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Golden Stool
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The Golden Stool (Ashanti-Twi: Sika dwa; full title, Sika Dwa Kofi "the Golden Stool born on a Friday") is the royal and divine throne of kings of the Asante people and the ultimate symbol of power in Asante.[1] According to legend, Okomfo Anokye, High Priest and one of the two chief founders of the Asante Confederacy, caused the stool to descend from the sky and land on the lap of the first Asante king, Osei Tutu.[2] Such seats were traditionally symbolic of a chieftain's leadership, but the Golden Stool is believed to house the spirit[3] of the Asante nation—living, dead and yet to be born.
Symbology and ritual
[edit]Each stool is understood to be the seat of the owner's soul and when not in use it is placed against a wall so that other souls passing by may relax on it. The Golden Stool is the royal throne and must never touch the ground; instead it is placed on a blanket.[4] During inauguration, a new king is raised and lowered over the stool without touching it.[5] The Golden Stool is carried to the king on a pillow,[6] as only the Asantehene himself is allowed to handle it. During solemn occasions, the Golden Stool is placed on the king's left on a throne of its own, the hwedom dwa (Asante, throne facing the crowd).[7]
Historical conflict
[edit]Many wars[8] have broken out over the ownership of the royal throne.[9] In 1896, Asantehene Prempeh I was deported rather than risk losing both the war and the throne. In 1900, Sir Frederick Hodgson, the Governor of the Gold Coast, demanded[5] to be allowed to sit on the Golden Stool, and ordered that a search for it be conducted. This provoked an armed rebellion known as the War of the Golden Stool, which resulted in the annexation of Ashanti to the British Empire, but preserved the sanctity of the Golden Stool. In 1921, African road workers discovered the stool and stripped some of the gold ornaments.[10] They were taken into protective custody by the British, before being tried according to local custom and sentenced to death.[10] The British intervened and the group was instead banished.[10] An assurance of non-interference with the stool was then given by the British and it was brought out of hiding.[10]
In 1935 the stool was used in the ceremony to crown Osei Tutu Agyeman Prempeh II.[11]
Appearance and craftsmanship
[edit]
The Golden Stool is a curved seat 46 cm high with a platform 61 cm wide and 30 cm deep.[12] Its entire surface is inlaid with gold, and hung with bells to warn the king of impending danger.[13][self-published source?] It has not been seen by many and only the king, queen, and trusted advisers know the hiding place. Replicas have been produced for the chiefs and at their funerals are ceremonially blackened with animal blood, a symbol of their power for generations.[14][self-published source?] The stool is one of the main focal points of the Asante today because it still shows succession and power.[9]
While the Golden Stool is made of pure gold, stools are often made from wood. Each stool is made from a single block of the wood of Alstonia boonei (a tall forest tree with numinous associations) and carved with a crescent-shaped seat, flat base and complex support structure. The many designs and symbolic meanings mean that every stool is unique; each has a different meaning for the person whose soul it seats.[15] Some designs contain animal shapes or images that recall the person who used it. The general shape of Asante stools has been copied by other cultures and sold worldwide.[16][citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ "African Gold-weights in the British Museum".
- ^ "How the Asantehene climaxed the 20th anniversary on the Golden Stool [PHOTOS]". www.graphic.com.gh. 2019-04-22. Retrieved 2019-05-18.
- ^ Kyerematen, A. (1969). "The Royal Stools of Ashanti". Africa: Journal of the International African Institute. 39 (1): 1–10. doi:10.2307/1157946. ISSN 0001-9720. JSTOR 1157946. S2CID 144362829.
- ^ "What is the royal and sacred object of the Ashanti people?". GlobalQuiz. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^ a b "History of Golden Stool". www.ghanaweb.com. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^ "Queen-Mother Yaa Asantewaa and the Golden Stool. | Hadithi Africa". Archived from the original on 2020-02-22. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^ "Akan Leadership Arts".
