Politics › Re: Peter Obi Vs Tiinubu: Who Rocked It Better? (Pictures) by APCNGN: 1:17pm On May 29, 2022 |
|
Politics › Re: The Massacre Of Northerners In The South And The Conspiracy Of Silence by APCNGN: 10:52am On May 28, 2022 |
Emergingnation3: Yes ! I am proud terrorist, cos one man freedom fighter is another man's terrorist....... We'll keep on terrorising you with our seperatist agitation until we gain independent from Nigeria...  Enjoy the moment! |
Politics › Re: IPOB Members Threaten To "End" David Hundeyin, Accuse Him Of Working For Fulani by APCNGN: 10:51am On May 28, 2022 |
IPOB members are all terrorists |
Politics › Re: The Massacre Of Northerners In The South And The Conspiracy Of Silence by APCNGN: 4:32pm On May 25, 2022 |
Emergingnation3: keep crying like an infant who is suffering acute feed disprivation while Begging for unity.. .. The end of chronic unity beggars are near,cost Biafra actualization means death to them.. It's your turn, terrorist. You guys should enjoy the terror moment while it lasts. |
Politics › Re: Kaduna Group Writes Facebook To Delete Reno Omokri’s Page by APCNGN: 4:04pm On May 25, 2022 |
Emergingnation3: Nigeria days are numbered rather , it must break up to enable nations with great potentials trapped in her to be free... Nigeria or not, you terrorists shall meet your disastrous end! |
Politics › Re: Kaduna Group Writes Facebook To Delete Reno Omokri’s Page by APCNGN: 4:03pm On May 25, 2022 |
oluwaVaz: Na you number am? Terrorists, we dey here together! We shall see! |
Politics › Re: The Massacre Of Northerners In The South And The Conspiracy Of Silence by APCNGN: 4:02pm On May 25, 2022 |
Emergingnation3: And Death to all unity beggars..... IPOB has denied being behind thier death , but pathetic unity beggars that can't imagine their life without Igbo in Nigeria will always loops every crime in the East on IPOB... You terrorists! Your end is nigh. Mark this! |
Politics › Re: Kaduna Group Writes Facebook To Delete Reno Omokri’s Page by APCNGN: 3:16pm On May 25, 2022 |
IPOB days are numbered |
Politics › Re: The Massacre Of Northerners In The South And The Conspiracy Of Silence by APCNGN: 3:14pm On May 25, 2022 |
Death to all IPOB members |
|
Politics › Re: How TB Joshua's Curse Led To Nnamdi Kanu's Arrest & Downfall by APCNGN: 4:39pm On Jul 04, 2021 |
Conrod: NO,mnk is the cure,forget this temporary holdup, we go soon enter highway. Chest beating terrorist. |
Politics › Re: How TB Joshua's Curse Led To Nnamdi Kanu's Arrest & Downfall by APCNGN: 3:04pm On Jul 04, 2021 |
God is good! |
Politics › Re: Audio Of Nnamdi Kanu Ordering ESN To Bury Ikonso With 2000 Human Heads by APCNGN: 3:21pm On Jul 03, 2021 |
Mynd44, Lalasticlala |
Politics › Re: We Swore Oaths To Die Mysteriously If We Disobeyed Kanu - Arrested IPOB Members by APCNGN: 12:02pm On Jul 03, 2021 |
Mynd44, Lalasticlala |
Politics › Re: Citizenship: UK Has A Message For Nigerian Government, Issues Stern Warnings by APCNGN: 9:39am On Jul 03, 2021 |
Tinubuadvocate: UK government will not do anything there's a way we can treat their fuvk up. Lol, Tinubu |
Politics › Re: BREAKING: IPOB Members Blast Vanguard Newspapers On Twitter For Exposing Kanu by APCNGN: 9:31am On Jul 03, 2021 |
|
Politics › Re: Citizenship: UK Has A Message For Nigerian Government, Issues Stern Warnings by APCNGN: 7:41am On Jul 03, 2021 |
|
Politics › Re: Top 7 States With Worst Road Networks In Nigeria— Sahara Reporters by APCNGN: 5:28pm On Jun 30, 2021 |
Mostly southern states..  |
Politics › Re: How Lady Lured Nnamdi Kanu From London To A South American Country - VANGUARD by APCNGN: 4:01pm On Jun 30, 2021 |
Commentor: Everytime with ashawo.
