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Early Oyo History Reconsidered

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2014

B.A. Agiri*
Affiliation:
University of Lagos

Extract

The old Oyo ‘empire’ was the largest and best-known of the Yoruba kingdoms. Located in the savannah below the bend of the river Niger in the Bussa-Jebba region of southwest Nigeria, it achieved prominence during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries but collapsed and disintegrated in the early years of the nineteenth. Its origins and early history are imperfectly known because the traditions dealing with this period are enmeshed in myth and legend. This state of affairs has led one writer to conclude that the history of this period “is beyond meaningful’ enquiry.

Two major problems confront anyone attempting to reconstruct early Oyo history. The origins of the kingdom are linked both to the process of the settlement of the Yoruba people in their present location and to that of state formation among them. Furthermore, information about these processes is to be found in traditional accounts that seem to have been fossilized since the publication of Samuel Johnson's The History of the Yorubas in 1921. Indeed, many subsequent ‘traditions’ seem in no small measure to be derived from this work. It is therefore appropriate to begin this paper with a discussion of the influence of Johnson's work, followed by an analysis of Johnson's sources and motives, insofar as these can be determined. In 1901 an Iiebu man found it necessary to make an emphatic declaration on Yoruba history:

I deny that Oyo is the capital city of Yoruba land. Ife, the cradle home of the whole Yorubas and the land of the deified Oduduwa, has been recognised by every interior tribe (including Benin and Ketu) for all intents and purposes as the capital city.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1975

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References

1. Some of these myths and legends will be discussed in detail later in this paper.

2. Law, R.C.C., “The Oyo Empire: The History of a Yoruba State, Principally in the Period c. 1600 to c. 1836,’ Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham, 1971.Google Scholar

3. Johnson, Samuel, The History of the Yorubas (Lagos, 1921).Google Scholar The original manuscript seems to have been completed about twenty-five years previously. For more on Johnson see Law, , “The Heritage of Oduduwa: Traditional History and Political Propaganda among the Yoruba,” JAH, 14 (1973), pp. 207–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar The present discussion is intended to be only a preliminary analysis of Johnson's influence on later Yoruba historiography. In order more fully to assess his role, recourse must be had to local official archives and to the records of the Church Missionary Society, with the intent of learning, if possible, why Johnson undertook the task, what effect, if any, it had on British attitudes toward Oyo, and in what ways it served both as a stimulus and a deterrent to further attempts by Yoruba traditional historians to recount their past. It is hoped that in due course the present writer may be able to embark on this task.

4. C.A. Sapara Williams, speaking to the Lagos Institute. Quoted in Herskovits, J., “The Siena Leoneans of Yorubaland,” in Curtin, P.D. (ed.), Africa and the West (Madison, 1972), p. 82n.Google Scholar

5. For these see especially Atanda, J.A., The New Oyo Empire: Indirect Rule and Change in Western Nigeria, 1894–1934 (London, 1973), pp. 99127.Google Scholar

6. Chief S.O. Ojo of Sake belongs to this second group. His publications on Oyo history were meant to “correct” Johnson.

7. Field notes of Babayemi, S.O., Institute of African Studies, University of Lagos.Google Scholar

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9. Ibid., pp. vii–viii.

10. Akinjogbin, I.A., Dahomey and Its Neighbours, 1708–1818 (Cambridge, 1967), pp. 81–96, 125, 220Google Scholar; Law, , “Oyo Empire,” pp. 4751.Google Scholar For the date of the death of Abiodun see next note.

11. Johnson, , History, p. vii.Google Scholar To some extent this argument depends on the date accepted for the death of Abiodun. On the basis of a somewhat ambiguous French reference, Akinjogbin, (Dahomey and Its Neighbors, p. 175n.)Google Scholar assigned his death to 1789. Although this presents several interpretative problems for the period from 1789 to ca. 1810, most scholars have accepted this date. A few argue, however, that Abiodun probably died ca. 1810. Johnson, (History, p. 186)Google Scholar spoke of Abiodun's “long and prosperous reign” without, unfortunately, being more specific. For our purposes the date of Abiodun's death is important only insofar as it affects Johnson's statement about Kukomi.

12. G3 A2/1888, Church Missionary Society Archives, London. Rev.Oyebode's, R.S.Journal, April 1886.Google Scholar

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20. CMS, CA2/058, entry for 12 June 1879.

21. Ibid.

22. This occurred every Sunday during 1873 and 1874. See ibid., Reports for half years ending 30 June and 31 December 1874, especially sub 8 March and 5 April.

23. For example, Johnson derived much information on the religious activities of the Oyo that he did not include in his History. It has recently been argued that his evaluation of the role of the Ogboni in the administration of Oyo towns as “a consultative and advisory body [with] the King or Bale being supreme” (Johnson, , History, p. 78Google Scholar) is substantially correct. See Agiri, B.A., “The Ogboni among the Oyo Yoruba,” Lagos Notes and Records, 3 (1972), pp. 5059.Google Scholar

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30. Law, , “Oyo Empire,” pp. 5657.Google Scholar

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38. Ibid.

39. Ibid., pp. 168–69.

40. Ogbomoso traditions record one such occasion when an Oyo army was defeated. Sohun, the ancestor of the Ogbomoso ruling dynasty, allegedly saved the Oyo army from extinction. Oyerinde, N.D., Iwe Itan Ogbomoso (Jos, 1934).Google Scholar

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44. Ibid., pp. 169–77.

