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  • Notice détaillée
    Titre : Ahi, doing some repairs on the “Slaves’ Route”.
    Lieu de la prise de vue : Bénin
    Extrait de : Cham, la mémoire vivante
    Type : Photographie - Couleur
    Description : The Slaves’ Route is a two-miles road starting in downtown Ouidah, close to a former slave market, and ending at the beach, where the captives were allegedly put on pirogues that brought them to the slave ships. In fact, because the coastal lagoon separated the town from the shore, it is more likely that the captives covered part of the way to the outer shore by canoe. Despite the relative success of the Slaves’ Route, only the local population living in the neighbourhoods is sufficiently audacious to walk along the road. The two-miles road is long and because the traffic is intense and there is no allotted space for pedestrians, it is rather difficult to safely observe the monuments. Indeed, individual tourists experience the Slaves’ Route by zemidjan (local motorcycle taxis). If with groups, they see the route by car or bus, and stop only at the end of the road, at the beach. Ouidah, Benin
    Mots-clés : Bénin - 21e siècle
    Conditions d'utilisation : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification
  • Notice détaillée
    Titre : Behanzin captif.
    Extrait de : Les colonies françaises: petite encyclopédie coloniale. Tome premier, Introduction, Principes d'organisation coloniale, Algérie, Tunisie, Sahara, Sénégal, Guinée, Côte d'Ivoire, Dahomey : 247 gravures, 24 cartes
    Type : Image - Photographie
    Description : Béhanzin (1844?-1906). Roi du Dahomey (1889-1894). Son royaume fut conquis par le colonel Dodds en deux campagnes (1890 et 1892-1893). Fait prisonnier, il est déporté à la Martinique puis à Alger. Béhanzin (ou Gbêhanzin) est le nom de règne d'Ahokponou Nyakaja Honsinyenli, prince héritier sous le nom de Kondo
    Conditions d'utilisation : Domaine public
  • Notice détaillée
    Titre : CLEMENT OLIVIER DE MONTAGUERE, descendant of Olivier de Montaguere in the family cemetery, Ouidah.
    Lieu de la prise de vue : Bénin
    Extrait de : Cham, la mémoire vivante
    Type : Photographie - Couleur
    Description : Clement is a member of this family originally from Marseille, France. His ancestor, Olivier de Montaguere, was the nineteenth steward of the French Fort for Louis XVI. He arrived in Ouidah in 1776. He brought with him his wife and their three children, Joseph, Nicolas and Jean Baptiste and organized the slave trade with the French West Indies, «He disappeared during one of his trips to the Caribbean and he is never returned to Ouidah» said Clement Olivier of Montaguere. Their descendents still live today in the old compound of their ancestor. Unlike many other local families, they have no voodoo altars in their homes, and while claiming their European origins, they strictly observe the catholic religion. Today, in the family cemetery (where I got the pictures), the oldest tomb is to Nicolas Olivier de Montaguere’s. According to the tradition, Nicolas grew up with the king of Dahomey Agonglo (1789-1797). After his adolescence spent in Abomey with the king, he returned to Ouidah in his father’s family home when he continued to deal palm oil . Nicolas and Joseph’s descendants still live in the old compound of their ancestors. They have maintained a position of prestige in the society, and historically occupy important positions in the public administration. Ouidah, Benin.
    Mots-clés : Bénin - 21e siècle
    Conditions d'utilisation : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification

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