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Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson - Culture (6) - Nairaland

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Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by tunene66: 6:45pm On Dec 13, 2016
I have downloaded the book it makes for interesting reading. How Yoruba language became a written language is interesting. One word I found interesting is the origin of the word Ooni from Owoni itself a contraction of Omo oluwoni (son of a sacrificial victim) hope to hear what the Ifes will say in response

5 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by 1kinggy(m): 6:49pm On Dec 13, 2016
Olu317:
You know nothing about History. If Afonja wasn't a great physical and spiritual warrior,how come his name is forever in the mindsets of ILORIN YORUBAs and the rest of Yoruba Race even the Abdusallam whose mother was Yoruba which is not even important . Little do you know.Do you know how Emir Momoh died? Ilorin was recreated by the British Empire in 1895/1896 after the British defeated the Ilorin Army commanders who were the Baloguns who made the Emir their puppet. Irrespective of Afonja rebellion,he remained unshaven even unto death. That was A GREAT WARRIOR.

Thisis a matter of perspectives. Reminds me of Olugbo's stand on Moremi.
Someone's hero is another's villain.

According to a writer: History of nations is biography of certain men. And I dare to add, from writers point of view.

2 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Nobody: 6:49pm On Dec 13, 2016
LordAdam7:


How can you say the official languages of the Aro confederacy were Igbo, Ibibio, Ijaw, Delta Ibo, Urhobo, Isoko, Itsekiri?

Have you lost your mind?

The Aros never went pass Igboland. They didn't have the military strength nor the machinery to enact such invasions or influence.

And all of the languages except Igbo and Delta Ibo (which is an aberration in itself because Delta Ibo is not a language) you mentioned there were not spoken in historic Igboland.

So you can stuff all the gibberish you wrote in a place where the sun does not shine.

Many more Igbo clans other than the Aros had influence on the non-Igboid ethnicities east of the Niger. But west of the Niger, the influence stopped at present day Delta North Senatorial zone. And even then the influence was solely based on language and cultural similarities, it was nothing like the vassal states in the old Bini or Oyo Empire.

The Igbos are republican. And personally, I don't think you guys have to give excuses as to why you guys didn't fight baseless intra-tribal wars and establish a mammoth tribal country like the Yoruba country or Bini country. But it borders on insanity to say that there was anything in pre-Independence Igbo land that rivaled the Oyo or Bini Empire in the West of the Niger or the Sokoto Caliphate, numerous Emirates in the North (such as the Kano Emirate) or the Bornu Empire in the North.

-Lord

The Aro Confederacy has trading partners beyond the Igbo land. They sold millions of Igbos to the Ijaws and others. So they interacted beyond Igbo land.
Apart from this, I think we are on the same page on the primitiveness of the Igbo people and lack of any history to be proud of. That was my point to the guy that I replied to. If you take time to follow the conversation, you will understand why I posted this

9 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by LordAdam7: 7:03pm On Dec 13, 2016
deji15:


The Aro Confederacy has trading partners beyond the Igbo land. They sold millions of Igbos to the Ijaws and others. So they interacted beyond Igbo land.
Apart from this, I think we are on the same page on the primitiveness of the Igbo people and lack of any history to be proud of. That was my point to the guy that I replied to. If you take time to follow the conversation, you will understand why I posted this

I was just correcting statements I felt were inaccurate.

I tend to do that regardless of the reason behind the post.

I hope you understand.

-Lord
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by 1kinggy(m): 7:04pm On Dec 13, 2016
LordAdam7:


How can you say the official languages of the Aro confederacy were Igbo, Ibibio, Ijaw, Delta Ibo, Urhobo, Isoko, Itsekiri?

Have you lost your mind?

The Aros never went pass Igboland. They didn't have the military strength nor the machinery to enact such invasions or influence.

And all of the languages except Igbo and Delta Ibo (which is an aberration in itself because Delta Ibo is not a language) you mentioned there were not spoken in historic Igboland.

So you can stuff all the gibberish you wrote in a place where the sun does not shine.

Many more Igbo clans other than the Aros had influence on the non-Igboid ethnicities east of the Niger. But west of the Niger, the influence stopped at present day Delta North Senatorial zone. And even then the influence was solely based on language and cultural similarities, it was nothing like the vassal states in the old Bini or Oyo Empire.

The Igbos are republican. And personally, I don't think you guys have to give excuses as to why you guys didn't fight baseless intra-tribal wars and establish a mammoth tribal country like the Yoruba country or Bini country. But it borders on insanity to say that there was anything in pre-Independence Igbo land that rivaled the Oyo or Bini Empire in the West of the Niger or the Sokoto Caliphate, numerous Emirates in the North (such as the Kano Emirate) or the Bornu Empire in the North.

-Lord


Forgive him. Blame it on copy & paste.

1 Like

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Nobody: 7:06pm On Dec 13, 2016
LordAdam7:


I was just correcting statements I felt were inaccurate.

I tend to do that regardless of the reason behind the post.

I hope you understand.

