Coronations in Africa are held, or have been held, in or amongst the following countries, regions and peoples:
TheAsantehene, the ruler of theAshanti of Ghana begins his reign by being raised and lowered over theGolden Stool (sika 'dwa), which is believed to embody the very soul of the Ashanti people, without touching it. The Golden Stool is the most sacred ritual object in Ashanti culture and only the Asantehene is allowed to touch it.
TheCentral African Empire was a short-lived monarchical regime established in 1976 in what was then theCentral African Republic, byJean-Bédel Bokassa, the nation's president. Inspired by thecoronation of Napoleon in 1804, Bokassa I staged his own elaborate ritual inside a large outdoor stadium inBangui, his capital, on 4 December 1977. While guests sweltered in the 100-degree heat, the self-proclaimed emperor ascended a giant goldenthrone shaped like aneagle with outstretched wings, donned a 32-pound coronation robe containing 785,000pearls and 1,220,000crystal beads, and then crowned himself with a gold crown topped by a 138-caratdiamond that cost over $2,000,000 to manufacture. His empress, Catherine—the youngest of his many wives—was then invested with a smaller diadem. The total bill for Bokassa's regalia alone came to $5,000,000.[1]
240 tons of food and drink were flown into Bangui for Bokassa's coronation banquet, including a tureen ofcaviar so large that two chefs had to carry it, and a seven-layer cake. Sixty newMercedes-Benz limousines were airlifted into the capital, at a hefty cost of $300,000 for airfreight alone. All in all, the entire ceremony cost $20,000,000 to stage, an astronomical sum in a nation whose annual gross domestic product was only $250,000,000. The newly crowned Emperor used French aid grants to cover a significant portion of the bill, saying: "Everything here was financed by the French government. We ask the French for money, get it and waste it".[1]
In 1979, Bokassa was overthrown in a coup, carried out with French military support, by the very man he had overthrown in 1965,David Dacko.[2] The monarchy was abolished, the emperor was exiled, and his empire reverted to its former name.
TheKingdom of Egypt (1922–53) held an enthronement rite for its last ruling king,Farouk I. A controversy arose as to whether the ritual should be religious in nature, an option favored by the king, or whether it should be purely secular, which was desired by Farouk's Prime Minister at the time, Mustafa El-Nahhas. The religious ceremony envisaged the new king taking special vows in an Islamic ritual, followed by his receipt of the sword ofMuhammad Ali Pasha. However, El-Nahhas insisted upon Farouk simply taking a constitutional oath before parliament, followed by a formal reception at his palace. The Prince Regent proposed combining the two ideas, but the government refused.[3]
The ceremony, which took place on 29 July 1937, followed the Prime Minister's directives. TheEgyptian army swore loyalty to the new monarch, who then entered the Parliament chamber where he first greeted his mother, then listened to two speeches given by the Prime Minister and the speaker of the Upper House.[N 1] Following this, the king took his constitutional oath, and was acclaimed by the assembled legislators and guests.[3]
Farouk was overthrown in theEgyptian Revolution of 1952. His son,Fuad II, was deposed in 1953 while still an infant, and the monarchy abolished.[4] Egypt is now a republic.[5]
TheEthiopian Empire used a coronation ritual for itsemperors. The last such event was held on 2 November 1930, forHaile Selassie, the finalEmperor of Ethiopia.
Heavily influenced by Ethiopia'sOriental Orthodox Christian tradition, preparation for the coronation ceremony commenced seven days prior to the actual event. Following an ancient Ethiopian custom, forty-nine bishops and priests continually chanted from thePsalter in groups of seven, in seven corners of theSt. George's Cathedral, inAddis Ababa, where the crowning was to take place. On the eve of the ceremony, the imperial robes and regalia were taken into the church to be blessed and prayed over by the Abuna, or Archbishop, followed by the new Emperor and his family, who arrived at midnight and remained inside the cathedral that night in prayer.[N 2]
The following morning, the Emperor was met inside the cathedral by the Archbishop, who presented him with aGospel Book and asked him to take a four-part coronation oath. This oath required him to defend the Ethiopian Orthodox Faith, rule according to law and the interest of his subjects, safeguard the realm and establish schools for teaching of both secular and Orthodox religious subjects. After this, the Abuna read a special prayer of blessing, while drums and harps accompanied the chanting ofPsalm 48. Various items of the Imperial Regalia were brought forward, blessed and presented to the new sovereign one-by-one. These items included a golden sword, a scepter of ivory and gold, the orb, a diamond-encrusted ring, two traditional lances filigreed in gold, the imperial vestments, and finally the crown. Each item was accompanied by an anointing with seven differently-scented oils. After this, the new monarch and his consort were taken on a tour of the church, then escorted outside by a procession of notables carrying palm branches and chanting: "Blessed be the King of Israel".[N 2]
Ethiopian tradition required the Emperor's consort to be crowned at the palace, three days after the coronation. However, Haile Selassie broke with this precedent, and had his wife crowned (but not anointed) in the cathedral with him. Selassie was overthrown by a communist military coup in 1974, and the monarchy was abolished in 1975.
