Asafo Flags
The Asafo flags are regimental flags of the Fante people, an ethnic group that mainly resides in Ghana's central coastal region. The flags are influenced by a combination of Akan proverbs, visual imagery, and European heraldic tradition.
History
The Fante people live in the coastal areas of Ghana in fishing communities such as Anomabu, Saltpond, Mankessim, and Elmina, Ghana in the town of Cape Coast. Historically, except for Elmina, they have been concerned with fighting the Ashantis from about the 1700s onwards, a part of the Akan ethnic group native to the Ashanti Region of modern-day Ghana, due to the Ashantis demanding tribute from them. However, from near the creation of Asafo, there have been various interstate rivalries as a result of the dispersed nature of power, which resulted in infighting within these Fante states, with this continuing until Ghana's creation. The Asafo companies were developed to defend the state as a military group of men in Fante villages. In the local language, Asafo is derived from the words sa meaning 'war', and fo meaning 'people'.Asafo companies were responsible for sanitation and roadworks, protection of state goods, local policies, conducting funeral rights, and community entertainment. After trading gold, ivory, and slaves with the Europeans, the Asafo companies adapted their flags in order to display designs symbolizing proverbs about security and warfare. The fighting duties of the Asafo companies ended with British colonialization, but they still have their role in the ritual life of Fante villages.