40 Interested Facts About Ibadan - Politics - Nairaland
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| 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Softcash(op): 12:25pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
40 Interesting Facts you did not know about Ìbàdàn Ìbàdàn was created in 1829 as a war camp for warriors coming from Oyo, Ife and Ijebu. A forest site and several ranges of hills, varying in elevation from 160 to 275 metres, offered strategic defence opportunities. Ìbàdàn is the largest indigenous city in West Africa and is located in the South-Western part of Oyo State of Nigeria. It is the capital city of Oyo State and is located about 145 km North-East of Lagos, the commercial capital of Nigeria. Its population of 2,550,593, according to the 2006 census results, includes 11 local government areas. The population of central Ìbàdàn, including five LGAs, is 1,338,659 covering an area of 128 km². Image of Anna Hinderer Church and Mission House at Ibadan. Anna Hinderer Church and Mission House, Ìbàdàn, 1854. Ancient Ìbàdàn 1. Ìbàdàn is a city built on seven hills. It was founded by the Yoruba in 1750. It became a Yoruba military headquarters in 1829 and came under British rule in 1893 as part of the Niger River Delta Protectorate. 2. Ìbàdàn has no “ancestral father” or founder; it only maintained an indirect link with Ile-Ife which was regarded by most of the older states as their orírun (original home), from which their princes obtained the adé ìlẹ̀kẹ̣̀ (beaded crown) that symbolised their right to rule and from which they also developed a spirit of brotherhood that bound a number of Yoruba rulers together. 3. Ìbàdàn was founded by “iron and blood” and right from the beginning a military aristocracy was set up where most of the notable warriors of the 1830s controlled the reins of government. 4. The first leader was Oluyedun, a distinguished warrior who took the title of Àare-̣Ọ̀nà-Kakanfò meant for the Oyo war general. His lieutenants and subordinates were selected in accordance with their valour. Lakanle, who had been the commander-in-chief of the Ìbàdàn ad hoc army, then acclaimed “the bravest of the brave,” became the Ọ̀tún Kakanfò while Oluyole who was reputed to be the next most powerful man, was made the Òsì Kakanfò. 5. The reign of Basọ̀run Oluyole from the mid-1830s to 1847 further emphasised that a powerful military leader was in control. He was feared by his subjects and chiefs for his firmness and toughness which was often excessive and bordered on oppression and wickedness. In fact, so well did he succeed that Ìbàdàn became known as Ìlú Olúyọ̀lé (“town of Oluyole”) long after his reign, to this present day. Geographical Location 6. Long-established Ìbàdàn oral traditions speak of “three Ìbàdàns”, the first two being smaller settlements inhabited by some migrants from other parts of Yorubaland, including the Egba Gbagura who were later to move to Abeokuta. Among these people were the descendants of Lagelu, the ancestral founder of the first Ìbàdàn who migrated from Ile-Ife. 7. The first Ìbàdàn disintegrated as a result of destruction; the second suffered from defeat and desertion; and the third has remained in existence ever since. 8. Ìbàdàn began as a temporary settlement and war camp (bùdó ogun) for the allied armies of Ijebu, Oyo, and Ife who had gone to participate in the Owu War. 9. The Egba, Ife and Oyo were the original inhabitants of Ìbàdàn. Egba left in 1829 for Abeokuta while Oyo expunged Ife under the leadership of Máyè ̣Okunade in 1833 and Oyo became the sole inhabitant of the land. 10. In the 19th century, Ìbàdàn offered a natural protection. This was why the settler settled at Oke Mapo (Mapo Hill) and clustered around its brow. Thus, Ìbàdàn was referred to as ìlú orí òkè (the city on the hill). 