-Lord

You felt I guess you are entitled to that and I am entitled to how "I feel" as well. Yes, I do understand but do not agree with you.

2 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by tunene66: 7:07pm On Dec 13, 2016
naijalander:
After Ilorin fell to Ibadan, it became subject to Ibadan. There has never been any real proof that Ilorin was completely subject to the Caliph at Sokoto.


Ilorin being in the Northern region might be a proof that there was a special tie with Sokoto. Abdulsalami son of Alimi was given a flag from Gwandu (the western empire of the Sokoto Caliphate). According to research done by Abdullahi Smith, a one time Professor of History ABU n Director Arewa House Kaduna, there is a letter in Gwandu written in 1829 from the Emir of the West(Gwandu) to the Emir of the Yoruba(Ilorin) Abdulsalami

1 Like

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by LordAdam7: 7:11pm On Dec 13, 2016
deji15:


You felt I guess you are entitled to that and I am entitled to how "I feel" as well. Yes, I do understand but do not agree with you.

Maybe this would derail the thread, but can you prove that the languages you mentioned aside Igbo and Delta Igbo (again it is not a language) were the languages of the Aro confederacy?

Let's start from there.

-Lord
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by LordAdam7: 7:19pm On Dec 13, 2016
obiageIi:
I'm so much enjoying this, how i wish this rich history will hit the cinemas someday, i am an addict of history film, Korean mostly. Reading this write up, all i can think of is the costume

You pick the words right out of my mouth.

If wishes were horses, eh!

-Lord

1 Like

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Nobody: 7:20pm On Dec 13, 2016
LordAdam7:


Maybe this would derail the thread, but can you prove that the languages you mentioned aside Igbo and Delta Igbo (again it is not a language) were the languages of the Aro confederacy?

Let's start from there.

-Lord

I believe the confusion is coming from the meanining of the word confederacy. How do you think the Aro's were able to sell millions of Igbos to the Ijaws and the Cross river allies without the presence and influence on the part of the Aro's?

1 Like

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by LordAdam7: 7:24pm On Dec 13, 2016
deji15:


I believe the confusion is coming from the meanining of the word confederacy. How do you think the Aro's were able to sell millions of Igbos to the Ijaws and the Cross river allies without the presence and influence on the part of the Aro's?


Are you saying influence is necessary for trade?

Because I can call out a million examples to debunk that assertion.

Or maybe, we should hold this discussion until naijalander is through with his posts.

I'm anticipating his next post.

-Lord
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Olu317(m): 7:28pm On Dec 13, 2016
1kinggy:


Thisis a matter of perspectives. Reminds me of Olugbo's stand on Moremi.
Someone's hero is another's villain.

According to a writer: History of nations is biography of certain men. And I dare to add, from writers point of view.
True, you can express your view but considering all angle on physically and spiritually sound mind of AFONJA,who was a man who fought and died without running from his place of abode,what do you call him? A LION or FOX? My reason for this is that many have written ills about Yoruba as being Back stabbers which we are not. People have failed to look at the course of an issue but always look at the aftermath .Have some people asked why is it so easy to stay and live in peace in Yoruba towns and cities and it is not like so in some parts of the North? Posterity is always around to judge everyone.

2 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Nobody: 7:31pm On Dec 13, 2016
LordAdam7:


Are you saying influence is necessary for trade?

Because I can call out a million examples to debunk that assertion.

Or maybe, we should hold this discussion until naijalander is through with his posts.

I'm anticipating his next post.

-Lord
It is up to you.. Nothing to debunk. Aro's were selling Igbos and cross river allies were buying (in the process, they intermingled), that is why they are part of the Aro Confederacy.

5 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by RedboneSmith(m): 7:34pm On Dec 13, 2016
deji15:


The Aro Confederacy has trading partners beyond the Igbo land. They sold millions of Igbos to the Ijaws and others. So they interacted beyond Igbo land.
Apart from this, I think we are on the same page on the primitiveness of the Igbo people and lack of any history to be proud of. That was my point to the guy that I replied to. If you take time to follow the conversation, you will understand why I posted this

Primitive and history-less because they did not fight senseless wars of conquest and did not try to extort money from weaker peoples in that brutal arrangement called 'states' and 'empires'?

In your narrow sense of reasoning, 'history' only exists under imperialistic conditions abi? See yourself?

2 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Nobody: 7:41pm On Dec 13, 2016
RedboneSmith:


Primitive and history-less because they did not fight senseless wars of conquest and did not try to extort money from weaker peoples in that brutal arrangement called 'states' and 'empires'?

In your narrow sense of reasoning, 'history' only exists under imperialistic conditions abi? See yourself?

The more reason the Aro kidnapped fellow Igbo and sold them to the Ijaws and to the trans atlantic slavery mission. What imperialistic condition is worse than that?

