revised August 18, 2006



DVDs on African art by Christopher Roy:
African Pottery Techniques
African Masks: Burkina Faso
African Art in Motion
Art as Verb in Africa

Burkina Faso Information

Art of Burkina Faso, by Christopher D. Roy

Map of Burkina Faso with the peoples discussed in "Art and Life in Africa" CD-ROM marked

General Information for Burkina Faso

Country:

Burkina Faso

Location:

West Africa

Independence:

August 5,1960

Nationality:

Burkinabè

Capital City:

Ouagadougou (wa-ga-doo-goo)

Population:

11,946,065

Important Cities:

Bobo-Dioulasso, Ouahigouya, Koudougou, Banfora

Head of State:

Blaise Compaore

Area:

274,200 sq.km.

Type of Government:

Parliamentary Republic

Currency:

500 CFAF=1 USD

Major peoples:

Mossi,Gurunsi,Senufo,Lobi,Bobo,Fulani

Religion:

Muslim 50%, African religion 40%, Christian 10%

Climate:

Tropical (dry from October to May, wet from May to October)

Literacy:

19.2%

Official Language:

French

Principal Languages:

More, Dioula, Fulfulde

Major Exports:

Cotton, Gold, Animal Products

Pre-Colonial History

The history of the region before the arrival of the French in 1897 is dominated by the Mossi people, who established the Mossi Empire in the basin of the Volta Rivers in 1500 and dominated the region through the use of the horse as a weapon of war. Because of their military strength, the Mossi played an important role in the western Sudan area of west Africa in the period up to the end of the 19th century. They were able to maintain an area free of conflict in which crafts people were able to create trade goods for distribution throughout the area, and they were ably to maintain free and open lines of trade between major trade centers. Like other powerful peoples they participated in the slave trade, raiding weaker neighboring peoples and shipping their captives south to the Atlantic coast, whence many were shipped to Brazil. Throughout the period the Mossi maintained close ties to the Asante to the south in Ghana and maintained mutual non-aggression treaties with their neighbors to the south.

Post-Colonial History

The legacy of French colonialism from 1897 to 1960 was one of conscious underdevelopment. Burkina Faso is the second most densely populated country in Black Africa and was used as a source of human labor by the French for their rich plantations and factories in the Cote_d'Ivoire. The French consciously chose not to develop industry in Burkina Faso to force labor to seek work in Côte d'Ivoire, and they refused to develop an infrastructure, especially roads, that would compete with the railroad they had constructed to supply labor to the coast. In the years since independence a number of foreign governments as well as the United Nations and the European Economic Union have attempted with considerable success to reverse this underdevelopment with the paving of roads and the construction of factories, especially the large textile mill in Koudougou. The history of political change has been one of struggle between forces for democratization, with occasional free elections, and the military, which has used the excuse of corruption to seize power from the civilian government. There has been a constant struggle by representatives of the less numerous ethnic minorities to maintain some measure of power in balance of the size and power of the Mossi majority. In 1983 a coup d'etat brought a government to power under Thomas Sankara. In 1987 Sankara was assasinated and Blaise Campaore came to power. There has been political satbility under Compaore. Over the past twenty years the capital, Ouagadougou (wa-ga-doo-goo), has been transformed from a picturesque mud-brick village to a pleasant, clean, fairly prosperous city with good hotels and restaurants and dependible infrastructure. Like Ghana, just to the south, the country is culturaly rich and very pleasant to visit. One of the most pleasant (but not expensive) hotels is the Hotel Splendide in Ouaga.