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How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa - Politics - Nairaland

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How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by ImadeUReadThis: 1:34pm On Feb 09, 2018
The Fulanis not only conquered and annexed Ilorin for themselves but went as far as sacking the old capital of Oyo empire.

The Yorubas did a tactical retreat from their pillaged capital of Oyo Ile and headed south, fleeing 90 miles to Ibadan - a then small remote town.

The new settlement then doubled as both the capital of the declining Oyo empire which was facing the ravages of an Islamic Jihad by Sokoto and also as a major refugee camp serving to host fleeing Yorubas from across the old Oyo empire.

The Jihadist had conquered the very capital of old Oyo empire and had annexed Ilorin for themselves so it wont be any surprise that smaller Yoruba settlements and towns in the old Oyo empire where being sacked with little resistance.

It is from the fleeing Yoruba population that Ibadan grew from a small town to one of the largest and densely populated areas in Africa.

We can forgive the British in defining Ibadan as a city when they first approached Ibadan but the honest truth is that Ibadan was nothing but a refugee camp.

Only two other local domains where described as ''Cities'' by the British and they relied on the classical definitions drawn from European antiquity.

The term city comes from citadel and it refers to a heavily fortified castle or town with watch towers. Ibadan had no such artificial defense unlike the cities of Kano and Benin.

The British used contemporary 19th century definitions based on population density and relative cosmopolitan makeup of Ibadan to arrive at the description of Ibadan being a city. Kano is famous for its surrounding walls which at some points was described by a British explorer as being up to 40ft thick. Benin was both walled off and had a complex moat encompassing the walls as a first line of defense.

So please lets not call Ibadan a city any more but rather refer to it for what it truly was - a massive refugee camp!

26 Likes 4 Shares

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by wakaman: 1:43pm On Feb 09, 2018
Yanmiri narrative

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by ImadeUReadThis: 1:50pm On Feb 09, 2018
wakaman:
Yanmiri narrative

Ibadan began as a massive refugee camp serving to fleeing Yorubas

30 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by wakaman: 1:52pm On Feb 09, 2018
ImadeUReadThis:


Ibadan began as a massive refugee camp serving to fleeing Yorubas

Your narrative.

4 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by ImadeUReadThis: 1:53pm On Feb 09, 2018
wakaman:


Your narrative.

Was Oyo Ile not pillaged to ashes and Yoruba indigents expelled by the Fulanis?

24 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by wakaman: 1:57pm On Feb 09, 2018
ImadeUReadThis:


Was Oyo Ile not pillaged to ashes and Yoruba indigents expelled by the Fulanis?


Your narrative again, please find audience for your narrative with people of the same inclinations as you.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Guestlander: 2:21pm On Feb 09, 2018
Can a sane individual sit down and write this gibberish?

11 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Nobody: 2:25pm On Feb 09, 2018
ImadeUReadThis:


So please lets not call Ibadan a city any more but rather refer to it for what it truly was - a massive refugee camp!
good history but stop living in the Past. Obi cannot be a boy every year. In fact Ibadan can decide to be a country. A community once started as a family. I'm not from Ibadan biko kwa.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by QuotaSystem: 2:32pm On Feb 09, 2018
Reality is beginning to dance one-corner on some people's brains cheesy.

9 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by fellowman: 2:35pm On Feb 09, 2018
Guestlander:
Can a sane individual sit down and write this gibberish?

attack the message, not the messenger.

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Nobody: 2:38pm On Feb 09, 2018
grin

1 Like

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Nobody: 2:43pm On Feb 09, 2018
princeking2:

good history but stop living in the Past. Obi cannot be a boy every year. In fact Ibadan can decide to be a country. A community once started as a family. I'm not from Ibadan biko kwa.
Nonsense history. Fulani jihadists were chased from Oshogbo to Ilorin wiped out, their women taken away.... Go to Oshogbo you'd still find splinters of the Fulani women taken forever by the formidable warriors of Yorubaland.

The move onto Ilorin was frustrated by the afonjas (adjective) who collaborated with Fulani and were benefitting from the hullabaloo there.

8 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Nobody: 2:54pm On Feb 09, 2018
angels09:

Nonsense history. Fulani jihadists were chased from Oshogbo to Ilorin wiped out, their women taken away.... Go to Oshogbo you'd still find splinters of the Fulani women taken forever by the formidable warriors of Yorubaland.

