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Brief History Of Ijoko In Ogun State - Culture - Nairaland

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Brief History Of Ijoko In Ogun State by duro4chang(m): 6:18am On Feb 03, 2023
IJOKO
Ijoko is a town in Ogun State, Western Nigeria north of Lagos, south of Abeokuta. It is an Ogun State border town with Lagos with large scale businesses and thriving retail businesses, a spill over from the congested mega city of Lagos. Ijoko is originally an Owu-Egba settlement but also accommodating other diverse people.

THE HISTORY OF IJOKO

The history of Ijoko otherwise known as Igbo Olowu is linked with that of Sango as they were both the war captives of the allied forces of Owu and Egba on behalf of Abeokuta that conquered Dahomey, Ado-Odo, Atan, Ilobi, Itori, Ota, Ifo, between 1836 and 1853. The territory is customarily administered to date by the Egbas through officials or coronets of either the Alake or the Olowu. The Olota who himself is a coronet of Alake of Abeokuta together with his Chiefs vehemently condemned in 1935 the agitation of the Awori youths on the ownership of Ota District and declared that the Owu - Egbas under the leadership of Alake on behalf of Abeokuta are the owners of Ota by conquest with the Colonial District Officer directed by his boss the Resident Officer for Abeokuta as British Crown Witness. Between 1853 and 1900, Ota was ruled by Egbas through their resident representatives. 1900ff Ota was ruled directly by Alake through his Local Council. The Egba and Owu warriors installed the first Olota - Oyede 1. The Egba resident representatives installed Olota - Isiyemi in 1882. Alake installed Olota - Aina Ako in 1902. Alake installed Olota - Oyede 2nd in 1927 etc. They all paid compulsory tributes and allegiance to the Alake as his subjects by virtue of Abeokuta's conquest over Ota opt cite. They were allowed to farm for livelihoods as his subjects and as his tenants under Abeokuta's Lordship and conquest over the entire Ota District Land. It is therefore an aberration for any family in Ota or Ijoko to be describing themselves as the owner or an Ajagungbale trying to reclaim a land that have been lost by their progenitors in battle and ruled by the Alake through his officials and coronets up to date. The claim of founding a land that belongs to the Egbas jointly with the Owus since the conquest of the whole of Ota Land in 1839 to 1842 is an affront to the Egbas and an insult to the Alake and the Olowu of Abeokuta. Nobody can lay claim to the ownership of Ota District Land and Chieftaincy titles particularly as an Oba without the consent of the whole of Abeokuta through the Alake after consultations with the other Abeokuta Obas. It is on this note that Ijoko and environ is an Abeokuta Land. No individual family owns Ijoko. A family can only lay claim to a few acres assigned to it for peasant farming in the virging land, nothing more. It is an Egba Land by conquest under Alake's trust for Abeokuta. Ajagungbale is a precolonial foreclosure in favour of Abeokuta on the entire Ota District Land which include Ijoko and environ. Past litigations on the ownership of Ijoko Egbaland have misled the courts and the State Land Office without the input of the Egba-Owu Traditional Councils on behalf of all Owu and Egba nation. These were simply cases between two Ota families Matanmi vs Ogunsina and another one between Matanmi vs Aina that were completely silent or willfully ignored the above cited facts of history of Abeokuta's ownership of Ota District Land. Neither Alake nor the Olowu were joined in such suits. Whoever sold and is still selling Ijoko Egbaland without the consent of Alake or the Olowu based on Ijoko ownership is making and profiting from acts of illegality. Hence, the genesis of the terrible land and chieftaincy title conflicts going on between a single family versus many Egba and Owu families most of whom are the descendants of the Great Egba and Owu Warriors that conquered the entire Ota District of Abeokuta. That one of the settlers was made the hamlet leader or imposed himself as one does not make him the founder or owner of Ijoko. In fact, nobody regarded himself as such as the Lordship of the Alake and ownership of the virgin forest by conquest over Ota was never in contention. It is the modern covetiousness for money and power that made some greedy youths to falsify history. Judicial pronouncements that do not recognise the authentic record of history cannot bring peace in the land. It will only be a theoretical legal academic exercise. There is no record of any successful land chieftaincy ownership of Ijoko litigation against the Alake nor the Olowu Institutions by any Ota family. Land conquest as met by the British became the foreclosed legal ownership and boundaries. Families within Ota District were assigned few acres for peasant farming by the Alake and the Olowu representatives. The ownership claim of Ijoko by an Awori family was based on lost title that predate the conquest of Ota District Land by the allied forces of Owu and Egba armies in the nineteenth century.
The Alake and the Olowu must unite because it was unity that gave Abeokuta the victory, the conquest and the ownership of Ota District. They must consult with their kiths and kins who have been on the ground for centuries. Ijoko's proximity with Lagos have always made it prosperous and civilised.

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Re: Brief History Of Ijoko In Ogun State by AutomaticMotors: 6:53am On Feb 03, 2023
Ahh it is no more an hunter that got lost inside bush from Ile Ife that founded this one ?? grin grin grin cheesy
Re: Brief History Of Ijoko In Ogun State by AreaFada2: 12:24pm On Feb 03, 2023
AutomaticMotors:
Ahh it is no more an hunter that got lost inside bush from Ile Ife that founded this one ?? grin grin grin cheesy
Auto, why are you wicked like this na? Such vawulence early momo like this? grin grin grin cheesy cheesy

The story never end na. This na just the first version. Lost hunter episode will follow soon. cheesy ;

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Re: Brief History Of Ijoko In Ogun State by AutomaticMotors: 1:58pm On Feb 03, 2023
AreaFada2:

Auto, why are you wicked like this na? Such vawulence early momo like this? grin grin grin cheesy cheesy

The story never end na. This na just the first version. Lost hunter episode will follow soon. cheesy ;

grin grin grin
Re: Brief History Of Ijoko In Ogun State by christistruth01: 1:32pm On Feb 08, 2023
duro4chang:
IJOKO
Ijoko is a town in Ogun State, Western Nigeria north of Lagos, south of Abeokuta. It is an Ogun State border town with Lagos with large scale businesses and thriving retail businesses, a spill over from the congested mega city of Lagos. Ijoko is originally an Owu-Egba settlement but also accommodating other diverse people.

