Overview
republic, Africa
officially Republic of Benin, French République du Bénin,
formerly (until 1975) Dahomey, or (1975–90) People’s Republic of
Benin,
Country, western Africa.
Area: 43,484 sq mi (112,622 sq km). Population (2005 est.):
7,649,000. Capital: Porto-Novo (official), Cotonou (de facto).
The Fon people and related groups constitute two-fifths of the
population; minorities include the Yoruba, Fulani, and Adjara.
Languages: French (official), Fon. Currency: CFA franc.
Religions: traditional religions, Islam, Christianity. Extending
about 420 mi (675 km) inland from the Gulf of Guinea, Benin
includes a hilly region in the northwest, where the maximum
elevation is 2,103 ft (641 m). There are plains in the east and
north and a marshy region in the south, where the coastline
extends about 75 mi (120 km). Benin’s longest river, the Ouémé,
flows into the Porto-Novo Lagoon and is navigable for 125 mi
(200 km) of its 280-mi (450-km) length. Benin has a developing
mixed economy based largely on agriculture and operates an
offshore oil field. It is a republic with one legislative house;
the head of state and government is the president, assisted by
the prime minister. In southern Benin the Fon established the
Abomey kingdom in the early 17th century. In the 18th century
the kingdom expanded to include Allada and Ouidah, where French
forts had been established in the 17th century. By 1882 the
French were firmly reestablished in the area, and conflict
between the French and Africans ensued. In 1894 Dahomey became a
French protectorate; it was incorporated into the federation of
French West Africa in 1904. It achieved independence in 1960.
Dahomey was renamed Benin in 1975. Its chronically weak economy
created problems for the country into the 21st century.
Profile
Official name République du Bénin (Republic of Benin)
Form of government multiparty republic with one legislative
house (National Assembly [83])
Head of state and government President assisted by Prime
Minister1
Capital2 Porto-Novo
Official language French
Official religion none
Monetary unit CFA franc (CFAF)
Population estimate (2008) 8,295,000
Total area (sq mi) 43,484
Total area (sq km) 112,622
1Office of Prime Minister vacant from May 1998.
2Porto-Novo, the official capital established under the
constitution, is the seat of the legislature, but the president
and most government ministers reside in Cotonou.
Main
republic, Africa
officially Republic of Benin, French République du Bénin,
formerly (until 1975) Dahomey, or (1975–90) People’s Republic of
Benin,
country of western Africa. It consists of a narrow wedge of
territory extending northward for about 420 miles (675
kilometres) from the Gulf of Guinea in the Atlantic Ocean, on
which it has a 75-mile seacoast, to the Niger River, which forms
part of Benin’s northern border with Niger. Benin is bordered to
the northwest by Burkina Faso, to the east by Nigeria, and to
the west by Togo. The official capital is Porto-Novo, but
Cotonou is Benin’s largest city, its chief port, and its de
facto administrative capital. Benin was a French colony from the
late 19th century until 1960.
Prior to colonial rule, part of the territory that is now
Benin consisted of powerful, independent kingdoms, including
various Bariba kingdoms in the north and in the south the
kingdoms of Porto-Novo and Dahomey (Dan-ho-me, “on the belly of
Dan;” Dan was a rival king on whose grave Dahomey’s royal
compound was built). In the late 19th century French colonizers
making inroads from the coastal region into the interior
borrowed the name of the defeated Dahomey kingdom for the entire
territory that is now Benin; the current name derives from the
Bight of Benin.
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The land
Relief
Benin consists of five natural regions. The coastal region is
low, flat, and sandy, backed by tidal marshes and lagoons. It is
composed of, in effect, a long sandbar on which grow clumps of
coconut palms; the lagoons are narrower in the western part of
the country, where many have become marshes because of silting,
and wider in the east, and some are interconnected. In the west
the Grand-Popo Lagoon extends into neighbouring Togo, while in
the east the Porto-Novo Lagoon provides a natural waterway to
the port of Lagos, Nigeria, although its use is discouraged by
the political boundary. Only at Grand-Popo and at Cotonou do the
lagoons have outlets to the sea.
Behind the coastal region extends the barre country—the word
being a French adaptation of the Portuguese word barro (“clay”).
A fertile plateau, the barre region contains the Lama Marsh, a
vast swampy area stretching from Abomey to Allada. The landscape
is generally flat, although occasional hills occur, rising to
about 1,300 feet (400 metres).
