of Benin from the 14th Century until 1897, from a seat of power sited atBenin City in present-day Nigeria.The
Republic of Benin was the seat of Dahomey, one of the great medievalAfrica n kingdoms, governed from the capital,Abomey , now aUNESCO World Heritage Site .Kingdom of Benin
the indigenous
Edo people (also known as Bini or Benin people) of modern day Nigeria were run by a group of local chieftains, until a single ruler known as theoba ,(oba means 'king' or 'ruler' in theYoruba language), had asserted control. SeeKingdom of Benin . U The obas brought great prosperity and a highly organized state to Benin. They also established good relations and an extensiveslave trade with the Portuguese and Dutch who arrived from the15th century onwards. TheBenin Empire was very powerful.Colonial Benin
The decline of the obas began in the 18th century when a series of internal power struggles began which lasted into the
19th century . This paved the way for the French takeover andcolonization of the country in 1872. In 1904, the territory was incorporated intoFrench West Africa as Dahomey.Under the French, a port was constructed at
Cotonou , andrailroad s were built. School facilities were expanded byRoman Catholic missions. In 1946, Dahomey became an overseas territory with its ownparliament and representation in the French national assembly. OnDecember 4 ,1958 , it became the République du Dahomey, self-governing within the French Community.Post-colonial Benin
On
August 1 ,1960 , the Republic of Dahomey gained fullindependence from France. The first president wasHubert Maga , who bore the title Prime Minister during the country's last year under French rule. Instability caused by economic troubles, social unrest and ethnic tensions brought about acoup in 1963.Justin Ahomadegbé was appointed president until he was deposed in 1969 and Lt. Col.Paul-Émile de Souza was made president.When elections were cancelled in 1970, a three-man presidential council was appointed, including Maga, his politically ally
Sourou Migan Apithy and Ahomadegbé. Another coup was staged in 1972, which led to the installation of a government led by MajorMathieu Kérékou . The name of the country was changed toBenin in1975 .From
1974 to1989 Kérékou ran the country as asocialist state, earning the label of "Africa'sCuba ". Free elections were reestablished in1991 , and Kérékou was defeated byNicéphore Soglo , Soglo however lost the 1996 election to Kérékou. He remained in power despite allegations of electoral fraud in the 2001 election.Kérékou did not seek reelection in 2006, and he was succeeded by
Yayi Boni in April2006 .ee also
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History of Africa
*History of West Africa External links
* [http://www.rulers.org/rulb1.html#benin Rulers.org — Benin] List of rulers for Benin
* [http://www.historyofnations.net/africa/benin.html History of Benin]References
*factbook
*StateDept
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