The Danish Gold Coast was established on the eastern Gold Coast (present-day Ghana):
(Dates in italics indicate de facto continuation of office)
Tenure | Incumbent | Notes |
---|---|---|
Danish Suzerainty | ||
1657–8 | Danish Gold Coast Settlements established on the eastern Gold Coast | |
1658 | Heinrich Carloff , Opperhoved [1] | |
1659 | Samuel Schmidt, Opperhoved | |
1659 to 1662 | Jost Cramer , Opperhoved | |
1662 to 1668 | Henning Albrecht, Opperhoved | |
1668 to 1674 | Bartholomaus von Gronstein , Governor—1st to be designated as governor | |
1674 to 1677 | Conrad Crull , Governor [2] | |
1677 to 1681 | Peter With , Opperhoved | |
1681 | Magnus Prang , Governor [3] | |
to 1698 | Erik Tylleman , Opperhoved | |
10 June 1698 to 23 December 1698 | Erik Oehlsen , Opperhoved | |
23 December 1698 to 31 August 1703 | John Trawne , Opperhoved | |
11 September 1703 to 23 April 1704 | Hartvig Meyer , Opperhoved | |
23 April 1704 to 5 May 1705 | Peter Sverdrup , acting Opperhoved | |
5 May 1705 to 25 May 1705 | Peter Petersen, acting Opperhoved | |
25 May 1705 to 17 August 1711 | Erik Olsen Lygaard , Opperhoved | 2nd Term |
17 August 1711 to 26 November 1717 | Bfantz Boye , Opperhoved | |
26 November 1717 to 6 August 1720 | Knud Røst , Opperhoved | |
6 August 1720 to 24 January 1722 | Peter Østrup , Opperhoved | |
25 January 1722 to 22 January 1723 | Niels Jensen Østrup , Opperhoved | |
22 January 1723 to 27 April 1724 | Christian Andreas Syndermann , Opperhoved | |
27 April 1724 to 1 March 1727 | Hendrik von Suhm , Opperhoved | |
4 March 1727 to 18 September 1727 | Fred Pahl , Opperhoved | |
18 September 1727 to 24 December 1728 | Andreas Willumsen , Opperhoved | |
24 December 1728 to 12 August 1735 | Anders Pedersen Waerøe , Opperhoved | |
12 August 1735 to 14 June 1736 | Severin Schilderup , Opperhoved | |
14 June 1736 to 20 June 1740 | Enevold Nielson Boris , Opperhoved | |
20 June 1740 to 26 May 1743 | Peter Nikolaj Jørgensen , Opperhoved | |
26 May 1743 to 3 February 1744 | Christian Glob Dorph , Opperhoved | |
3 February 1744 to 11 March 1745 | Jørgen Billsen , Opperhoved | |
11 March 1745 to 23 March 1745 | Thomas Brock , Opperhoved | |
23 March 1745 to 23 April 1745 | Johan Wilder , Opperhoved | |
23 April 1745 to 21 June 1746 | August Frederik Hackenburg , Opperhoved | |
21 June 1746 to 1750 | Joost Platfusz , Opperhoved | |
Danish crown colony | ||
1750 to 6 March 1751 | Joost Platfusz , Opperhoved | |
6 March 1751 to 8 March 1751 | Magnus Christopher Lützow , Opperhoved | |
8 March 1751 to 21 July 1752 | Magnus Hacksen , acting Opperhoved | |
21 July 1752 to 11 March 1757 | Carl Engman , Opperhoved | |
11 March 1757 to 14 February 1762 | Christian Jessen , Opperhoved | |
14 February 1762 to 20 October 1766 | Carl Gottleb Resch , Opperhoved | |
20 October 1766 to 11 January 1768 | Christian Tychsen , Governor | |
11 January 1768 to 2 July 1769 | Frantz Joachim Kuhberg , Governor | |
2 July 1769 to 11 June 1770 | Joachim Christian Otto , acting Governor | |
11 June 1770 to 15 June 1772 | Johan Daniel Frøhlich , acting Governor | |
15 June 1772 to 24 June 1777 | Niels Urban Aarestrup , acting Governor | |
24 June 1777 to 2 December 1780 | Johan Conrad von Hemsen , Governor | |
2 December 1780 to 21 April 1788 | Jens Adolph Kjoge , acting Governor | |
21 April 1788 to 23 October 1789 | Johan Friedrich Kipnasse , acting Governor | |
23 October 1789 to July 1792 | Andreas Rieselsen Bjørn , Governor | |
July 1792 to 25 January 1793 | Andreas Hammer , acting Governor | |