THE HISTORY OF IJOKO

The history of Ijoko otherwise known as Igbo Olowu is linked with that of Sango as they were both the war captives of the allied forces of Owu and Egba on behalf of Abeokuta that conquered Dahomey, Ado-Odo, Atan, Ilobi, Itori, Ota, Ifo, between 1836 and 1853. The territory is customarily administered to date by the Egbas through officials or coronets of either the Alake or the Olowu. The Olota who himself is a coronet of Alake of Abeokuta together with his Chiefs vehemently condemned in 1935 the agitation of the Awori youths on the ownership of Ota District and declared that the Owu - Egbas under the leadership of Alake on behalf of Abeokuta are the owners of Ota by conquest with the Colonial District Officer directed by his boss the Resident Officer for Abeokuta as British Crown Witness. Between 1853 and 1900, Ota was ruled by Egbas through their resident representatives. 1900ff Ota was ruled directly by Alake through his Local Council. The Egba and Owu warriors installed the first Olota - Oyede 1. The Egba resident representatives installed Olota - Isiyemi in 1882. Alake installed Olota - Aina Ako in 1902. Alake installed Olota - Oyede 2nd in 1927 etc. They all paid compulsory tributes and allegiance to the Alake as his subjects by virtue of Abeokuta's conquest over Ota opt cite. They were allowed to farm for livelihoods as his subjects and as his tenants under Abeokuta's Lordship and conquest over the entire Ota District Land. It is therefore an aberration for any family in Ota or Ijoko to be describing themselves as the owner or an Ajagungbale trying to reclaim a land that have been lost by their progenitors in battle and ruled by the Alake through his officials and coronets up to date. The claim of founding a land that belongs to the Egbas jointly with the Owus since the conquest of the whole of Ota Land in 1839 to 1842 is an affront to the Egbas and an insult to the Alake and the Olowu of Abeokuta. Nobody can lay claim to the ownership of Ota District Land and Chieftaincy titles particularly as an Oba without the consent of the whole of Abeokuta through the Alake after consultations with the other Abeokuta Obas. It is on this note that Ijoko and environ is an Abeokuta Land. No individual family owns Ijoko. A family can only lay claim to a few acres assigned to it for peasant farming in the virging land, nothing more. It is an Egba Land by conquest under Alake's trust for Abeokuta. Ajagungbale is a precolonial foreclosure in favour of Abeokuta on the entire Ota District Land which include Ijoko and environ. Past litigations on the ownership of Ijoko Egbaland have misled the courts and the State Land Office without the input of the Egba-Owu Traditional Councils on behalf of all Owu and Egba nation. These were simply cases between two Ota families Matanmi vs Ogunsina and another one between Matanmi vs Aina that were completely silent or willfully ignored the above cited facts of history of Abeokuta's ownership of Ota District Land. Neither Alake nor the Olowu were joined in such suits. Whoever sold and is still selling Ijoko Egbaland without the consent of Alake or the Olowu based on Ijoko ownership is making and profiting from acts of illegality. Hence, the genesis of the terrible land and chieftaincy title conflicts going on between a single family versus many Egba and Owu families most of whom are the descendants of the Great Egba and Owu Warriors that conquered the entire Ota District of Abeokuta. That one of the settlers was made the hamlet leader or imposed himself as one does not make him the founder or owner of Ijoko. In fact, nobody regarded himself as such as the Lordship of the Alake and ownership of the virgin forest by conquest over Ota was never in contention. It is the modern covetiousness for money and power that made some greedy youths to falsify history. Judicial pronouncements that do not recognise the authentic record of history cannot bring peace in the land. It will only be a theoretical legal academic exercise. There is no record of any successful land chieftaincy ownership of Ijoko litigation against the Alake nor the Olowu Institutions by any Ota family. Land conquest as met by the British became the foreclosed legal ownership and boundaries. Families within Ota District were assigned few acres for peasant farming by the Alake and the Olowu representatives. The ownership claim of Ijoko by an Awori family was based on lost title that predate the conquest of Ota District Land by the allied forces of Owu and Egba armies in the nineteenth century.
The Alake and the Olowu must unite because it was unity that gave Abeokuta the victory, the conquest and the ownership of Ota District. They must consult with their kiths and kins who have been on the ground for centuries. Ijoko's proximity with Lagos have always made it prosperous and civilised.

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"Land conquest as met by the British became the foreclosed legal ownership and boundaries. Families within Ota District were assigned few acres for peasant farming by the Alake and the Olowu representatives. The ownership claim of Ijoko by an Awori family was based on lost title that predate the conquest of Ota District Land by the allied forces of Owu and Egba armies in the nineteenth century."

I don't agree with this version

So what happens to the Otas that were there before

In Yoruba culture you cannot render them Landless you could only request tribute

and tribute would have ended when the British took over

You cannot throw the Otas off their Ancestral Lands

That was what we blacks fought the white South Africans for

The British conquered Nigeria yet they have no rights to the land

They ruled as overlords for a while and went home

If the British conquered you and gave you back your Land

how can you insist on holding onto others Peoples land forever ?

This type of Selfish attitude would keep you at War for the Next 10 generations

Work out a Peace agreement with the Otas and you give them back their Lands for it

Anything beyond that is pure greed

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