11. There was no ààfin (palace) centrally located to the town since there was no Ọba. Consequently, the various compounds were not built to look towards the direction of any ruler’s compound as was the case in older towns where houses were built to face, as much as possible, the palace. Instead, they were built on slopes of hills to face whatever direction the owner found convenient and to avoid the ridges where erosion and flooding could wash their houses away. Commerce and Trade 12. While the people were predominately farmers, some engaged in trading. The central market at Ojaoba was the economic nerve centre of the town. Traders from the neighbouring countries of the Egba and Ijebu attended the market at Ìbàdàn, bringing coastal goods like salt, dried fish, and European commodities. Female Ìbàdàn traders, too, left the town to attend the markets in Apomu, Ikire, and some villages in the Ife kingdom. 13. To facilitate the movement of traders entering and leaving Ìbàdàn from different places, the town wall had sixteen gates, all in the direction of the sixteen highways entering the town. The system of many gates was considered unique and described as the first of its type in the whole of Yorubaland. 14. Four of Ìbàdàn’s gates were of special importance because of the traffic on them and the importance attached to their maintenance and security. These were the gates leading to Abeokuta, Ijebuland, Oyo, and Iwo. Both Abeokuta and Ijebu gates linked Ìbàdàn with the coast while the others linked the people with their kinsmen in Oyo-Yoruba towns and villages. 15. The location of Ìbàdàn also favoured trading activities. Ìbàdàn had the economic advantage of being located on a network of communication routes. It could easily be linked with the older Yoruba states and with the ports in Lagos, Porto Novo, and Badagry through the Egba, Egbado, and Ijebu territories. These three ports were important because of the lucrative trade in slaves and later in agricultural products with the Europeans on the coast. Ìbàdàn succeeded in exploiting this advantageous location to establish trade contacts with many other parts of Yorubaland. Internal Relations 16. In less than two decades after its establishment, Ìbàdàn had grown into a big commercial centre. From the small settlement of the 1830s, it rapidly expanded to such an extent that the second town wall had to be built in the late 1840s, and the third in 1858 to protect its almost one hundred thousand dwellers. 17. Ìbàdàn maintained an open door policy to strangers, attracting and welcoming them irrespective of their places of origin. Many were lured into the town by its great commercial potentialities, its liberal and accommodating attitude towards strangers, and the opportunities it provided the hardy and the adventurous to make use of their talents. 18. Unlike the older states which were founded by just a few people and took hundreds of years to grow, Ìbàdàn had a large and rapidly expanding population right from the beginning. This made an impact on the economy. Farmlands had to be rapidly expanded to meet the food requirements of the people. More tools and cloths had to be provided and this led to the phenomenal expansion of the crafts industry. The exchange economy had to be developed too. 19. Ìbàdàn provided an unparalleled security to all its inhabitants and this created in the minds of its citizens a spirit of invulnerability. Anybody who set his foot on Ìbàdàn territory was sure that, except for war or civil rebellion—the two conditions that were capable of subverting peace in Ìbàdàn—he was completely safe from the hands of invaders. For, it was believed “ogun kò lè kó Ìbàdàn” (“Ìbàdàn can never be plundered in war”). Economy 20. Apart from its strategic location which gave it a natural protection, it boasted of many distinguished warriors who could successfully defend the town against attack from any part of Yorubaland. 21. With an expanding economy characterised by a high degree of specialisation, Ìbàdàn rapidly grew into a big, urban centre. This rapid transformation of the town is in line with the “functional specialisation theory of urbanisation” which stresses that an economy based on specialisation and division of labour, as obtained in Ìbàdàn, is capable of transforming a small settlement into an urban centre. 