Difference between revisions of "Yoruba People" - New World Encyclopedia

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<div style="background-color:#fee8ab"><small><small>[[Olusegun Obasanjo]] • [[King Sunny Adé]] • [[Wole Soyinka]] • [[Fela Kuti]] . [[Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti]] </small></small></div>
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The '''Yoruba''' (''Yorùbá'' in Yoruba orthography) are one of the largest ethno-linguistic groups in Africa and are distinguished by their use of the Yoruba language. Yorubas constitute about 21 percent of the population of modern day Nigeria<ref>[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html CIA World Factbook]</ref>, and while that percentage may seem large, the Yoruba are commonly the majority population in their communities. For example, many of the 30 million Yorubas in West Africa live in the states of [[Ekiti State, Nigeria|Ekiti]], [[Lagos State, Nigeria|Lagos]], [[Ogun State, Nigeria|Ogun]], [[Ondo State, Nigeria|Ondo]], [[Osun State, Nigeria|Osun]], and [[Oyo State, Nigeria|Oyo]], making these political areas decidely in the control of the numerically superior Yoruba.  
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The '''Yoruba''' (''Yorùbá'' in Yoruba orthography) are one of the largest ethno-linguistic groups in [[sub-Saharan Africa]]. Yoruba constitute about 21 percent of the population of modern day [[Nigeria]], and they are commonly the majority population in their communities. Many of the Yoruba in [[West Africa]] live in the states of [[Ekiti State, Nigeria|Ekiti]], [[Lagos State, Nigeria|Lagos]], [[Ogun State, Nigeria|Ogun]], [[Ondo State, Nigeria|Ondo]], [[Osun State, Nigeria|Osun]], and [[Oyo State, Nigeria|Oyo]], making these political areas decidedly in the control of the numerically superior Yoruba.  
  
Yoruba can be found throughout the entirety of West Africa ,even reaching into [[Benin]], [[Ghana]] and [[Togo]]. However the greatest concentration of Yoruba is found in [[Yorubaland]], an area in western [[Nigeria]]. Considered the nexus of the Yoruba cultural identity, Yorubaland is bordered by the [[Borgu]] (variously called Bariba and Borgawa) in the northwest, the [[Nupe]] and [[Ebira]] in the north, the [[Ẹsan]] and [[Edo State|Edo]] to the southeast, the [[Igala]] and other related groups to the northeast.
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While Yoruba can be found throughout the entirety of West Africa, even reaching into [[Benin]], [[Ghana]], and [[Togo]], the greatest concentration of Yoruba is found in [[Yorubaland]], an area in western [[Nigeria]]. Considered the nexus of the Yoruba cultural identity, Yorubaland is bordered by the [[Borgu]] (variously called Bariba and Borgawa) in the northwest, the [[Nupe]] and [[Ebira]] in the north, the [[Ẹsan]] and [[Edo State|Edo]] to the southeast, and the [[Igala]] and other related groups to the northeast.
  
Many people of African descent in the Americas are able to claim a degree of Yoruba ancestry, as a significant percentage of Africans who were enslaved and forced to serve in the Americas originated from Yoruba controlled lands.  
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The Yoruba are known for their excellent craftsmanship, considered to be the most skilled and productive in all of Africa. Traditionally, they worked at such trades as [[blacksmith]]ing, [[leather]]working, [[weaving]], [[glass]]making, and [[ivory]] and [[wood]] [[carving]]. The many densely populated urban areas of Yorubaland allow for a centralization of wealth and the development of a complex market economy which encourages extensive patronage of the arts.
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Many people of African descent in the Americas claim a degree of Yoruba ancestry, due to the [[slave]] trade of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
  
==History==  
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==Name==
===Religious History in Yoruba culture===
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The term '''Yoruba''' (or Yariba) did not come into use until the nineteenth century, and was originally confined to subjects of the [[Oyo Empire]]. Prior to the standardization of the term, the Yoruba had been known by a variety of labels across the globe. Among [[Europe]]ans the Yoruba  were often known as ''Akú'' a name derived from the first words of Yoruba greetings such as ''Ẹ kú àárọ?'' ‘good morning’ and ''Ẹ kú alẹ?'' ‘good evening.’ "Okun," is a slight variation of ''Akú'' also seen in Europe. In [[Cuba]] and Spanish-speaking America, the Yoruba were called "Lucumi," after the phrase "O luku mi," meaning "my friend" in some dialects. It is important to note, however, that not all terms used to designate the Yoruba derived from the Yoruba language. In Spanish and Portuguese documents the Yoruba were described as "Nago," "Anago," and "Ana," names which derived from the name of a coastal Yoruba sub-group in the present-day [[Republic of Benin]]. The use of this label continues into the present day to describe Yoruba in Francophone [[West Africa]] .
Several versions of the Yoruba origin exist, the most popular of which revolves around a figure named [[Oduduwa]]. As recorded by one of the earliest Yoruba historians, Reverend [[Samuel Johnson (Nigeria)|Samuel Johnson]] (an Ọyọ convert to [[Christianity]]), Oduduwa was the head of an invading army from the East [[Egypt]], the [[Sudan]], or Central Nigeria) who established the constitutional monarchic system of government amongst the indigenous population he found.  
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{{readout||left|250px|The Yoruba are one of the largest ethno-linguistic groups in [[sub-Saharan Africa]] with "Yorubaland" spanning parts of the modern states of [[Nigeria]], [[Benin]], and [[Togo]]}}
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The term Yoruba did not always designate an ethnicity and was often used merely to describe speakers of the Yoruba language. The first documented use of the term Yoruba as an ethnic description appeared in the a treatise written by the [[Songhai Empire|Songhai]] scholar [[Ahmed Baba]] in the sixteenth century. It is likely that Yoruba became widely popularized as an ethnic label due to use of the term with an ethnic connotation in the [[Hausa]] language. Since Hausa was widely used in West Africa, the ethnic connotation of "Yoruba" spread across West Africa and was institutionalized in [[ethnography|ethnographies]] written in [[Arabic]] and [[Ajami]].
  
