Oral traditions and settlement According to
F. K. Buah, Twifo oral traditions maintain that their ancestors migrated from the
Bono state through the
Adansi region before settling near the
Ofin and later the
Pra, establishing themselves around
Hemang. Over time, other Akan groups joined them, and many of these arrivals adopted the Twifo identity. By the seventeenth century the Twifo were among the earliest states established in the
Central Region. Their settlement predates most other Akan states in the area, and they gradually absorbed groups such as Mokwaa, Hemang, and Afutuakwa, who were of
Etsi origin.
Regional role in the seventeenth century European sources from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries identified Twifo as one of the major inland gold-producing states. Dutch accounts recorded the kingdom under various names, including
Kuiforo and
Cuffroo. By the mid-seventeenth century, Twifo-Heman was a prominent inland town and market center, integrated into the north–south caravan trade that linked the forest zone to the Atlantic coast.
Akani trading caravans passed through Twifo en route to inland mining districts and coastal markets, linking it to wider regional commerce. During this period Twifo came under pressure from larger inland powers. In 1658–1659 the state fought wars with
Assin that disrupted regional commerce. By the later seventeenth century they were subordinated to
Denkyira, which dominated the
Pra basin. Denkyira’s tribute demands were heavy: in 1700 it invaded Twifo and forced King Akafo to pay over £800 in gold. After Denkyira’s defeat by the
Asante Empire at the
Battle of Feyiase in 1701, Twifo joined other Denkyira tributaries in blocking arms supplies to their former overlord and subsequently aligned with Asante.
Conflicts and alliances Twifo played a major role in the
Komenda Wars. In 1690 the Dutch signed a defensive alliance with Twifo, promising munitions worth about £640 and protection for their “property, women and children.” English agents attempted to hire Twifo armies for £2,400, but were unsuccessful. In 1693 the Dutch made payments to prevent a Twifo–Komenda war, and in 1694 they attempted to bribe Twifo armies to attack Komenda, drawing Twifo into the wider conflict. When Komenda blocked Dutch access to the interior, Twifo fought alongside the Dutch until defeated in 1695, when English-backed forces drove away Twifo and Kabes Terra soldiers. Relations with coastal brokers remained complex. In 1703 Dutch records noted that Twifo traders were being obstructed from reaching Elmina by Komenda intermediaries, while English officials spread rumors of Twifo cooperation with Ashanti against the Dutch forts. In the same year Kurankyi of Akanni attacked Twifo, killing King Amba, before negotiating with the Dutch to reopen the trade routes. By the 1710s, Twifo was part of a shifting anti-Asante bloc with Denkyira, Akyem, and Agona. In 1715–1716 Twifo clashed with John Kabes of Komenda in disputes over pawned individuals and trade rights. The conflict escalated into ambushes and seizures, halting commerce until the
Asantehene mediated a settlement. The same year, Twifo forces took part in the Asante–Wassa campaign against Aowin, helping to impose a fine of £2,000 and several slaves on the defeated Aowin rulers. European accounts described Twifo at this time as a “scattered nation” that lived by raiding and plunder, often blocking trading paths and seizing merchants. Throughout the late 1710s Twifo continued to exploit regional instability. Along with Wassa and Aowin, they raided Ashanti villages in 1719–1721, enslaving captives and selling them to the coast. At other times Twifo supplied auxiliaries to Asante armies, as in the 1726 campaign against Wassa led by Kodwo Abbe Tekki. Twifo alliances extended to the coast. At times they cooperated with the
Fante Confederacy, intercepting
Asante traders attempting to reach European forts directly. Later, however, Fante support for Assin in its disputes with Twifo limited Dutch willingness to provide direct military aid to their Twifo allies. In the mid-eighteenth century Twifo also entered into broader coalitions: by the 1740s they allied with
Wassa and
Fante against Asante expansion, and by 1765 a new Fante–Wassa–Twifo coalition sought to block Asante access to western trade routes.
Nineteenth century and fragmentation During the eighteenth century Twifo alternated between conflict and alliance with the
Coastal Coalition polities. At times it joined Fante, Wassa, and Akyem in resisting Asante expansion southwards. Twifo also lay along one of the most important north–south trade corridors: markets at
Twifo Praso and
Assin Manso became key entrepôts for slaves purchased from
Asante and resold to merchants bound for
Anomabo,
Cape Coast, and
Elmina. These markets tied Twifo directly into the transatlantic slave trade during its peak in the eighteenth century. Despite its strategic role, Twifo remained vulnerable to larger powers. European observers described it as a small state “living by plunder,” often blocking or taxing caravans moving through its territory. In 1719–1721 Twifo joined Wassa and Aowin in raiding Ashanti villages, selling captives at the coast, which deepened tensions with Kumasi. Although it occasionally aided Asante armies, such as in the 1726 campaign against Wassa, Twifo’s tributary status was marked by frequent revolts and shifting loyalties. In the early nineteenth century, facing renewed Asante dominance, Twifo leaders seceded from the Asante alliance. During the Anglo–Asante wars of 1823–1826 they aligned with the
British Empire, further weakening Asante control over the southern forest. By the mid-nineteenth century, the centralized Twifo polity had fragmented into semi-autonomous divisions, though the broader Twifo identity persisted. These divisions—including
Twifo Hemang,
Twifo Mampong,
Tufoe, and
Twifo-Atti Morkwa—retained local authority under the framework of
British colonial administration. == Society ==