22. Based on this economic theory, its numerous farmers operated far above the subsistence level; its military rulers provided the necessary peace and control over the economy; and its exchange sector allowed for the distribution of surplus local items and imports. 23. Many Ìbàdàn traders grew wealthy by exchanging local products and by participating in the clearing of higher-value goods from different sources. This generated considerable employment for many people as retailers, wholesalers, food sellers, and in other nonagricultural occupations. It also brought more revenue to the military rulers. 24. Thus, by around 1850, Ìbàdàn had become an urban centre with a population of about 60,000 to 100,000 people living within the town, which covered about sixteen square miles. 25. It had also established an identifiable social, political, and economic structure which sustained it for the remaining fifty years of the century. Modern Ìbàdàn 26. Ìbàdàn (Yoruba: Ìbàdàn or fully Ìlú Ẹ̀bá-Ọ̀dàn, the town at the junction of the savannah and the forest), the capital of Oyo State, is the second largest city in Nigeria by population after Lagos and the largest in geographical area. At independence, Ìbàdàn was the largest and the most populous city in Nigeria and the third in Africa after Cairo and Johannesburg. Image of The Cocoa House, Ibadan. The Cocoa House, Ibadan. Completed in July 1965, it is the 3rd tallest building in Nigeria and the 78th tallest building in Africa as at June 2017. 27. Its central location and accessibility from the capital city of Lagos were major considerations in the choice of Ìbàdàn as the headquarters of the Western Provinces (1939), which became the Western Region of Nigeria in 1952. Political 28. Ìbàdàn is the largest city in Nigeria by geographical area. It is larger in size than Ekiti, Abia, Ebonyi, Imo, Anambra and Lagos States. It is more populous than Ondo, Osun, Kogi, Zamfara, Enugu, Kebbi, Edo, Plateau, Adamawa, Cross River, Abia, Ekiti, Kwara, Gombe, Yobe, Taraba, Ebonyi, Nasarawa, Bayelsa States and Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory. And it is more industrialized than Sokoto, Jigawa, Adamawa, Taraba, Plateau, Ebonyi, Ekiti, Osun, Bayelsa, Cross River, Kwara, Kogi, Kaduna, Kebbi, Gombe, Bauchi and Borno States. 29. Ìbàdàn as a city, has 11 local government areas; three more than Bayelsa State and just two less than Ebonyi State. Facts 30. The first “skyscraper” in Nigeria, Cocoa House, is at Ìbàdàn. 31. Ìbàdàn has the first standard Nigerian stadium; The Obafemi Awolowo Stadium formerly Liberty Stadium. 32. The first television station in Africa is at Ìbàdàn. 33. Ìbàdàn boasts of the oldest surviving private-owned Newspaper (The Nigerian Tribune). 34. The first school in Ìbàdàn was founded by Rev. David Hinderer at Kudeti in 1853. 35. There are more federal tertiary institutions/institutes in Ìbàdàn than any other city in Nigeria. 36. The busiest highway in Nigeria, Lagos-Ìbàdàn expressway, terminates at Ìbàdàn. 37. The city of Ìbàdàn is naturally drained by four rivers with many tributaries: Ona River in the North and West; Ogbere River towards the East; Ogunpa River flowing through the city and Kudeti River in the Central part of the metropolis. 38. Ìbàdàn is the second largest non-oil city economy in Nigeria after Lagos. Side Attractions 39. Tourist attractions include: Agodi Gardens and Leisure Park. Ventura Mall, Samonda. University of Ìbàdàn Zoological Garden. Bower Tower. Mapo Hall. Kankanfo Inn, and others too numerous to mention. 40. Some notable people from Ìbàdàn include; Prof. Oluremi Sonaiya (b. 1955) Prof. Toyin Falola (b. 1953) Prof. Jadesola O. Akande (1940–2008) Prof. Oladapo Afolabi (b. 1953) Mr. James Olubunmi Aboderin (1934–1984) Dr. Tunde Adegbola (b. 1955) Otunba Akin Alabi (b. 1977) Chief Theophilus Akinyele (b. 1932) Oba Samuel Odulana (1914–2016) Oba Isaac Babalola Akinyele (1882–1964) Bishop Alexander Babatunde Akinyele (1875–1968) Pa Taiwo Michael Akinkunmi (b. 1936) Chief Richard Akinjide (b. c. 1932) Kofoworola Abeni Pratt (1910–1992) Oba Saliu Adetunji (b. 1928) and Brigadier-General Raji Alagbe Rasaki (b. 1947), just to mention a few.
