Kpalimé

Kpalimé is a city in the Plateaux Region of Togo, 120 km north of Lomé and 15 km from the border with Ghana. It is the administrative capital of Kloto Prefecture. Kpalimé has a population of 75,084,[1] making it the fourth-biggest town in Togo, after Lomé, Sokodé and Kara. The town has a cathedral, a scientific lycée, and a post-office, as well as several banks, medical centres,[2] pharmacies, cyber-cafés and petrol stations.

Kpalimé
Kpalimé
Location in Togo
Coordinates: 6°54′N 0°38′E
CountryTogo
RegionPlateaux Region
Population
 (2010)
  Total75,084

History

Pre-colonial period (before 1890)

Kpalimé was originally called Agomé-Kpalimé, being one of the villages of the Agomé people. Their origins can probably be traced to Yorubaland in modern Nigeria, and in particular to two cities: Ifè (the religious center) and Oyo (the political and administrative center). Migrants gradually moved west, settling in Kétou (Benin), Tado (Togo), and eventually founding the town of Notsé.

King Agokoli, who ruled Notsé in the early 18th century, was a tyrant. This caused many people to flee, taking refuge in Gamé. There were three main groups of fugitives, one of which was made up of Agomé, Agou, Kpélé, Danyi, Gbi, Peki, Kpando, Matsè and Wodzo people.

Their migration eventually led them to Anidi on Mount Kloto (then named Méléku), which is located 13 km north west of Kpalimé. The Agomé consisted of five clans led by a chief called Tsali. There, they were free to practice activities such as agriculture, hunting, farming, fishing, crafts and trade.

However, it was common for tensions to break out among migrants on their arrival in a new location, and the Agomé were no exception. They quarreled over a goat's head, and since the conflict could not be resolved to everyone's satisfaction, some of the elders decided to leave Anidi and go and live on the plain.

The first group went to live on the lower slopes of the mountain, in a place where the trees were called "Yoti", hence the name Agomé-Yo. The second group settled on a rise at the foot of the Kouma Plateau. This became known as Agomé-Kpodzi. The third group settled in a place they named Agomé-Koussountou. The fourth group crossed the river and founded Agomé-Tomégbé. The fifth group moved to "Mokpalipé", meaning crossroads, and the pronunciation gradually evolved into "Kpalime".

Since those who founded Mokpalipé chose the location for its potential for expansion and communication, it is likely that they made their first settlement in the vicinity of the crossroads near the Kpegolo River on the road to Agomé-Yo. They forced their distant relatives, the Tové Ahoundjo, to cede their territory, which extended from the river to Tsihinou (located behind the current neighborhood of Noumetou Kondji). The Tové Ahoundjo eventually found refuge in their present location on the Lomé-Kpalime road. Later, in order to properly control their vast new territory, the Agomé-Kpalimé decided to move to the middle of it, which is now the Domé neighborhood in the town center.

In their new location, the Agomé-Kpalimé came into contact with Hausa traders who crossed their territory with caravans from Salaga on their way to what is now Keta in Ghana. They learned commerce from them.

The chiefs of Kpalimé are from the Apeto dynasty, who were the first to settle there. However, it is the chief of Agomé-Yo, not Agomé-Kpalimé, who is the paramount chief of the Agomé.[3]

Colonial period (18901960)

The German Cemetery

Until 1880, Kpalimé was a small inland village surrounded by forest. It had no connections to the coast. It was colonization that led to its emergence as a large, inter-connected town. The colonial history of Kpalimé is unusual in that it is one of the few places in Africa that passed from German (1890–1914) to British (1914–1920) and then to French (1920–1960) administration.[3] Malaria and other tropical diseases took their toll on the early colonizers: none of those buried in the German military cemetery lived beyond the age of 35.[4]

In 1890, Jesko von Puttkamer, the German Imperial Commissioner for Togoland, founded the first field station at Misahohè, 9 km from Kpalimé and "five day's march from Lomé". It was a strategic location in the German's "Togo Hinterland Expedition", and was considered the gateway to the north of Togo. The Commissioner had the station named after his former lover, Misa von Esterhazy.

