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== History == Agaja served a crucial role in the early development of the [[Kingdom of Dahomey]]. The kingdom had been founded by Agaja's father [[Houegbadja]] who ruled from 1645 until 1685 on the [[Abomey]] plateau. Although there were some limited military operations outside of the plateau, the kingdom did not significantly expand before the eighteenth century.{{sfn|Halcrow|1982|p=49}} ===Rise to power=== Oral tradition says that Agaja was born around 1673, the second oldest son to [[Houegbadja]]. Houegbadja's first two children were the twins [[Akaba of Dahomey|Akaba]] and [[Hangbe]]. Agaja was originally called Dosu, a traditional [[Fon people|Fon]] name for the first son born after twins.{{sfn|Bay|1998|p=54}} When Houegbadja died, Akaba became the king and ruled from 1685 until about 1716. Akaba died during a war in the [[Ouémé River]] valley and since his oldest son, Agbo Sassa, was a minor, his twin sister Hangbe may have ruled for a brief period of time (alternatively given as either three months or three years).{{sfn|Bay|1998|p=54}} Hangbe supported a faction that wanted Agbo Sassa to be the next king, but Agaja contested this and became the ruler in 1718 after a brief, violent struggle.{{sfn|Bay|1998|pp=54-55}} ===Conquest of Allada and Whydah=== [[File:Symbole de Agadja roi du Dahomey au mur de la place Goho à Abomey au Bénin66.jpg|thumb|Symbol of Agaja in place Goho.]] Agaja led the most important expansions of the kingdom in the 1720s with the conquest of the [[Kingdom of Ardra|Kingdom of Allada]] in 1724 and the [[Kingdom of Whydah]] in 1727. Allada and Whydah, both [[Aja people|Aja]] kingdoms, had become important coastal trading centers in the early 1700s, with trade connections to multiple European countries. The two powers made a 1705 agreement where both agreed not to interfere in the trade of the other kingdom. The King of Whydah, Huffon, grew increasingly connected through trade with the British [[Royal African Company]] while the king of Allada, Soso, made his ports outposts for the [[Dutch West India Company]]. In 1712, a British ship attacked a Dutch ship in the harbor at Allada, triggering economic warfare between Allada and Whydah that lasted until 1720. Upon coming to the throne, Agaja and Soso made an agreement to attack Whydah and remove Huffon from power; however, this plan was halted for unknown reasons.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|pp=54-60}} In 1724, Soso died and a contest for the throne in Allada followed. On March 30, 1724, Agaja's army entered Allada in support of the defeated candidate, named Hussar. After a three-day battle Agaja's army killed the king and set the palace on fire. Rather than place Hussar on the throne, though, Agaja drove him out of the city after establishing his own power.{{sfn|Rodney|1975|p=235}} Agaja then turned his forces against the other Aja kingdoms. In April 1724, Agaja conquered the town of [[Godomey]] and in 1726 the King of [[Gomè-Sota|Gomè]] transferred his allegiance from the King of Whydah to Agaja.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|pp=68-69}} Agaja planned his attack on Whydah in February 1727. He conspired with his daughter, Na Gueze, who was married to Huffon, to pour water on the gunpowder stores in Whydah. He also sent a letter to all of the European traders in the port of Whydah encouraging them to remain neutral in the conflict, in return for which he would provide favorable trade relations at the conclusion of the war. On February 26, 1727, Agaja attacked Whydah and burned the palace, causing the royal family to flee from the city. During the five-day battle, reports say that five thousand people in Whydah were killed and ten to eleven thousand were captured. In April, he burned all of the European factories in the Whydah capital.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|pp=76-79}} In the three years between 1724 and 1727, Agaja had more than doubled the territory of Dahomey, had secured access to the Atlantic coast, and had made Dahomey a prominent power along the [[Slave Coast of West Africa|Slave Coast]].{{sfn|Bay|1998|pp=63-64}}{{sfn|Law|1986|p=242}} ===Wars with the Oyo Empire=== [[File:Oyoxviii.jpeg|right|thumb|220px|The Oyo Empire and surrounding states around the time of Agaja]] The Aja kingdoms had been [[Tributary state|tributaries]] to the Oyo Empire since the 1680s. After Agaja had conquered Allada, it appears that he sent a smaller tribute and so on April 14, 1726, the Oyo Empire sent its army against Dahomey. The Oyo conquered Abomey and burned the city while Agaja and his troops escaped into the marshes and hid until the Oyo armies returned home.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|pp=83-84}} Agaja rebuilt Abomey and when he conquered Whydah the next year he provided many gifts to the King of Oyo. Despite these gifts, tributary terms acceptable to Oyo were not agreed to and so the Oyo Empire returned on March 22, 1728. As part of a strategy, Agaja buried his treasure, burned food resources, and made all the residents of Abomey abandon the city. The Oyo army found it difficult to remain in that situation and so they returned to Oyo in April.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|p=84}} This strategy was repeated in 1729 and 1730, with Oyo sending increasingly larger armies and Agaja and his troops retreating into the marshes.{{sfn|Decalo|1987|pp=22-23}} The 1730 invasion was particularly devastating as the Oyo feigned acceptance of gifts from Agaja but then ambushed Dahomey's forces when they returned to Abomey. With the regular destruction of Abomey, Agaja moved the capital to Allada and ruled from there (his son Tegbessou would later move the capital back to Abomey while appointing a puppet king in Allada).{{sfn|Monroe|2011|p=774}} After the 1730 attack by the Oyo Empire, Agaja's forces were particularly depleted. Huffon and the deposed royal family of Whydah, with support from the British and the French, attempted to reconquer the city. With depleted forces, Agaja created a special unit of women dressed in war armor to assemble at the back of his remaining army to make his forces look larger. The ploy worked as the Whydah forces saw a huge force marching toward the city and fled before any fighting happened.