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Archives in Stone: Cemeteries, Burial, and Urban Ownership in Late Colonial Ghana

Publication ,  Journal Article
Balakrishnan, S
Published in: Journal of Urban History
January 1, 2024

While many scholars have examined the influence of European law, writing, and record-keeping on African land rights and property, few have analyzed semi-textual records such as cemetery gravestones. This essay argues that urban cemeteries, introduced by the British colonial state to the Gold Coast Colony (southern Ghana) in the nineteenth century, became archives in stone. As one of the few public records forums available inside Gold Coast towns, cemeteries offered basic, but crucial, information. They indirectly dated immigration history and reflected ancestral political status. Over the course of colonial rule, Gold Coast citizens petitioned the state to have their elders buried in particular cemeteries to augment their claims to land and authority. This essay demonstrates that urban ownership—the status of belonging to a town as an authochthon—came to depend partly upon cemetery burial. Like any archive, cemeteries were highly curated collections, shaping legal contestations over residency, leadership, and land ownership.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

Journal of Urban History

DOI

EISSN

1552-6771

ISSN

0096-1442

Publication Date

January 1, 2024

Related Subject Headings

  • History
  • 4303 Historical studies
  • 3304 Urban and regional planning
  • 2103 Historical Studies
  • 1205 Urban and Regional Planning
 

Citation

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Balakrishnan, S. (2024). Archives in Stone: Cemeteries, Burial, and Urban Ownership in Late Colonial Ghana. Journal of Urban History. https://doi.org/10.1177/00961442241235927
Balakrishnan, S. “Archives in Stone: Cemeteries, Burial, and Urban Ownership in Late Colonial Ghana.” Journal of Urban History, January 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1177/00961442241235927.
Balakrishnan S. Archives in Stone: Cemeteries, Burial, and Urban Ownership in Late Colonial Ghana. Journal of Urban History. 2024 Jan 1;
Balakrishnan, S. “Archives in Stone: Cemeteries, Burial, and Urban Ownership in Late Colonial Ghana.” Journal of Urban History, Jan. 2024. Scopus, doi:10.1177/00961442241235927.
Balakrishnan S. Archives in Stone: Cemeteries, Burial, and Urban Ownership in Late Colonial Ghana. Journal of Urban History. 2024 Jan 1;
Journal cover image

Published In

Journal of Urban History

DOI

EISSN

1552-6771

ISSN

0096-1442

Publication Date

January 1, 2024

Related Subject Headings

  • History
  • 4303 Historical studies
  • 3304 Urban and regional planning
  • 2103 Historical Studies
  • 1205 Urban and Regional Planning