The Golden Stool is the most sacred object of the Ashanti people of Ghana. Its proper name is Sika Dwa Kofi — the Golden Stool of Friday. According to Ashanti tradition, the Stool descended from the sky in the late 17th century onto the lap of Osei Tutu, who became the first Asantehene (king of the Ashanti). The priest Okomfo Anokye called it down. The Stool, the tradition says, contains the soul of the Ashanti nation. The Stool is not a throne. No Asantehene sits on it. It has its own chair, beside the Asantehene's. It is brought out only for the most important ceremonies. Outsiders rarely see it. Many of its details are guarded knowledge. The Golden Stool has been at the centre of Ashanti history for over 320 years. The Ashanti Empire rose to be one of the most powerful states in West Africa during the 18th and 19th centuries, controlling the gold-rich forest belt of what is now Ghana. The British fought four wars with the Ashanti during the 19th century. In 1896, the British exiled the Asantehene Prempeh I to the Seychelles. In 1900, the British colonial governor Sir Frederick Hodgson came to Kumasi and made a demand that no British official should ever have made — he asked for the Golden Stool to be brought out so that he, as the representative of Queen Victoria, could sit on it. The Ashanti went to war. The Queen Mother of Ejisu, Yaa Asantewaa, gave the speech that has come to be remembered: 'If you, the men of Ashanti, will not go forward, then we will. We, the women, will fight.' The British called this the Ashanti Rebellion. The Ashanti called it the War of the Golden Stool. The Ashanti were defeated militarily. Yaa Asantewaa was captured and exiled to the Seychelles, where she died in 1921. The Asantehene Prempeh I lived in exile for 28 years before being allowed to return to Kumasi in 1924. But the Golden Stool itself — the object Hodgson demanded — was never captured. Ashanti elders hid it in the forest. It was rediscovered in 1920, partially desecrated by gold-seekers, and restored to the Asantehene. Today it is in Kumasi, in the custody of the current Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II. Modern Ghana is a republic. The Asantehene is no longer a head of state. But the Golden Stool remains the soul of the Ashanti nation. This lesson asks how an object that has almost never been photographed, that no outsider has ever sat on, that has no power in modern Ghanaian law, can remain the heart of a people's identity for over 320 years.
Several things. First, it is not a throne. Most royal sacred objects in world history — the crown, the sceptre, the throne, the sword of state — are objects the monarch uses. The Golden Stool is an object that even the king cannot sit on. It is held to be too sacred for any person, however high-ranking. The Asantehene's own chair sits beside the Golden Stool's chair, not on it. Second, it contains the soul of the nation. The Stool is not just a symbol of the Ashanti people; according to the tradition, it actually holds the spiritual essence of every Ashanti, living, dead, and yet to be born. Damage to the Stool would damage the nation. Third, it was given by the gods. The tradition holds that the Stool was not made by human hands. It came from the sky. This makes it categorically different from a crown, which is made by human craftsmen for a specific king. Strong answers will see that the Golden Stool occupies a different conceptual space from European royal regalia. It is not a symbol of personal rule; it is a vessel of national soul. End by noting that this is the deep reason why what happened in 1900 was such a catastrophic act. The British governor did not understand what the Stool was. He thought it was a throne. He asked to sit on it as he might sit on Queen Victoria's throne in a state visit. To the Ashanti, this was an act of sacrilege against the nation itself.
He had committed the gravest possible sacrilege against the Ashanti nation. He had demanded the Stool that no king of the Ashanti had ever sat on. He had announced his intention to sit on the soul of the nation. He may not have understood what he was asking — many British officials of the period had a limited and dismissive understanding of African religious life. But understanding or not, the demand was made, in public, before the assembled chiefs. Strong answers will see that this was not a small mistake. It was a profound failure to understand what the Stool was. It was a colonial act that assumed the British representative had the right to do anything he wished. It treated a sacred living object as a piece of conquered property. End by noting that this is one of the clearest examples in colonial history of cultural violence — not the destruction of an object (the Stool was hidden and survived), but the contempt for what the object meant to the people who held it sacred. The Ashanti did not respond with diplomacy. They went to war.
