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From where did we take our name?
The name Nigeria was taken from the Niger River running through the
country. This name was allegedly coined in the late 19th century by
British journalist Flora Shaw, who later married Baron Frederick Lugard,
a British colonial administrator. The origin of the name Niger, which
originally applied only to the middle reaches of the Niger River, is
uncertain. The word is likely an alteration of the Tuareg name egerew
n-igerewen used by inhabitants along the middle reaches of the river
around Timbuktu prior to 19th-century European colonialism.
Nigeria today is marked by the emergence in various epochs of
civilisations, kingdoms, states and empires, as well as a caliphate and
colonial rule, before the founding of the Nigeria Nation-State in 1914
and its subsequent independence in 1960. Archaeological evidence from
various parts of Nigeria suggests that parts of the country were
occupied by man since the Palaeolithic or Old Stone Age period
(500,000-9000 B.C.) and that such populations seem to have been
physically and culturally contiguous with the present-day inhabitants.
In the north, the most populous groups comprised the Hausa, the Kanuri,
the Bolawa, the Ngizim, the Menga, the Margi, the Buduma, the Kotoko,
and the Fulani who joined in the 19th Century through trade, Jihad and
conquest. Of all these peoples, the Kanuri, the Hausa and the Fulani
engaged in state formation and empire building process. The Kanuri
people were closely connected with the people of Kanem in eastern part
of Lake Chad, in which a kingdom comprising several small states emerged
in about 9th Century. In AD 774, there emerged the Sefawa, who
eventually came to dominate the whole Lake Chad area. The beginning of
this empire coincided with the rise of Mali and Al-Kawkaw or Songhai,
and with the period of Ghana’s greatness. For many years, what came to
be known as the Kanuri Empire was made up of two parts, separated by the
Lake: Kanem (in present-day Chad) and Borno (in Nigeria).
Hausa States
The Hausa people are by far the most numerous and occupy the greater
part of northern Nigerian territory. They were made up of two major
groups of seven states each. The first group of states included Biram,
Daura, Katsina, Zaria, Kano, Rano, and Gobir, while the second group
included Kebbi, Zamfara, Nupe, Gwari, Yauri, Ilorin and Kwararafa.
Political and religious themes constituted the development of Hausa
states up to the beginning of the 19th Century. The search for larger
and more secure political entities stood out as the dominant theme of
Hausa political life. Thus, from about the 15th Century, there had been
intense rivalry and conflict between Katsina, Kano, and Zazzau (Zaria).
Between 1500 and 1800 Century, there had been unsuccessful attempts to
build lasting empires by welding together many of the numerous Hausa
states. Consequently, during various phases, one power rose to
pre-eminence only to be supplanted by another. During the 15th Century,
Zazzau, under the legendary Queen Amina, established what the first
Hausa Empire was, in effect, Zazzau dominion is said to have extended
over territories as far as the Benue and the Niger and in some form over
Bauchi, Kano, and Daura. Amina’s epoch was succeeded by the imposition
of Borno overlordship on the Hausa states. Following the 19th Century
Jihad of Uthman dan Fodio, the Fulani occupied northern Nigeria,
dominated the Hausa states and established the Sokoto Caliphate. The
Hausa/Fulani territory was renowned for leather works and exported shoes
to Spain through trans-saharan trade routes.
Central Nigerian Kingdoms and Empires
To the south of Hausa land and Borno, the number of ethnic groups was
legion. Ethnic heterogeneity reached its peak in the region of Bauchi
Plateau, Adamawa province. The vast majority of the ethnic groups south
of Hausa land and Borno seem not to have organized themselves into
closely integrated states. In this politically fragmented region, the
Jukuns (Kwararafa) of the Gongola Benue valleys, the Igala, the
Igbira-Panda, Nupe, the Oyo Yoruba of the savanna belt, as well as the
Borgawa and the Edo were organized into comparatively powerful kingdoms
and empires.