Misahohè's small size and remoteness obliged the German government to invest in nearby Kpalimé by establishing offices, administrative services and a minimum of socio-economic infrastructure. Kpalimé quickly stole the limelight from Misahohè, becoming the regional capital. Located at a crossroads, it attracted many traders. By 1913, there were 39 businesses in Kpalimé, with only eight white employees.

Originally, the town consisted only of four districts: Domé (the center), Avéwin (near the forest), Dzigbé (higher town) and Anigbé (lower town). Domé is the center of the town. Most of the town's extant colonial buildings are in this area. The Germans also invested in road and rail links between Kpalimé and the coast, opening the LoméKpalimé branch of Togo Railways in 1907, with its terminus in the Domé district. At the time, this revolutionized the town, breathing new life into the region's commerce and agriculture. However, the railway has not been functional for many years.

However, the First World War (19141918) was to cut short the German domination of Kpalimé. Moving in across the border from what was then the Gold Coast, the British occupied the town for six years (19141920). They did nothing notable for the development of Kpalimé, preoccupied as they were by the war. Following the Treaty of Versailles (28 June 1919), they ceded the town to the French in 1920.

Set in fertile countryside, Kpalimé was an ideal location for the pre-export storage of crops. This was a major factor in its growth, with the French colonizers giving Kpalimé progressively greater autonomy, with its status changing from "indigenous commune" (1939), to "mixed commune" (1951) and finally "commune" (1959).[3]

Tourism

Countryside near Kpalimé

Kpalimé is a tourist destination for its natural environment and tropical climate. It is a centre for exploring nearby Mount Agou, the highest point in Togo, and Mount Kloto, from which there are distant views of Lake Volta on a clear day.

Waterfall near Kpalimé

In the surrounding countryside there are also several waterfalls (at Tomegbe, Kpoeta, Woatti, Woma, Ykpa, Aklowa, Kpima and Amegape)[5][6] that cascade down from the plateau, coffee and cocoa plantations, and forest trails for bird and butterfly watching.

Other nearby attractions are:

Crafts

Kpalimé market

Kpalimé is Togo's main centre for crafts such as wood sculpture, weaving, wickerwork, decorated calabashes, batiks, painting, pottery, ceramics and mounted butterflies.[12] There are 36 artisanal workshops and retail outlets in the town,[13] and also an artisanal training college.[14]

Food

Kpalimé fruit vendor

Local specialties include palm wine and grilled chicken or fish served with fufu (boiled, pounded yams) and peanut sauce.

Languages

Ewe is the main local language, being a lingua franca for the whole of the south of Togo.[15] However, northern languages such as Kabiye, Nawdm and Tem (Kotokoli) are also widely spoken, as these populations have migrated south. French, the official language of Togo, is spoken by anyone who has been to school.[16]

Misahöhe Forest Reserve

The Misahöhe Forest Reserve is situated in the mountains north-west of Kpalimé, on the border with Ghana (Coordinates: 0° 35.00′ East, 6° 57.00′ North). It covers an area of 5,000 hectares (12,000 acres), and the altitude varies between 250 and 740 metres (820 and 2,430 ft). The reserve consists of steep hillsides supporting semi-deciduous forest dominated by bark cloth and iroko trees. Other species include flat-crown, alstonia, false fig, cola, velvet tamarind, orange milk, African mahogany, macaranga, malacantha, African nutmeg, limba, African bitterwood and Abachi.

The site is the type-locality of the African green tree frog.[17]

Sixty-seven bird species have been recorded in the reserve. It is the type-locality of Baumann's olive greenbul and the olive-green camaroptera. Pallid harriers have been recorded, as have two species of the Sudan–Guinea Savanna biome. It is the only site in Togo from which many forest species have been recorded.[18]

Churches

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Kpalimé (Latin: Kpalimen(sis)) is in the Ecclesiastical province of Lomé. Established in 1994, it has a population of 715,650, of which 295,420 (41.3%) profess to be Catholic. The bishop of the Diocese of Kpalimé is Bishop Benoît Comlan Messan Alowonou (since July 4, 2001).[19] His predecessor was Bishop Pierre Koffi Seshie (July 1, 1994 – April 25, 2000). The Roman Catholic Cathédrale Saint-Esprit was built by the German colonizers in 1913. It is neo-Gothic in style.