Other versions of the myth posit that Oduduwa was sent down by [[Olodumare]], the Creator, to fashion the first human beings out of the clay soil of [[Ile-Ife|Ilė-Ifę]]. [[Odudua]] is also the name of an important [[Goddess|Earth goddess]], the wife of [[Obatala|Ọbatala]], and some scholars postulate a connection between the semi-mythical founder of the [[Ife|Ifẹ]], [[Oyo|Ọyọ]], and [[Benin]] monarchic traditions and the ancient female deity. The name Oduduwa has been translated to mean "the one ("O/Ohun") who created the knowledge ("odu") of character ("iwa")" or "o dudu, o l'ewa/o n'iwa": he's black and beautiful/well-mannered,  signifying the figure's paramount role in establishing Yoruba philosophy and blackness, whether mythical or historical. Yoruba people are always referred to as "Yoruba, Omo Oduduwa(O'odua)," sons of Oduduwa. The name is also linked to the literature of the Yoruba [[geomancy|geomantic divination]] system, [[Ifa]]. The final chapters memorized and chanted by divination consultants ([[babalawo]]) during an Ifa session are called "odu."
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==History of the Yoruba==
  
[[Oduduwa]] was the founder of Ile-Ife. He was sent from the heavens by [[Olodumare]] to establish the earth and create its inhabitants after another minister of Olodumare, Obatala, failed to do this. To this effect, Oduduwa was given a cock and a sack of sand since the earth was covered with water at that time. While climbing down from the heavens, he lost grip of the cock that started flying down and in his bid to catch the cock let loose the sack of sand. Sand started slipping down onto the water down below. Getting down, Oduduwa realised that the sand had formed a small "land hill" protruding from the water and that the cock had perched on it spreading the sand with its legs. The land started spreading forming the soil of the earth. He named that spot '''Ile n'fe''', the earth was extending, and hence the name of Ile-Ife, the ancestral town of humanity and the Yoruba. Obatala later came down with the others and created the humans.
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===Religious Views of Creation===
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Two varying views of creation revolving around a man named [[Oduduwa]] exist within the Yoruba culture, one stating that [[Ile-Ife]] was the site of humankind's creation and the other stating that Oduduwa's extensive family caused the population to spread out from Ile-Ife. The most popular of these two versions is the one based on Oduduwa's children, as it appears supported by historical fact. Subscribers to this version of creation hold that Oduduwa sent his descendents out of Ile-Ife to conquer other existing Yoruba people and that many of his children gained leadership positions in other cities. Eventually the flow of his descendents out of Ile-Ife into other Yoruba areas unified a way of life and tied together different cultural practices.  
  
===General History===
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The other main creation myth of the Yoruba focuses on the religious significance of Ile-Ife as the cradle of humankind. In this version, Oduduwa is sent by [[Olodumare]], the Creator, in order to form humankind out of the clay of Ile-Ife. While this version endows Oduduwa with a religious role, it keeps his position as a major player in the formation of Yoruba life. Some scholars argue that this version of creation is tied to the earth goddess [[Odudua]]. Proponents of the connection between the earth goddess and Oduduwa are primarily based on the shared use of the "odu," meaning knowledge.  
The Yoruba people are descendants from the Nok Civilization (900 B.C.E.—200 C.E.) of Central Nigeria. By 500 C.E.. the present Yoruba homeland was settled by Igbo people. By 900 C.E. Yoruba people slowly began to move from the Nok Region southwest into present Yorubaland, possibly due to a combination of drought and the expansion of Hausa civilization.
 