The move onto Ilorin was frustrated by the afonjas (adjective) who collaborated with Fulani and were benefitting from the hullabaloo there.
bros, take it easy on me. Redirect your grieviances to the OP.
BTW, today is friday, take a bottle of star and forget the nonsense Op.
Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Nobody: 2:58pm On Feb 09, 2018
princeking2:

bros, take it easy on me. Redirect your grieviances to the OP.
BTW, today is friday, take a bottle of star and forget the nonsense Op.
Oga I no get time
Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by orisa37: 3:03pm On Feb 09, 2018
[quote author=fellowman post=64920681]
attack the message, not the messenger.
The Messenger mustn't be silly.
Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by georjay(m): 3:03pm On Feb 09, 2018
Dear OP
what shall it profit you to diss ibadan

2 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by ellalina(f): 3:24pm On Feb 09, 2018
You twisted history
Old Oyo as you said is partially empty as seen on kaima nanny axis but don’t talk like you are trying to start a tribal war

2 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by toyoC1(f): 3:54pm On Feb 09, 2018
OP derserves an acheivement award...

for.stupidity

3 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by adecz: 4:29pm On Feb 09, 2018
Every city or town that the
Fulani 'captured' ( usurped) was always
through treachery & backstabbing.

The fulani, who were a wandering
ppl had no marketable trade. They were
either wandering herdsmen or clerics.

When they become comfortable with
the hospitality of any society, they begin
to plot against such a society..

That is the true nature of the Fulani
psyche, lazy, treacherous & betraying by
Character.

Check out all their major so-called 'conquests'
its always at expense of ppl who accepted
& accommodated them.

17 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by GworoChewinMaga: 5:43pm On Apr 03, 2018
Bump

1 Like 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by conductorl7: 5:58pm On Apr 03, 2018
When this thread was created, nobody envisaged Osun State would fall to the Caphilate as fast as it just did
grin grin grin

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Nobody: 6:19pm On Apr 03, 2018
ImadeUReadThis:
[s]The Fulanis not only conquered and annexed Ilorin for themselves but went as far as sacking the old capital of Oyo empire.

The Yorubas did a tactical retreat from their pillaged capital of Oyo Ile and headed south, fleeing 90 miles to Ibadan - a then small remote town.

The new settlement then doubled as both the capital of the declining Oyo empire which was facing the ravages of an Islamic Jihad by Sokoto and also as a major refugee camp serving to host fleeing Yorubas from across the old Oyo empire.

The Jihadist had conquered the very capital of old Oyo empire and had annexed Ilorin for themselves so it wont be any surprise that smaller Yoruba settlements and towns in the old Oyo empire where being sacked with little resistance.

It is from the fleeing Yoruba population that Ibadan grew from a small town to one of the largest and densely populated areas in Africa.

We can forgive the British in defining Ibadan as a city when they first approached Ibadan but the honest truth is that Ibadan was nothing but a refugee camp.

Only two other local domains where described as ''Cities'' by the British and they relied on the classical definitions drawn from European antiquity.

The term city comes from citadel and it refers to a heavily fortified castle or town with watch towers. Ibadan had no such artificial defense unlike the cities of Kano and Benin.

The British used contemporary 19th century definitions based on population density and relative cosmopolitan makeup of Ibadan to arrive at the description of Ibadan being a city. Kano is famous for its surrounding walls which at some points was described by a British explorer as being up to 40ft thick. Benin was both walled off and had a complex moat encompassing the walls as a first line of defense.

So please lets not call Ibadan a city any more but rather refer to it for what it truly was - a massive refugee camp![/s]

Your last statement though, "let's not call Ibadan a city anymore...”

I guess the last time you were in Ibadan was in the 18th century.

It's alright, you can come out of your cave in the East now. We won the war against the Jihadists and they've been safely driven back to the North.

You can join your brothers and sisters on the next available Ekene-dili-Chukwu bus to Ibadan.

Make sure you discard your leafs and wear proper clothes o. Safe trip.

5 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Biggie225(m): 8:05pm On Apr 03, 2018
Iwo has been captured,,i pity Yorubas
Yoruba caliphate loading.....