- ^ "Golden Stool of the Asante". History of International Relations. 2018-10-14. Archived from the original on 2019-10-28. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^ a b "Asante Art - Artefacts - Stools". asante.neocities.org. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^ a b c d Carmichael, John (1993). African Eldorado - Gold Coast to Ghana. Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd. pp. 176–77. ISBN 0-7156-2387-7.
- ^ Michael T. Kaufman (March 4, 1999). "Opoku Ware II, King of Asante, Is Dead at 89". New York Times.
- ^ "How a mysterious Golden Stool is keeping the great Ashanti kingdom united". Face2Face Africa. 2018-09-20. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^ Yussif, Elias (2013-07-24). The Facet of Black Culture. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4669-8848-4.
- ^ Hadzija, Boka (November 2013). My Door is Always Open: A Memoir. Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 978-1-4836-2925-4.
- ^ "Asante (Ashanti) Abstract Stools 2". www.hamillgallery.com. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^ "Asante Kotoro Dwa Stool". Exquisite African Art. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
External links
[edit]Golden Stool
View on GrokipediaOrigins and Historical Context
Legendary Account of Descent
According to Ashanti oral tradition, the Golden Stool, known as Sika Dwa Kofi ("the gold-born stool" or "the stool born on Friday"), originated during the late 17th century amid efforts to unify disparate Akan clans into a confederacy under Osei Tutu, the emerging leader of the Kwaman state. Okomfo Anokye, a powerful priest and co-founder of the Ashanti Empire alongside Osei Tutu, invoked supernatural intervention to resolve disputes over leadership and allegiance among the chiefs. In a ceremonial gathering at Kumasi, Anokye reportedly commanded a divine symbol of unity to descend from the heavens, prophesying that it would embody the soul of the Ashanti nation and legitimize Osei Tutu's authority without being crafted by human hands.[6][1] The legend recounts that, amid thunder, darkness, and swirling clouds, the stool materialized in the sky and gently floated downward, bypassing all assembled chiefs to alight directly on the knees of Osei Tutu, signifying Nyame—the supreme Akan creator god's—endorsement of him as Asantehene (king of the Ashanti) and the confederacy's divine mandate. This event, dated variably to around 1695–1701 in traditional chronologies, is said to have quelled rivalries, as the stool's unbidden arrival demonstrated that no chief could claim it through conquest or fabrication; it represented the collective spirits of ancestors and the unborn, housing the nation's sunsum (soul or spirit). Anokye declared it untouchable by human feet or reproduction, establishing taboos that reinforced its sacred autonomy from earthly power struggles.[6][5] Variations in the oral accounts exist, with some emphasizing Anokye's ritual incantations involving sacrifices or the invocation of specific deities, while others highlight the stool's golden luminescence as proof of its celestial forging, untouched by goldsmiths. These narratives, preserved through griot-like abosomfo (priests) and royal historians, underscore the legend's role in fabricating political cohesion rather than empirical origins, though colonial-era records like those from British expeditions corroborate the Ashanti's unwavering belief in its supernatural descent as central to their identity.[6][1]Role in Ashanti State Formation
The Ashanti state, or Asante Empire, emerged in the late 17th century through the unification of independent Akan chiefdoms under Osei Tutu I, who ascended as ruler of Kumasi around 1695 and is credited with founding the confederacy by 1701.[7] [1] Osei Tutu, alongside his chief advisor and high priest Okomfo Anokye, orchestrated military conquests against rivals such as Denkyira—defeated in 1701—and forged oaths of allegiance from subordinate states, creating a hierarchical structure with Kumasi as the central capital.[8] [9] This process transformed fragmented polities into a cohesive polity capable of controlling gold-producing regions and trade routes to the coast. The Golden Stool played a pivotal symbolic role in legitimizing this unification, as recounted in Ashanti oral traditions preserved through griots and state historians. Okomfo Anokye reportedly invoked the stool during a public ritual at Kumasi circa 1700, where it allegedly descended from the sky amid thunder and mist, landing directly on Osei Tutu's lap without touching the ground.