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Stools

Overview

Gold Stool (Asante-Twi: Sika 'dwa) is the royal and divine throne of the Asante people. 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, typically a seat of 46 cm high with a platform 61 cm wide and 30 cm deep. Its entire surface is inlaid with gold. It has not been seen by many and only the king, queen, true prince Ofosu Sefa Boakye 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. The stool is one of the main focal points of the Asante today because it still shows succession and power.


Symbolic Meaning

The many designs and symbolic meanings mean that every stool is unique; each has a different meaning for the person whose soul it seats. Some designs contain animal shapes or images that recall the person who used it. 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. Such seats were traditionally symbolic of a chieftain's leadership, but the Golden Stool is believed to house the spirit of the Asante nation—living, dead and yet to be born.


Historical Conflict and Cultural Implications

Many wars have broken out over the ownership of the royal throne. 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 to be allowed to sit on the Gold 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 Asante 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.[1] They were taken into protective custody by the British, before being tried according to local custom and sentenced to death. The British intervened and the group was instead banished.[1] An assurance of non-interference with the stool was then given by the British and it was brought out of hiding. In 1935 the stool was used in the ceremony to crown Osei Tutu Agyeman Prempeh II.


A West African Asante Miniature Representation of the Kings ‘Golden Stool’ cast of Gold by the lost wax technique

The Golden Stool

Asante, Royal Stool, Ghana, ca. 1860 Taken from the palace of Asantehene Kofi Kakari (1837-1884)

Contact

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phone: 02 9988 7766

Correspondence

African Art History Studies
P.O. Box 1234
Sydney NSW 2000

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