Which Asafo flag is better?
Option 1
Option 2
Flag Wars Bonus Round

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Indonesia

seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from Martinique

seen from Italy
seen from Germany
seen from Morocco

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Morocco
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seen from Italy

seen from Kyrgyzstan
seen from Germany
seen from Singapore
Which Asafo flag is better?
Option 1
Option 2
Flag Wars Bonus Round
Most of the enslaved Africans brought to Barbados were from the Bight of Biafra (62,000 Africans), the Gold Coast (59,000 Africans), and the Bight of Benin (45,000 Africans).[2] Other African slaves came from Central Africa (29,000 slaves), Senegambia (14,000 Africans), the Windward Coast (13,000 slaves) and from Sierra Leone (9,000 slaves).
Africans from the Bight of Biafra were primarily Igbo, Ibibio and Efik; Africans from the Gold Coast were primarily Akan; Africans from the Bight of Benin were primarily Yoruba, Ewe and Fon; and Africans from Central Africa were primarily Kongo
I’m originally from Igbo – US singer Rihanna opens up
Forbes’ wealthiest female singer, Rihanna, has disclosed that she is originally an Igbo woman.
Igbo is one of the dominant tribes in Nigeria, and the singer and brand influencer said her mother told her so.
Forbes recently named Rihanna a billionaire and she was officially recognised one of the wealthiest female musicians in the world.
Rihanna’s net worth is estimated at $1.7 billion while still receiving almost $1.4 billion from her beauty cosmetics l
Rihanna’s other fortune comes from her lingerie company Fenti, which is worth another $270 million, among other businesses.
Her mother is an Afro-Guyanese, while her father is a Barbadian of African and Irish descent.
She said: “My mom told me that I am originally an Igbo woman. Igbo is a tribe in Africa,” the singer said in a recent interview and has trended in Nigeria’s social media space for many hours.
Many Nigerians on social media, especially those from the Igbo tribe are now asking her to return to her roots, while others hailed her for coming out with the revelation.
Rihanna also has two brothers, Rorrey and Rajad Fenty.
"Sarebbe tornata di sera, perché per me era come un animale notturno. Non l'avevo mai vista di giorno e l'aspettavo come si aspetta la Luna."
- J. Fante
Here’s my slight redesign of Nyame! Hope you like em!
I am begging u to draw more of that fante guy
Here he is
A Fante lady from Ghana 🇬🇭
A postcard from Saltpond (Ghana) dated 1902
Commemorative Head (Mma), Fante, 1775, Art Institute of Chicago: Arts of Africa
Akan sculpture in terracotta (mma; plural, mmaa) is a significant part of the corpus of artworks dedicated to leadership. The genre is also the earliest to be documented by European visitors to the Ghanaian coast. The Dutch explorer Pieter de Marees described the setting and function of these clay images among the Fante in 1604, noting their exclusive royal affiiation. Later the use of terracotta spread to a broader segment of Fante society even though it retained its association with the elite.It is likely that this terracotta head of a woman with an elaborate coiffure originally rested atop a pot lid. Such terracotta sculptures were made to serve a strictly funerary purpose, honoring as well as commemorating the dead. This head may represent a deceased woman. It may have stood alone or have been part of a group of figures. The Akan belief that this world and the next are parallel spheres, and particularly that rank and status in life can carry over into the afterlife, explains why several figures rather than single images were considered most appropriate to commemorate important personages.Among the Akan, a multistepped ritual articulated this essential connection between the dead, works of art, and the community. The manufacture of clay portraits of the deceased often took place as part of second burial ceremonies, which were intended to settle the spirit in the afterlife and to place it within the constant reach of living relatives. This was the domain of elderly women who were long past childbearing age, and the artistic process took place amid a rite designed to anchor the spirit of the deceased long enough for his or her true likeness to be captured in clay. The artist needed the powers of clairvoyance to accomplish this feat.Following its completion, the figure was transported in a public procession to a site in the forest reserved by the family or lineage. There it would be deposited with further rituals. In the past, such images were deposited, along with an array of grave goods, including diverse pottery with distinct utilitarian functions. Periodically, offerings of food, liquor, and water would be made at the site because Akan people believed that spirits honored in this way were spiritually capable of assisting living family members in times of crisis.Fired clay figurines are still used in some Akan communities, although on a significantly limited scale. This may be the result of the increased use of photography among these people. If such images were indeed perceived as portraits, then photographs of the deceased could be seen as prestigious and expedient replacements for them. –Revised from Nii Otokunor Quarcoopome, “Art of the Akan,” African Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, Museum Studies, vol. 23, no. 2 (1997), pp. 135-147. Gift of Dr. Robert Laff Size: 24.7 x 17.7 x 15.8 cm (9 3/4 x 7 x 6 1/4 in.) Medium: Blackened terracotta
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/135539/