Dakodonou

Dakodonou was the second King of Dahomey. He ruled from 1620 to 1645. In traditional Abomey stories, Dakodonou overthrew his brother, the previous King Gangnihessou, when the ruler was absent from the capital on a tour of the kingdom. Dakodonou is portrayed as a brutal and violent man. His symbols were an indigo jar (a reference to his murder of a certain indigo planter named Donou, whose body he made sport of by rolling it around in his indigo jar and whose name he appended to his own original name, 'Dako'), a tinder box, and a war club. Before dying, Dakodonou named his nephew, Aho Houegbadja, as his successor.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
474 bc
471 bc
470 bc
469 bc
465 bc
the man who would be a king
461 bc
456 bc
454 bc
451 bc
448 bc
446 bc
440 bc
435 bc
visayas
edremit
429 bc
jules dumont d'urville
424 bc
425 bc
421 bc
420 bc
gangnihessou
419 bc
henri fantin latour
418 bc
maximilian kaller
houegbadja
renate stecher
akaba
the league of extraordinary gentlemen
agadja
tegbessou
kpengla
agonglo
symbian os
jean pierre rampal
adandozan
ibero caucasian languages
ghezo
glele
signs
behanzin
oswald von wolkenstein