Around 1600 C.E., a new kingdom took shape on the Abomey Plateau in what is now the Republic of Benin. The Kingdom of Dahomey, built by the Fon people, would grow from a small inland polity into one of the most organized, diplomatically active, and internationally recognized states in West Africa — and one of the most morally complex.
What the evidence shows
- Kingdom of Dahomey: Established around 1600 C.E. as an offshoot of the royal dynasty of the Kingdom of Allada, Dahomey consolidated power on the Abomey Plateau before expanding outward under a succession of ambitious kings.
- Fon people: The dominant ethnic group of Dahomey’s royal families, the Fon developed a centralized administrative state with taxation, a professional military, diplomatic ties with European powers, and an elaborate tradition of Vodun religious practice.
- Atlantic slave trade: Dahomey’s rise as a regional power was deeply entangled with the slave trade — the kingdom raided neighboring peoples, sold captives to European traders, and built much of its wealth and military capacity on that commerce.
A kingdom built on the Abomey Plateau
The founding story of Dahomey is rooted in a confrontation. According to oral tradition, an early ruler named Dakodonu asked a local chief named Dan for land. Dan responded with contempt: “Should I open up my belly and build you a house in it?” Dakodonu killed him and built his palace on the spot. The kingdom’s name — from the Fon words for “belly,” “chief,” and “inside” — carried that origin forward.
The ruler most often credited with shaping Dahomey into a durable state is Houegbadja, who reigned roughly from 1645 to 1685 C.E. He constructed the Royal Palaces of Abomey — a compound that still stands and is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site — and began expanding beyond the plateau through raids and conquest.
His grandson, King Agaja, accelerated that expansion dramatically after taking the throne in 1708 C.E. Dahomey under Agaja fielded a professional standing army of around 10,000 soldiers — unusually large and disciplined for the region. In 1724 C.E. he conquered Allada, the kingdom from which his own dynasty descended. Three years later, he took Whydah on the Atlantic coast, giving Dahomey direct access to European slave traders and transforming it into a major commercial and military power.
What made Dahomey distinctive
European visitors documented Dahomey extensively, making it one of the most well-known African kingdoms in 18th and 19th century European accounts. What they recorded was a state with striking and sometimes startling features.
Dahomey had a formalized bureaucracy, a system of taxation, and a network of diplomatic relationships with European nations. Its Annual Customs — a yearly festival combining gift distribution, Vodun ceremonies, military parades, and political deliberation — gave the kingdom a structured civic and religious life that served both spiritual and administrative purposes.
Among the most noted features was an all-female military unit, referred to by European observers as the “Dahomey Amazons.” Known in the Fon language as the Agojie, these soldiers were an elite fighting force integrated into the royal military, not a symbolic unit. Their existence represented an unusual and significant departure from military structures elsewhere in the region.
Vodun — the religious tradition that gave rise to Vodou and Voodoo in the African diaspora — was central to Dahomean life. Queen mother Hwanjile, during the reign of King Tegbesu (1740–1774 C.E.), is credited in oral tradition with creating two new deities and more closely linking religious practice to the authority of the king, deepening Vodun’s role in Dahomey’s political structure.
The slave trade and the cost of power
No honest account of Dahomey’s rise omits what powered it. The Kingdom of Dahomey was one of West Africa’s principal suppliers of enslaved people to European traders. It raided neighboring peoples, took captives in warfare, and sold them in exchange for rifles, gunpowder, fabrics, cowrie shells, tobacco, and alcohol. Captives who were not sold were either put to work on royal plantations or killed in ritual ceremonies during the Annual Customs.
King Ghezo, who came to power in 1818 C.E., restructured the trade and expanded it further even as British pressure to abolish it intensified. He acknowledged the kingdom’s dependence on the commerce, explaining that the entire regional economy had become organized around it. He expressed a desire to eventually shift toward “legitimate” trade in palm oil — but the shift came too slowly, and under too much external pressure, to fundamentally change the kingdom’s trajectory.
Dahomey’s participation in the Atlantic slave trade contributed to one of the largest forced migrations in human history. Millions of people from West and Central Africa — including many taken by Dahomean raids — were transported to the Americas, where their descendants built cultures, religions, and societies that survive today. The Slave Voyages database, maintained by a consortium of scholars, documents the scale of this trade in detail.
Lasting impact
Dahomey’s influence extended well beyond its borders and its era. The Vodun tradition it practiced and exported through the diaspora became the foundation for Haitian Vodou, Louisiana Voodoo, and Candomblé in Brazil — living religious traditions practiced by millions today. The Royal Palaces of Abomey, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1985 C.E., preserve the material culture of the kingdom for future generations.
The Agojie — the Dahomean female soldiers — became a subject of renewed global attention following the 2022 C.E. film The Woman King, which brought their story to audiences unfamiliar with West African military history. Historians noted both the film’s value in raising awareness and the care needed in how their story is told alongside the full context of Dahomey’s role in the slave trade.
King Ghezo’s eventual defeat of the Oyo Empire’s tributary hold on Dahomey in 1827 C.E. marked a significant moment in West African political history — the assertion of sovereignty by a Black African kingdom against a dominant regional hegemon. Dahomey went on to maintain independence until French colonial forces overthrew King Béhanzin in 1894 C.E. and annexed the territory into French West Africa.
After independence in 1960 C.E., the country renamed itself Benin in 1975 C.E. — a name chosen to avoid the associations of its colonial-era label. The history of the Kingdom of Dahomey remains central to Beninese national identity and to broader conversations about African history, the transatlantic slave trade, and the complexity of African agency within it.
Blindspots and limits
Much of what is known about Dahomey was recorded by European visitors whose accounts carried their own biases and blind spots — and who often focused on the aspects of Dahomean life that seemed most dramatic or exotic to outside eyes. The voices of the people Dahomey enslaved and sacrificed are largely absent from the historical record, as are the internal perspectives of those Fon communities who may have dissented from or suffered under the kingdom’s militarism.
Oral traditions preserved by Dahomean descendants offer an important corrective, but these too reflect the perspectives of those closest to royal power. Scholarship by historians such as Edna Bay has done significant work to reconstruct a fuller picture, and that work continues. The story of Dahomey is not yet fully told.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Dahomey
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana creates a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights reach a global milestone at COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Benin
About this article
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