  
Their leader, Oduduwa, found fame by conquering the Igbo and founding the small kingdom of Ile Ife in 1100 C.E.  This small kingdom began to expand, especially culturally and established itself as the dominant power south of the Niger River and east of the Volta. (central and southwest Nigeria, Benin, and Togo).  The Yoruba city-states largely acknowledged the primacy of the ancient city of Ile Ife. The southeastern Benin Empire, ruled by a dynasty that traced its ancestry to Ifẹ and Oduduwa but largely populated by the Ẹdo and other related ethnicities, also held considerable sway in the election of nobles and kings in eastern Yorubaland.  
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According to myth, when Oduduwa was sent to create humankind he was given only a [[chicken]] and a sack of [[sand]]. The sand was primarily a preventive measure, because at the time of Oduduwa, Yoruba myth states that the earth was covered with water. While Oduduwa was climbing down from the heavens, his grip on the chicken weakened and it began to spiral towards the ground. In a desperate attempt to catch the free falling chicken, Oduduwa let loose his sack of sand, which also plummeted to the earth. When Odudwa had finished climbing he realized that his sack of sand had formed a small hill in the waters covering the earth and that the chicken was safely seated on top of the sandy mound. From this spot, dubbed '''Ile n'fe''', land began extending in all directions as the town of Ile-Ife was created.
  
Between 1100 C.E. and 1700 C.E., the Yoruba Kingdom of Ife experienced a golden age. Between 1700 C.E. and 1900 C.E., Oyo was the dominant Yoruba power. The nearby Kingdom of Benin was also a powerful force between 1300 and 1850 C.E.
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===Pre-Colonial Yoruba History===
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Both [[creation myth]]s of the Yoruba culture articulate the same basic idea: newcomers (personified by Oduduwa) settled in Yoruba land had a significant effect on the pre-existing populations of the area. [[Archaeology|Archaeological]] evidence has demonstrated that Yorubaland was already populated by the time of these newcomers, and had probably been populated since the [[Stone Age]]. Evidence for early inhabitants in the area rests with metalwork and fine art techniques on baked clay that are possibly related to [[Nok]] Culture.  
  
Most of the city states were controlled by monarchs (''Obas'') and councils made up of nobles, [[guild]] leaders, and [[merchant]]s. Different states saw differing ratios of power between the two. Some had powerful, semi-[[autocratic]] [[monarch]]s with almost total control, while in others, the senatorial councils were supreme and the ''Ọba'' served as a figurehead. In all cases, Yoruba monarchs were always subject to the continuing approval of their constituents, and could be easily compelled to abdicate for demonstrating dictatorial tendencies or incompetence. The order to vacate the throne was usually communicated through a symbolic message, or ''[[aroko]]'', of parrots' eggs delivered by the senators.
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The question still remains, however, regarding the identity of the newcomers into Yorubaland. Linguistic history has proven pivotal in unraveling the mystery, and many Yoruba language experts have agreed that there were in fact two main movements of newcomers. The first movement brought a population boom to [[Ekiti]], [[Ife]], and [[Ijebu]] soon after 700 C.E.. This movement was followed by a similar increase of population in [[Oyo]] to the north. Yoruba legends claim that the newcomers hailed from [[Arabia]], an idea substantiated by the high percentage of Yoruba customs that echoes those found along the Middle [[Nile]], particularly in the ancient kingdom of [[Kush]].  
  
Before the abolition of the slave trade, some Yoruba groups were known among Europeans as ''Akú'', a name derived from the first words of Yoruba greetings such as ''Ẹ kú àárọ?'' ‘good morning’ and ''Ẹ kú alẹ?'' ‘good evening.’ A variant of this group is also known as the "Okun," Okun which is a form of "A ku." These are Yorubas found in parts of the states of Kogi - the "Yagba," Ekiti and Ondo. The terms "Nago," "Anago," and "Ana," derived from the name of a coastal Yoruba sub-group in the present-day Republic of Benin, were also widely used in Spanish and Portuguese documents to describe all speakers of the language. Yoruba in Francophone West Africa are still sometimes known by this ethnonym today. In Cuba and Spanish-speaking America, the Yoruba were called "Lucumi," after the phrase "O luku mi," meaning "my friend" in some dialects. During the 19th century, the term ''Yariba'' or ''Yoruba '' came into wider use, first confined to the Ọyọ. The term is often believed to be derived from a [[Hausa]] ethnonym for the populous people to their south, but this has not been substantiated by historians. As an ethnic description, the word first appeared in a treatise written by the [[Songhai]] scholar Ahmed Baba (1500s) and is likely to derive from the indigenous ethnonyms [[Oyo|Ọyọ (Oyo)]] or [[Yagba]], two Yoruba-speaking groups along the northern borders of their terrority. However, it is likely that the ethnonym was popularized by [[Hausa]] usage and ethnography written in Arabic and [[Ajami]]. Under the influence of Bishop [[Samuel Ajayi Crowther]], a Yoruba clergyman, subsequent missionaries extended the term to include all speakers of related dialects.
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The two waves of newcomers brought a flood of new political ideas and methods into Yorubaland, which began to take root almost immediately. By 1000 C.E., the Yoruba had developed a political system dominated by town governments. Towns themselves were a product of new ways of thinking, as they grew out of increased interdependence among the Yoruba and a rising need to rely on one's neighbors. Where once Yorubaland had been primarily a forest farming area, under the influence of the newcomers it became a highly urbanized society, known throughout [[West Africa]] for the glory of their capital, or crowned, towns.  
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[[Image:Nigeria Yoruba Area.png|thumb|300px|right|Yoruba area within Nigeria (Yorubaland).]]
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The capital towns of Yorubaland were linked together in ancient times, forming a loose confederacy under the senior Yoruba leader, the oni of Ife. Primarily serving as a mechanism for peace keeping, the confederacy that united Yorubaland left the states to govern themselves and served to minimize conflict among confederacy members. Political thought at this time focused on the idea of a kingdom as a large family, the oni as the head and mutual respect among the sibling nations. Each city state, left to govern itself in most matters, was controlled by [[monarchs]] ''(Obas)'' and councils of nobles, [[guild]]leaders, and [[merchant]]s, commonly known as Ẹgbẹ in Yoruba.  
  