Several reasons. First, she did what very few people in any culture have ever done — she led her nation in armed resistance to a colonial empire at its peak. The British Empire in 1900 was the largest in human history. To stand against it required extraordinary moral conviction. Second, she did it as a woman, in a council mostly of men, at a moment when the men were hesitating. Her famous words to the chiefs are a model of leadership at a moment of crisis. Third, she did it for the right reasons — to defend a sacred object that was the heart of her people's identity. Not for personal gain, not for new territory, but for the soul of the nation. Fourth, although she lost the war, she succeeded in her main aim — the British never got the Golden Stool. The object she went to war for was never theirs. Strong answers will see that Yaa Asantewaa is remembered because she combined courage, moral clarity, and effective leadership in the service of something larger than herself. She is celebrated across Africa today as one of the great resisters of colonial conquest. End by noting that her example matters now too. There is a Yaa Asantewaa Girls' Secondary School in Kumasi. There is a Yaa Asantewaa Museum at Ejisu. Schools, songs, and stories keep her name alive. The Republic of Ghana, which became the first sub-Saharan African country to win independence from Britain (in 1957), holds her as one of its founding ancestors. She lost the battle. She helped win the longer war.
Because it was never a symbol of political power in the first place. It is a vessel of national soul. Political authority comes and goes — empires rise and fall, governments change, presidents are elected — but the soul of a people, the Ashanti tradition holds, continues as long as the people continue. The Stool today is exactly what it was in 1701. It still contains the sunsum of the Ashanti nation. The men and women who hid it in the forest in 1900 understood this. They were not protecting a political object; they were protecting a spiritual one. Strong answers will see that this is one reason why traditional sacred objects can survive enormous political change. The Crown Jewels of England are political — they belong to whichever monarch holds the throne. The Golden Stool is religious — it belongs to the Ashanti people, whatever their political circumstances. The Republic of Ghana is the political home of the Ashanti. The Stool is their spiritual home. End by noting that this distinction matters for many sacred objects worldwide. The Torah scrolls in a Jewish community, the relics in a Catholic church, the Black Stone at the Kaaba in Mecca, the temple precincts of Ise in Japan, the Tabot in an Ethiopian Orthodox church — each is a sacred object whose meaning is religious, not political. Such objects can survive political change in ways that political symbols cannot.
The Sika Dwa Kofi — the Golden Stool of Friday, also called the Golden Stool of the Ashanti — is the most sacred object of the Ashanti people of Ghana. According to Ashanti tradition, it descended from the sky in the late 17th century onto the lap of Osei Tutu, the first Asantehene, called down by the priest Okomfo Anokye. The Stool is held to contain the soul (sunsum) of the entire Ashanti nation. It is not a throne — no Asantehene sits on it. It has its own chair, beside the Asantehene's. The Ashanti Empire rose to be one of the most powerful states in West Africa, controlling the gold-rich forest country of what is now Ghana. The Ashanti fought four wars with the British during the 19th century, losing the fourth in 1896 when the Asantehene Prempeh I was exiled to the Seychelles. In 1900, the British colonial governor Sir Frederick Hodgson demanded that the Golden Stool be brought out so that he, as the representative of Queen Victoria, could sit on it. This act of sacrilege caused a war — the War of the Golden Stool, also called the Yaa Asantewaa War. Yaa Asantewaa, Queen Mother of Ejisu, led the Ashanti resistance with the famous speech: 'If you, the men of Ashanti, will not go forward, then we will. We, the women, will fight.' The Ashanti were defeated militarily. Yaa Asantewaa was captured and exiled to the Seychelles, where she died in 1921. But the Golden Stool itself was never captured. It was hidden in the forest by Ashanti elders, rediscovered in 1920, partially desecrated by gold-seekers (who were tried and exiled), and restored to the Asantehene. The Ashanti monarchy was formally restored by the British in 1935 with Prempeh II as Asantehene. Ghana won independence from Britain on 6 March 1957, becoming the first sub-Saharan African country to do so. The Ashanti monarchy continues today as a respected cultural institution within the Republic of Ghana. The current Asantehene is Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, enthroned in 1999. The Golden Stool is in Kumasi, in his custody. It is brought out only for major ceremonies. It is rarely photographed. Many of its details are knowledge held within the Ashanti tradition. The Golden Stool teaches that some objects can carry the identity of a whole people for centuries, surviving wars, exile, theft, partial destruction, and the rise and fall of political systems. The Stool is older than the Republic of Ghana, older than the British Empire that fought to take it, older than the United Kingdom itself. It is one of the most important objects in West African history and a continuing centre of Ashanti identity today.