Twinning

20th anniversary of the twinning with Bressuire, July 2011

Kpalimé is twinned with:

Notable residents

gollark: I should really see if it has a dark theme or not.
gollark: Hi.
gollark: I agree with actual Arduino boards being rather underpowered and suboptimal given newer alternatives, but being able to stick a microcontroller in and do much of your project's logic in software is easier and more flexible than having dedicated hardware.
gollark: You have a bunch of samples of a thing you want, and two neural networks; one is trained to distinguish real ones from ones the other generates, the other is trained to be able to generate fake ones the other one can't distinguish from real.
gollark: This is just the idea of "generative adversarial networks" in general.

References

  1. Quatrième Recensement Général de la Population et de l'Habitat 2010 (Fourth Population and Housing Census 2010)
  2. "KPALIME (TOGO): kpalime-togo.com: portail web de la ville de Kpalime (Togo) : tourisme à Kpalimé, hotels à Kpalimé, restaurants, services, ecotourisme au Togo, artisanat au Togo, eadministration, ong kpalime, associations kpalime, camps chantiers Togo". kpalime-togo.com. Archived from the original on 2017-07-08.
  3. Administrator. "Presentation de la commune de Kpalime". uct-togo.org. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02.
  4. "Architectural reminders of the German colonial era in Togo". DW.DE.
  5. "KPALIME (TOGO): kpalime-togo.com: portail web de la ville de Kpalime (Togo) : tourisme à Kpalimé, hotels à Kpalimé, restaurants, services, ecotourisme au Togo, artisanat au Togo, eadministration, ong kpalime, associations kpalime, camps chantiers Togo". kpalime-togo.com. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02.
  6. Cascade de Kpalimé. YouTube. 2 February 2007.
  7. Collectif; Auzias, Dominique; Labourdette, Jean-Paul (2010-12-08). Togo 2011-12 (in French). Petit Futé. ISBN 9782746935976.
  8. "Abbaye de l'Ascension de Danyi Dzogbégan-TOGO". abbayedzogbegan.com.
  9. "Architectural reminders of the German colonial era in Togo | All media content | DW.DE | 19.05.2014". Dw.de. 2014-05-19. Retrieved 2015-04-04.
  10. Kpalimé, Château Vial. YouTube. 23 March 2009.
  11. "Château Vial-Château présidentiel : un patrimoine à sauver". Togocultures.com.
  12. "TOGO TOURISME ›› Découvrez Lomé, Aného, Togoville, Kpalimé, Atakpamé, Badou, Sokodé, Kara, Dapaong". Togo-tourisme.com. Archived from the original on 2015-03-18. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
  13. "carte_kpalime_artistes_artisans". Kpalime-togo.com. Archived from the original on 2015-02-14.
  14. "CEAA". Afreak.net.
  15. "Éwé - About World Languages". aboutworldlanguages.com. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  16. "Togo". Axl.cefan.ulaval.ca. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  17. "Hyperolius baumanni Ahl, 1931 - Amphibian Species of the World". research.amnh.org. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  18. "Birdlife Data Zone". Birdlife.org.
  19. Albert Komlan Gblokpor. "Diocese de Kpalime". diocesedekpalime.tg.
  20. "KPALIME (TOGO): kpalime-togo.com: portail web de la ville de Kpalime (Togo) : tourisme à Kpalimé, hotels à Kpalimé, restaurants, services, ecotourisme au Togo, artisanat au Togo, eadministration, ong kpalime, associations kpalime, camps chantiers Togo". kpalime-togo.com. Archived from the original on 2016-10-19.
  21. "Dr. Jean Berlie". Migration Control. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  22. "Proverse Hong Kong - Jean A.Berlie". Proversepublishing.com. Retrieved 2016-08-11.

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