Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/1948_Accra_riots> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 52 of
52
with 100 triples per page.
- 1948_Accra_riots abstract "The Accra Riots started on 28 February 1948 in Accra (capital of present-day Ghana, which at the time was the British colony of the Gold Coast), after a protest march by unarmed ex-servicemen was broken up by police, leaving several leaders of the group dead. Among those killed was Sergeant Adjetey, who has since been memorialized in Accra. In January 1948, the Ga chief Nii Kwabena Bonne II had organized a boycott of all European imports in response to their inflated prices, and the 28 February incident is considered \"the straw that broke the camel's back\", marking the beginning of the process of independence for the Gold Coast as Ghana - the first African colony to achieve this.".
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageExternalLink west-africa.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageID "1593764".
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageLength "4687".
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageOutDegree "32".
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageRevisionID "676451994".
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Accra.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Category:1948_in_Gold_Coast_(British_colony).
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Category:1948_riots.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th_century_in_Accra.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Accra.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Category:Riots_and_civil_disorder_in_Ghana.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Christiansborg_Palace.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Colony.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Convention_Peoples_Party.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Corporal_Attipoe.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Ebenezer_Ako-Adjei.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Akufo-Addo.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Emmanuel_Obetsebi-Lamptey.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Ga-Adangbe_people.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Ghana.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Ghana_Regiment.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Gold_Coast_(British_colony).
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Independence.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink J._B._Danquah.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Kwame_Nkrumah.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink List_of_governors_of_the_Gold_Coast.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Myanmar.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Nii_Kwabena_Bonne_II.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Private_Odartey_Lamptey.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Sergeant_Adjetey.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink The_Big_Six_(Ghana).
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink United_Gold_Coast_Convention.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink Watson_Commission.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink William_Ofori_Atta.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageWikiLinkText "1948 Accra riots".
- 1948_Accra_riots wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- 1948_Accra_riots subject Category:1948_in_Gold_Coast_(British_colony).
- 1948_Accra_riots subject Category:1948_riots.
- 1948_Accra_riots subject Category:20th_century_in_Accra.
- 1948_Accra_riots subject Category:History_of_Accra.
- 1948_Accra_riots subject Category:Riots_and_civil_disorder_in_Ghana.
- 1948_Accra_riots comment "The Accra Riots started on 28 February 1948 in Accra (capital of present-day Ghana, which at the time was the British colony of the Gold Coast), after a protest march by unarmed ex-servicemen was broken up by police, leaving several leaders of the group dead. Among those killed was Sergeant Adjetey, who has since been memorialized in Accra.".
- 1948_Accra_riots label "1948 Accra riots".
- 1948_Accra_riots sameAs Q339486.
- 1948_Accra_riots sameAs Accra-Riots.
- 1948_Accra_riots sameAs m.05f4gw.
- 1948_Accra_riots sameAs Neredi_u_Accri_1948..
- 1948_Accra_riots sameAs Q339486.
- 1948_Accra_riots wasDerivedFrom 1948_Accra_riots?oldid=676451994.
- 1948_Accra_riots isPrimaryTopicOf 1948_Accra_riots.