[1] [10] This event endowed the stool with divine origin, representing the sunsum (collective spirit or soul) of all Ashanti—ancestors, living subjects, and unborn descendants—thus transcending clan loyalties and vesting supreme authority in the confederacy rather than any single ruler.[5] By embodying the nation's unity, the stool facilitated the confederacy's constitutional framework, wherein chiefs swore fealty to it as the ultimate arbiter of power, not to the Asantehene personally; Osei Tutu ruled as custodian, never sitting upon it to avoid profaning its sanctity.[9] This arrangement fostered political stability amid expansion, as the stool's aura deterred internal dissent and rallied forces for campaigns that grew the empire to encompass over 100 chiefdoms by the early 18th century.[11] While reliant on unverifiable oral accounts lacking contemporary written corroboration, the narrative's enduring invocation in Ashanti governance underscores its causal efficacy in forging a shared identity and hierarchical loyalty essential to state formation.[1]Historical Verification and Debates
The legendary account attributes the Golden Stool's origins to a supernatural descent from the sky, summoned by the priest Okomfo Anokye around 1700 during the formation of the Ashanti Confederacy under Osei Tutu I, landing amid thunder and white dust on the future king's lap without touching the ground, symbolizing the aggregation of ancestral souls (sunsum) of all Ashanti people.[1] This narrative, central to Ashanti identity, served to legitimize political unity among disparate Akan clans through shared spiritual authority rather than conquest alone, but no pre-colonial written records or artifacts substantiate the event, as Ashanti history prior to European contact relies exclusively on oral transmission.[12] Empirical verification points to human craftsmanship consistent with Ashanti goldworking expertise, which flourished from the 17th century onward; the stool comprises a wooden core (likely cedar or similar nyamedua wood) carved by specialist stoolmakers (duademfoo), overlaid with gold leaf, adorned with cast gold bells, nuggets, and beads, techniques evidenced in surviving regalia and European trade records from the early 18th century.[13][14] Its physical form—described in late 19th-century accounts as filled with precious beads and hung with nuggets—aligns with artisanal methods rather than extraterrestrial fabrication, with no anomalous materials detected in post-colonial examinations.[15] Scholars interpret the descent myth as a foundational etiology, akin to origin stories in other state-building contexts, engineered to foster cohesion amid inter-clan rivalries, though exact fabrication date remains undated beyond the confederacy's circa 1701 inception.[16] Debates over authenticity intensified in August 2025 when Dormaahene Osagyefo Oseadeeyo Agyemang Badu II publicly rejected the celestial origin, asserting the stool's "welded" appearance during displays indicates earthly construction and dismissing sky-summoning as implausible fabrication, prompting backlash from Ashanti custodians who defend it as the nation's indivisible soul.[17] Such challenges echo broader historiographic tensions between mythic sacralization and materialist analysis, with critics like the Dormaahene arguing distorted narratives undermine Akan historical integrity, while traditionalists cite its unbroken ritual role—never sat upon, but invoked in oaths and enstoolments—as de facto proof of divine mandate, unrefuted by physical testing due to taboos against disassembly.[18] No peer-reviewed consensus favors supernatural claims, prioritizing instead the stool's evolution as a political artifact by the early 1800s, when it underpinned Asantehene authority amid expansions and British encroachments.[12]Symbolism and Cultural Significance
Spiritual and Ancestral Role
The Golden Stool, or Sika Dwa Kofi, functions as the paramount spiritual vessel in Asante tradition, embodying the sunsum—the vital soul-force—of the entire Ashanti nation, inclusive of ancestors, the living, and descendants yet unborn.[1][19][20] This collective essence renders the stool an indissoluble link to the foundational spirits that unified the Asante confederacy under Osei Tutu I around 1701.[1] In Ashanti ontology, stools serve as repositories for individual spirits post-mortem, ritually blackened to preserve the deceased's essence; the Golden Stool extends this principle nationally, enshrining the aggregated ancestral sunsum as the perpetual seat of the people's forebears, from whom the Asantehene derives legitimacy without physical contact.[5][21] No individual ever sits upon it, as doing so would profane its sanctity and risk existential peril to the nation, emphasizing its role as an immutable ancestral oracle rather than a utilitarian throne.[1][20] The stool's heavenly descent, invoked by the priest Okomfo Anokye during the confederacy's inception, imbues it with divine otherworldliness, positioning it as a conduit for ancestral guidance in rituals where libations and invocations affirm communal harmony and invoke protective spirits against discord.[19] Its custodianship remains veiled, known only to select elders, perpetuating its mystique as the unchanging guardian of Ashanti spiritual continuity amid historical upheavals.[5][1]Political Unity and Authority