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by amaniro: 12:32pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Educative. The reason ibadan has many brown roofs is because its an old city ![]() |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by oilPUSSY(f): 12:57pm On Apr 13, 2019*. Modified: 8:29pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
amaniro:Delusion ! Keep deceiving yourself. Ibadan was founded in 1829.. It's not as old as Onitsha Calabar and Benin but you hardly see dirty roof in the aforementioned cities.. Brown roof is a sign of poverty and wretchedness.... Checking the human development records in Nigeria Will help you out. Even if it's a sign of being an old City as you claimed, do you mean the roof attached below is the roof that has been there since Ibadan was discovered in 1880's ?, you are still dwelling under the same roof.? Afonja dey make me laugh ![]() Old City ko Acient City ni.
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Nobody: 12:58pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
amaniro:Yea, you can say that again. Those buildings with brown roofs were the lekkis, Ikoyis and VGCs of their time, when almost 90% of the houses in Nigeria were covered with bamboos ![]() |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Blue3k2: 1:04pm On Apr 13, 2019*. Modified: 3:26pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
3. Ìbàdàn was founded by “iron and blood” and right from the beginning a military aristocracy was set up where most of the notable warriors of the 1830s controlled the reins of government.Which set of people did they conquer? I would be surprised if this land was just uninhabited during the 18th century. I would appreciate if you can elaborate on that part. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Unik3030: 1:12pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
oilPUSSY:what u fail to realize was that your forefathers wished they could have that brown roof u think u are taunting us with but they were cut short in their prime by d Nigerian bullet. those houses u call brown roof have been dere for decades n it's shows that it's been a long way coming. go to the obas palace n u will still find a brown roof building despite all d money, it's not that they don't have money to change d roof but it's a way to remember what our forefathers laboured for. those houses with brown roof have children in high places but they will prefer to leave that brown roof house there as remembrance n build their mansion elsewhere due to very large land mass in Ibadan unlike where u come from where u kill yourself over half plot of land |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by rummmy: 2:09pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Welcome to brown roofs republic, the greatest and largest city of the Yorubas. They can't lay claim on Lagos Becuse it is a no man's land developed with our common resources. They have lost more than 50% of the land to other tribes. The founder of Lagos is a Benin man. Don't quote me because I have thunder phone no ![]() |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Nobody: 2:12pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
fairfora:
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Arda1000(m): 2:44pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Unik3030:and u guys are still living in houses build by ur ancestors |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Preshy561(f): 2:50pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Arda1000:One can't imagine how shameless these people are. ![]() |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Iamgrey5(m): 3:00pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Late Professor Jadesola Akande my Aunt I can't forget the day she gave me dirty knock for not greeting her properly. Omo Ibadan ni awa Ibadan omoajorosun |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by oilPUSSY(f): 3:03pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Arda1000:I had to ignore his mention .. I didn't know where and how to reply him because he ended up discracing himself indirectly.. Those clowns no get shame. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Iamgrey5(m): 3:05pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Op please Google professor Bolale Awe The first woman professor of History in Nigeria. Iyalode Wuraola Esan The first woman to be a senator in Nigeria. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Afospecialk: 3:22pm On Apr 13, 2019*. Modified: 4:04pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Am more than a little bit enamored to be a Yoruba man from SW of Nigeria Historically, SW is the foundation of all civilization in Nigeria thats why we ar more civilized and sophisticated beyond their reasonable imagination and label us a coward The first Primary, secondary nd tertiary institutions ar situated in SW First story building, first radio, TV, airport, stadium, newspaper, bridge skyscraper, female to drive car etc ar in SW Some demented simpleton with empty purulent cranium chestbeaters always refer to the great Ibadan city as BROWN ROOF when its crystal clear that their forefathers couldn't afford them and were only reduced to live under hut and washed away by erosion bcs they couldn't stand d test of time. We see it all ur old movies. Your forefathers built huts while our forefathers built brown roof Proud of our ancestors city |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by olawalepopoola: 4:02pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Ìbàdàn my place of birth. Serene, lovely and accommodating. The land of great warriors. Omo Ajorosun. When I remember the days I spent in Yemetu Igosun while growing up I always thank God I passed through you. Ìbàdàn awa omo re ko je gbagbe re. The land with seven highly mineralized mountains and flourishing plains. ÌBÀDÀN TO GBA ONILE TO GBA ALEJO YIO GBE GBOGBO WA OOO. AMIN. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by CyynthiaKiss(f): 4:04pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