9 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by 12Monkeys: 9:36am On Jul 07, 2018
Gotze1
gurnam
Aribisala0
Patrioticooduan
Dtribeless
T9ksy

grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin

BishopMagic:

How Yoruba Muslims Sacked Old Oyo And Will Do Same For All Odua

Ilorin was a small town in the Oyo Empire by the beginning of the 19th century. Afonja, Baale of Ilorin, who also held the title of Are Ona Kakanfo of the Oyo Empire, rebelled against his king, the Alafin of Oyo, in 1817. (There is no space here for the reasons for his rebellion). In order to sustain his rebellion, he was desperate to build a large and powerful army. To that end, he did a number of desperate things.

First, he invited the people of nearby villages to move to Ilorin and turn Ilorin into a large town. Many people so moved, but most refused.

Secondly, he reached out to many prominent friends all over the Oyo country, and invited them to come and live in Ilorin. Some accepted his invitation and came. Among these was a rich trader named Solagberu from Kuwo. Another was a man named Alimi, a Fulani man who had long lived in the Oyo country peddling charms from town to town. Afonja employed Alimi to make charms for him and his army.

Thirdly, Afonja decided to exploit a religious situation that was causing trouble in the country at the time. A Jihad movement had started in Hausaland in the north in 1804, generating wars and stormy Islamic evangelism there. It was started and led by an immigrant people called Fulani. The Fulani immigrants were few among the large Hausa nation, but very many of the Hausa who were already Muslims sided with the Fulani – and thus made it possible for the Fulani to defeat the ancient Hausa kings and make themselves rulers over Hausaland.

Some of the violent Jihadist preachers trickled south into the Oyo country. Everywhere they came, they were causing a lot of commotion by preaching violent and disrespectful sermons against the Oyo kings and chiefs, and against Yoruba culture in general. Yoruba people, with their tradition of religious tolerance, were alarmed; and angry crowds began to attack the preachers. Afonja decided to exploit the situation by issuing a general invitation to the Muslims to flee to him in Ilorin, promising to give them protection there. Thousands of frightened Muslims fled to Ilorin, and Afonja trained many of them for his army. (Afonja himself did not intend to convert to Islam, and he never did).

Fourthly, most rich Oyo families had Hausa, Nupe and Fulani slaves - used mostly in farming, trading, livestock rearing, etc. Most were Muslims.

Afonja decided to exploit this also. He issued a proclamation saying that if any slaves ran away from their owners and came to him in Ilorin, he would give them freedom and protection there. Large numbers of slaves, mostly Hausa, fled to Afonja, and he trained some of them for his army.

Afonja thus had his large town and large army. Most of his army’s commanders and soldiers were Oyo Muslims. A few of the soldiers were Muslim Hausa – all slaves recently set free by Afonja. But many of his Hausa soldiers were unruly. He warned or threatened them repeatedly, but with no result. When he at last decided to discipline them, they mutinied. Afonja was killed in the mutiny - in 1823.

Meanwhile, while Alimi had been making charms for the army, he had become a friend to many of the Oyo commanders who were Muslims, and these hadmade him Imam (Islamic teacher and preacher) for the Muslim community in the army. After Afonja›s death, the same friends gradually made their Imam the ruler of Ilorin. They also created some officers among the Hausa soldiers - for instance, Balogun Gambari. The powerful men doing all these things were Oyo.

That then is how Oyo people made a Fulani man the ruler of Ilorin. When Alimi died, his elder son, Abdulsalam, was elevated to his father’s position by his father›s powerful Oyo Muslim friends. Adulsalam had lived in the Jihad in Hausaland and had only recently come to live with his father in Ilorin. He knew that the Jihad had made the Fulani the rulers of Ilorin - with a Fulani Sultanate based in Sokoto and quasi-independent Fulani Emirs in the separate Hausa kingdoms. So, after he was made ruler of Ilorin, he sent to Hausaland to announce that he had established an Emirate in Ilorin and to ask that his Emirate should be accepted as part of the Fulani Sultanate.

In this way, Ilorin became a Fulani Emirate, ruled by a Fulani family.

Ilorin was, in population, still an Oyo town - probably over 95% Oyo in population. And Ilorin was never conquered or even invaded by any Fulani army. Those influential Oyo men who made Alimi and his son the rulers of Ilorin did so out of fervour for their Islamic faith.