Wetin sef? Hahaha |
Politics › Re: Ebonyi Communal War: Umahi Asks Police To Re-Arrest Appointees Over Killings by APCNGN: 8:59am On Jun 18, 2021 |
|
|
Crime › Re: BREAKING: Buhari Shot Dead by Gunmen! by APCNGN: 6:49pm On Jun 17, 2021 |
Babaibeji2020: Nor be wetin I been wan read, I almost had an orgasm  Lol. Evil child! |
Crime › Re: BREAKING: Buhari Shot Dead by Gunmen! by APCNGN: 5:05pm On Jun 17, 2021 |
chiiraq802: I almost started Thank God sey you no be God. |
Politics › Re: FAKE NEWS: The #LagosIbadanRail Project Was Started And Completed By PMB by APCNGN: 4:09pm On Jun 14, 2021 |
Nawa for Reno and PDP sef. Lalasticlala and Mynd44, FP |
Politics › Re: Why I Support Buhari’s Ban On Twitter – Ned Nwoko by APCNGN: 4:02pm On Jun 14, 2021 |
Simplyleo: You would have saved yourself this epistle by simply typing the usual line by asking Nwodo if he has received his 30k bmc allowance.
Since anyone voicing out his opinion and refuse to drink lamidi cownu's urine is a 30k bmc.   |
Politics › Re: Why I Support Buhari’s Ban On Twitter – Ned Nwoko by APCNGN: 12:41pm On Jun 14, 2021 |
Good! |
Politics › Re: Femi Fani-Kayode: MKO Abiola Funded 1985 Coup That Removed Buhari by APCNGN: 1:57pm On Jun 13, 2021 |
Hmm |
Politics › Re: Not Fulani: AESID Condemns Renewed Izzi/ikwo Communal Hostility In Ebonyi by APCNGN: 1:11pm On Jun 13, 2021 |
yanabasee1: There's barely a day without a single news attributed to the Herdsmen....
This people are trouble...
How they became Nigerians marvels me till today... Read well. Even the title alone is sufficient. |
Politics › Re: Not Fulani: AESID Condemns Renewed Izzi/ikwo Communal Hostility In Ebonyi by APCNGN: 1:11pm On Jun 13, 2021 |
Well done, COFFINSELLER! Topics like this rarely make FP... But let's see..
Lalasticlala Mynd44. |
Politics › Re: JUNE 12: Yantaung People Teach Yoruba How To Organize A Successful Protest (Pix) by APCNGN: 12:43pm On Jun 13, 2021 |
Interesting! |
Politics › Re: Ghana Copy Pantami, To Link Simcard With Nin by APCNGN: 8:53am On May 25, 2021 |
Mynd44: NIN is national ID Baba dun comment. Front page loading...  |
Politics › How Igala Conquered And Colonized Igbos (1450–18th Century) * by APCNGN(op): 7:32am On May 02, 2021*. Modified: 10:03am On May 02, 2021 |
The Igala mega state attained the height of its fame during the mid-17th century. The rise of the Igala mega state disrupted and contributed to the shift of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade from the Bight of Benin to the Bight of Biafra and the decline of the Benin Empire between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The Idah-Benin war (1515–1516) was a war of mutual independence. The Igala state reached its political and commercial supremacy afterwards, when it became a leading exporter of choral beads, horses, medicine, skills and of course, slaves to the coastal region. Its growing power, nevertheless, changed the dynamics of the earlier complex relationships with several northern Igbo communities. Joseph Hawkins in 1797 already captured the relentless raiding of the extreme northern Igboland by the Igalas. In his “A History of a Voyage to the Coast of Africa” he noted the growing conflicts between the ‘Ebo Country’ and ‘Galla’.
By the late 17th century, the Igalas conquered and held socio-economic, political and religious control of the indigenous northern Igbo mini-states. From Opi, Nsukka, Nsugbe, several Igbo communities on the Anambra river, the lower Niger, through Okpanam to Asaba the Igala held sway. Trading out post with Onitsha and the Ijo middlemen were fully established. The mythical Omeppa, Inenyi Ogugu set up garrison at Opi and several Igala warlords played their part in the build up of the Igala colonial take over of these northern Igbo states. But no other individual played a greater role in shaping Igala-Igbo colonisation during the 18th century than Onoja Oboni, the legendary Igala warrior and slave trader.
Onoja Oboni’s personality and heritage has been shrouded in mythical imagery over time. Ranging from being the Son of Eri, the grandson of Aganapoje to being a descendant of one of the Idah royal families; the priestly sub-clan of Obajeadaka in Okete-ochai-attah. The key areas of consensus are; he was a master strategist, slave raider and trader, conqueror, coloniser and imperialist. Added to these were his diplomacy, expansionist traits and the acculturation of conquered territories. He built himself a walled city in Ogurugu and recent archaeological findings of the remnant of the ruins of his fort on the grounds of the University of Nsukka confirm this. The Igala soldiers built forts and fortifications that stretched from Ete down to Opi and then to Anambra. Oboni’s rise to power affected the history of the North-western Nsukka and the Igbo communities on the Anambra River and the Lower Niger during the Igala commercial and socio-cultural ascendancy and domination. This was the reinforcing of the golden age of Igala imperial expansion.