The Golden Stool, known as Sika Dwa Kɛntɛn, stands as the paramount emblem of political unity and authority in the Ashanti confederacy, representing the collective soul and legitimacy of the Asante nation rather than the personal power of any individual ruler.[22] Crafted under the auspices of Okomfo Anokye during the late 17th century under Asantehene Osei Tutu I, it facilitated the unification of disparate Akan chiefdoms into a cohesive empire by symbolizing a divine descent from the heavens, thereby establishing a shared spiritual and political foundation that bound over 100 clans and territories.[23] [24] Central to the Asantehene's authority, the stool confers legitimacy upon the king, who derives his mandate from its symbolic endorsement rather than hereditary claim alone; subordinate chiefs and paramountcies swear oaths of allegiance directly to the Golden Stool, reinforcing a hierarchical structure where loyalty to the nation supersedes parochial interests.[18] [12] This ritual pledging, often involving libations and invocations, ensured political cohesion across the confederacy's divisions, with violations treated as existential threats to Ashanti sovereignty, as evidenced in pre-colonial enforcement mechanisms that maintained expansion from Kumasi to encompass regions up to 250,000 square kilometers by the early 19th century.[18] Never intended for sitting, the Golden Stool remains enshrined and is positioned behind the Asantehene during enstoolment and key ceremonies to signify the people's moral and spiritual support as the true source of governance, distinguishing Ashanti political philosophy from autocratic models by embedding authority in communal consensus.[18] [25] This arrangement mitigated succession disputes and centrifugal forces, as the stool's sanctity—believed to house the sunsum (spirit) of all Ashanti forebears—demanded adherence from rulers, fostering stability amid military conquests and internal governance of an estimated 3 million subjects at its peak.[26]Associated Rituals and Taboos
The Golden Stool, known as Sika Dwa Kofi, is central to Ashanti enstoolment rituals, where a new Asantehene is symbolically installed by being lowered and raised above the stool without physical contact, signifying the transfer of authority and the nation's soul.[27][28] This procedure underscores the stool's role as a repository of ancestral spirits rather than a functional seat, with the ceremony often beginning at midnight and involving placement on an elephant skin or secondary platform to avoid ground contact.[29] Display of the stool requires preparatory rites performed by its custodians, the Da Prano Group at Manhyia Palace, who conduct customs before retrieval from its secure room and handover to the Nkodwasuafo attendants for public viewing during special events, such as anniversaries or festivals.[30] It is then positioned on a dedicated chair to the left of the Asantehene, emphasizing its superior spiritual status.[30] The Akwasidae Festival, held every six weeks on Sundays, commemorates the stool's legendary descent and Ashanti unity, during which it may be referenced or symbolically honored, though full display remains rare.[28] Key taboos prohibit the stool from touching the ground, as it embodies the Ashanti soul and must remain elevated to preserve its sanctity.[27][28] No individual, including the Asantehene, may sit upon it or make direct physical contact, reinforcing its non-utilitarian role as a divine emblem rather than a throne for occupation.[27][28] Public viewings demand observers wear white attire, and the stool's exact storage location remains secret, known only to select custodians to prevent desecration.[30] These prohibitions extend to wartime consultations, where chiefs seek its guidance without handling, highlighting its mystical protective function.[28]Physical Description and Craftsmanship
External Appearance
