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| A huge poster of
President Eyadéma dominating the Place de la Paix in Lomé. The slogan reads:
"Experience in service of the future" |
The history of Togo
goes back to the 11th and 14th centuries, when the Ewé
people moved into the area from the Niger River Valley.
During the 14th and 15th centuries Portuguese explorers
and traders visited the area, and because of its central
position on what was then called the Slave Coast, Togo
became a trading centre for slaves.
During the 18th century the area that
would become Togo was under pressure from the Akwamu Confederacy and the Ashanti Kingdom
to the west, and from the Kingdom of Dahomey to the east. However, powers from Europe also
wanted control.
In 1884, a German
Diplomat, Gustav Nachtigal, arrived at the village of
Togo (modern Togoville). On July 4th-5th the chief of
Togoville, Mlapa III, signed a treaty with Nachtigal
that led to the creation of German Togoland. Between
1887 and 1889, Germany, Great Britain, and France decided
the boundaries of Togoland. The Germans created the
port of Lomé and developed the region.
Following the defeat of Germany in the
First World War, Togoland was divided in two between Britain and France. Western Togo came
under British rule, and now forms part of modern Ghana. French Togo became modern-day
Togo, and gained independence in 1960.
The first years of independence saw power
struggles between various political groups. In 1963, President Olympio was
assassinated, and Grunitzky became the new head of state, voted in by the army. He was
deposed by the army four years later, to be replaced by Lieutenant Colonel Eyadéma, the
army chief of staff.
President Eyadéma has dominated Togo's
political scene ever since.
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