- Naa
Gbewaa (also
known as
Nedega or Kulu Gbagha) is the
founder of the
Kingdom of Dagbon, in what is now
northern Ghana. His sons and
daughters are credited...
-
Gbewaa Palace is the seat of the Yaa Naa of the
Kingdom of Dagbon.
Located at
Nayilifong along the Yendi-Saboba road in Yendi,
Gbewaa Palace was named...
- Nigeria, and in the Mali Empire.
Gbewaa would later establish Dagbon in present-day
northern Ghana.
Before Naa
Gbewaa,
Dagbon was
composed of
small decentralised...
- II at the sod-cutting of the
Gbewaa Palace Redevelopment Project". GhanaWeb. 1970-01-01.
Retrieved 2023-10-25. "
Gbewaa palace reconstruction; Ya-Naa...
-
originally extended to
refer to
other related peoples who were
unified by Naa
Gbewaa including the
Mamprusi and Nanumba. The
Dagomba country is
called Dagbon[need...
-
within present-day Ghana. The
current Yaa Naa is
Gariba II. The Lion of
Gbewaa is the
totemic symbol of the Yaa Naa. The Konkomba, Bimoba, Chekosi, Basaari...
- of
Burkina Faso. She was a
famous warrior precious for her father, Naa
Gbewaa or Nedega, the
founder of the
kingdom of Dagbon, now in
present day Ghana...
-
Tindaamba (singular: tindana).
These decentralised states were
unified by King
Gbewaa, who
lived a long life, and
formed a stable,
peaceful society.
Dagbon extended...
-
Gbewaa never died but
simply vanished into the ground. The
shrine was
thought to have been
built in the 14th
century in
commemoration of Naa
Gbewaa,...
-
people are
located primarily in
Burkina Faso
while Dagbon is in Ghana. Naa
Gbewaa Thomas Sankara Aliu
Mahama Blaise Compaoré
Haruna Iddrisu Maurice Yaméogo...