The Golden Stool, known as Sika Dwa Kofi in Twi, possesses a distinctive curved seat form typical of Ashanti royal stools, elevated approximately 46 centimeters (18 inches) in height from its base platform, which measures 61 centimeters (24 inches) in width and 30 centimeters (12 inches) in depth.[2] [31] Its entire external surface is inlaid with gold, creating a lustrous appearance that underscores its ceremonial prestige, while small bells are suspended from it to produce audible warnings of its approach or movement.[2] [1] The stool's structure includes four supporting legs attached to the platform, though tradition prohibits it from ever resting directly on the ground, instead requiring it to be carried by attendants during processions or rituals.[32] This design aligns with broader Ashanti stool aesthetics, featuring geometric and symbolic motifs, but the Golden Stool's gold inlay distinguishes it as uniquely opulent, with an estimated weight of around 24 kilograms reflecting the density of its metallic adornments.[32]Materials and Construction Techniques
The Golden Stool, known as Sika Dwa Kofi, consists of a wooden core carved from a single block of wood, overlaid with gold sheeting or leaf to achieve its characteristic appearance.[19][33] The wood is typically sourced from durable local species used in Asante stool-making, such as sese wood (Celtis mildbraedii), though specific identification for the Golden Stool remains unverified due to restricted access.[22] Gold application involves hammering thin sheets over the carved surface, a technique common in Asante metalworking that adheres via natural adhesion or minimal fastening, preserving the stool's lightweight structure despite its opulent exterior.[13] Construction employs traditional Asante woodworking methods, beginning with the selection and felling of a single tree trunk to form the entire stool without joints, ensuring structural integrity and symbolic unity.[33] Artisans use adzes and knives for carving, shaping a crescent-form seat elevated on a flat base approximately 18 inches high, 24 inches long, and 12 inches wide, with ornamental elements like paired bells—likely cast from gold or brass—suspended from chains or cords at the ends to signify ancestral spirits.[1][34] These bells are attached post-gilding, avoiding direct contact with the ground to maintain ritual purity. No nails or modern adhesives are involved, relying instead on the precision of hand-carving and the malleability of gold for seamless integration.[19] While the stool's divine legend precludes public documentation of its exact fabrication, analyses of Asante regalia suggest the gold layer is not solid but a veneer over wood, weighing far less than equivalent solid gold (estimated under 50 pounds total), which aligns with portability during processions and wars.[5] This composite construction reflects Asante mastery of combining organic materials with precious metals, prioritizing symbolism over mass.[13]Comparisons to Other Stools
The Golden Stool stands apart from other Asante stools in material composition, practical usage, and symbolic scope. Unlike the wooden black stools (nkonwa tumtum), which are ritually blackened with soot, spider webs, egg yolk, and sacrificial blood upon a chief's or queen mother's death and then enshrined to house ancestral spirits, the Golden Stool is constructed from solid gold and never undergoes such individual enshrinement rites.[35] [35] Chiefly stools, often carved from sese or odum wood and adorned with silver or gold strips only by permission of the Asantehene, serve living rulers during enstoolment and governance, with the occupant sitting upon them to embody authority.[35] In contrast, the Golden Stool is never sat upon by the Asantehene or any individual; it receives its own throne or carrier stool during processions and never touches the ground, underscoring its transcendent status as the collective soul of the Asante nation rather than a personal seat.[19] [36]| Aspect | Golden Stool | Black Stools | Chiefly Stools |
|---|---|---|---|
| Material | Solid gold | Wood, ritually blackened with soot, webs, yolk, blood | Wood (sese/odum), optional metal strips |
| Usage | Never sat upon; carried in processions, placed on its own throne | Enshrined post-death; not sat upon after blackening | Sat upon by living chiefs/queen mothers during rites and rule |
| Symbolism | Soul and unity of entire Asante nation | Ancestral spirits of specific deceased lineages, offering protection | Individual chiefly authority and lineage continuity |
| Scope | National, unifying federation of Akan states under Asantehene | Divisional or familial, tied to specific chiefs/queen mothers | Hierarchical, rank-denoted by decoration and size |