The Benin plateaus, four in number, are to be found in the
environs of Abomey, Kétou, Aplahoué (or Parahoué), and
Zagnanado. The plateaus consist of clays on a crystalline base.
The Abomey, Aplahoué, and Zagnanado plateaus are from 300 to 750
feet high, and the Kétou plateau is up to 500 feet in height.
The Atakora Mountains, in the northwest of the country, form
a continuation of the Togo Mountains to the south. Running
southwest to northeast and reaching an altitude of 2,103 feet
(641 metres) at their highest point, they consist of a highly
metamorphosed quartzite interior.
The Niger plains, in the northeast of Benin, slope down to
the Niger River valley. They consist of clayey sandstones.
Drainage
Apart from the Niger River, which, with its tributaries the
Mékrou, Alibori, and Sota, drains the northeastern part of the
country, the three principal rivers in Benin are the Mono, the
Couffo, and the Ouémé. The Mono, which rises in Togo, forms the
frontier between Togo and Benin near the coast. The Couffo, near
which stands Abomey, flows southward from the Benin plateaus to
drain into the coastal lagoons at Ahémé. The Ouémé rises in the
Atakora Mountains and flows southward for 280 miles; near its
mouth it divides into two branches, one draining to the east
into Porto-Novo Lagoon and the other to the west into Nokoué
Lake. The Atakora Mountains form a divide between the Volta and
Niger basins.
Climate
Two climatic zones may be distinguished—a southern and a
northern. The southern zone has an equatorial type of climate
with four seasons—two wet and two dry. The principal rainy
season occurs between mid-March and mid-July; the shorter dry
season lasts to mid-September; the shorter rainy season lasts to
mid-November; and the principal dry season lasts until the rains
begin again in March. The amount of rain increases toward the
east. Grand-Popo receives only about 32 inches (800 millimetres)
a year, whereas Cotonou and Porto-Novo both receive
approximately 50 inches. Temperatures are fairly constant,
varying between about 72° and 93° F (22° and 34° C), and the
relative humidity is often uncomfortably high.
In the northern climatic zone, there are only two seasons,
one dry and one rainy. The rainy season lasts from May to
September, with most of the rainfall occurring in August.
Rainfall amounts to about 53 inches a year in the Atakora
Mountains and in central Benin; farther north it diminishes to
about 38 inches. In the dry season the harmattan, a hot, dry
wind, blows from the northeast from December to March.
Temperatures average about 80° F (27° C), but the temperature
range varies considerably from day to night. In March, the
hottest month, diurnal temperatures may rise to 110° F (43° C).
Plant and animal life
The original rain forest, which covered most of the southern
part of the country, has now largely been cleared, except near
the rivers. In its place, many oil palms and rônier palms have
been planted and food crops are cultivated. North of Abomey the
vegetation is an intermixture of forest and savanna (grassy
parkland), giving way farther north to savanna. Apart from the
oil and rônier palms, trees include coconut palms, kapok,
mahogany, and ebony.
In the extreme north is the “W” National Park (1,938 square
miles), which extends into Burkina Faso and Niger. Its varied
animal life includes elephants, leopards, lions, antelope,
monkeys, wild pigs, crocodiles, and buffalo. There are many
species of snakes, including pythons and puff adders. Birds
include guinea fowl, wild duck, and partridge, as well as many
tropical species. The Pendjari National Park (1,062 square
miles) borders on Burkina Faso.
Settlement patterns
The southern provinces make up one-fourth of the total area
but are inhabited by more than two-thirds of the total
population. Many of these people are clustered near the port of
Cotonou, which is the focus of the commercial and political life
of the country, and Porto-Novo, the official capital. The
cultivation of subsistence crops, such as corn (maize), cassava,
and yams, is intensive on the outskirts of the towns. The barre
region and the Benin plateaus are planted with oil palms, which
form the cash crop, as well as with subsistence crops. To the
north, the aspect of the countryside changes as savanna
vegetation increases and the population diminishes; some areas
are uninhabited, except by Fulani nomads. Villages, instead of
being encountered frequently as in the south, become scattered.
Parakou is an important northern market town, dating from
colonial times.
