[By Sheer Pluck by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookBy Sheer Pluck CHAPTER XVI: CAPTIVES IN COOMASSIE 4/24
They, like the Dahomans, delighted in human sacrifices upon a grand scale, and to carry these out captives must be taken.
Consequently every four or five years, on some pretext or other, they cross the Prah, destroyed the villages, dragged away the people to slavery or death, and carried fire and sword up to the very walls of the English fort at Cape Coast.
Sometimes the English confined themselves to remonstrance, sometimes fought, not always successfully, as upon one occasion Sir Charles Macarthy, the governor, with a West Indian regiment was utterly defeated, the governor himself and all his white officers, except three, being killed. In 1828 we aided the Fantis to defeat the Ashantis in a decisive battle, the consequence of which was the signature of a treaty, by which the King of Ashanti recognized the independence of all the Fanti tribes.
In 1844, and again in 1852, a regular protectorate was arranged between the British and the Fantis, the former undertaking to protect them from enemies beyond the borders, and in turn exercising an authority over the Fantis, forbidding them to make war with each other, and imposing a nominal tribute upon them. In 1853 the Ashantis again crossed the Prah, but, being met with firmness, retired again.
After ten years' quiet, in 1863 they again invaded the country, burnt thirty villages, and slaughtered their inhabitants.
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