Republic of Dahomey

Republic of Dahomey
République du Dahomey

1958–1975
Flag Coat of arms
Anthem
L'Aube Nouvelle  (French)
The Dawn of a New Day
Capital Porto-Novo
Languages French
Government Republic
Historical era Cold War
   Self-governing colony 11 December 1958
  Independence 1 August 1960
   Renamed 30 November 1975
Currency CFA franc
Today part of  Benin

The Republic of Dahomey (French: République du Dahomey) was established on December 11, 1958, as a self-governing colony within the French Community. Prior to attaining autonomy it had been French Dahomey, part of the French Union. On August 1, 1960, it attained full independence from France.

In 1975, the country was renamed Benin after the Bight of Benin (which was in turn named after the Benin Empire which had its seat of power in Benin City, modern day Nigeria), since "Benin" was deemed politically neutral for all ethnic groups in the state, whereas "Dahomey" recalled the Fon-dominated Kingdom of Dahomey.

In film

Dahomey was chosen for some of the filming locations in the film The Comedians, with an all-star cast that included Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, Lillian Gish, James Earl Jones, Roscoe Lee Brown, Alec Guinness, Raymond St. Jacques, Gloria Foster, Zakes Mokae, Paul Ford, Georg Stanford Brown, Peter Ustinov, Douta Seck and Cicely Tyson. The movie is the story of an adulterous affair placed against the backdrop of Haiti during the tumultuous dictatorship of François Duvalier, (known as "Papa Doc"). Dahomey resembled Haiti in many ways, both geographically and culturally, and it was safer to film there than in Haiti.

See also

Coordinates: 6°28′N 2°36′E / 6.467°N 2.600°E / 6.467; 2.600


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