The towns exhibit traditional African, colonial European, and
modern influences. Traditional African (or precolonial) mud
houses, markets, shrines, and statues are found in small towns
as well as in Abomey, Porto-Novo, and, to a lesser degree,
Cotonou, and the Somba region in the northwest has traditional
thatched-roof, turreted houses. Colonial European styles
dominate in most towns, especially in Cotonou. Colonial
buildings, some dating from the 18th century, include train
stations, official buildings, and private homes, as well as such
structures as the former Portuguese fort at Ouidah that was used
in the slave trade. Modern architecture is found in private
homes, port facilities, and hotels.
Stanislas Spero Adotevi
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The people
Despite attempts at greater national unity and
integration since 1960, differences among Benin’s ethnic groups
survive to a marked degree.
The Fon, who make up nearly 40 percent of the population,
live in various parts of the country and especially in Cotonou.
The Yoruba, who are related to the Nigerian Yoruba, live mainly
in southeastern Benin and constitute about one-eighth of Benin’s
population. In the vicinity of Porto-Novo the Goun (Gun) and the
Yoruba (known in Pobé and Kétou as Nago, or Nagot) are so
intermixed as to be hardly distinguishable. Among other southern
groups are various Adja peoples, including the Aizo, the Holi,
and the Mina.
The Bariba, the fourth-largest ethnic group, comprise several
subgroups and make up about one-twelfth of Benin’s population.
They inhabit the northeast, especially towns such as Nikki and
Kandi that were once Bariba kingdoms. The Somba (Ditamari) are
found in Natitingou and in villages in the northwest. Other
northern groups include the Dendi, the Djougou, the Pila
(Pilapila), and the nomadic Fulani (Peul). Several thousand
French, Lebanese, and other nationals reside in Benin, primarily
in Cotonou and Porto-Novo.
French is the official language and the language of
instruction, but each ethnic group has its own language, which
the educated also speak. Most adults living in the various
ethnic communities also speak the dominant language of each
region. The most widely spoken languages are Fon, Ge (Mina),
Bariba, Yoruba, and Dendi.
Religious groups
Although Christian missions have been active in the coastal
region since the 16th century, only one-fifth of the total
population is Christian; of the Christians, about four-fifths
are Roman Catholic. Islām has adherents in the north and
southeast; about one-sixth of the total population is Muslim.
Most of the population adheres to traditional religions. In the
south, animist religions, which include fetishes (objects
regarded with awe as the embodiment of a powerful spirit) for
which Benin is renowned, retain their traditional strength.
Demographic trends
Benin’s rate of population growth is high for western
Africa, resulting primarily from a birth rate that is higher
than the regional average and a death rate that is lower.
Moreover, nearly one-half of the population is less than 15
years of age, assuring the country’s continued high growth rate.
Life expectancy for males is about 49 years and for females
about 52 years. Only about one-fifth of the population is urban,
concentrated mostly in Cotonou, the only city with a population
of more than 400,000.
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The economy
Since independence, Benin’s regular and developmental
budgets have been dependent on external support, primarily from
France and international organizations. This support has
rendered a little less painful the formidable economic
stagnation and low standard of living of the overwhelming
majority of the population.
The regime that came to power in a 1972 coup attempted from
1975 to restructure the economy more or less along socialist
principles and to disengage from dependence on France. Most
sectors of the economy were nationalized or otherwise turned
over to government control, and economic relations were
established with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries,
as well as with Benin’s neighbours. By the early 1980s it was
clear that—though the economy was restructured and, at least on
paper, more efficient and diversified and France’s contribution
to Benin’s economy diminished—corruption persisted and that the
overall economic situation had not improved. “Liberalization” of
the economy in the mid-1980s also failed to produce positive
results. Accompanying changes in the constitution and regime in
the early 1990s, the remnants and slogans of Marxism were wiped
out, and privatization of the economy began.
Resources
The few stretches of tropical forest that remain in Benin,
mostly in the southwest and central areas, contain mahogany,
iroko, teak, samba, and other tropical hardwoods. The rivers and
lagoons are rich in fish. Mineral deposits include iron ore both
in the Atakora Mountains and northeast of Kandi, limestone
deposits at Onigbolo, chromium ore and a little gold in the
northwest near Natitingou, marble at Dadjo, an important deposit
of pottery clay at Sakété, and ilmenite (a mineral source of
titanium) near the coast. Offshore oil was discovered in 1968 in
the Sémé field near Cotonou and has been exploited since 1982.
