'Togoland' was a
German protectorate in
West Africa from
1884 to
1914. The protectorate was established during the "
Scramble for Africa", when German explorer and
imperialist Gustav Nachtigal arrived at
Togoville, sent as a special commissioner by Prime Minister
Otto von Bismarck. On
July 5 1884, a treaty was signed with the local chief,
Mlapa III, in which the
German Empire declared a protectorate over a stretch of territory along the coast of the
Bight of Benin. Nachtigal was ''
Reichskommissar'' for a day, but was replaced on
July 6 by
Heinrich Randad as other tasks were waiting for Nachtigal in Northern Africa.
Germany gradually extended its control inland. They brought scientific cultivation to the country's main export crops (
cacao,
coffee and
cotton) and developed its infrastructure to one of the highest levels in Africa. Because it became Germany's only self-supporting
colony, Togoland was known as its model possession. This would last until the eruption of
World War I.
After calling on German forces to surrender on 6 August 1914,
French and
British forces invaded the colony the next day, occupying Lome and advancing on a powerful radio station near Kamina (just east of
Atakpamé). The colony surrendered on
August 26, after the Germans had destroyed the station on the night of August 24/25. On
December 27 1916, Togoland was divided into French and British administrative zones. Following the war, Togoland formally became a
League of Nations Class B mandate divided for administrative purposes into
French Togoland and
British Togoland (covering respectively about 2/3 and 1/3 of the territory).
As a result, the French-ruled part of Togoland became what is now
Togo, with the rest transferred to
Ghana following a plebiscite.
See also
★
History of Togo
★
List of former German colonies
References in Popular Culture
In the popular
Canadian sketch comedy show,
Second City Television (which ran from
1976 to
1984), the news segment skit "SCTV News" regularly included news bulletins about natural catastrophes in Togoland, although the country no longer had that name.
External links
★
Map of Togoland
★
Proposed flag of Togoland