King Agaja

E347824

King Agaja was an 18th-century ruler of the West African Kingdom of Dahomey, known for expanding its territory, centralizing power, and intensifying its role in the Atlantic slave trade.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
King Agaja canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historical figure
king
monarch
ruler of Dahomey
alsoKnownAs Agaja
surface form: Agaja Trudo
capitalOfRealm Abomey
century 18th century
conflictedWith Oyo Empire
conquered Kingdom of Allada
Kingdom of Whydah
continentRuledIn Africa
countryRuled Kingdom of Dahomey
deathCentury 18th century
dynasty Houegbadja dynasty
engagedWith English traders
European slave traders
French traders
Portuguese traders
ethnicContext Fon people
expandedTerritoryTo Allada
Whydah
father Houegbadja
governmentTypeUnderRule centralized monarchy
historicalRegion Bight of Benin
involvedIn Atlantic slave trade
knownFor centralization of royal authority
conflicts with coastal kingdoms
involvement in the Atlantic slave trade
military conquests
reforms of Dahomean administration
territorial expansion of Dahomey
legacy association with the growth of the slave trade in the Bight of Benin
formation of Dahomey as a regional power
modernCountryLocation Benin
name Agaja
placeOfRule Abomey
policy centralization of power under the king
integration of conquered territories into Dahomey
state control over coastal trade routes
predecessor Akaba
regionRuledIn West Africa
reignEnd c. 1740
reignStart c. 1718
religiousContext traditional West African religion
strengthened Dahomey army
surface form: royal army of Dahomey

royal bureaucracy of Dahomey
successor Tegbesu
used war captives as slaves for export

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kingdom of Dahomey notableRuler King Agaja
Kingdom of Dahomey expandedUnder King Agaja