Yoruba Kingdoms and Empires
The Yoruba kingdoms started in about the eleventh century. The various
kingdoms shared the belief that their several founders originated from
Ife. The kingdom was the unit of political power. But cultural identity
went beyond the kingdom to include sub-ethnic groups speaking the same
dialect. Of these sub-ethnic groups, the principal ones were Oyo, Egba,
Egbado, Ijebu, Ijesa, Ekiti, Ondo, Akoko, and Owo. The most successful
of the Yoruba kingdoms in building up its power was the Oyo Kingdom.
Taking advantage of its location, it built up a cavalry force which gave
it dominance not only throughout the Oyo area, but also over the
neighbouring parts of Borgu and Nupe, over Egbaland and Egbado, as well
as over Dahomey and Porto Novo. By the end of the 18thCentury, Oyo
Empire had gone long way in disintegrating due to challenges to the
authority of the Alaafin in the second half of the 18th century by
leading civil and military chiefs. In about 1837, it collapsed
completely due to civil wars and effects of the Fulani jihad.
Benin Kingdoms and Empires
The heartlands of the Benin Kingdom belong to the Edo group. The kingdom
has almost certainly been in existence for less than a millennium. The
traditions preserved by the monarchy itself traced with a fair degree of
conviction to an origin around the 13th Century. Some thirty rulers are
reckoned to have reigned in that span of time. Beyond that, we
encounter much vaguer accounts of an earlier monarchy extending back
over another thirty reigns to the supposed first settlement of the Edo
in that area. Tradition insists that the hereditary order of Uzama
chiefs existed in Benin before the present line of kings was established
and that theirs are the oldest of all the Benin chieftaincy titles. It
is also possible that there evolved from within this Edo community a
paramount chieftaincy of either an hereditary or elective character
which would have given Benin an early experience of kingship.
Kingdoms and Autonomous Communities of the Delta region and Eastern Nigeria
To the south of the Edo and the Yoruba are the people of the Delta
region and the Igbo in the east of the Niger. Several types of social
and political institutions are found among the peoples of the Delta
region. They include the kingdoms of Aboh and Itsekiri, and the
fragmented societies of the Ukwuani, Urhobo, Isoko and Ijo. The Itsekiri
kingdom appears to have already developed by the middle of the 16th
century. The Kingdom, ruled by an Olu and a Council of Ojoye, is very
compact; it comprises the capital of Ode- Itsekiri and a few settlements
scattered along the Forcados, Escravos and Benin Rivers. The Ijo, also
settled in this region over several Centuries have scattered kingdoms,
including the Egbema, Gbaramatu and Ogbe-Ijo around the Escravos river
in present day Delta State, Nembe in Bayelsa State, etc. Although the
development of Aboh kingdom was uncertain, it was apparently powerful
enough to have influence over most of the riverine clans as well as some
upland clans. Intelligence Report compiled by the British in the 1930s
lists Ogume, Ashaka, Amai, Ossissa, Afo, Adiai, Aso, Umuolu, Okpai,
Utuoku, Akarai and Onya as some of the clans which recognized the
authority of the Obi of Aboh.
The Igbo are often categorised among the non-centralised societies. This
categorisation is due to the fact that the Igbo did not come under the
umbrella of a single state or evolve state system of any great size.
However, in spite of this, Igbo society and culture enjoyed a basic
uniformity of pattern and of cosmological and social ideas. But through
their military dominance, and their position as spokesmen of the Oracle,
the Aro established what amounted to a theocratic state over eastern
Nigeria.
The Lagos Colony came into existence in 1861 following the conquest of
Lagos by the British. The colony was administered by a Governor with a
legislative council.
External Influences up to 1861
The first external influence came from trading activities of the Muslim
merchants from North Africa and Arabia. The Muslim merchants carried
with them to Nigeria the Koran, and converted people. These Arabs traded
in gold, ivory, iron, hides, kola nuts, slaves, and gum. Two out of the
four trans-Saharan trade routes connected directly to northern Nigeria.
From Tunis the third route passed through Ghadames, Ghat, and the
country of Aïr, down to Agades and Hausa land. Parallel to this, to the
east, was the fourth route from Tripoli to Murzuk in Fezzan, through
Bilma and on the territories of Kanem and Borno in the Lake Chad region.