The pre-colonial Yoruba living in the [[savanna]]h region between the forest and the [[Niger]] river were pressed further south by conflicts with the [[Sokoto Caliphate]], a militant Muslim empire founded by the [[Fulani]] Koranic scholar [[Uthman Dan Fodio]]. After usurping power in the Hausa city-states of northern Nigeria, the Sokoto Caliphate also seized power in [[Ilọrin|Ilorin]], one of the northernmost Yoruba towns, and ravaged Ọyọ-Ile, the capital city of the Ọyọ Empire. After losing the northern portion of their region to the cavalry-dependent [[Sokoto Caliphate]], the Ọyọ for the most part retreated to the latitudes where [[tsetse fly|tsetse flies]] made horses unable to survive. The Caliphate attempted to expand further into the southern region of modern-day Nigeria, but was decisively defeated by the [[armies of Ibadan]] in 1840, thereby making [[Ibadan]] the "Saviour of Yorubaland."
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Often the throne was hereditary, passed through generations. Royal bloodlines alone, however, were not enough to secure a position of power, as an eligible contender for the throne would not be allowed to ascend to power if any family member, servant, or slave belonging to the family committed a serious [[crime]] such as [[theft]], [[fraud]], [[murder]], or [[rape]]. Some city states abolished the use of royal lineages altogether, preferring to keep the monarchy open to the election of any free-born male citizen. The kings were almost always [[Polygamy|polygamous]], some boasting up to 20 wives. Political power was often increased through [[marriage]], and kings often sought women of royal families as their wives. A few female ''Obas'' rose to power in [[Ilesa]] and [[Ondo]], but these were comparatively rare.  
  
==Precolonial social organization==
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There was no set power balance between the monarch and the council throughout the confederacy, and cities were left to decide for themselves whether to weigh the two opinions equally or to cast more weight to one. For the [[Egba]] of Yorubaland, the the leadership council exercised extreme control over the [[monarchy|monarch]] and carefully guarded against any excesses of royal authority. While the extreme level of control that the council could exercise over the king was not the mode across all of Yorubaland, many other cities fostered a political sense of unity between the monarch and the council. For example, even in Ọyọ, the most centralized of the precolonial kingdoms, the ''Alaafin'' consulted on all political decisions with a prime minister (the ''Basọrun'') and the council of leading nobles known as the ''Ọyọ Mesi''.
Though monarchies were fairly common throughout the Yoruba-speaking region, they were not the only approach to government and social organization. The numerous [[Egba|Ẹgba]] communities, found in the forests below Ọyọ's savannah region, were a notable example. These independent polities often elected an ''Ọba'', though real political, legislative, and judicial powers resided with the ''[[Ogboni]]'', a council of notable elders.
 
  
When citizens of more than 150 Ẹgba and Owu communities migrated to the fortified city-state of [[Abeokuta]] during the internecine wars of the 19th century, each quarter retained its own ''Ogboni'' council of civilian leaders, along with an ''Olorogun'', or council of military leaders, and in some cases its own elected ''Obas'' or ''Baales''. These independent councils then elected their most capable members to join a federal civilian and military council that represented the city as a whole. Commander Frederick Forbes, a representative of the British crown writing an account of his visit to the city in an 1853 edition of the ''Church Military Intelligencer'', described Abẹokuta as having "four presidents," and the system of government as having "840 principal rulers or 'House of Lords,' 2800 secondary chiefs or 'House of Commons,' 140 principal military ones and 280 secondary ones." He described Abẹokuta and its system of government as "the most extraordinary republic in the world."
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When not exercising a political voice in the council of nobles, Yoruba could join in many of the other peer organizations in the region. One of these organizations was ''Ẹgbẹ Aro'', a militia group formed in the eighteenth century by [[Lisbi]] in opposition to Oyo's ''Ajeles'' (appointed administrators) . Other covert military resistance leagues such as the ''Ekitiparapọ'' and the ''Ogidi'' alliance were organized in the nineteenth century for the diametrically opposite reasons; these groups wanted to secure the dominance of the Yoruba and resist advances from [[Ibadan]], [[Nupe]], and the [[Sokoto Caliphate]].
  
