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THE MAKING OF HISTORY IN COLONIAL HAUTE VOLTA: BORDER CONFLICTS BETWEEN TWO MOOSE CHIEFTAINCIES, 1900–1940

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 1999

MARK BREUSERS
Affiliation:
University of Amsterdam

Abstract

When, in 1896, the Moose kingdoms of contemporary Burkina Faso were incorporated in the colony of Haute Volta, a period of sometimes extreme hardship began for their population as the French colonizers introduced head taxes, forced labour and military recruitment, and, during the 1920s, a programme of forced cotton cultivation. The repressive colonial regime and the concomitant ‘pacification’ of the Haute Volta triggered two major migratory movements among the Moose. First, today's massive migration of Moose towards Côte d'Ivoire is generally understood to have been initiated by forced recruitment during colonial times. Until the eve of Haute Volta's independence in 1960, ‘voluntary’ long-distance migration was mainly directed towards the British Gold Coast and has been explained in terms of either the Moose's need to earn a monetary income to pay taxes or their attempts to escape the repressive French colonial regime. The latter also predominates in explanations of the second migratory movement which was towards the so-called aires-refuges: less controlled areas, situated at the margins of the Moose kingdoms and offering places to hide from colonial exactions. The relatively high population densities in the Moose kingdoms and the space-consuming land use practices are often cited as subsidiary causes.

Type
Border Conflict and Chiefly Power
Copyright
© 1999 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

I wish to thank Jan den Ouden and Norman Long for their comments on previous versions of this paper, and Caroline Grumiau, both for her comments and her help in studying the colonial archives in Kaya. I also express my gratitude to the editors of this journal and the anonymous referees for their comments and advice. The Ph.D. research on which this paper is based was part of a wider research programme on sustainable land use in the Soudano-Sahel region and was funded by the Wageningen Agricultural University. Fieldwork was conducted in 1994–5 in the village of Ziinoogo (the name is fictive), located on the western border of the present-day province of Sanmatenga which corresponds more or less with the territory of the kingdoms of Boussouma and Mané (see Maps 1 and 2; see also M. Breusers, ‘On the move: mobility, land use and livelihood practices on the Central plateau in Burkina Faso’ (Ph.D. thesis, Wageningen Agricultural University, 1998)).