Agriculture and fishing
About 70 percent of the working population depends on
agriculture. Since the mid-1980s Benin has produced yams,
cassava, corn (maize), millet, beans, and rice to achieve
self-sufficiency in staple foods. Among cash crops, the formerly
predominant palm product output declined considerably in the
1980s, but cotton output rose. The output of karité, peanuts
(groundnuts), cacao beans, and coffee also has increased.
Livestock include cattle, sheep and goats, pigs, horses, and
poultry. Substantial quantities of fish are caught annually in
the lagoons and rivers, while coastal fishing produces a
smaller, but growing, amount. Most of the fish is exported to
Nigeria or Togo. Shrimp and deep-sea fishing are developing,
using modern vessels.
Industry
Manufacturing plants and secondary industries include
several palm-oil-processing plants in Ahozon, Avrankou, Bohicon,
Cotonou, Gbada, and Pobé; cement plants at Onigbolo and Pobé;
several cotton-ginning facilities in the north; a textile mill
at Parakou; a sugar refining complex at Savé; a soft-drink
plant; a brewery; and two shrimp-processing plants.
Electricity is generated thermally by plants located at
Bohicon, Parakou, Cotonou, and Porto-Novo. About half of Benin’s
demand for electricity is met by importing power from Ghana’s
Volta River Project at Akosombo. In 1988 operations commenced at
the hydroelectric installation of the Mono River Dam, a joint
venture between Benin and Togo on their common southern
boundary.
Finance
Liquidation of Benin’s three state-owned banks took place in
the late 1980s and early 1990s as part of economic
privatization, and four private banks opened, including the Bank
of Africa-Benin. Citizens of Benin began to transfer their
savings from foreign banks. With the advent of privatization,
foreign aid and assistance grew, particularly funding for
developmental projects from the United States and the Commission
of the European Community, the latter of which also agreed to
help pay the wages of civil servants. France continues to
provide financial assistance. The currency of Benin is the CFA
(Communauté Financière Africaine), which is fully guaranteed by
and pegged to the French franc.
Trade
Benin’s export earnings rely on agricultural products, such
as cotton, palm oil, cocoa, and coffee, exported to such
countries as Portugal, Italy, France, Thailand, Taiwan, and the
United States. Informal trade (smuggling) across the border with
Nigeria has also affected Benin’s negative trade balance. One of
Benin’s main, albeit underexploited, trade assets is the
deepwater port at Cotonou, which serves as a sea outlet for the
Republic of Niger and as a secondary port for Nigeria and thus
holds a potential to earn lucrative customs duties. Benin has
traditionally imported various manufactured products, machinery,
chemicals, beverages, and tobacco, as well as cereals.
Transportation
There are two paved, mostly two-lane, road networks. One
runs parallel to the coast of the Gulf of Guinea from the
Togolese border, through Cotonou and near Porto-Novo, to the
Nigerian border. The other road runs north from Cotonou, near
Abomey and Dassa, to Parakou in the north. Roads from Parakou to
Niger’s border and from near Abomey to Burkina Faso’s border are
unpaved and are barely passable in the rainy season.
There is a railroad from Cotonou to Parakou. Another
railroad, parallel to the coast, does not extend to either the
Togolese or the Nigerian border.
Interconnected coastal lagoons are navigable by small craft
known as pirogues. The Ouémé, Couffo, and Mono rivers are
navigable by small boats for several dozen miles. The country’s
only port is at Cotonou. An international airport in Cotonou
links Benin with other countries of Africa and with Europe.
There is also limited domestic airline service.
Stanislas Spero Adotevi
Dov Ronen
Administration and social conditions
Benin has experienced much political instability and
unrest. It suffered through 12 years of unstable government,
including several coups d’état, beginning three years after
independence. The regime of President Mathieu Kérékou, who came
to power in a 1972 coup, enjoyed almost two decades of fragile
but unprecedented stability. The Marxist rhetoric introduced in
1974 culminated in repressive military rule in the late 1970s,
but this had largely ceased by the early 1980s. During this
period, however, the Benin People’s Revolutionary Party (PRPB)
was the only legal political party. A National Revolutionary
Assembly, elected by citizens, chose the president, who was also
head of state.