{{sfn|Alpern|1998|p=16}} After this attack, Agaja asked the Portuguese leader in the area to negotiate a peace agreement between Dahomey and Oyo. The agreement set the boundaries between Oyo and Dahomey at the [[Ouémé River]] and made Dahomey a tributary state of Oyo, a status which would remain until 1832. As a guarantee, Agaja had to send a son, [[Tegbessou]], to Oyo.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|pp=91-92}} ===Centralization=== For the last ten years of his reign, from 1730 until 1740, Agaja worked on consolidating his kingdom and increasing trade with Europeans. Having come to terms with the Oyo empire, Agaja sought to militarily destroy other rivals in the region. This started in 1731 with a successful war against the [[Mahi people]] to the north of Abomey for supplying the Oyo with food and support during the wars.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|pp=98-99}} Attempts by the Portuguese and the Dutch to establish forts in [[Godomey]], which Agaja had conquered in 1724 but whose leader had recently renounced his allegiance to Dahomey, caused a large war in 1732 in which Agaja burned the town and took thousands of people captive.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|p=99}} In addition, regular warfare continued between Agaja and the exiled Whydah population under Huffon. In July 1733 Huffon died and a civil war broke out in the exiled community. A defeated prince went to Agaja to ask for assistance and seeing the opportunity, Agaja agreed to support the prince against the leadership of Whydah and allowed the prince to resettle after the war was successful.{{sfn|Law|1986|p=265}} The other Whydah faction was defeated by Agaja in 1734 with assistance of the French.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|pp=97-98}} Agaja also undertook significant administrative reforms to govern the newly conquered areas. Many of the chiefs and officers in Allada were retained, while Agaja dispatched his trade officers and kept active military control over Whydah. The old chiefs, retained for necessity, often caused problems for Agaja by resisting his rule or even revolting.{{sfn|Bay|1998|p=64}} Agaja also appointed three different trade directors, one to manage relations with each different European power (Britain, France, and Portugal). When the Europeans complained about these directors in 1733, Agaja replaced them with one person, thus creating the important position of ''Yovogan''.{{sfn|Bay|1998|p=70}} The Dutch, in contrast, were held in high contempt by Agaja and he spent much of this period trying to destroy their interests in the region. This led the Dutch to organize a significant army of many tribes to the west of Dahomey which destroyed Agaja's forces in 1737 but did not destroy the kingdom.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|p=106}} Starting in 1730 but becoming formal in 1733 all slaves could only be sold through representatives of the king.{{sfn|Falola|Warnock|2007|p=129}} This royal monopoly led to some revolts by important chiefs who were not receiving full prices for their goods and Agaja crushed multiple rebellions between 1733 and 1740. The royal monopoly proved unpopular and, following the defeat of Agaja's forces in 1737, he was forced to allow the free trade of slaves through Dahomey.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|p=103}} As part of his efforts against the Dutch, Agaja organized a war against [[Badagry]] in 1737. This war, while marginally successful, was possibly considered by the Oyo Empire to be against the terms of the 1730 agreement.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|p=107}} Conversely, it is possible that Agaja simply refused to continue paying the tribute to Oyo.{{sfn|Law|1977|p=171}} Whatever the reason, war between Oyo and Dahomey resumed in 1739 and Agaja repeated his earlier strategy of withdrawing into the wild to wait for the Oyo troops to leave.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|p=107}} ===Contacts with Europeans=== Agaja was the first king of Dahomey to have significant contact with European traders. Although Dahomey had been known to European traders in the 1600s, largely as a source for slaves, because it was an inland kingdom contact was limited.{{sfn|Law|1986|p=240}} When Agaja expanded the kingdom, he came into contact with the Dutch, British, French, and Portuguese traders. Agaja opposed the Dutch and largely excluded them from trade along the coast after he had conquered it. However, he created direct officers to manage contacts with the other European powers.{{sfn|Akinjogbin|1967|p=106}} One important contact began in 1726 when Agaja sent Bulfinch Lambe (a British trader captured in the 1724 attack on [[Godomey]]) and a Dahomey ambassador known as Adomo Tomo or Captain Tom on a mission to Britain. Lambe was meant to deliver a "Scheme of Trade" to King George I. The "Scheme of Trade" outlined a plan for King George I to work with King Agaja in the creation of a plantation in Dahomey, exporting goods such as sugar, cotton, and indigo. However, Lambe was aware that the English had already abandoned plans to set up a plantation in Dahomey; he left Dahomey with no intention of following through on Agaja's plan. Lambe initially sold Adomo Tomo into slavery in Maryland, but after a few years came back to free Tomo and bring him to England. Lambe and Tomo carried a letter claimed to be from Agaja and received an audience with [[George II of Great Britain|King George II]]. The letter from Agaja was dismissed as a fraud and Tomo was returned to Dahomey where Agaja appointed him the assistant to the chief of trade with the British.{{sfn|Law|Mann|1999|p=320}} ===Death=== Agaja died in Allada a few months after returning following the war with Oyo in 1740. Oral traditions say that Tegbessou, who was the fifth oldest son of Agaja, was told by Agaja earlier that because he had saved Dahomey from the Oyo Empire he was going to be the king rather than any of his older brothers,{{sfn|Bay|1998|pp=81-83}} although that tradition may have been created by Tegbessou to legitimize his rule. Regardless, the result was a contest between him and his brothers upon Agaja's death. In the end, Tegbessou was victorious and became the new king of Dahomey.{{sfn|Law|1986|p=266}}
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