45. This point is discussed fully in Forde, C.D. (ed.), African Worlds (London, 1954), pp. viixvii.Google Scholar

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53. Some of the variants of these myths are discussed in Law, , “Heritage of Oduduwa,” pp. 209–10.Google Scholar

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64. Wheatley, P., “The Significance of Traditional Yoruba Urbanism,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 12 (1970), pp. 393423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

65. The oriki of the Oba people suggest that they used iron implements in farming. Esan, , “Correspondence,” p. 75.Google Scholar

66. Relics of this civilization seem to have been scattered throughout Yorubaland, for example, the Idoko people of Ondo and Ijebu.

67. Johnson, , History, pp. 78.Google Scholar Ife traditions say that Oduduwa had sixteen followers who later became rulers over kingdoms. This version is similar, at least in number, to the Ekiti version of sixteen Ekiti kings: Parratt, , “Approach,” pp. 343–44Google Scholar; Akintoye, S.A., Revolution and Power Politics in Yorubaland, 1840–1893 (London, 1971), p. 6.Google Scholar

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69. Johnson, , History, pp. 8, 2324Google Scholar; Dennett, , Nigerian Studies, pp. 31, 91.Google Scholar One of the Alafin's traditional titles is Onile, “owner of the land.”

70. Law, , “Heritage of Oduduwa,” pp. 207–21Google Scholar; Ryder, A.F.C., “A Reconsideration of the Benin-Ife Relationship,” JAH, 7 (1965), pp. 2537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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76. For example, Oje, whose ruler, Ompatu, is thought to be of the original Ife stock.

77. Collections of oriki of past Alaafin by S.O. Babayemi.

78. Johnson, , History, pp. 149–50.Google Scholar

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81. Johnson, , History, pp. 70–1.Google Scholar

82. Ibid., p. 48.

83. This is the Jelepa ceremony, a concluding part of the Bere festival. See Johnson, , History, pp. 4951.Google Scholar

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85. Johnson, , History, p. 149.Google Scholar

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87. Nadel, S.F., A Black Byzantium (London, 1942), pp. 7276.Google Scholar Cf. Ellis, , Yoruba-Speaking Peoples, p. 50.Google Scholar

88. Ellis recorded that Sango disappeared at a place called Kuso and took the title Oba Kuso, i.e., king of Kuso (ibid., p. 52). For the meaning of Kuso see Nadel, , Nupe Religion (London, 1954), p. 229n.Google Scholar Nadel describes the Nupe god of lightning, Sogba, as having been introduced by the Gwari or Yagba, a southern section of the Yoruba (ibid., pp. 82, 210n, 211–13). He also records that “a Nupe king called Shago occurs in a myth describing the origin of the anti-witchcraft cult ndako gboya. Shago is probably identical with the mythical hero and deity of the Yoruba religion, Shango, who in Yoruba mythology is described as a man or king” (ibid., p. 17n).

89. Dennett, , Nigerian Studies, pp. 6568.Google Scholar

90. Stevens, , “Orisa Nla Festival,” p. 196.Google Scholar

91. Johnson, , History, p. 160.Google Scholar

92. Collections of the oriki of Egungun lineages by S.O. Babayemi.

93. Johnson, , History, p. 160Google Scholar; Smith, , “Alafin in Exile,” pp. 5777.Google Scholar

94. Johnson does record that Sango's followers learned how to attract lightning in “Bariba country,” i.e., Borgu, (History, p. 34Google Scholar). It seems not unreasonable to accept Frobenius' suggestion (The Voice of Africa (2 vols.: London, 1913, 1:177, 219–23Google Scholar) that a Borgu dynasty replaced the ‘Tapa’ dynasty and that both dynasties worshipped a god of lightning as a patron god.

95. Levtzion, N., Muslims and Chiefs in West Africa (Oxford, 1968), pp. 173–74.Google Scholar

96. Ibid.

97. Johnson, , History, pp. 159–60.Google Scholar

98. Babayemi, S.O., “Upper Ogun: An Historical Sketch,” African Notes [Ibadan], 6, 2 (1971), pp. 7477.Google Scholar See also Akinyenri, G.K., “Igboho and Its Neighbors in the Nineteenth Century,” B.A. essay in history, University of Ibadan, June 1971.Google Scholar

99. Babayemi, “Upper Ogun”; Oyerinde, , Iwe Itan Ogbomoso, pp. 911.Google Scholar

100. For a discussion of the traditions of Borgawa origins see Crowder, M., Revolt in Bussa (London, 1973), pp. 2638.Google Scholar Extensive fieldwork in Borgu was carried out by the late Mallam Musa Baba Idris to be submitted as a dissertation to the University of Birmingham. Fortunately, before his tragic death, his work had proceeded far enough so that parts of it are to be edited and published by some of his former colleagues.

101. Thus I would argue that the arithmetical exercises by Smith, , The Kingdoms of the Yoruba (London, 1969), pp. 102–4Google Scholar, and by Law, , “Oyo Empire,” pp. 5155Google Scholar, are fruitless for this early period. They are extrapolated from data for nineteenth and twentieth-century Alaafin for whom we know reign lengths and sequence. More importantly, we know there are no names missing for this period. For the earlier period we can know none of these things.