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  1. Kingdom of Notsé

    The kingdom of Notsé was a former kingdom that organized itself around the city of Notsé between the 15th and 18th centuries. This theocracy, led by a sacred-king, was founded around the 15th century and managed to gain significant importance within West Africa, notably by initiating the construction of the monumental walls of Notsé, a sacred enclosure intended to surround the entire sacred boundary of the city. However, after significant internal turmoil leading to the exodus of the Ewe from Notsé, considered by them as their origin, the kingdom gradually declined until it disappeared. In the 19th century, German colonizers established a chieftaincy that collaborated with them in Notsé. This chieftaincy became prominent among the Ewe people and attempted to preserve the heritage of the kingdom of Notsé. Wikipedia

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  2. en.wikipedia.org

    The kingdom of Notsé (Ewe: Notsé Fiaɖuƒea; French: Royaume de Notsé) was a former kingdom that organized itself around the city of Notsé between the 15th and 18th centuries. This theocracy, led by a sacred-king, was founded around the 15th century and managed to gain significant importance within West Africa, notably by initiating the construction of the monumental walls of Notsé, a ...
  3. en.wikipedia.org

    Pages in category "Kingdom of Notsé" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. E. Eda (king) Ewe people; Exodus of the Ewe from Notsé; K.
    • Notsé Walls

      The ancestors of the Ewe were likely a people already present in the region of Togo and Ghana in the 13th century. [1] However, it is difficult to trace their journey and evolution before their settlement in Notsé, where they founded a prosperous city and kingdom during the 15th century. [2] According to surviving oral traditions, they were guided to the site of Notsé by the hunter Afotsè ...

    • Eda (king)

      Eda, also known as Da or Noin depending on the various recorded oral traditions, is considered the ancestor of the Ewe people and the founder of the Kingdom of Notsé.Upon arriving in the region with a group, Eda is said to have received the land of Notsé after negotiating with a priest of Mawu who owned the land. He then became the sacred-king of the city and established his dynasty there.

  4. wikiwand.com

    The kingdom of Notsé (Ewe: Notsé Fiaɖuƒea; French: Royaume de Notsé) was a former country that organized itself around the city of Notsé between the 15th and 18th centuries. This theocracy, led by a sacred-king, was founded around the 15th century and managed to gain significant importance within West Africa, notably by initiating the construction of the monumental walls of Notsé, a ...
  5. en.wikipedia.org

    The ancestors of the Ewe were likely a people already present in the region of Togo and Ghana in the 13th century. [1] However, it is difficult to trace their journey and evolution before their settlement in Notsé, where they founded a prosperous city and kingdom during the 15th century. [2] According to surviving oral traditions, they were guided to the site of Notsé by the hunter Afotsè ...
  6. It focuses primarily on Notse, a town in the Republic of Togo, whose centuries-old walls have now become the object of a major festival, the Agbogboza. Suc cessors to a relatively young chiefship, invented by the German administration a century ago, have in the last 30 years championed a new ideology aimed at reinventing a lost kingdom.
  7. council-of-world-elders.de

    Notsé is the kingdom of the ethnic tribe of the Ewes. King Agokoli IV is President of the 'Togo National House of Chiefs' (UCTT) and thus the head of 15 chiefs in that region. He sees his main task in encouraging the chiefs and the people of that region in Western Africa to honour and preserve their cultural inheritance for themselves and ...
  8. anowyouknow.blogspot.com

    Notsé is the capital of the Ewe people and is located in the plateau region in Togo. There are not many traces remain of the Kingdom which developed there to the fifteenth century, but Notsé remains a mythical place for many Ewe as evidenced each year the largest festival of traditional Ewe people: Agbogbo-Za. Notsé is also the capital of ...
  9. en.wikipedia.org

    Eda, also known as Da or Noin depending on the various recorded oral traditions, is considered the ancestor of the Ewe people and the founder of the Kingdom of Notsé.Upon arriving in the region with a group, Eda is said to have received the land of Notsé after negotiating with a priest of Mawu who owned the land. He then became the sacred-king of the city and established his dynasty there.
  10. kerearchitecture.com

    Notsé, founded in the 17th century, is a historic cultural hub for the Ewé people and the site of the annual Agbogbozan festival, which celebrates unity and ancestral memory. The CCSE's exhibition halls will preserve historical artifacts and showcase contemporary works, while natural light shafts create a serene, ambient atmosphere.

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