Both the Dutch and the British form…
1684 CE to 1827 CE
Both the Dutch and the British form companies to advance their African ventures and to protect their coastal establishments.
The Dutch West India Company operates throughout most of the eighteenth century.
The British African Company of Merchants, founded in 1750, is the successor to several earlier organizations of this type.
These enterprises build and man new installations as the companies pursue their trading activities and defend their respective jurisdictions with varying degrees of government backing.
There are short-lived ventures by the Swedes and the Prussians.
Locations
Groups
Dutch people
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Danes (Scandinavians)
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Ga-Adangme
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Akan people
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Portuguese people
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Fante people
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Ewe people
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English people
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Swedes (Scandinavians)
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Portuguese Empire
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Portuguese Gold Coast
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Gold Coast, Portuguese
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Denmark-Norway, Kingdom of
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Swedish Empire
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Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
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Gold Coast, Dutch
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Brandenburg-Prussia
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Dutch West India Company
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Gold Coast, Swedish
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Gold Coast, Danish
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England, (Stewart, Restored) Kingdom of
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Royal African Company
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Gold Coast Settlements, Prussian
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Gold Coast, Brandenburger
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England, (Orange and Stewart) Kingdom of
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England, (Stuart) Kingdom of
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Britain, Kingdom of Great
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