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This article is written in
Ghanaian English, which has its own spelling conventions (colour, travelled, centre, realise, analyse, defence) and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other
varieties of English. According to the
relevant style guide, this should not be changed without
broad consensus.
[[Geography of Ghana#High plains|Northern Plains]] The anchor (#High plains) is no longer available because it was
deleted by a user before.
Please help fix the broken anchors. You can remove this template after fixing the problems. |
Reporting errors
percent of Ghana GDP spent on Space exploration
Under the Science and Technology tab, it states that Ghana spends 1 percent of its GDP on space exploration. This statistic is not sourced. This seems extremely unlikely, because the USA only spends about 0.6% of GDP on space exploration. 1% of Ghana's GDP would be 700 million USD, and I can find no evidence of such large spending.
38.49.79.174 (
talk)
03:43, 7 March 2024 (UTC)reply
A table was extended to entire article
I wanted to request an edit- can someone who knows how to do so, fix the current error- a table in the geography section has been extended to the rest of the article, so that half of the article is colored grey, clearly an error. I don't know how to fix this. Thanks
Varoart2005 (
talk)
03:50, 7 March 2024 (UTC)reply
Semi-protected edit request on 23 April 2024
This
edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request.
Adding additional information regarding Foreign Direct Investment and its impact on Ghanian economy, especially from China and the USA. One paragraph:
Foreign Direct Investment are increasing in Ghana, especially from China and US. Chinese investment have significantly influenced the nation's economic growth and have impacted bilateral ties, regional interactions, and global markets. These investments primarily target the infrastructure, natural resources, and manufacturing sectors, fostering economic expansion, employment opportunities, and technology transfer within Ghana. Nonetheless, issues related to the sustainability of projects financed by China, environmental consequences, and the opacity of these investments necessitate a thorough evaluation of these partnerships.[1]JJpeterson (
talk)
02:06, 23 April 2024 (UTC)reply
I see this was
deleted by someone who is now blocked.....we could simply say...
"The word Ghana is said to have been derived from the Soninke language which means "warrior king". This word was used to describe the powerful Ghana Empire that existed in West Africa between the 9th and 13th centuries. Over time, the name Ghana came to be associated with the region and the people who lived there. When Ghana gained independence from British colonial rule in 1957, the country adopted the name Ghana as a way to honor its history and heritage". [2]Moxy🍁
22:56, 5 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Let's not add this without actual sources; 'liquisearch' is a Wikipedia mirror that simply copied the material that was previously removed. Sam Kuru(talk)12:53, 8 June 2024 (UTC)reply
That source doesn't explain the etymology of Ghana, it just says it was the name of the ruling dynasty. There is a source at
Ghana Empire, but it is an offline one. I found
[2] which explains a bit more about the selection of the name, but not the Etymology.
CMD (
talk)
13:23, 8 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Not if both are distinct points, but still neither explains the original etymology present on
Ghana Empire. I'm sure there are sources out there, etymology is often hard to google.
CMD (
talk)
13:58, 8 June 2024 (UTC)reply
I think you get access to this through wikipedia library
[3], Ghana is sort of an exonym, the Soninke used
oral tradition rather than writing, so the first written records come from Arab sources, it was called Wagadu by the Soninke, although there is some debate about whether Wagadu and Ghana are the same
Alexanderkowal (
talk)
14:05, 8 June 2024 (UTC)reply
Can't seem to access that source myself. It seems potentially an exonym for the empire, but that doesn't mean the word itself wasn't originally local.
CMD (
talk)
14:19, 8 June 2024 (UTC)reply
You're right, the word was sort of from local origin, the title for the king was "Kaya Maghan" with Maghan being corrupted into Ghana. Personally I think it's beyond reasonable doubt but that's why I'm not an academic
"Firstly, there are mentions of a political entity called Ghāna in written Arabic sources. Secondly, there is the legend of the Soninké people about a polity that ruled in an area called Wagadu. Thirdly, there is a comparatively long history of archaeological research in the wider region that has become attached to the Empire of Ghana."
"The first mentions of the political entity that later became known as the Empire of Ghana are in Arabic texts after the 8th century CE. In the 10th-century work of al-Ma’sūdī, there is a reference to an unknown manuscript by al-Fazārī that appears to be from the late 8th or early 9th century. Al-Fazārī is quoted as mentioning “Ghāna, the land of gold,”3 an association that sticks to Ghāna throughout its mentions in the Arabic source material. Written between 831 and 842, al-Khuwārizmī’s Ṣurat al-arḍ mentions Ghāna and its geographic position, as well as a mountain of the same name, Jabal Ghāna, from which there flows a river into the sea.4 What exactly Ghāna was in this early period, however, is open to debate among the translators: Cuoq translates al-Fazārī as describing “the state of Ghāna”5 while Levtzion and Hopkins translate the same passage as “the province of Ghāna.”6 Some clarity is introduced by Al-Ya’qūbī in his Tārīkh, written in 872–873. In one of the most fundamental quotes for the early political history of West Africa, he states:
Then there is the kingdom of Ghāna, whose king is also very powerful. In his country are the gold mines, and under his authority are a number of kings. Among them are the kingdom of ‘ĀM and the kingdom of Sāma. Gold is found in the whole of this country.7
Together with the preceding section, a list of kings who are subordinate to the nearby king of Kawkaw (Gao), this passage is taken as proof for the existence of a complex political hierarchy in the western Sahel and is the main justification for speaking about an “Empire” of Ghana. We must however note that, by this point, the political structure of Ghāna has undergone three processes of distortion: first, in the way the North African visitors understood what they saw and related it; second, in the way the authors of the Arabic sources interpreted this information; and third, in the way that European scholars interpreted the Arabic sources. To speak of Ghāna as an empire and of its rulers as kings certainly overfamiliarizes a political form whose actual shape we know only in outline and by approximation.
Yet if Al-Ya ̔qūbī states that Ghāna is a “kingdom,” then Ibn al-Faqīh, writing after 903, muddies the waters again by referring to Ghāna as a “land” as well as a “town.”8 Ibn Ḥawqal, in the second half of the 10th century, is of the opinion that Ghāna is the name of the ruler as well as the country he rules.9 The most detailed source, Al-Bakrī in the 11th century, finally states that “Ghāna is a title given to their kings,” while the region has the name Awkar. All the while, however, Al-Bakrī still refers to the “town of Ghāna.” While the Empire of Ghana has become a common term, it is far from clear whether this is in any way a name that this polity used for itself, or whether it rather refers to the ruler, the capital, or the core region it controls. Neither do we know what language the word “Ghāna” is taken from. It is neither Arabic, nor does it appear to be from a Mandé language."
The name Ghana comes from
Wagadu, a vast empire in west Africa from the 3rd to 12th centuries; Wagadu was coined Ghana by Arab traders involved in the
trans-Saharan trade. Ghana is thought to originate from the title Kaya Maghan of the rulers of Wagadu, which translates as ruler of gold. As the
Gold Coast colony prepared for independence, the nation's founder
Kwame Nkrumah settled on Ghana, aiming to evoke a sense of unity and liberation among the
Ghanaian people. The name was a powerful reminder of their shared heritage and the legacy of the ancient empire that once thrived in the region. It encapsulated the aspirations of the Ghanaian people for self-governance, progress, and a future marked by dignity and resilience.[3][4]Alexanderkowal (
talk)
13:15, 23 June 2024 (UTC)reply
^[ttps://africanfolder.com/how-ghana-got-its-name/ "Unveiling The Origins: How Ghana Got Its Name"]. African folder. 7 June 2023. Retrieved 23 June 2024.