The tiny African kingdom ofLesotho crowns its monarchs. The last such ritual was held on 31 October 1997, when current kingLetsie III was crowned in a sports stadium in the capital city ofMaseru. King Letsie entered the stadium escorted by units of mounted police clad in red uniforms and carryingsabers and lances. Donning a traditional coat of animal skins, the new ruler was crowned by twochieftains with a beaded headband containing a brown and whitefeather. Traditional dances and songs followed.[6]
TheSerer people of Senegambia (Senegal andGambia) andMauritania crown their kings based on the tenets ofSerer religion. Succession for kingship begins from the moment a prince is born. The parents must lodge their application to the Great Council of Nobles, headed by the Jaraff (the person responsible for electing the king from the royal family). The sacred ceremony is presided over by the Jaraff. After the coronation, theMaad a Sinig orMaad Saloum makes aroyal proclamation, crowns his own mother or sister asLingeer, then appoints his government.[7]
Eswatini, a small independent kingdom in southern Africa, held a coronation ritual in April 1986 for its current monarch,Mswati III. Although Swazi tradition required the king to wait until his twenty-first year to be crowned, Mswati was crowned three years early due to disputes between different factions in the regency council.[8] Swazi chiefs paid a tribute of 105 cattle to the family of Mswati's mother, Ntombi, as a dowry for the woman who was to become the new "Mother of the Nation". The rite itself included various secret rituals, after which the new king took part in several ritual dances in full feathered regalia. At the coronation, tribal singers repeated his imposing chain of official titles, which include "the Bull", "Guardian of the Sacred Shields", "the Inexplicable" and "the Great Mountain". The dances were described by William Smith ofTime as "exhausting".[9]
TheToro Kingdom—located in modernUganda—crowned its current ruler,Rukidi IV, on 12 September 1995. Rukidi was the world's youngest monarch at the time, being only three years old. The boy was awakened at 2AM, then led to the palace where the rites would take place. At the entrance, Rukidi and his entourage engaged in a mock battle with a "rebel" prince, then entered to the accompaniment of theOmujaguza, the traditional Toro war-drum.[10]
Once inside, Rukidi was led to the regalia room, where theOmusuga, or head of royal rituals, called upon the gods to strike the boy dead if he was not of royal blood. Once the Omusuga was satisfied as to the new king's lineage, Rukidi was permitted to ring the royal bell, then he sounded theNyalebe orsacred drum, following which he was blessed with blood from a slaughtered bull and a white hen. As morning broke, women (who had been barred from the ritual up to this time) were admitted to the palace. The king was seated upon the lap of a virgin girl and was fed with a royal meal ofmillet dough. A coronation oath was administered with the boy lying on his side, in accordance with Toro tradition.[10]
At 10 AM, the king, wearing a jewel-studded crown, was led to St. John's Anglican Cathedral where he was crowned by Anglican Bishop Eustance Kamanyire. Rukidi was given aBible by the local Roman Catholic prelate, then returned to his palace where he was presented with a centuries-old copper spear and leather shield. Following this the king led a procession of Toro notables to inspect the royalcorral, then concluded his coronation by greeting his subjects from a traditional shed.[10]
A coronation is known as Ìwúyè, meaning the action of bestowing a chieftaincy title. Relative rank amongst the dynastic paramount chieftains of theYoruba people ofBenin,Nigeria andTogo is determined by the answering of three questions: Is a chief a direct descendant of the medieval emperorOduduwa, is he entitled to wear a ceremonialcrown, and how long has said crown been in his family? If a chieftain's earliest pioneering ancestor left the emperor's kingdom ofIle-Ife with the crown that is now used to crown him in his own kingdom during his coronation ceremony, and if he claims direct descent from Oduduwa himself, then he is traditionally viewed by the Yoruba as a king of the highest possible rank (with him being surpassed in such a case by only the pre-eminent Yoruba monarchs, such as the Ooni of contemporaryIle-Ife and theAlaafin ofOyo).
Pre-coronation rites that are common amongst the Yoruba include an election to the office of king by the subordinate chiefs of the realm, confirmation of said election by theIfa oracle, going into the Ipebi ritual confinement (during which a would-be king learns the various traditions of his people) and swearing to a series of oaths tied to the kingship. Only after all of the foregoing has occurred is the king installed according to local custom (In Egbaland, for example, the crown is placed upon the king's head by a chieftess known as the Moshade, who is subsequently regarded as his ritual mother because she did so).
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