Tegbessou

Tegbessou was the sixth King of Dahomey. He succeeded Agadja, and ruled from 1732 to 1774. Tegbessou's reign was characterized by internal intrigues and a failed foreign policy; he killed many coup-plotters and political enemies, refused to pay tribute to the Yorubas, and lost many battles in the punitive raids that followed. His main symbol is a buffalo wearing a tunic. His other symbols are the blunderbuss, a weapon he gave his warriors--the first time in Dahomey that the royal army had ready access to firearms-- and a door decorated with three noseless heads, a reference to his victory over a rebellious tributary people, the Zou, whose corpses he mutilated. Tegbessou was succeeded by Kpengla.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
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
dakodonou
maximilian kaller
houegbadja
renate stecher
akaba
the league of extraordinary gentlemen
agadja
kpengla
agonglo
symbian os
jean pierre rampal
adandozan
ibero caucasian languages
ghezo
glele
signs
behanzin
oswald von wolkenstein
northwest caucasian languages
agoli agbo
387 bc
tributary
385 bc
distributary
384 bc