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・ John C. Wilson
・ John C. Wobensmith
・ John C. Wood
・ John C. Woods
・ John C. Wright (author)
・ John C. Wright (comptroller)
・ John C. Wright (politician)
・ John C. Young
・ John C. Yuille
・ John C. Zacharis First Book Award
・ John C. Zak
・ John C. Zimmerman, Sr.
・ John C.C. May
・ John C.S. Lui
・ John Cabello
John Cabess
・ John Cabot
・ John Cabot Academy
・ John Cabot Catholic Secondary School
・ John Cabot House
・ John Cabot University
・ John Cabrera
・ John Cacavas
・ John Cadbury
・ John Caddell
・ John Caddy
・ John Cade
・ John Cade (antiquarian)
・ John Cade (disambiguation)
・ John Caden


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John Cabess : ウィキペディア英語版
John Cabess

John Cabess (also written as John Kabes or John Cabes) (c. 1640s-1722) was a prominent African trader in the port city of Komenda, part of the Eguafo Kingdom, in modern-day Ghana. He was a major British ally and was a supplier to the British Royal African Company. As a trader, he became a strong economic and political force in the coastal region in the early 1700s, playing an active role in the Komenda Wars, the rise of the Ashanti Empire, the expansion of British involvement in West Africa, and the beginnings of large-scale Atlantic slave trade. Because of his combined economic and political power, historian Kwame Daaku named Cabess one of the "merchant princes" of the Gold Coast in the 1700s. He died in 1722, but his heirs continued to exert economic power in the port for the remainder of the 18th century.
==Background==
John Cabess was born sometime in the 1640s or 1650s. It is believed that he was the son of John Cabessa, who had been a prominent African official working for the British at Fort Amsterdam in the 1660s. The older Cabessa was most noted in British reports for committing suicide rather than become a captive while the Dutch were attacking Fort Amsterdam.
The city of Komenda, part of the Kingdom of Eguafo, had become a major trade port in the later parts of the 17th century. The British and French wanted to get a foothold in the port in order to break the Dutch monopoly over trade in the Gold Coast. The Dutch, in contrast simply saw it as a secondary port to support its other operations in the area. In this situation, Cabess moved to Komenda in the 1670s to work with the British attempts to establish trade relationships in the port. The primary African merchant to the British in the port was a trader named Captain Bracon in the 1670s; however, by 1686, Cabess had taken over this position.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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