Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,199,311 members, 7,971,135 topics. Date: Wednesday, 09 October 2024 at 11:29 PM

Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I - Culture - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Culture / Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I (245 Views)

Itsekiri People (A Brief History) Part 3 / Itsekiri People (A Brief History) PART 2 / 6 Nigerian Cultural Myths That Are Unfavourable To Women (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I by samuk: 9:26am On May 29
Okpame-Edward Oronsaye sent in this lengthy and exhaustive treatise on a trending contentious issue.
Please peruse;

ODODUWA: MYTHS & NARRATIVES AS HISTORY. PART I*

The story of Ododuwa by many essayists and scholars of African art history and history comes in different flavours and styles.

First story of Ododuwa:

One of these narratives claims Ododuwa was the son of Olodumare, a Yoruba(**)deity and the king of the sky or heavens. The assertion is that Olodumare sent Ododuwa from his domain in heaven to create the world. Oduduwa had a cockerel, a handful of sand and a palm nut and sixteen lesser deities (or four hundred according to one other version) were let down from heaven by an iron chain to the exact spot today known as Ile-Ife. On arrival on earth, Ododuwa and his companions found the area was waterlogged. So Ododuwa threw the handful of sand over the water surface, and then the cockerel scattered sand grains, and the place became dry land. Then, he planted the palm nut, which grew into a palm tree with sixteen branches. Each palm tree branch is said to represent each of the sixteen crowned heads of the Yoruba people. The belief is that Ile Ife is the cradle of civilization.

Second story of Ododuwa:

One other narrative asserts that Ododuwa was the son of King Lamorodu, said to be a king of Mecca. Ododuwa and his followers were expelled from Mecca for idol worshipping.

Third story of Ododuwa:

A third variant of the story claims that Ododuwa was a fugitive prince from an unnamed city-state or kingdom ‘East’ of Ile-Ife.
Re: Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I by samuk: 9:40am On May 29
Several Yoruba historians and scholars investigated the possibility that the fugitive or celestial Ododuwa was the founder of Ile-Ife and the progenitor of all Yoruba kings.

These include Professor Bolaji Idowu (_Olodumare Bibliography_), Bose Emmanuel (_Odun Ifa-Ifa Festival_), Dr Isaac Adaegbo Akinjogbin (_Yorubaland before Oduduwa_) and Dr Isola Olomola (_Eastern Yoruba before Oduduwa_). They have essentially enquired whether Ododuwa was a historical or mythological person.

Dr Isaac Adaegbo Akinjogbin argued that probably the alleged descent of Ododuwa from heaven was culled from the mythology of the pre-Ododuwa inhabitants of Ile-Ife. He believed that the fugitive Oduduwa, whether from Mecca or an eastern kingdom, did not establish Ile-Ife but perhaps arrived in the city-state during the last days of the Obalata epoch.

Dr Isola Olomola also dismissed the argument that Ododuwa, celestial or fugitive, founded Ile-Ife and was the father of all Yoruba kings. He believed that the arrival of Oduduwa in Ile-Ife was an isolated event that did not affect the entire area now known as Yorubaland.

Professor Bolaji Idowu also argued that Ododuwa did not establish Ile-Ife. He maintained that when Oduduwa arrived in Ile-Ife, there was already a community of aboriginal people. Indeed, there are many communities in what is now known as Yoruba land, such as Oba-Ile near Akure, and Ijamo and Idoko people of Ondo state, including the Oba Igbomina and Igbo-Idaisa in the present-day Republic of Benin, whose creation story is at variance with the popular Ododuwa’s descent-from-the-sky version.

The Ijebu claim they migrated from Wadai and had nothing to do with Ile-Ife or Oduduwa.

Although these writers did not ascertain Ododuwa’s origin, the descent-from-the-sky postulation became the standard and accepted story. Western scholars of African art history and history such as P.A. Talbot, William and Bernard Fagg, Frank Willett, Ms Blackmun, Paula Amos ,Kathy Curnow, Kate Ezra, Laure Meyer etc also promoted the postulation and claimed that Ododuwa was a god.
Re: Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I by samuk: 9:45am On May 29
Oba Erediauwa Book:

Then, on April 29, 2004, the Benin king, Omo N’Oba Erediauwa, publicly launched a book, _I Remain, Sir, Your Obedient Servant_. In chapter 36 of the book, the Benin king claimed that Ododuwa was Ekaladerhan, an Edo fugitive prince from Benin City. He further said that Ododuwa was neither the founder of Ile-Ife nor the progenitor of all Yoruba kings.