Benin was the first African country to make a post-Cold War
transition away from Marxism-Leninism. Kérékou himself abandoned
in December 1989 the Marxist-Leninist ideology that he had
promulgated in the mid-1970s. In December 1990 a new
constitution was approved, guaranteeing human rights, freedom to
organize political parties, the right to private property, and
universal franchise. While multiparty elections, a National
Assembly, and a presidency were provided for, the country’s poor
economy and history of fractured political alliances lent an
element of uncertainty to the political future. Benin has a
transitional constitutional court, a high court of justice, and
a supreme court.
Education
The public education system has followed the French pattern
since colonial times. A six-year primary school cycle (for
children ages 6–11) is followed by six years of secondary
education (ages 12–17). In the mid-1970s major reforms were
introduced both to conform to the then-prevalent
Marxist-Leninist ideology and to shed French influence. The
reforms failed as teachers, parents, and university-bound
students objected to the lowering of standards, and the reforms
were largely abandoned by the late 1980s. School enrollment
levels for boys in the late 1980s were at least double those for
girls. In the early 1990s the National University of Benin,
founded in 1970, enrolled approximately 9,000 students. The
university’s student body has been, along with workers, the main
political force in the country since the early 1980s.
Health and welfare
Benin has a national health-care system that maintains
hospitals in Cotonou, Porto-Novo, Parakou, Abomey, Ouidah, and
Natitingou, in addition to medical dispensaries, maternity
centres, and other small, specialized health-care facilities in
these and smaller towns. Financial aid from international
organizations provides resources to compensate for a shortage of
medical personnel and medications. Malaria, guinea worm, and
river blindness are widespread.
Cultural life
French colonial rule and subsequent close ties with France
have left a deep impact on all aspects of cultural life,
especially among the educated segments of the population and in
the southern cities. Each ethnic group also has its own
centuries-old tradition, which itself often mixes with the
French influence. These cultural traditions are clustered in two
distinct regions, the largely Muslim north and the largely
animist and Christian south.
In Cotonou one finds many kinds of commercial enterprises,
often with a French flavour, such as restaurants, cafés, and
discotheques. Diplomats of foreign governments and many of
Benin’s elite live in newer residential sections. There are
several movie theatres and several hotels that provide
entertainment. Most other towns have modern sections on a
smaller scale.
In other sections of the towns, however, tradition dominates
cultural life. Extended families live in family compounds in
distinct neighbourhoods, where they practice religious rites and
celebrate festivals with music and dance. Markets where
foodstuffs, clothing, and traditional medicines and arts are
sold are important centres of daily life.
The arts
Artistic traditions in Benin are very old and are
represented in practically every village. Plastic art is the
most prominent, as carved wooden masks representing images and
spirits of the departed are made and used in traditional
ceremonies. Other artistic items are bronze statuettes, pottery,
appliquéd tapestries recounting the history of kings of
precolonial Dahomey, and fire engraving on wooden bowls, which
often have religious meaning. Probably the best-known art
objects are the Yoruba wooden masks called guelede from the
region of Porto-Novo. Street musicians are found in various
neighbourhoods, and modern dance ensembles perform at clubs.
Cultural institutions
An artisan village is attached to the Historical Museum of
Abomey (formerly the Royal Palace). There is an excellent
ethnographic museum in Porto-Novo, a historical museum in
Ouidah, and the Open-Air Museum of Ethnography and Natural
Sciences in Parakou. The National Library is in Porto-Novo. Art
galleries are the Cultural and Artistic Centre and the French
Cultural Centre, both in Cotonou, and the CAZAM in Porto-Novo.
Cultural centres sponsored by the French and American
governments maintain libraries and organize lectures, concerts,
and other cultural activities.
Recreation
The national sport played by several teams is football
(soccer). There is a modern sport stadium in Cotonou.
Press and broadcasting
Radio programs are broadcast from Cotonou in French,
English, and a number of local languages. There is also a
limited television service. A daily newspaper, La Nation, is
published in Cotonou and is controlled by the government; there
are also two other dailies and several weekly or biweekly
publications. Newspapers published in Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire
(in French) and newspapers and magazines from elsewhere may be
found in bookstores and newsstands.