The Atlantic slave trade, which began in the 15th Century, was the
largest intercontinental migration in world history before the
nineteenth century. For 300 years, more Africans than Europeans crossed
the Atlantic each year. The evolution of western-controlled plantation
slavery, the revolution in maritime technology, and the movement of
Mediterranean plantation agriculture out into the Atlantic basin worked
together in creating the Atlantic slave trade. The economic complex
sometimes called the South Atlantic System, centered on the production
of tropical staples in Brazil, the Caribbean, and southern North
America. The Portuguese, the Spaniard, the Dutch, the French and the
English were all involved in the slave trade.
After the abolition of the Slave trade in Britain in 1807 and in south
of Equator in 1834, there followed the growth of legitimate trade
stimulated by the penetration of European merchant capital into Nigeria,
essential to the development of capitalism. Export of cocoa,
groundnuts, rubber, palm oil, etc. to the world market was a means by
which the resources of natural economy of pre-colonial Nigeria hitherto
slumbering in dormant inaction were released into the sphere of
circulation and utilised for the further augmentation or expansion of
capital - a worldwide process of “accumulation of capital”. The result
of this was a shift from European settlement on the coast to European
penetration into the hinterland. This was facilitated by the exploration
of the River Niger and was followed by missionary activities, conquest
and colonisation.
The Nigerian Nation-state in Gestation: Conquests, Treaties and Amalgamations, 1861-1914
Chronologically, the conquest of Nigeria through military campaign was
inaugurated by the annexation of Lagos in 1861. In 1878, Onitsha was
sacked and Asaba bombarded. Similarly, by 1884, the National African
Company had concluded about thirty seven treaties at the Niger
territories including Atani, Onitsha, Abo, Osomala, Ndoni, Oko, Odekpe.
Internal wars among the Yoruba, caused mainly by the decline of Oyo
Empire and rivalry over the control of trade, gave the British the
opportunities to gain political control further inside. In 1886, through
efforts of British Prince of Peace Mission, led by Rev. Samuel Johnson,
a treaty was signed to conclude the Ibadan/Ekiti Parapo War. With the
exile of Jaja of Opobo in 1887 his territory became part of Niger
Protectorate.
In 1892, the United African Company fought Aguleri. On 18 January 1893,
the Governor of Lagos Gilbert Thomas Carter signed, at Abeokuta, a
“Treaty of Friendship and Commerce” with Oba Osokalu, the Alake of
Egbaland. Again, on 3 February 1893, Carter concluded a similar treaty
with Oba Adeyemi, the Alafin of Oyo. These treaties opened up the Yoruba
country to European penetration. In 1894, Ebrohimi, the strong- hold of
Nana the Itsekiri was bombarded and Nana exiled on the accusation of
slave trade and interference with free market. In 1896, an expedition
was sent against Brass and the community was sacked.
The British discovery of the use of rubber for the production of
pneumatic tyre made entry into Benin forest imperative. In a major
expedition mounted against Benin in 1897, the city was sacked and its
treasury looted. Shortly after the revocation of the Charter of the
United African Company, and shortly after his appointment as a British
High Commissioner to establish British control over Northern Nigeria,
Lugard, at an impressive ceremony in Lokoja, 1st January 1900, hoisted
the union Jack and declared the Sokoto Caliphate a British protectorate.
Although this declaration was greeted with fierce battle, by 1906 most
of the North had fallen to the British imperial forces. Resistance to
alien rule gradually receded as one moved from coastal areas and the
banks of major inland waterways to less easily accessible areas. Hence,
new political arrangements were sought by those in control of affairs.
The Salbourn Committee on amalgamation recommended in August 1898 that
the British “Niger Territories” be ultimately Amalgamated. In May 1906,
the Lagos Colony and Protectorate were amalgamated with the Protectorate
of Southern Nigeria to form the new Colony and Protectorate of Southern
Nigeria. The second installment took place in 1914 when these
territories (in the South) were administratively combined with the
protectorate of Northern Nigeria, giving birth to the geo-political
entity that was to be named "Nigeria" (in evocation of "River Niger" and
the "Area" it flows through).
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