He wrote,
*..it is historically wrong to describe Odua or Oduduwa as “father and progenitor of the Yoruba kings.*
*That Oduduwa could not have been the father of Yoruba kings or founder of Yoruba race, as modern Yoruba historians now put it, is also borne out of the fact that the Ife account itself has it that there were five rulers in Ife before the advent of Oduduwa*

Many Yoruba writers, historians and kings reacted furiously to the claim and clamoured for the removal of the book from circulation. They argued that Oba Erediauwa was not a ‘trained’ historian thus not competent to write about Ododuwa’s origin. The Ooni of Ile-Ife, Ooni Okunade Sijuwade Olubuse II, accused Omo N’Oba Erediauwa of attempting to re-write Yoruba history saying.
Re: Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I by samuk: 9:52am On May 29
The Ooni said,

*It is just right to allow the entire world to know that the name Ododuwa, the founder of our dynasty, can never be corrupted or bastardised by any living being in an attempt to create for himself an unnecessary distortion of historical fact...Oduduwa, the legend, the father of the bigger Yoruba dynasty, has no connection whatsoever with the Ogiso dynasty in Benin history as portrayed by the Oba of Benin because Oduduwa descended directly from heaven through a chain to where is now known as Ife today in the company of 400 deities*


It was like the Yoruba scholars, historians and kings, especially Ooni Okunade Sijuwade Olubuse II, were hearing the Edo view of Ododuwa’s origin and the Benin/Ile-Ife relationship for the first time.

In 1960, the Enogie of Obazuwa, Enogie Edun Akenzua (then a journalist), published an article, _A Bini View,_ in the Nigeria Journal of June 1960. It was the Edo perspective of Ododuwa’s origin.

Then, in 1973, Oba Erediauwa, then Prince Solomon Igbinoghodua Akenzua, reiterated this Edo perspective in a lecture to the Benin Museum Society in Lagos, Nigeria. Again, in 1982, during his nationwide Thank-You- Tour after his coronation in 1979, the Benin king repeated the Edo viewpoint about Ododuwa and the Benin/Ile-Ife link on the occasion of his visit to Ile-Ife. Actually, it was the Ooni of Ile-Ife, Ooni Okunade Sijuwade, Olubuse II, who had raised the subject matter in his welcome address. Once again, in 1984, Oba Erediauwa reiterated the Edo view in a lecture, _The Evolution of Traditional Rulership in Nigeria_, which he gave at the Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan, Nigeria.

The Benin king among other things, said,
*We in Benin believe, and there are historical landmarks for such belief, that the person whom the Yorubas call Ododua was the fugitive Prince Ekaladerhan, son of the last Ogiso of Benin by name Ogiso Owodo…*
Re: Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I by samuk: 9:55am On May 29
Seemingly, the high-profile launching of the book, which brought to light the information mainstream art historians and historians had hitherto called ‘abuse of oral tradition’, frightened the Yoruba scholars, historians and kings. Naturally, there was a lot of mud-slinging as Edo and Yoruba essayists, scholars, and writers presented their "facts" about Ododuwa and the Benin/Ile-Ife relationship. Many Yoruba essayists, scholars and writers stuck to the contention of the Ooni of Ile-Ife that Ododuwa descended directly from heaven, created the world and started civilisation in Ile-Ife in the 10th century. In support of the Ooni, Dr Siyan Oyeweso, a professor of history, of the Lagos State University asserted,


*"... The origin of the Yoruba people started in Ife, the cradle of Yoruba, the Orisu, the word that cannot be translated, which is believed to be their own Garden of Eden. The identity of Oduduwa is not so much in doubt. It is agreed by historians of all persuasions that the ancestor of the Yoruba is Oduduwa. According to the Yoruba belief system, Oduduwa was sent from Heaven through a chain and landed in Ife”.*

Eventually, credible facts began to emerge from the archives. The Eleko of Eko, Oba of Lagos, Eleko Rilwanu Aremu Akilolu threw his weight behind Omo N’Oba Erediauwa’s view, insisting that Oduduwa was the exiled Prince Ekaladerhan from Benin kingdom. According to a newspaper report,
*The Oba of Lagos, Rilwanu Aremu Aklolu I yesterday joined the ongoing controversy between Oba Okunade Sijuwade Olubuse II and his Benin counterpart, Omo N’Oba Erediauwa, weighing in on the side of the Benin monarch that Qduduwa, was an escapee Prince Ekaladerhan from Benin kingdom*.
Re: Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I by muyico(m): 11:47am On May 29
u re From which tribe?
Re: Ododuwa: Myths & Narratives As History. Part I by NaijaPrince18: 12:17pm On May 29
Oduduwa will never be from Benin. Benin was created by oduduwa son so how can he be from Benin

(1) (Reply)

Unraveling The Political Structure Of The Hausa Empire / Everything Is Relative! / Words On The Marble..maye Of Yoruba Kingdom

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 23
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.