The 'Gold Coast' was the region of
West Africa which is now the nation of
Ghana. It was to the east of the
Ivory Coast and to the west of the
Slave Coast. It was first colonised by the
Portuguese, with the
Portuguese Gold Coast first settled in 1482. In 1642 this became part of the
Dutch Gold Coast, which had been colonised by the
Dutch since 1598. The Dutch stayed in the region until 1871, when the last of their settlements were taken over by the
British Gold Coast. There was also the
Brandenburger Gold Coast which established a colony in the area in 1682, which later became the Prussian Gold Coast, and was then sold to the Dutch in 1721. The
Swedish also had settlements in the area, with the
Swedish Gold Coast established in 1650, but seized by
Denmark in 1663, and made part of the
Danish Gold Coast. The Danes had been in the gold coast since 1658, and in 1850 all of the settlements became part of the British gold coast.
The British had taken over all of the gold coast by 1871. They captured more territory inland in the late nineteenth century after the
Ashanti wars. The nation of
Ghana made from the former Gold Coast territory, was one of the first European colonies to become independent, in
1956.