Gerontocratic leadership councils that guarded against the monopolization of power by a monarch were a proverbial trait of the Ẹgba, according to the eminent Ọyọ historian Reverend Samuel Johnson, but such councils were also well-developed among the northern Okun groups, the eastern [[Ekiti]], and other groups falling under the Yoruba ethnic umbrella. Even in Ọyọ, the most centralized of the precolonial kingdoms, the ''Alaafin'' consulted on all political decisions with a prime minister (the ''Basọrun'') and the council of leading nobles known as the ''Ọyọ Mesi''.
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The political and urban developments in Ife reached their height around 1300 C.E.. By this time the Yoruba language had spread across an extensive portion of West Africa and the amount of Yoruba settlements had dramatically increased. The most notable among the new settlements was [[Oyo]], a town in the Northern part of Yoruba territory. Oyo would become a kingdom in its own right following the decline of Yoruba hegemony in sixteenth century.  
  
[[Ibadan]], a city-state and proto-empire founded in the 19th century by a polyglot group of refugees, soldiers, and itinerant traders from Ọyọ and the other Yoruba sub-groups, largely dispensed with the concept of monarchism, preferring to elect both military and civil councils from a pool of eminent citizens. The city became a military republic, with distinguished soldiers wielding political powers through their election by popular acclaim and the respect of their peers. Similar practices were adopted by the [[Ijẹsa]] and other groups, which saw a corresponding rise in the social influence of military adventurers and successful entrepreneurs.
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The power of the Yoruba confederacy began a slow decline in the sixteenth century, primarily caused by conflicts with the [[Sokoto Caliphate]] in the [[savanna]] region between the [[Niger River]] and the [[forest]]. The Sokoto Caliphate was a militant [[Muslim]] empire founded by the [[Fulani]] [[Koran]]ic scholar [[Uthman Dan Fodio]] who seized control of the northern Yoruba town of [[Ilorin]] and ravaged the Yoruba capital [[Oyo-Ile]]. The early victories of the Caliphate caused the Yoruba to retreat to the northern latitudes, a move which dramatically harmed the remaining Yoruba population as [[tsetse flies]] in the area killed many of the remaining [[horse]]s. The Caliphate continued to pursue the Yoruba, however, an advance that only stopped when they were decisively defeated by the [[armies of Ibadan]] in 1840. For pushing back the advances of the Sokoto Caliphate [[Ibadan]] was named the "Saviour of Yorubaland."
  
Occupational guilds, social clubs, secret or initiatory societies, and religious units, commonly known as Ẹgbẹ in Yoruba, included the ''[[Parakoyi]]'' (or league of traders) and ''Ẹgbẹ Ọdẹ'' (hunter's guild), and maintained an important role in commerce, social control, and vocational education in Yoruba polities.
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===Colonization and Independence===
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In 1914, [[Nigeria]] became an official colony of [[Great Britain]], a move which legitimized the continual British presence in southern Nigeria since the nineteenth century. The British colony of Nigeria politically united many of the various factions within Yorubaland and other nearby ethnic and linguistic groups. British colonization brought an influx of [[Christianity]] into Nigeria, a practice which led to a slow dissolution of many traditional Yoruba religious practices.  
  
There are also examples of other peer organizations in the region. When the Ẹgba resisted the imperial domination of the [[Ọyọ Empire]], a figure named Lisabi is credited with either creating or reviving a covert traditional organization named ''Ẹgbẹ Aro''. This group, originally a farmers' union, was converted to a network of secret militias throughout the Ẹgba forests, and each lodge plotted to overthrow Ọyọ's ''Ajeles'' (appointed administrators) in the late 1700s.  
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Following [[World War II]], public sentiment in Nigeria turned against the British colonizers and began to rally for an independent state. On October 1, 1960 Nigeria was declared independent of British rule. Greater Yorubaland was subsumed into the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
  
Similarly, covert military resistance leagues like the ''Ekitiparapọ'' and the ''Ogidi'' alliance were organized during the 19th century wars by often-decentralized communities of the Ekiti, Ijẹṣa, Ìgbómìnà and Okun Yoruba in order to resist various imperial expansionist plans of Ibadan, Nupe, and the Sokoto Caliphate.
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==Culture==
  
The monarchy of any city state was usually limited to a number of royal lineages. A family could be excluded from [[monarch|king]]ship and chieftancy if any family member, servant, or slave belonging to the family committed a crime such as theft, fraud, murder or rape. In other city-states, the monarchy was open to the election of any free-born male citizen. There are also, in Ileṣa, Ondo, and other Yoruba communities, several traditions of female ''Ọbas'', though these were comparatively rare.
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===Religion===
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Itan is the term for the sum total of all Yoruba [[Mythology|myths]], [[song]]s, histories, and other [[Culture|cultural]] components.
  
