Welcome to twinme.com on July 9 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Akan people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Akan Image:Gye nyame adinkra.png
Total population
Upwards of 25 million
Regions with significant populations
Ghana Côte d'Ivoire
Languages

Various Akan dialects

Religion

Christianity, Traditional, Islam

Related ethnic groups

[Akan]

The Akan people are an ethnic linguistic group of West Africa.

This group includes the following ethnic groups: Akuapem, the Kwahu, the Akyem, the Ashanti, the Baoulé, the Anyi, the Brong, the Fante and the Nzema peoples of both Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. From the 15th century to 19th century, the Akan people dominated gold mining and gold trade in the region. Akan art is wide-ranging and renowned, especially for the tradition of crafting bronze gold weights, which were made using the lost wax casting method. Branches of the Akan include the Abron and the Afutu. The Akan culture is the most dominant and apparent in present-day Ghana. Some of their most important mythological stories are called anansesem. Anansesem literally means 'the spider story', but can in a figurative sense also mean "traveler's tales". These "spider stories" are sometimes also referred to as nyankomsem; 'words of a sky god'. The stories generally, but not always, revolve around Kwaku Ananse, a trickster spirit, often depicted as a spider, human, or a combination thereof.

[edit] See also

[edit] Examples of Akan Language

[edit] References

Akan states of Gold Coast
Accra (Ga) | Efutu | Akyem (Bosome, Abuakwa, Kotoku) | Adanse | Akuapem | Akwamu | Asen | Mankessim (Fante) | Dwabena | Gyaaman (Abron) | Bono | Denkyira | Asanteman (Twi)
Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs