Fanti law report of decided cases on Fanti customary laws : selected from the records of the appeal and divisional courts at Accra, Axim, Cape Coast Castle, and Elmina
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書誌事項
Fanti law report of decided cases on Fanti customary laws : selected from the records of the appeal and divisional courts at Accra, Axim, Cape Coast Castle, and Elmina
(History of African thought / introduced by Tom Lodge, . Writings of John Mensah Sarbah ; v. 2)
Thoemmes Press , Edition Synapse, 2004
- : Thoemmes Press : [set]
- : Edition Synapse : [set]
- タイトル別名
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Fanti law report of decided cases on Fanti customary laws : second selection
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注記
Reprint. Originally published: London : William Clowes , 1904
Includes indexes
内容説明・目次
内容説明
John Mensah Sarbah (1864-1910) was born on the Gold Coast in West Africa. In his teens he was sent to London for legal training and was called to the bar in 1887 - the first African barrister from his country to qualify in this way. Later, Mensah Sarbah became a leading critic of British colonial rule, especially in connection with land ownership. Sarbah, the lawyer, argued that land in Africa belonged to someone, and that therefore its confiscation by the British was illegal. He also appealed to the principle "no taxation without representation". The three volumes in this set comprise Mensah Sarbah's only books, and they contain all of his important writings on the theory and practice of government in West Africa, chief among them the Fanti National Constitution (1906). The Fanti were (and remain) a community living on what is now the Ghanaian coast, culturally distinct from the Ashanti, whose domination they feared. After 300 years of contact with traders, etc., they had become thoroughly westernized. Sarbah proposes that the Fanti draw upon their own traditions and institutions as well as western ideas to develop their own more or less autonomous state, under British protection.
He is thus one of the first modern African nationalist thinkers to consider in detail a "nationbuilding" project.
目次
Volume 1 (363pp): "Fanti Customary Laws - a brief introduction to principles of the native laws and customs of the Fanti and Akan districts of the Gold Coast", London - Clowes, 1897. Volume 2 (189pp): "Fanti Law Report of Decided Cases on Fanti Customary Law, Selected from the records of the appeal and Divisional courts at Accra, Axim, Cape Coast Castle, and Elmina", London - Clowes, 1904. Volume 3 (297pp): "Fanti National Constitution", London - Clowes, 1906.
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