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History
As a political unit, Benin was created by the French
colonial conquest at the end of the 19th century. In the
precolonial period, the territory comprised a multiplicity of
independent states, differing in language and culture. The south
was occupied mainly by Ewe-speaking peoples, who traced their
traditional origins to the town of Tado (in modern Togo). During
the 16th and 17th centuries, the most powerful state in this
area was the kingdom of Allada (Ardra), but in the 18th and 19th
centuries its place was taken by Dahomey. In the north, the
largest group was the Bariba, the most important state being the
kingdom of Nikki, which formed part of a confederacy including
other Bariba states located in what is today Nigeria. The Somba,
in the northwest, did not form a kingdom.
The slave trade
The Portuguese first explored the coast of Benin in 1472 but
did not begin trading there until 1553. During the 17th century
the Dutch, English, French, and other Europeans also entered the
trade. The principal export before the mid-19th century was
always slaves. The volume of slave exports was at first small,
but it increased rapidly in the second half of the 17th century,
when this area became known to Europeans as the “Slave Coast,”
and remained high until the 1840s. The principal centre for the
trade was the coastal kingdom of Ouidah (Whydah), which was
originally a tributary of Allada but had become an independent
state by the 1680s. The slaves exported were predominantly war
captives and were drawn from the entire area of modern Benin,
including northern peoples such as the Bariba as well as
communities near the coast. The Atlantic slave trade had a
substantial and deleterious impact in Benin, causing the
depopulation of certain areas as well as a general
militarization of society. The prominence of slaves from this
area in the transatlantic trade is reflected in the survival of
elements of its culture in black communities of the New World,
especially in the “voodoo” religion of Haiti, which incorporates
many spirit cults and deities of the Ewe-speaking peoples.
The kingdom of Dahomey
Dahomey (also called Abomey, after its capital city) was the
state of the Fon people. It was originally a dependency of
Allada, but during the 17th century a ruler called Wegbaja
declared himself king and made Dahomey an independent state.
Under King Agaja (reigned 1708?–40) Dahomey overran the coastal
area, conquering Allada in 1724 and the commercial centre of
Ouidah in 1727, thus establishing itself as the dominant power
in the area. A section of the royal family of Allada, however,
founded the new kingdom of Porto-Novo, on the coast to the east,
which successfully resisted Dahomean authority and competed with
Ouidah for control of the Atlantic trade. Dahomey itself was
attacked and defeated by the kingdom of Oyo, to the northeast
(in modern Nigeria), to which it was obliged to pay tribute from
1730 onward. Dahomey attained the height of its power under the
kings Gezo (1818–58) and Glélé (1858–89). Gezo liberated Dahomey
from its subjection to Oyo by defeating the latter in 1823.
Dahomean attempts at expansion eastward, however, brought it up
against the powerful state of Abeokuta (also in Nigeria).
Dahomean attacks upon Abeokuta in 1851 and 1864 were decisively
defeated.
Dahomey was a despotic and militaristic kingdom. Its power
was based upon a highly trained standing army, which included a
female contingent (called the “Amazons” by Europeans) drawn from
the king’s wives. The king’s authority was buttressed by an
elaborate cult of the deceased kings of the dynasty, who were
honoured by the offering of human sacrifices at yearly public
ceremonies (the “annual customs”). Its rulers succeeded in
uniting the disparate communities which they absorbed into a new
national identity, so that the conquered subjects of Dahomey
came to regard themselves as Fon. During the 18th and early 19th
centuries, Dahomey was a major supplier of slaves for the
transatlantic trade, but by the mid-19th century the volume of
the slave trade was in decline. In 1852 King Gezo was forced by
a British naval blockade to accept a treaty abolishing the slave
trade, although this was evaded in practice. From the 1840s
onward Gezo promoted the export of palm oil, produced by slave
labour on royal plantations, as a substitute for the declining
slave trade.
The French conquest and colonial rule
During the 17th century several of the European nations
engaged in the Atlantic slave trade maintained trading factories
in the Dahomey area, and during the 18th century the English,
French, and Portuguese all possessed fortified posts in Ouidah.
The French first established a factory in Allada in 1670 but
moved from there to Ouidah in 1671. Although this factory was
abandoned in the 1690s, the French built a fort (known as Fort
Saint Louis) in Ouidah in 1704. The European forts in Ouidah
were, however, all abandoned about the end of the 18th century,
the French establishment being withdrawn in 1797.
In 1842 the French fort at Ouidah was reoccupied as a base
for the new trade in palm oil, and in 1851 the French government
negotiated a commercial treaty with King Gezo of Dahomey.
