Humans have
inhabited Togo for several millennia, although exact dates are
unknown. Pottery and grinding stones at least 3,500 years old
have been found in Togo. In addition, there is archeological evidence,
including edge-ground axes and pottery, in the central region
of Togo that dates back 4,200 years ago (de Barros 2001). However,
Europeans did not come into contact with this region until the
15th century.
The first
Europeans to reach Togo were Portuguese explorers traveling between
1471 and 1473. However, the Dutch, French, English or Portuguese
never officially claimed the Togolese land. There were two factors
that lead to the unclaimed Togo territory. First, the European
merchants characterized the people of Aneho, the main trading
town, as having "bad dispositions" and "sharp middleman practices".
Secondly, Dahomy (Benin) and the Gold Coast (English Ghana) were
the major slave trading posts and produced a "plentiful supply
of slaves", leaving the two powers (England and France) uninterested
in Togo land.
It was not
until 1884 when Germany, who was aggressively trying to claim
colonial territory like England and France, sent a German Imperial
Commissioner to try to seize domination over the Togolese people.
The Germans were also trying to avoid the high import duties that
the English charged them on goods from their African colonies.
Moreover, the death of the Aneho King Malapa II in 1883 made Aneho
politically unstable, leaving the town vulnerable to German settlement.
On July 4,
1884, the German Imperial Commissioner Gustav Nachtigal signed
the first protectorate agreement with Chief Malapa III. From this
date until the First World War, Togo was under German rule. However,
the German Togoland was not finally determined until 1897 because
of the resistance of people in the inner land. By the end of the
19th century, German domination in Togo was replaced by French
rule. This change of power occurred in 1914 during the First World
War, when French and English attacked Germany from both sides.
Eighteen days later, the Germans were defeated in the first allied
victory of World War One. Togoland was divided among the French
and English without the participation of native leaders. The French
were accorded 56,000 square kilometers and the English acquired
33,800 square kilometers. The English "portion" was added to their
Gold Coast Colony (Ghana); the remainder became a new French colony.
Similar to
the conduct of the Germans, the French ruled with an authoritarian
government, which acted with severe brutality towards the Togolese
and was involved in forced labor for their cotton and cocoa plantations.
In addition, the Togolese were barred from holding important positions
in colonial administrative offices. It was not until 1960 that
Togolese once again had control of their own country.
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