When the news of the happenings in Ilorin spread all over the Oyo country, people were shocked to hear that Ilorin people had made the family of an obscure Fulani charm peddler their rulers. Therefore, people formed armies to go and subdue Ilorin and flush out the Fulani impostors. None of these invasions of Ilorin succeeded. The invading armies were poorly organized, and, moreover, the old Afonja army defending Ilorin was just too powerful. In fact, in the end, the Ilorin people, in order to ensure perfect protection for their fervently Muslim town, decided to go out and conquer most of Yorubaland (all the way to the sea coast), and make all of it a Muslim empire ruled from Ilorin.

Their army marched out in about 1838, conquering town after town towards the south, and causing mammoth streams of refugees. Till today, most Yoruba people still call this Ilorin invasion a Fulani invasion of Yorubaland. But it was not a Fulani invasion at all; it was an attempt by the predominantly Yoruba Muslim people of Ilorin to conquer and Islamize the rest of Yorubaland.

The victorious Ilorin march southwards ended suddenly in 1840. The refugees who had gathered in the Egba village of Ibadan had quickly become a large town. Their army marched out and met the Ilorin army in Oshogbo in 1840, and totally destroyed them, capturing many of their commanders. From then on, the power of Ilorin was more or less over, and Ilorin never dared again to face the Ibadan army in battle.

In the following years, Ibadan became the most powerful state in Yorubaland, and established control over the Oshun valley, Ife, Ijesa, Ekiti, Akoko, Igbomina and parts of Iyagba. Ilorin continued to be ambitious to control some territory in its immediate neighbourhood – in nearby Igbomina and Ibolo (especially Offa); but they feared Ibadan. In 1877, the Ekiti, Ijesa, Igbomina and Akoko revolted against Ibadan’s rule, and the Kiriji War started, keeping all these peoples and Ibadan busy until 1893. Ilorin took advantage of this and established some feeble control over parts of Igbomina and Ibolo.

However, at home in Ilorin itself, a proper Emirate could not develop. The powerful Yoruba war chiefs wanted to re-establish the traditional Yoruba political system whereby the chiefs in a kingdom select their king. The Emirs resisted. By 1895, the chiefs were winning the contest grandly – a situation which forced the Emir Momoh to commit suicide after setting his palace on fire. The victorious chiefs then installed Sulaiman as Emir. This was the situation when the forces of the British Royal Niger Company came and conquered Ilorin in 1897.

In the years that followed, it was the British that established Ilorin as a full-fledged emirate, making the Ilorin Emir like the Emirs of Hausaland. The Emir then took advantage of that to establish all sorts of Emirate-type control over Ibolo and northern Igbomina.

In short, Ilorin was never conquered (was never even invaded) by the Fulani. Ilorin is more than 90% Yoruba in population. The Igbomina, Ibolo, and Ekiti of Kwara, because they have hated the imposture of the Ilorin Emirs since the beginning of British rule, tend to be usually cool towards Ilorin. Rather it was the treasonable ambition of Afonja and the Yoruba Muslim converts who handed Ilorin to the Fulanis.

Today, the same group are at the forefront fighting to ensure that all Yoruba land falls to Sokoto.

2 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by aribisala0(m): 9:52am On Jul 07, 2018
Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by 12Monkeys: 9:54am On Jul 07, 2018
aribisala0:

afonja organize your post well
Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by aribisala0(m): 9:54am On Jul 07, 2018
Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by EternalTruths: 9:56am On Jul 07, 2018
Is the fear of another Fulani takeover that drives the Yoruba people to keep shouting death to Biafra in order to have more anti Fulani people under the umbrella of One Nigeria to save them.

7 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by ImadeUReadThis: 8:55am On Nov 25, 2018
wakaman:


Your narrative again, please find audience for your narrative with people of the same inclinations as you.

oyo-oba grin grin grin grin

1 Like

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Frankdoz26: 9:07am On Nov 25, 2018
Chai!!!! Is this why there are too many Yoruba Muslims today. Yoruba's are full traitors and cowardice. No wonder afonja sold them to invading Fulani caliphate.

7 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by ImadeUReadThis: 9:10am On Nov 25, 2018
Frankdoz26:
Chai!!!! Is this why there are too many Yoruba Muslims today. Yoruba's are full traitors and cowardice. No wonder afonja sold them to invading Fulani caliphate.

Even their name yoruba was given to them by Huasa Fulanis

2 Likes

Re: How Fulani Jihadists Created The Largest City In West Africa by Ttipsy(f): 9:10am On Nov 25, 2018
wtf

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