In this way, Igala mega state took control and allegiance were paid. Until the decline of Igala power, the Ezes of Enugu Ezike, Akpugo, Nkpologu, Ibagwa Ani and Opi continued to receive their titles from Idah; investiture, installation and confirmation of their office was only by the royal blessing of Attah Igala in Idah. The Eze were only validated when the returned home with Igala choral beads ‘aka’, staff of office believed to be imbued with protective charms to ensure longevity and security of the Eze as well as prestige animal (horse) to bolster up their ego. There were also periodic royal visits to the Atta Igala to pay tributes and as well intended to strengthen diplomatic ties and inter-group relations, renew allegiance, and assured insurance from slave raids.
In terms of indigenous technologies, the Igala soldiers built factories (forges) for manufacturing Dane-guns, ironworks, carving, introduced arrowheads with tip-poison from sting ray; cloth knitting, terracing of Nsukka hillsides and brought in a well developed political and social hierarchies. At this time Igala empire had become a cultural exchange hub for other merging states; the influence was felt as far north as the Nok civilisation and down east to Igbo-Ukwu civilisation. Till date many of the Igala-Nsukka borderland remain bilingual.
On the religious level, the Igala installed their own priests- the Attama- as the custodian of the dangerous ‘alusi’ shrine, took control as mediators between the spirit and the Igbo communities, presided over divinations and fashioned ‘Ikenga’, ‘Okwute’ (ritual staffs) that combined both Igala and Igbo religious elements. The Attama thus became the major agents of Igala socio-cultural control. Several efforts to keep the Attama lineage Igala failed, eventually the priestly office have been greatly igbonized, even though the nominal Igala identification is still predominant. Many of the northern Igbo state settlements have lineages with Igala names, cultural practices with marked Igala modification and adaptations. The use of Igala circular basket in contrast to the Igbo rectangular types persists till this day.
By the turn of the 19th century, the Igala empire was too large for any reliable and robust central control. Internal decay and implosion set in. The Fulani jihadists started contracting the Igala imperial power, conquered territories in the north switched tributes, forced or/and seceded from the Igala empire. The Bassa war added more pressure to the war-weary empire. The abolition of slave trade brought in untold economic recession. In 1914 the British burnt down Ibagwa and Obukpa as a punitive measure. By the 1920s, Igala empire was a spent force and a limping shadow, the British easily took over control of both Nsukka and the Igala territories. SOURCES:Achebe, N. (2011). The female king of colonial Nigeria: Ahebi Ugbabe. Indiana University Press.
Boston, J. S. (1960). Notes on Contact between the Igala and the Ibo. Journal of the Historical society of Nigeria, 2(1), 52–58.
DeLancey, V. (1973). The Igbo-Igala Borderland: Religion and Social Control in Indigenous African Colonialism.
Ebeh, J. I. (2015). Igala Ontology and Its Influence on Their Social Praxis.
African Research Review, 9(1), 123–135.
Egbunu, F. E. (2001). Chieftaincy Titles Among Igala Christians: Problems and Prospects Enugu.
Eze, O. C., Omeje, P. U., & Chinweuba, U. G. (2014).
The Igbo:“A Stateless Society”. Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences, 5(27 P3), 1315.
Hawkins, J. (1797). A History of a Voyage to the Coast of Africa: And Travels Into the Interior of that Country: Containing Particular Descriptions of the Climate and Inhabitants, and Interesting Particulars Concerning the Slave Trade. author.
Oforka, V. C. (2015). The Bleeding Continent: How Africa Became Impoverished and Why It Remains Poor. Xlibris Corporation.
Okwoli, P. E. (1973). A short History of Igala. Ilorin: Matanmi and Sons.
Okwoli, P. E. (2006). The History of the Fifty Years Reign of the Attah Igala, Alhaji Aliyu Ocheja Obaje, 1956–2006.
Oriji, J. (2011). Political Organization in Nigeria since the Late Stone Age: A History of the Igbo People. Springer.
Shelton, A. J. (1968). Onọjọ Ogboni: Problems of Identification and Historicity in the Oral Traditions of the Igala and Northern Nsukka Igbo of Nigeria.
Journal of American Folklore, 243–257.
Shelton, A. J. (1971). The Igbo-Igala borderland: religion & social control in indigenous African colonialism. State University of New York Press.
|