About The Book

Empire. Plunder. Resistance.

The forgotten history of Britain and the Asante gold.

'A compelling, challenging and important book.' William Boyd

1874. Kumasi, the Asante capital, burns. British soldiers prowl the palace, looting as much gold as they can find, before razing it to the ground. In Britain the soldiers are feted as heroes. In 1896 they return, looting the palace a second time and carrying off more gold to London in triumph.

Royalty, aristocracy and London’s most illustrious museums divide the spoils. ‘It is scarcely possible to do justice to the variety and beauty of these specimens,’ The Times declares. There are golden masks, swooping eagles and an exquisitely wrought ram’s head. One mpomponsou – a ceremonial sword – comes wrapped in a leopard skin sheath.

Tracing the course of Britain’s wars with the Asante alongside the course of its plundered relics, Barnaby Phillips weaves a thrilling and poignant tale of imperial ambition and African resistance. Travelling from the Gold Coast to the museum galleries, officers’ mess rooms and aristocratic homes of Britain, The African Kingdom of Gold confronts us with urgent questions about the legacy of Empire and, in particular, how our museums should respond.

About The Author

Barnaby Phillips spent over twenty-five years as a journalist, reporting for the BBC from Mozambique, Angola, Nigeria and South Africa before joining Al Jazeera English. He is the author of Another Man’s War: The Story of a Burma Boy in Britain’s Forgotten African Army and Loot: Britain and the Benin Bronzes. He grew up in Kenya and now lives in London.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Oneworld Publications (April 14, 2026)
  • Length: 416 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781836431336

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Raves and Reviews

'A brilliant work of historical and cultural investigation. A compelling, challenging and important book.' —William Boyd

'MagnificentThe history is laid out with clarity and conviction… What makes the book all the more valuable is its contemporary resonance.' —Tim Butcher, Spectator

'This detailed and well researched book is more than just another chronicle of bad behaviour in Britain’s less than glorious colonial past. Yes, it captures in excruciating detail imperial avarice, but it also beautifully renders the courage and resistance of a people... This is a timely intervention in the ongoing debate over colonial thievery and appropriate restitution.' —Clive Myrie

'What begins in Phillips’s account as the terror of military conquest and the destruction of Asante sovereignty ultimately settles into a quieter, more durable story of the bureaucratic custody of Asante gold... Such retelling is possible only because of Phillips’s meticulous research... He adeptly follows individual objects while keeping the larger category of loot in view.' —Times Literary Supplement

'Phillips's The African Kingdom of Gold is the engrossing and skillfully told story of what happened to the fabled riches of the Asante kingdom... With exemplary attention to detail, Phillips shows that the seizure of Asante treasure was not only, or even primarily, a matter of anarchic and individualised looting.' —Literary Review

'Vividly narrated, judiciously presented.’ —Oldie

'A book that will take your breath away – a story that may make you angry, perhaps sad, but will ultimately leave your heart bursting with vicarious joy – an epic generational tale of a people’s grace, tenacity, and sheer indefatigability.' — Gus Casely-Hayford, director of V&A East

'This carefully researched and compelling read provides an unsettling insight into one important episode in the global criminal enterprise which accompanied Britain's imperial expansion. Barnaby Phillips' book will prove an invaluable tool as we confront the uncomfortable truth of the presence of hoards of stolen treasure in some of our great national institutions. The cry for restitution on the part of the dispossessed cannot be ignored indefinitely and this book illustrates with detailed scholarship the manifest justice of their cause.' —Lord Boateng of Akyem and Wembley, CVO

'The meticulous retracing of the histories of these objects from the colonial era down to the present is impressive... Phillips remains especially alive to the shifting meanings that specific objects take on during their passage through history.' —Apollo

'The African Kingdom of Gold brings together imperial history and material culture, offering a clear view of how the legacy of British imperialism continues to shape what is held, displayed, and contested today.' —Voice Magazine

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