Location: |
Central Burkina
Faso |
Population: |
3.5 million |
Language: |
Moré (Voltaic) |
Neighboring Peoples: |
Dogon, Kurumba, Gourmantche, Gurunsi,
Bisa, Dagomba, Sisala |
Types of Art: |
The Mossi make both political art and spiritual art. Figures are used
by the ruling class to validate political power, and masks are used by the
conquered peoples to control the forces of nature. Each year at the annual
celebrations of the royal ancestors, figures of the deceased kings are
displayed. On many occasions each year, especially during the long dry
season from October to May, masks appear to honor the spirits of nature
that control the forces of the environment The several mask styles reflect
the diversity of the population before the 15th century invasion. Long
tall masks in the north are made by the descendants of the conquered Dogon
population, while red, white, and black animal masks in the southwest are
made by descendants of the conquered Gurunsi peoples. |
History: |
The Mossi states were created about 1500 A.D., when bands of horsemen
rode north from what is now northern Ghana into the basin of the Volta
River and conquered several less powerful peoples, including Dogon, Lela,
Nuna, and Kurumba. These were integrated into a new society call Mossi,
with the invaders as chiefs and the conquered as commoners. The emperor of
the Mossi is the Moro Naba, who lives in the ancient and contemporary
capital, Ouagadougou. In the centuries between 1500 and 1900 the Mossi
were a major political and military force in the bend of the Niger River
and were effective in resisting the movements of Muslim Fulani armies
across the Sudan area of west Africa. In 1897 the first French military
explorers arrived in the area and staked French colonial claims. During
the sixty years of French colonial rule the Mossi population was exploited
as a source of human labor for French plantations in Côte d'Ivoire. In
1960 Burkina Faso gained its independence from the French. The first
elected president Ouezzin Coulibaly was succeeded by Maurice Yameogo, a
Mossi. In 1967 a coup-d'état put in place a military government that has
ruled with infrequent change ever since. |
Economy: |
The Mossi are primarily farmers, raising millet, sorghum, maize,
sesame, peanuts, and indigo. The latter three are cash crops that are
raised for export. Large numbers of Mossi live in the urban centers of
Ouagadougou, Ouahigouya, Kaya, Yako, Koudougou. During the colonial period
the French exercised a policy of deliberate underdevelopment intended to
force Mossi laborers to leave their homes following the harvest and
migrate by the French-built railroad to Côte d'Ivoire where they worked in
French-owned factories and plantations. From the founding of the Mossi
states to the present the economy of Burkina Faso and of the Mossi
benefitted from their position astride major trade routes between the
forest and the desert and from the open trade policies of the government
surrounded by countries such as Ghana and Mali which restricted
trade. |
Political Systems: |
The Mossi are unique in Burkina Faso for their centralized and
hierarchical political system. The nakomse are the ruling class and are
directed descendants of the first invaders from the south. At the apex of
political hierarchy is the emperor (Moro Naba), whose palace is in
Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso. Chiefs (nabas) rule over each of
the regions of Mossi country and pay homage to the emperor. Each chief
presides over a political hierarchy of local officials who are responsible
for raising armies, levying taxes, etc. The nyonyose are the descendants
of the conquered peoples who lived in the region before the Mossi
arrived. |
Religion: |
The descendants of the conquered farmers (nyonyose) honor nature
spirits that provide them with supernatural power to control the weather,
disease, crop failure, and general well-being. These are the "invented
spirits" that become important as the congregation faces a particular
affliction and which decrease in influence as the problem is solved. These
spirits are often represented by masks and figures that make them visible
and concrete. The spirits themselves provide, through the diviner, the
religious laws that govern the community and so provide a system of sacred
rule. The creator god Wennam is associated with the sun and with the
political hierarchy (nakomse). The spiritual power of the nyonyose based
on nature spirits is in direct opposition to the secular power of the
nakomse based on the horse and associated with the sun. Among the most
important religious celebrations are annual sacrifices to honor the
memories of the royal ancestors, when each and every male head of a
household reaffirms his dependence on the benevolence of the chief and his
ancestors for health and well-being of his family. |