25 January 1793 to 30 June 1793 | Andreas Hammer , Governor | |
30 June 1793 to 3 August 1793 | Bendt Olrich , Governor | |
3 August 1793 to 17 August 1795 | Baron Christian Friedrich von Hager , Governor | |
October 1795 to 31 December 1799 | Johan Peter David Wrisberg , Governor | 1st Term |
31 December 1799 to 3 December 1802 | Johan David Ahnholm , acting Governor | |
3 December 1802 to 15 April 1807 | Johan Peter David Wrisberg , Governor | 2nd Term |
15 April 1807 to 1 March 1817 | Christian Schiønning , Governor | |
3 March 1817 to 5 October 1817 | Johan Emanuel Rechter , Governor | |
5 October 1817 to 6 May 1819 | Jens Nikolas Cornelius Reiersen , acting Governor | |
6 May 1819 to 1 January 1821 | Christian Svanekjaer , acting Governor | |
1 January 1821 to 5 September 1821 | Peter Svane Steffens , Governor | |
5 September 1821 to 23 December 1823 | Matthias Thønning , acting Governor | |
23 December 1823 to 7 May 1825 | Johan Christopher von Richelieu , Governor | |
7 May 1825 to 30 September 1827 | Niels Brøch , acting Governor | 1st Term |
30 September 1827 to 1 August 1828 | Jens Peter Flindt , Governor | |
1 August 1828 to 20 January 1831 | Heinrich Gerhard Lind , acting Governor | 1st Term |
29 January 1831 to 21 October 1831 | Ludwig Vincent von Hein , Governor | |
21 October 1831 to 4 December 1831 | Helmut von Arenstorff , Governor | |
4 December 1831 to 1 March 1833 | Niels Brøch , Governor | 2nd Term |
1 March 1833 to 21 July 1833 | Heinrich Gerhard Lind , acting Governor | 2nd Term |
21 July 1833 to 26 December 1834 | Edvard von Gandil , acting Governor | |
26 December 1834 to 19 August 1837 | Frederik Segfried Mørch , acting Governor | |
19 August 1837 to 18 March 1839 | Frederik Segfried Mørch , Governor | |
19 March 1839 to 18 August 1839 | Hans Angel Giede , acting Governor | |
18 August 1839 to 24 May 1842 | Lucas Dall , acting Governor | |
24 May 1842 to 26 August 1842 | Bernhard Johan Christian Wilkens , acting Governor | |
26 August 1842 to 15 March 1844 | Edvard James Arnold Carstensen , acting Governor [4] | 1st Term |
18 March 1844 to 5 July 1844 | Edvard Ericksen , acting Governor | |
5 July 1844 to 9 October 1844 | George Lutterodt , acting Governor | |
9 August 1844 to 10 April 1847 | Edvard James Arnold Carstensen , Governor | 2nd Term |
10 April 1847 to 20 February 1850 | Rasmus Eric Schmidt , acting Governor | |
30 March 1850 | Gold Coast Settlements sold to Britain and incorporated into the Gold Coast Colony |
Gold Coast may refer to:
Cape Coast Castle is one of about forty "slave castles", or large commercial forts, built on the Gold Coast of West Africa by European traders. It was originally a Portuguese "feitoria" or trading post, established in 1555, which they named Cabo Corso.
British West Africa was the collective name for British colonies in West Africa during the colonial period, either in the general geographical sense or the formal colonial administrative entity. British West Africa as a colonial entity was originally officially known as Colony of Sierra Leone and its Dependencies, then British West African Territories and finally British West African Settlements.
Swedish overseas colonies consisted of the overseas colonies controlled by Sweden. Sweden possessed overseas colonies from 1638 to 1663, in 1733 and from 1784 to 1878. Sweden possessed five colonies, four of which were short lived. The colonies spanned three continents: Africa, Asia and North America.
