Togoville 

Togoville
Togoville (Togo)
Togoville
Togoville
Location in Togo
Coordinates: 6°14′N 1°29′E / 6.233, 1.483
Country Togo
Region Centrale Region

Togoville is a town in southern Togo, lying on the northern shore of Lake Togo. It was originally known as Togo. The country took its name from the town when Gustav Nachtigal signed a treaty with the town's chief, Mlapa III, in 1884,1 from which Germany claimed overlordship over what became Togo.2

The main features of the town are Togoville Cathedral, built in 1910, and a shrine to the Virgin Mary to mark where she is said to have appeared on 7 November in the early 1970s, but there are also numerous voodoo shrines and the former royal palace. In June 1984, a monument commemorating the 100th anniversary of the treaty was erected.1

References

  1. ^ a b Cleere, Henry (2005). Archaeological Heritage Management in the Modern World, Routledge. pp. 123. ISBN 0415214483. 
  2. ^ Ebeku, Kaniye S. A (2005). The Succession of Faure Gnassingbe to the Togolese Presidency: An International Law Perspective, Stylus Publishing. pp. 7. ISBN 9171065547. 

Coordinates: 6°14′N 1°29′E / 6.233, 1.483

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