oilPUSSY:Ibadan is in that condition because it's dominated by Yoruba Muslims.. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by BeautifulMind2: 4:20pm On Apr 13, 2019*. Modified: 4:36pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Softcash:I don't know why you guys enjoy deceiving yourselves satellite can simply give you accurate size of any city without stress , Oyo state is one of biggest states in Landmass in Nigeria no doubt, saying Ibadan is bigger than Anambra and other states you mentioned, means you are very ignorant below is satellite map of Oyo state, Ibadan is 25.5km, satellite measured accurately without mistake
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by BeautifulMind2: 4:29pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Softcash:[b] Onitsha metropolitan areas from Umunya to Onitsha is 18.3 KM From Onitsha to Awka is 40.5 KM
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Iamgrey5(m): 4:42pm On Apr 13, 2019*. Modified: 9:07pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
BeautifulMind2:Idi Ayure, Ido, lalupon and Olodo that falls out of your arrow and all other places are actually in Ibadan only Eruwa in your map is no longer in Ibadan Ibadan falls under two senatorial district. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by BeautifulMind2: 4:52pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Iamgrey5:I measured by length even with lalupon and Olodo is not up to 27KM I believe you can see the map clearly
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Iamgrey5(m): 4:54pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
BeautifulMind2:Olodo ? Lalupon ? That is actually the real Ibadan people you have omitted only Eruwa is now ibarapa land. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by BeautifulMind2: 4:58pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Iamgrey5:Olodo you mentioned is still rural area not urbanize |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Iamgrey5(m): 5:02pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
BeautifulMind2:A forest with properties to let Eruwa in ibarapa land is no longer a forest.
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by BeautifulMind2: 5:15pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Iamgrey5:Olodo is rural area
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Iamgrey5(m): 5:18pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
BeautifulMind2:If you want to be honest with yourself Start measuring Ibadan from "Lalupon" the home of the founder of Ibadan lagelu and end in "Olodo" But you can choose to believe whatever you want by measuring only half of Ibadan Good luck |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Nobody: 5:19pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
oilPUSSY:Okoros will always show their stupidity at every available opportunity. |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by BeautifulMind2: 5:31pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Iamgrey5:Use this site to calculate distance from Lalupon to Olodo and also calculate Onitsha to Amansi Just type Lalupon to Olodo same with Onitsha to Amansi then tell me the figures http://distancescalculator.com/ |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by Iamgrey5(m): 5:37pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
BeautifulMind2:Your program does not recognize Olodo it stops at Ido Ido is still far from Olodo as you can clearly see on the map Where is Amansim ?
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| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by vonxe: 5:43pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
The rate at which Ibadan, Kano and Enugu were developing was thwarted by introduction of unitary government. Despite this, I will say only few cities in south can compete with Ibadan economically and it only behind Kano and Kaduna in the north |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by BeautifulMind2: 5:49pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
Iamgrey5:Amansi is Awka south, My phone battery is down I can't screenshot, I using lappy The distance from Lalupon to Olodo gave me 21.16 mi Straight Distance 24 mi Driving Distance 36 minutes http://distancescalculator.com/calculate?from=lalupon&to=Olodo |
| Re: 40 Interested Facts About Ibadan by mrhowoto: 5:54pm On Apr 13, 2019 |
oilPUSSY: |
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satellite can simply give you accurate size of any city without stress , Oyo state is one of biggest states in Landmass in Nigeria no doubt, saying Ibadan is bigger than Anambra and other states you mentioned, means you are very ignorant below is satellite map of Oyo state, Ibadan is 25.5km, satellite measured accurately without mistake