John Canoe, also known as January Conny, was the European name given to an Akan warrior from Axim, Ghana. He was a chief of the Ahanta people in the early 18th century, who established a stronghold in the defunct Fort Fredericksburg and fought multiple wars with European traders for twenty years. The stronghold finally fell in 1725, though Canoe's fate is unknown. He is commemorated in the Junkanoo festival held in the Caribbean each December.
Opperhoofd is a Dutch word that literally translates to "upper-head", meaning "supreme headman". The Danish equivalent overhoved, which is derived from a Danish pronunciation of the Dutch or Low German word, is also treated here.
The Dutch Gold Coast or Dutch Guinea, officially Dutch possessions on the Coast of Guinea was a portion of contemporary Ghana that was gradually colonized by the Dutch, beginning in 1612. The Dutch began trading in the area around 1598, joining the Portuguese which had a trading post there since the late 1400s. Eventually, the Dutch Gold Coast became the most important Dutch colony in West Africa after Fort Elmina was captured from the Portuguese in 1637, but fell into disarray after the abolition of the slave trade in the early 19th century. On 6 April 1872, the Dutch Gold Coast was, in accordance with the Anglo-Dutch Treaties of 1870–71, ceded to the United Kingdom.
The Danish Gold Coast comprised the colonies that Denmark–Norway controlled in Africa as a part of the Gold Coast, which is on the Gulf of Guinea. It was colonized by the Dano-Norwegian fleet, first under indirect rule by the Danish West India Company, later as a crown colony of the kingdom of Denmark-Norway.
The Brandenburger Gold Coast, later Prussian Gold Coast, was a part of the Gold Coast. The Brandenburg colony existed from 1682 to 1721, when King Frederick William I of Prussia sold it for 7,200 ducats and 12 Black slaves to the Dutch West India Company.
The Swedish Gold Coast was a colony of the Swedish Africa Company founded in 1650 by Hendrik Carloff on the Gulf of Guinea in present-day Ghana in Africa. Under foreign occupation for much of its existence, it disappeared for good in April 1663 when it became part of the Dutch Gold Coast.
Osu Castle is a castle located in Osu, Ghana on the coast of the Gulf of Guinea in Africa.
The Gold Coast was the name for a region on the Gulf of Guinea in West Africa that was rich in gold, petroleum, sweet crude oil and natural gas. This former region is now known as the country Ghana.
The Treaty of Axim was concluded between the Netherlands and the chiefs of Axim in the western region of the Gold Coast and signed at Fort St. Anthony near Axim on 17 February 1642. The treaty regulated the jurisdiction of the Netherlands and the Dutch West India Company in the town and polity of Axim after the Dutch West India Company had successfully attacked the Portuguese who were the occupants of Fort St. Anthony in the town. Over time, the agreement was in part superseded and replaced by new contracts and agreements. The treaty did remain the basis for Dutch jurisdiction and political relations between Axim and the Dutch until the latter left the Gold Coast in 1872.
Conrad Crull was the second governor of the Danish Gold Coast from 1674 to 1677. He governed the Danish Gold Coast from Fort Friedensburg (Frederiksborg).
Hendrik Carloff, Caerloff or Caarlof was an adventurer and slave trader active in the 17th century. Carloff began his career as a cabin boy but rose to become a commander and governor appointed by the Dutch West India Company and Danish or the Swedish Africa Company on the Gold Coast. Between 1676 and 1677, he was Governor of Tobago.
Fort Metal Cross, originally Fort Dixcove, is a military structure located on a promontory at the fishing community of Infuma in Dixcove, in the Western Region of Ghana. Because of its history in the Atlantic slave trade and its testimony to European-African trade, the Fort was included as one of the Forts and Castles of Volta, Greater Accra, Central and Western Regions that became a World Heritage Site in 1979.
Fort Apollonia is a fort in Beyin, Ghana. The name Apollonia was given to the area by a Portuguese explorer who sighted the place on the Feast of Saint Apollonia, 9 February. Because of its importance during the European colonial period and its testimony to the Atlantic slave trade, Fort Apollonia was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List along with several other forts and castles in Ghana in 1979.
Erik Tylleman was an Opperhoved of the Danish Gold Coast, a Danish Crown Colony. He governed from the colony's capital, Fort Christiansborg. Tylleman was the first Danish Governor who reigned in the United Gold Coast in 1698. The Danish Gold Coast was established on the eastern Gold Coast.