| Date | Event | What changed |
|---|---|---|
| around 1701 | Osei Tutu becomes first Asantehene; Okomfo Anokye calls down the Golden Stool | The Ashanti Empire is founded; the Stool becomes its soul |
| 18th-19th centuries | Ashanti Empire grows powerful, controls the gold trade | Kumasi becomes a major West African capital |
| 1823-1874 | First three Anglo-Ashanti Wars | British force reaches and partly burns Kumasi in 1874 |
| 1895-1896 | Fourth Anglo-Ashanti War; Asantehene Prempeh I exiled to Seychelles | Ashanti becomes a British protectorate, but the Stool remains hidden |
| March-July 1900 | Sir Frederick Hodgson demands the Golden Stool; Yaa Asantewaa leads the resistance | The War of the Golden Stool |
| 1901 | Yaa Asantewaa captured and exiled to Seychelles | The military war ends; the Stool is still hidden |
| 1920 | Stool found by gold-seekers, partially desecrated, then recovered | The Stool returns to Ashanti custody |
| 1935 | Ashanti monarchy formally restored; Prempeh II becomes Asantehene | The traditional institution is re-established |
| 1957 onwards | Ghana gains independence; Ashanti monarchy continues as cultural institution | The Stool is in Kumasi today under Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II |
The Golden Stool is the throne of the Asantehene.
The Golden Stool is not a throne. No Asantehene has ever sat on it. The Stool has its own chair, beside the Asantehene's. The Stool is held to contain the soul of the Ashanti nation, and to sit on the soul of a nation would be a sacrilege. The Asantehene sits on a different stool of office.
European observers often confused the Stool with a throne because in European royal tradition the throne is the king's seat. The Ashanti tradition does not work this way. Sir Frederick Hodgson's 1900 demand to sit on the Stool came partly from this misunderstanding.
The Ashanti lost the War of the Golden Stool.
The Ashanti lost the military war — they were defeated, Yaa Asantewaa was captured, the empire became a British protectorate. But they achieved the main aim of the war, which was to keep the Stool out of British hands. The Stool was never captured. It was hidden, recovered, and is in Kumasi today. The Ashanti lost the battle and won the deeper struggle.
It is too simple to call the war a defeat. The Ashanti's goal was specifically to defend the Stool. They succeeded. The British's goal was to humiliate the Ashanti and seize the Stool as a symbol of conquest. They failed.
The Ashanti monarchy ended when Ghana became independent in 1957.
The Ashanti monarchy continues today as a respected cultural and traditional institution within the Republic of Ghana. The current Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, was enthroned in 1999 and is one of the most influential figures in modern Ghanaian society. The Asantehene is no longer a head of state but exercises real authority within Ashanti society and is consulted by national governments.
Many readers assume that traditional African monarchies stopped functioning after independence. In fact, several continue today — the Asantehene in Ghana, the Oba of Benin in Nigeria, the Buganda kingdom in Uganda, the Zulu monarchy in South Africa. Each occupies a specific cultural and constitutional role within modern republics or democracies.
Yaa Asantewaa was the only woman who led African resistance to colonialism.
Yaa Asantewaa was one of several. Queen Nzinga of Ndongo and Matamba (in modern Angola) resisted Portuguese conquest in the 17th century. Queen Aminatu of Zazzau (in modern Nigeria) led her people in war in the 16th century. Empress Taytu of Ethiopia helped lead Ethiopian forces against the Italians at the Battle of Adwa in 1896. Many other women across Africa led resistance to colonial conquest. Yaa Asantewaa stands in a long tradition.
