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Prince Klaas

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(Redirected from King Court Tackey)
Prince Klaas
Born
Kwaku

c. 1694
DiedEarly November 1736 (celebrated on October 22nd)
Cause of deathExecution
MonumentsPrince Klaas Statue
NationalityAntiguan
Other namesKing Court, King Tackey
EducationUnknown, but was a talented reader
OccupationHead slave
Known forPlot to overthrow the white colonizers in Antigua
Criminal chargesTreason
Criminal penaltyLashing to the wheel[1]
Criminal statusExecuted
HonoursMost Exalted Order of the National Hero, posthumously in 2000


Prince Klaas, also known as King Court, Tackey, or by his African name, Kwaku, was an enslaved Antiguan who was a posthumous recipient of the Most Exalted Order of the National Hero.[2] In order to establish an independent African-ruled Kingdom of Antigua and destroy the colonial white administration, Klaas launched a slave uprising that was put down.[3][4][5]

Background

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In 1736, on the island of Antigua, an enslaved African known as Prince Klaas (whose real name was thought to be Court or Kwaku Takyi) planned an uprising in which whites would be massacred. Court was crowned "King of the Coromantees" in a pasture outside the capital of St. John's, in what white observers thought was a colourful spectacle, but was for the Africans a ritual declaration of war on the white enslavers. Due to information obtained from other enslaved people, colonists discovered and suppressed the plot. Prince Klaas and four accomplices were caught and executed by the breaking wheel.[6] They hung and starved six Africans and burnt another 58 at the stake. The site of these executions is now the Antigua Recreation Ground.[7]

Early life

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Klaas, then known as Kwaku, was taken captive from the Ashante in the Gold Coast, which is now modern-day Ghana, when he was 10 years old. He was taken prisoner during the Eguafo Civil War, which broke out as a result of the death of King Takyi Kuma. This gave British and Danish slave dealers the opportunity to seize as many people as they could and sell them as slaves.[4] Kwaku lived in St. John's and was the "chief slave," "owned" by slave owner Thomas Kerby, a Judge of the Peace and Speaker of the Assembly.[5]

Coronation and the plot to create the Kingdom of Antigua

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Coronation

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Klaas was installed as King of the Black Antiguans during an Akan ritual at one of the planning sessions. Although this was regarded by the white Antiguan slave owners as a "innocent ceremony," according to Western African traditions, it was actually a declaration of war.[4][5]

Kingdom of Antigua rebellion plan

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In the original 1728 design for the Kingdom of Antigua, all Europeans were to be put to death.[5][3] The plan's preparation took eight years,[5] and was ready to be carried out in 1736.[4]

A 10-gallon barrel of gunpowder would be smuggled into the venue and blown up during a large ball honoring King George II in late October 1736 with the intention of killing every European there. The explosion's noise would serve as a warning signal for the allied slave Africans to attack every white person they saw, sparking a carnage that would make Prince Klaas the new ruler of Antigua.[4]

Under the proposal, 10 significant plantations were included.[4] If successful, Antigua would have been the first nation in the Western Hemisphere to be governed by the African race.

Foiling of the plot and execution

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On the report of an unnamed slave, Klaas was found guilty of participating in the scheme along with 132 other individuals.[3] The remaining 88 persons who were executed were either gibbeted (6 of them), burned at the stake, or broken on the wheel, including Klaas (77 of them).[3][5]

He was 45 when he was executed.

Legacy

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Both a statue of Prince Klaas and an exhibition in the nearby National Museum of Antigua and Barbuda are currently present in St. John's.

The Most Exalted Order of the National Hero, Antigua and Barbuda's highest honor, was posthumously given to Klaas in 2000.[2]

References

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  1. ^ https://antiguanewsroom.com/the-horrifying-execution-of-prince-klaas-the-slave-from-ghana-who-planned-to-make-antigua-an-african-state/
  2. ^ a b "You are being redirected..." www.antiguanice.com. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  3. ^ a b c d KESSE (2020-04-14). "Prince Klaas, the Ghanaian rebel slave in Antigua". Ghanaian Museum. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "The horrifying execution of Prince Klaas, the slave from Ghana who planned to make Antigua an African state". Antigua News Room. 2018-11-04. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "The Brutal Execution Of Prince Klaas The Enslaved Ghanaian Who Planned To Make Antigua An African State | Liberty Writers Global". 2021-11-14. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  6. ^ Mike Dash (2 January 2013). "Antigua's Disputed Slave Conspiracy of 1736: Does the evidence against these 44 slaves really stack up?". Smithsonian Magazine. Smithsonian.
  7. ^ Brian Dyde, A History of Antigua, London and Oxford: Macmillan Education, 2000.