The kings were almost always [[Polygamy|polygamous]] and many had as many as 20 wives and often married royal family members from other towns/city states.
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Traditional Yoruba religious beliefs recognize a wide variety of deities, with [[Ọlọrun]] or Olodumare venerated as the creator and  other spirits serving as intermediates to help with the concerns of humans. Yoruba deities include "[[Oya|Ọya]]" (wind goddess), "[[Ifa]]" (divination or fate), "[[Eleda|Ẹlẹda]]" (destiny), "[[Ibeji]]" (twins), "[[Osanyin|Ọsanyin]]" (medicines and healing) and "[[Osun|Ọsun]]" (goddess of fertility, protector of children and mothers), and [[Shango|Ṣango]] (God of thunder). Each human being is also assumed to have his or her individual deity, called and "[[Ori]]," who is responsible for controlling destiny. In order to placate the Ori into providing a beneficial future, cowrie shells are often used to bedeck a sculpture of the personal deity. When not seeking guidance from an Ori, Yoruba may also turn to deceased parents and ancestors, who are believed to posses the ability to protect their living relatives. In order to receive protection from deceased family members, many Yoruba worshiped or offered sacrifices such as libations and [[kola nut]]s on the graves of their relatives, hoping that a suitable sacrifice would guarantee protection.  
  
==Culture==
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Traditional Yoruba [[polytheism]], however, was challenged throughout history, particularly by the contact with [[Islam]] through trade with the [[Mali Empire]]. The Islamic establishment of the Mali Empire often used the military to spread religion, a movement illustrated through the [[jihad]]s that plagued Yorubaland. Most Yoruba who converted to Islam found solace and community in urban centers such as [[Ibadan]], that allowed Muslims to connect with one another and form political ties.  
Perhaps their best known material artist is [[Olowe of Ise]]. Their religious beliefs are complex, and recognize a wide variety of deities. [[Ọlọrun]] or Olodumare is venerated as the creator, with the other Oriṣas serving as emissaries or intermediaries that help with human concerns. Yoruba came in contact with [[Islam]] through commerce with [[Mansa Musa]]'s [[Mali Empire]], with the religion being referred to as ''"Esin-Mali".''(Mali's religion). [[Muslims]] were mostly concentrated in most Yoruba metropolis of the time, such as [[Ibadan]], Ijebu-Ode, Shaki, [[Oyo]], [[Abeokuta]]. Yorubaland encountered [[Christianity]] with the coming of the colonialists about 400 years after contact with [[Islam]], the Christian missionaries set up schools, and Yoruba have converted to [[Christianity]] since the 19th century. In the [[United States]], they are recognizeable, along with other Nigerian immigrants, as very strict Christians, observing many of the conservative biblical views. They are also prominent in some urban Muslim congregations. They also continue to participate in various forms of Ifa/Oriṣa religious worship.
 
  
The Yoruba are one of the ethnic groups in [[Africa]] whose [[cultura]]l heritage and legacy are recognizable in the Americas, despite the debilitating effects of [[slavery]]. [[Orisha|Oriṣa]] religion, and various [[music]]al artforms popularized in [[Latin America]], especially [[Haiti]], [[Cuba]], and [[Puerto Rico]] are rooted in [[Yoruba music]].  
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The second significant challenge to traditional Yoruba religious beliefs was [[Christianity]], which was introduced to Nigeria by colonial powers roughly 400 years after contact with Islam. Conversion to Christianity was often brought about through the use of religious schools, set up by [[Christian]] missionaries to draw people away from traditional beliefs.  
  
The Yoruba performance repertoire includes various masquerade plays, folk operas, and a vibrant video cinema. One Yoruba masquerade, Gẹlẹdẹ from the Ketu region of the modern Republic of Benin, has been recognized as a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity by [[UNESCO]]. Other aspects of Yoruba culture that have been recognized as masterpieces of human cultural ingenuity include the [[Ifa]] corpus, a collection of hundreds of poems used in divination ceremonies; and the [[Osun-Osogbo|Ọṣun-Oṣogbo]] Sacred Grove, one of the few remaining functional sites for traditional religious ceremonies in Nigeria and a magnet for visitors from all over the world. Countless scholarly articles have also examined the performances of Egungun (representative of ancestral spirits visiting the living); Epa (symbolic performances variously promoting valor and fertility); and Ẹyọ, a procession of masked dancers.
+
Yoruba religion and mythology is a major influence in [[West Africa]], chiefly in [[Nigeria]], and has given origin to several [[New World]] religions such as [[Santería]] in [[Cuba]], [[Puerto Rico]] and [[Candomblé]] in [[Brazil]]. Another permutation of traditional Yoruba religious beliefs, the religion popularly known as [[Vodun]] in [[Haiti]] combines the beliefs of the many different African ethnic nationalities taken to the island with the structure and liturgy from the Fon-Ewe of present-day [[Benin]] and the Congo-Angolan culture area, but Yoruba-derived religious [[ideology]] and deities also play an important role.
  
The Yoruba maintain a widely observed system of traditional manners. When greeting an elder, a man is to bow and a woman is to curtsy. Sometimes, when greeting someone such as one of the royal house, a woman or girl is to kneel and then get up quickly. A man is to lay down on the ground before the important person, and then get up.
+
The majority of contemporary Yoruba are [[Christian]]s and [[Muslim]]s, with indigenous congregations having the largest membership among Christians.
  
