The two small countries squeezed between Ghana on the west and Nigeria on the east developed out of the European colonialization of most of Africa. Germany, under Kaiser Bill, was determined to create an empire to rival that of Britain and seized a portion of the coastline close to the British-held area of Ghana. They held on to it until WW1 ended Germany's colonial aspirations.
Britain and France jointly governed Togo briefly, but the territory was ceded to France until independence was granted in the 1960s. Neighbouring Benin (formerly the French colony of Dahomey) was all that the French colonial office could obtain of the rich coastal plain until the German defeat in WW1, which gained it Togo and German Cameroun, further to the east.
