Félix Houphouët-Boigny

President

Birthday October 18, 1908

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Yamoussoukro, French West Africa

DEATH DATE 1993-12-7, Yamoussoukro, Ivory Coast (88 years old)

Nationality Ivory Coast

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1898

Houphouët-Boigny had two elder sisters, Faitai (1898?–1998) and Adjoua (d. 1987), as well as a younger brother Augustin (d. 1939).

The French colonial administration recognised tribal leaders; they arranged to have Houphouët go to school at the military post in Bonzi, not far from his village, to prepare for his future as a leader, despite strenuous objections from relatives, especially his great-aunt Queen Yamousso.

1905

Félix Houphouët-Boigny (18 October 1905 – 7 December 1993), affectionately called Papa Houphouët or Le Vieux ("The Old One"), was an Ivorian politician and physician who served as the first president of Ivory Coast from 1960 until his death in 1993.

A tribal chief, he worked as a medical aide, union leader, and planter before being elected to the French Parliament.

According to his official biography, Houphouët-Boigny was probably born on 18 October 1905, in Yamoussoukro to a family of hereditary chiefs of the Baoulé people.

Unofficial accounts, however, place his birth date up to seven years earlier.

Born into the animist Akouès tribe, he was named Dia Houphouët: his first name Dia means "prophet" or "magician".

His father was N'Doli Houphouët.

Dia Houphouët was the great-nephew through his mother of Queen Yamousso and the village chief, Kouassi N'Go.

1910

When N'Go was murdered in 1910, Dia was named to succeed him as chief.

Due to his young age, his stepfather Gbro Diby ruled as regent until Dia came of age; Dia's father had already died.

Houphouët-Boigny descended from tribal chiefs through his mother, Kimou N'Dri (also known as N'Dri Kan).

1915

In 1915, he was transferred to the école primaire supérieure (secondary) at Bingerville in spite of his family's reluctance to have him go to boarding school.

The same year, at Bingerville, Houphouët converted to Christianity; he considered it a modern religion and an obstacle to the spread of Islam.

He chose to be christened Félix.

1919

First in his class, Houphouët was accepted into the École normale supérieure William Ponty in 1919, and earned a teaching degree.

1921

In 1921, he attended the École de médecine de l'AOF (French West Africa School of Medicine) in French Senegal, where he came first in his class in 1925 and qualified as a medical assistant.

As he never completed his studies in medicine, he could qualify only as a médecin africain, a poorly paid doctor.

1925

On 26 October 1925, Houphouët began his career as a doctor's aide at a hospital in Abidjan, where he founded an association of indigenous medical personnel.

This undertaking proved short-lived as the colonial administration viewed it unsympathetically, considering it a trade union.

1927

As a consequence, they decided to move Houphouët to a lesser hospital in Guiglo on 27 April 1927.

1929

After he proved his considerable talents, however, he was promoted on 17 September 1929 to a post in Abengourou, which until then had been reserved for Europeans.

1936

She died much later in 1936.

Doubts remain as to the identity of his father, N'Doli.

Officially a native of the N'Zipri of Didiévi tribe, N'Doli Houphouët died shortly after the birth of his son Augustin, although no reliable information regarding his death exists.

1960

He served in several ministerial positions within the French government before leading Ivory Coast following independence in 1960.

Throughout his life, he played a significant role in politics and the decolonisation of Africa.

Under Houphouët-Boigny's politically moderate leadership, Ivory Coast prospered economically.

This success, uncommon in poverty-ridden West Africa, became known as the "Ivorian miracle"; it was due to a combination of sound planning, the maintenance of strong ties with the West (particularly France) and development of the country's significant coffee and cocoa industries.

1966

He aided the conspirators who ousted Kwame Nkrumah from power in Ghana in 1966, took part in the failed coup against Mathieu Kérékou in Benin in 1977, was suspected of involvement in the 1987 coup d'état that removed Thomas Sankara from power in Burkina Faso and provided assistance to UNITA, a United States-supported, anti-communist rebel movement in Angola.

1969

Houphouët-Boigny maintained a strong anti-communist foreign policy, which resulted in, among other things, severing diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union in 1969 (after first establishing relations in 1967) and refusing to recognise the People's Republic of China until 1983.

1980

However, reliance on the agricultural sector caused difficulties in 1980, after a sharp drop in the prices of coffee and cocoa.

Throughout his presidency, Houphouët-Boigny maintained a close relationship with France, a policy known as Françafrique, and he built a close friendship with Jacques Foccart, the chief adviser on African policy in the de Gaulle and Pompidou regimes.

1986

He re-established relations with the Soviet Union in 1986.

In the West, Houphouët-Boigny was commonly known as the "Sage of Africa" or the "Grand Old Man of Africa".

Houphouët-Boigny moved the country's capital from Abidjan to his hometown of Yamoussoukro and built the world's largest church there, the Basilica of Our Lady of Peace, at a cost of US$300 million.

At the time of his death, he was the longest-serving leader in Africa's history and the third longest-serving leader in the world after Fidel Castro of Cuba and Kim Il Sung of North Korea.

1989

In 1989, UNESCO created the Félix Houphouët-Boigny Peace Prize for the "safeguarding, maintaining and seeking of peace".

After his death, conditions in Ivory Coast quickly deteriorated.

1994

Between 1994 and 2002, there were a number of coups, a devaluation of the CFA franc and an economic recession; a civil war began in 2002.