6 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Olu317(m): 7:41pm On Dec 13, 2016
dEastActivist:

Lol.. I need to leave it to those that specialises on that field whom I have great respect for like somebody like Onwuka, you should agree with me that I need to engage myself more on things that should relate to my discipline which here is computer science.
Having said all that, I can get you link as I can't start derailing this treachery exposé of a thread called some people's history. grin
cool.enjoy your more knowledge discovery on your discipline.
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by RedboneSmith(m): 7:43pm On Dec 13, 2016
deji15:


The more reason the Aro kidnapped fellow Igbo and sold them to the Ijaws and to the trans atlantic slavery mission. What imperialistic condition is worse than that?

Oh the point was lost on you. But it's okay. smiley

1 Like

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Noblecx: 7:49pm On Dec 13, 2016
DaFlash:


WHO IS THIS IDIOT THAT KEEP SPAMMING THIS BEAUTIFUL THREAD WITH HIS/HER STUPIDITY.

I THINK THE MODS ARE NOT DOING THEIR JOB WELL
angry angry angry

The mod is really not doing their job, if not you should have been long banned.
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Nobody: 7:54pm On Dec 13, 2016
RedboneSmith:


Oh the point was lost on you. But it's okay. smiley
Whatever makes you sleep well at night.
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Nobody: 7:55pm On Dec 13, 2016
RedboneSmith:


Oh the point was lost on you. But it's okay. smiley
Whatever makes you sleep well at night.
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Noblecx: 7:55pm On Dec 13, 2016
Aigbofa:


Funny guy, I would do exactly what you are doing right now if the only thing memorable about my history was a bunch of savages running wild and hunting each other for food.

Well people can really do same thing which cause was from different cases...
People can end up mad out of Sango visitation.
People can equally end up mad out of natural cause
People can equally end up mad out of inhibition of strange brain defective chemicals.
grin
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by vicadex07(m): 8:06pm On Dec 13, 2016
na one osu boy that barely escaped being sacrificed at the evil forest... since then he has never been himself again

3 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by vicadex07(m): 8:08pm On Dec 13, 2016
Noblecx:


Well people can really do same thing which cause was from different cases...
People can end up mad out of Sango visitation.
People can equally end up mad out of natural cause
People can equally end up mad out of inhibition of strange brain defective chemicals.
grin


deastactivist... you have been banned abi...

grin
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by ayyoshert: 8:18pm On Dec 13, 2016
This is highly educative, a great story on history. I have the book, but have not read it yet. However it is of high level stupidity and narrow mindedness for some to come here with tribal distractions. This thread looks too sophisticated for that, the richness in the history goes above all the useless abuse some fools are bringing, it is so beneath it. If you feel bad of the lack of a glorious past with your tribe, why cant you shut up and read/learn from this story of the people that have.

7 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by naijalander: 8:24pm On Dec 13, 2016
Yes there is a letter. However it does not explicitly say 'come and be king over us at Ilorin' It was a call for help against the pagans bullying them. The flag symbolizes Sokoto overlordship over the muslims of Ilorin, not the pagans.


tunene66:


Ilorin being in the Northern region might be a proof that there was a special tie with Sokoto. Abdulsalami son of Alimi was given a flag from Gwandu (the western empire of the Sokoto Caliphate). According to research done by Abdullahi Smith, a one time Professor of History ABU n Director Arewa House Kaduna, there is a letter in Gwandu written in 1829 from the Emir of the West(Gwandu) to the Emir of the Yoruba(Ilorin) Abdulsalami

2 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Noblecx: 8:25pm On Dec 13, 2016
vicadex07:



deastactivist... you have been banned abi...

grin

If He is banned, how is He responding?
It shows that you can ban a handle but you can't ban the person.
The whole the thing circles in a loop rendering ban useless.
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by barragan: 8:31pm On Dec 13, 2016
Good job historian. I need to ask, was Ilesha or any Ijesha town ever taken amidst all these wars?

3 Likes

Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by naijalander: 8:31pm On Dec 13, 2016
Wait till you see the drama between Efunsetan and Latosa. Pure Nollywood!


obiageIi:
I'm so much enjoying this, how i wish this rich history will hit the cinemas someday, i am an addict of history film, Korean mostly. Reading this write up, all i can think of is the costume
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by vicadex07(m): 8:33pm On Dec 13, 2016
Noblecx:

If He is banned, how is He responding? It shows that you can ban a handle but you can't ban the person. The whole the thing circles in a loop rendering ban useless.
lol... stubborn guy. You too like trouble
Re: Yoruba Revolutionary War Chronicles. By Samuel Johnson by Olu317(m): 8:36pm On Dec 13, 2016
naijalander:
Yes there is a letter. However it does not explicitly say 'come and be king over us at Ilorin' It was a call for help against the pagans bullying them. The flag symbolizes Sokoto overlordship over the muslims of Ilorin, not the pagans.


are you sure they are pagan? I thought Yoruba had and still have a Deity called Eledumare /olodumare /Olorun. Do you call that paganism? A people that stood and fight Against Islamization of Yoruba land. Do you think it wasnt GOD that helped the Yoruba warriors who fought against Jihadist? Yoruba Race are not ordinary Race. If you understand spiritualism, you know what I mean. It wasn't ordinary they fought against themselves at first and again fought and won against the Jihadist 1839/1840.

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