Subsequently fears of preemption by British colonial expansion
led to the extension of formal French rule in the area. A
protectorate was briefly established over the kingdom of
Porto-Novo in 1863–65 and was definitively reestablished in
1882. Treaties purporting to secure cession of the port of
Cotonou, between Ouidah and Porto-Novo, were also negotiated
with the Dahomean authorities in 1868 and 1878, though Cotonou
was not actually occupied until 1890. King Behanzin, who had
succeeded to the Dahomean throne in 1889, resisted the French
claim to Cotonou, provoking the French invasion and conquest of
Dahomey in 1892–94. Behanzin was then deposed and exiled, and
the kingdom of Dahomey became a French protectorate.
French ambitions to extend their control into the interior,
north of Dahomey, were threatened by the rival expansionism of
the British, who were established in what was to become their
colony of Nigeria to the east, and in 1894 both the British and
French negotiated treaties of protection with the kingdom of
Nikki. The Anglo-French convention of 1898, however, settled the
boundary between the French and British spheres, conceding Nikki
to the former. The boundary with the German colony of Togo to
the west was settled by the Franco-German conventions of 1885
and 1899. The present frontiers of Benin were established in
1909, when the boundaries with the neighbouring French colonies
of Upper Volta and Niger were delimited. The colony was at first
called Benin (from the Bight of Benin, not the precolonial
kingdom of Benin, which is in Nigeria), but in 1894 it was
renamed Dahomey, after the recently incorporated kingdom. From
1904 Dahomey formed part of the federation of French West
Africa, under the governor-general in Senegal. Descendants of
Portuguese settlers, freed slaves returning from Portuguese
colonies in the Americas (called Brésiliens, or Brazilians), and
missionaries were instrumental in spreading Christianity and
Western education in the south but not in the Muslim north; by
the 1950s Dahomey was known as the “Latin Quarter” of French
West Africa.
Decolonization and independence
In 1946 Dahomey became an overseas territory of France. It
was created an autonomous republic within the French Community
in 1959 and achieved complete independence on August 1, 1960.
During the period of decolonization, the nationalist movement in
Dahomey became fragmented, with the emergence of three
regionally based political parties—led by Sourou-Migan Apithy
(president in 1964–65), Justin Ahomadégbé (1972), and Hubert
Maga (1960–63 and 1970–72), drawing their principal support
respectively from Porto-Novo, Abomey, and the north. After
independence in 1960, these political problems were exacerbated
by economic difficulties, reflected in student and trade union
unrest. The ensuing instability resulted in six successful
military coups d’état between 1963 and 1972 and periods of army
rule in 1965–68 and 1969–70. In a last military coup, on October
26, 1972, power was seized by Major (later General) Mathieu
Kérékou. From 1974 Kérékou pursued a Marxist-Leninist policy,
based on nationalizations and state planning of the economy. The
country was renamed the People’s Republic of Benin in 1975.
The late 1980s and early 1990s were a turbulent period for
Benin. In 1989 Kérékou proclaimed that Marxism-Leninism would no
longer be the state ideology, and there followed a period of
transition in the direction of greater democratization,
including the promulgation of a new constitution in 1990 and the
liberalization of the economy. The first multiparty elections
were held in 1991, and Kérékou was defeated by Nicéphore Soglo,
a former cabinet member.
Soglo’s administration worked hard to improve the country’s
economy, implementing fiscal policies that garnered
international respect, and Benin started to make economic gains.
Unfortunately, the feeling among many Beninese was that economic
progress came at too great a cost to the country—the disregard
for democratization and the social well-being of its
citizens—and Soglo’s support slipped. In the 1996 presidential
election, Soglo was defeated by Kérékou, as he was again in 2001
when the two leaders ran against each other.
During Kérékou’s tenure the economy continued to be a concern
among the Beninese. Workers went on strike several times in the
late 1990s and early 2000s to protest issues—some resulting from
economic reform measures—such as low wages and the change to
merit-based salary increases and promotions. Corruption was also
an issue Kérékou had to address, with two unrelated
investigations in 2003 and 2004 implicating many police,
judiciary, and finance ministry officials.
At the beginning of the 21st century, Benin’s economy was
still underdeveloped and its political transformation was
incomplete, despite much progress having been made since the
late 1980s.
Robin Law
Dov Ronen
Ed.