==Yoruba religion and mythology==
+
===Performance===
[[Image:Eshu-statue.jpg|thumb|100px|right|Statue of the orisha Eshu, Oyo, Nigeria, c1920.]]
+
[[File:The Childrens Museum of Indianapolis - Egungun masquerade dance garment.jpg|thumb|right|Egungun masquerade dance garment in the permanent collection of The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis]]
{{main|Yoruba mythology}}
+
The Yoruba performance repertoire includes various masquerade plays, folk operas, and a vibrant cinematic scene. Perhaps the most famous among Yoruba masquerade pieces, Gẹlẹdẹ from the Ketu region of the modern Republic of Benin, received the honor of being recognized as a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity by [[UNESCO]]. Other Yoruba cultural productions that have gained international recognition include the [[Ifa]] corpus, a collection of hundreds of poems used in divination ceremonies and the Osun-Osogbo Sacred Grove, one of the few remaining functional sites for traditional religious ceremonies in Nigeria and a magnet for visitors from all over the world.  
Yoruba religion and mythology is a major influence in [[West Africa]], chiefly in [[Nigeria]], and it has given origin to several [[New World]] religions such as [[Santería]] in [[Cuba]], [[Puerto Rico]] and [[Candomblé]] in [[Brazil]].
 
  
[[Itan]] is the term for the sum total of all [[Yoruba mythology|Yoruba myths]], [[song]]s, histories, and other [[Culture|cultural]] components.
+
Recently, scholarly attention has focused on the performances of Egungun (representative of ancestral spirits visiting the living), Epa (symbolic performances variously promoting valor and fertility), and Ẹyọ, a procession of masked dancers.
  
Many ethnic Yoruba were enslaved and taken to [[Haiti]],[[Cuba]], [[Puerto Rico]], [[Brazil]], [[Trinidad]] and the rest of the New World (chiefly in the [[19th century]], after the [[Oyo empire|Ọyọ empire]] collapsed and the region plunged into [[Yoruba Civil War|civil war]]), and carried their [[religion|religious beliefs]] with them. These concepts were combined with  preexisting [[African]]-based religions, [[Christianity]], [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]] mythology, and [[Kardecist Spiritism]] into various New World lineages:
+
===Greeting Customs===
 +
The Yoruba maintain a widely observed system of traditional manners. When greeting an elder, a man is to bow and a woman is to [[curtsey]]. Sometimes, when greeting someone of high reputation, like a member of the royal house, a woman or girl is to kneel and then get up quickly. A man is to lay down on the ground before the important person, and then get up.
  
*[[Santería]] ([[Cuba]]) ([[Puerto Rico]])
+
===Sports===
*[[Oyotunji]] ([[USA]])
+
Traditional popular sports include: [[wrestling]], called ''gidigbo'' or ''ijakadi'', foot races, [[swimming]] and [[canoe]] races in river areas, [[horse]] riding in the [[savannah]] region, and various forms of combative performances. Combative performances are particularly popular during festivals and religious ceremonies. As is common throughout the West African region, [[soccer]] is the most popular contemporary sport, followed by [[track and field]], [[boxing]], and [[table tennis]].
*[[Idigene]] ([[Nigeria]])
 
*Anago ([[Nigeria]])
 
*[[Candomblé]] ([[Brazil]])
 
*[[Umbanda]] ([[Brazil]])
 
*[[Batuque (religion)|Batuque]] ([[Brazil]])
 
  
The popularly known [[Vodun]] religion of [[Haiti]] combines the religious beliefs of the many different African ethnic nationalities taken to the island with the structure and liturgy from the Fon-Ewe of present-day [[Benin]] and the Congo-Angolan culture area, but Yoruba-derived religious ideology and deities also play an important role.
+
Yoruba athletic events take place in either the National Stadium, [[Lagos]] (55,000 capacity), Liberty Stadium, [[Ibadan]] (the first stadium in [[Africa]]) (40,000 capacity), Teslim Balogun stadium (35,000 capacity), Mọṣhood Kaṣhimawo Abiọla Stadium Abẹokuta (28,000 capacity), or Lekan Salami Stadium, Ibadan (25,000 capacity).
  
Yoruba deities include "[[Oya|Ọya]]" ([[Goddess|wind goddess]]), "[[Ifa]]" ([[divination]] or [[destiny|fate]]), "[[Eleda|Ẹlẹda]]" ([[destiny]]), "[[Ibeji]]" ([[twins]]), "[[Osanyin|Ọsanyin]]" ([[medicine]]s and [[healing]]) and "[[Osun|Ọsun]]" ([[Mother goddess|goddess of fertility]], protector of [[children]] and [[mother]]s), [[Shango|Ṣango]] (God of thunder)
+
Many Yoruba also play Ayò, a popular board game called [[mancala]] elsewhere in Africa.
  
