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Research topic: Ouidah

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Ouidah

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ouidah or Whydah , town (1992 pop. 32,474), S Benin, a port on the Gulf of Guinea. It was the capital of a small state founded about the 16th cent. From the early 17th cent., Portuguese, French, and Dutch traders were intermittently active at Ouidah, whose name was derived by Europeans from a nearby Portuguese fort called São João Baptista de Ajudá (St. John of Adjuda). In the 18th and early 19th cent. Ouidah was an important export point for slaves. In the 1840s the French established a substantial trade with Ouidah, exchanging textiles, guns, and gunpowder for palm... Read more
Whydah
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Benin: see Ouidah . Read more
whidah
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology whidah, whydah name of a town (now Ouidah) in Dahomey, W. Africa, applied spec. to animals found in this locality; w. bird (XVIII), alt. of widow-bird , which is based on... Read more

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Voodoo Ceremony - Ouidah, Benin

Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Ouidah: The Social History of a West African Slaving Port, 1727-1892.(Book review)
Magazine article from: The Historian; 6/22/2007
Free Article Contemporary Vodun arts of Ouidah, Benin.
Magazine article from: African Arts; 12/22/2001
Free Article Ouidah; the social history of a West African slaving 'port', 1727-1892.(book)(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 11/1/2005

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