Western histories of Africa have sometimes treated women rulers as exceptions. They are not exceptions in Akan history (where matrilineal authority is structural) or in many other African contexts.
Treat the Golden Stool with the highest level of respect. This is a living sacred object of a specific people. The Ashanti tradition holds many details of the Stool as private — not to be widely shared, not to be photographed without permission, not to be reduced to a museum exhibit. The lesson tells the public story; it does not claim to reveal what is properly private. Pronounce 'Asante' as 'a-SAN-tay' (the modern Ghanaian spelling); 'Ashanti' as 'a-SHAN-tee' (the older English spelling). Both are widely used. Pronounce 'Sika Dwa Kofi' approximately as 'SEE-ka JWA KOH-fee'. Pronounce 'Asantehene' as 'a-san-tay-HEH-nay'. Pronounce 'Okomfo Anokye' as 'oh-KOM-foh ah-NOH-chay'. Pronounce 'Yaa Asantewaa' as 'YAA a-san-TAY-waa'. Pronounce 'Kumasi' as 'koo-MAH-see'. Pronounce 'Sunsum' as 'SUN-sum'. These are approximations; for precise pronunciation, listen to a recording by a Ghanaian Twi speaker. Treat Yaa Asantewaa as a serious historical figure, not a curiosity. She was an elderly Queen Mother who led her people in armed resistance to the British Empire at its peak. She paid for this with exile and death far from home. She is one of the great moral examples of West African history. Note that there is a famous photograph commonly attributed to Yaa Asantewaa — a woman in a war dress holding a rifle — which several Ghanaian sources have argued is actually a later studio photograph of someone else, possibly an African-American theatre student. The most reliable historical photographs of Yaa Asantewaa are the Seychelles group photographs of the exiled Ashanti chiefs. Be cautious about which images are used. The Yaa Asantewaa Museum statue is the safest visual reference. Be honest about the British colonial violence. The four Anglo-Ashanti wars killed many thousands of Ashanti and many British soldiers. Kumasi was burned. The Asantehene was exiled. Sir Frederick Hodgson's demand for the Golden Stool was a real act of cultural aggression. The 1900 war is not 'just history' — it is recent enough that great-grandchildren of the participants are alive today. Be careful about the framing 'sacred object'. The Stool is not just an object considered sacred by some people; in the Ashanti tradition, it actually contains the soul of the nation. This is a religious claim. Teachers should present it as the tradition holds it (the Stool contains the sunsum of the Ashanti nation) without either endorsing or dismissing the religious claim. Same as any other sacred object — the Torah, the Eucharist, the Black Stone of the Kaaba. Treat with respect, without forcing students to share the belief. If you have Ghanaian students in your class, especially Ashanti students, they may know more about this subject than you do. Welcome this. Give them space to share without putting them on the spot. They may also have family memories of the events of 1900 or the exile that academic sources do not capture. Be careful about the framing of 'restoration'. The British formally restored the Ashanti monarchy in 1935. But Ashanti chiefs and the Asantehene's authority continued throughout the protectorate period; the British recognition was the formal acknowledgement of something that had not actually ended. Avoid suggesting the Ashanti monarchy disappeared and was reinvented. End the lesson on the present. The current Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, is a living person enthroned in 1999. The Stool is in Kumasi today. Major Ashanti ceremonies happen throughout the year. The story is not closed.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Golden Stool.
What is the Golden Stool, and what does it mean to the Ashanti?
Why is the Golden Stool not a throne?
What was the War of the Golden Stool, and what caused it?
Who was Yaa Asantewaa, and what did she do?
What happened to the Golden Stool itself?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
The Ashanti went to war over a single object. Was it worth it?
Sir Frederick Hodgson may not have understood what he was demanding. If a person commits sacrilege without meaning to, is the act still wrong?
The Golden Stool has survived for over 320 years through wars, exile, theft, and political change. Why have some objects lasted so long when so much else has been lost?
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