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Axim is a town, district and kingdom on the coast of Ghana, West Africa. It is 63 kilometers west of the Ghanaian port city of Takoradi, south of the highway leading to the Ivory Coast border, in the Western Region, to the west of Cape Three Points. Sekondi-Takoradi, population 93,822 (1984), is the capital of the Western Region of Ghana. ...
Axim has a prominent seaside castle or fort, Fort San Antonio de Axim, first built by the Portuguese and Dutch in the early 16th Century, most of which is open to the public. There are picturesque islands offshore, including one with a lighthouse and another with an old undersea tunnel to the castle. There are two large mansions of lumber-trading magnates remaining from the British colonial period. Axim is ruled by two traditional omanhenes or chiefs, a foreign-born king, and the political District Chief Executive of Nzema East. The economy is based mainly on Axim's fishing fleet, and there are two tourist beach resorts, coconut and rubber plantations. The terrain is scenic and fertile, with many palm trees. Local artisanal miners pan for gold in streams inland from Axim. Axim has a transport station, two major bank branches, and some rural banks. Every August, there is the major festival of Kundum which coincides with the best fishing catch of the year; people come to Axim for the festivities and to fish and trade, from several countries on the Guinea Coast. Culturally, Axim is part of the Nzema complex within the Akan culture, except for the foreign-born king who is associated with Biffeche. Languages: Nzema, Fante and English are spoken. The town is prominently Christian with many churches including Anglican, Catholic, Presbyterian, Pentecostal, and several newer sects. There is a small islamic mosque, and numerous traditional fetish priests. The Akan are an ethnic group from western Africa. ...
The Kingdom of Biffeche is a small kingdom located on the lower Senegal River in West Africa, on the border between Mauritania and Senegal near Saint-Louis, Senegal. ...
For the writer, see John Fante. ...
A native of Axim, Anton Wilhelm Amo (1703-1756) was the first black philosopher (specifically, the first black African to be educated and publish philosophical works in Europe). In Germany, he published "The Rights of Moors" among other works, and taught philosophy at the University of Jena. Anthony William Amo (1703–c. ...
Kwame Nkrumah, the first president of independent Ghana, was born in the small village of Nkroful, located just west of Axim, where he was buried until his remains were transported to Accra. In the 1930's, Nkrumah was headmaster of a Catholic school in Axim and led an intellectual circle there. Kwame Nkrumah (September 21, 1909 - April 27, 1972) was a Ghanaian politician and one of the most influential founders of Pan-Africanism. ...
Nkroful is the village, near Axim in the Western Region (Ghana) of Ghana, where Kwame Nkrumah, founder and first president of independent Ghana, was born September 21, 1909 and reared, and where he was buried after his death in 1972 -- temporarily, it turned out, because his body was later moved...
Accra, population 1,661,400 (2001), is the capital of Ghana. ...
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