Human beings and other sentient creatures are also assumed to have their own individual deity of destiny, called "[[Ori (Yoruba)|Ori]]," who is venerated through a sculpture symbolically decorated with cowrie shells. Traditionally, dead parents and other ancestors are also believed to possess powers of protection over their descendants. This belief is expressed in worship and sacrifice on the grave or symbol of the ancestor, or as a community in the observance of the Egungun festival where the ancestors are represented as colorfully masquerade of costumed and masked men who represent the ancestral spirits. Dead parents and ancestors are also commonly venerated by pouring libations to the earth and the breaking of kolanuts in their honor at special occasions.
+
===The Yoruba Diaspora===
 +
During the decline of the [[Oyo Empire]], Yorubaland degenerated into a series of [[civil war]]s, in which military captives were sold into the [[slave trade]]. Most of the slaves that were exported as a result of the civil war) were sent to [[Haiti]], [[Cuba]], [[Puerto Rico]], [[Brazil]], and [[Trinidad]], bringing with them Yoruba religious beliefs.  
  
A significant portion of the population either follows the traditional religion called [[Ifá]] or consult with the clergy of traditional diviners known as ''[[babalawo]]'', or "Father of secrets."
+
The Yoruba are one of the ethnic groups in [[Africa]] whose cultural heritage and legacy are recognizable in the Americas, despite the [[diaspora|diasporic]] effects of [[slavery]]. [[Orisha religion]], and various [[music]]al art forms popularized in [[Latin America]], especially [[Haiti]], [[Cuba]], and [[Puerto Rico]] are rooted in Yoruba music.
 
 
The majority of contemporary Yoruba are [[Christian]]s and [[Muslim]]s, with indigenous congregations having the largest membership among Christians.
 
  
 
==Yoruba cities==
 
==Yoruba cities==
The chief Yoruba cities are [[Ibadan]], [[Lagos]], [[Abeokuta]] (Abẹokuta), [[Akure]] (Akurẹ), [[Ilorin]] (Ilọrin), [[Ijebu Ode]] (Ijẹbu Ode), [[Ijebu-Igbo]] (Ijẹbu-Igbo), [[Ogbomoso]] (Ogbomọṣọ), [[Ondo City|Ondo]], [[Ota, Nigeria|Ota]] (Ọta),Ìlá Ọràngún, [[Ado-Ekiti]], [[Shagamu]] (Sagamu), [[Ikenne]] (Ikẹnnẹ), [[Osogbo]] (Osogbo), [[Ilesa]] (Ilesa), [[Oyo]] (Ọyọ), [[Ife]] (Ilé-Ifẹ), Saki,and [[Ago-Iwoye]]
+
The chief Yoruba cities are: [[Ibadan]], [[Lagos]], Abeokuta (Abẹokuta), Akure (Akurẹ), Ilorin (Ilọrin), Ijebu Ode (Ijẹbu Ode), Ijebu-Igbo (Ijẹbu-Igbo), Ogbomoso (Ogbomọṣọ), Ondo, Ota (Ọta),Ìlá Ọràngún, Ado-Ekiti, Shagamu (Sagamu), Ikenne (Ikẹnnẹ), Osogbo (Osogbo), Ilesa (Ilesa), Oyo (Ọyọ), Ife (Ilé-Ifẹ), Saki, and Ago-Iwoye.
 
Traditionally the Yoruba organized themselves into networks of related villages, towns, and kingdoms, with most of them headed by an ''Ọba'' [King] or ''Baale'' [a nobleman or mayor]. Kingship is not determined by simple primogeniture, as in most monarchic systems of government. An electoral college of lineage heads is usually charged with selecting a member of one of the royal families, and the selection is usually confirmed by an Ifa divination request. The Ọbas live in palaces usually in the center of the town. Opposite to the king's palace is the ''Ọja Ọba'', the king's market. These markets form an inherent part of Yoruba life. Traditionally the market traders are well organized, have various guilds, and an elected speaker.
 
  
==Sports==
+
== References ==
Yorubaland stadia include the [[National Stadium]], [[Lagos]] (55,000 capacity), [[Liberty Stadium, Ibadan|Liberty Stadium]], [[Ibadan]] (the first stadium in [[Africa]]) (40,000 capacity), Teslim Balogun stadium (35,000 capacity), Mọṣhood Kaṣhimawo Abiọla Stadium [[Abeokuta|Abẹokuta]] (28,000 capacity), Lekan Salami Stadium, Ibadan (25,000 capacity).
+
* Brooks, George E. 2003. ''Eurafricans in western Africa: commerce, social status, gender, and religious observance from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century''. Western African studies. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0821414859
 +
* Central Intelligence Agency. Nigeria.
 +
* Davidson, Basil. 1998. ''West Africa before the colonial era: a history to 1850''. London: Longman. ISBN 978-0582318526
 +
* Falola, Toyin, and Dare Oguntomisin. 2001. ''Yoruba warlords of the 19th century''. Trenton, NJ: Africa World. ISBN 978-0865437838
  
Traditional popular sports include wrestling, called ''gidigbo'' or ''ijakadi''; foot races; swimming and canoe races in riverine areas, horse riding in the savannah regions where horses could be bred and raised; and various forms of combative performances, particularly during festivals and religious ceremonies. As with other fellow Nigerians and other West Africans, [[soccer]] is the most popular contemporary sport, followed by track and field games, boxing, and table tennis.
+
== External links ==
 +
All links retrieved June 4, 2023.
 +
* [http://africa.uima.uiowa.edu/peoples/show/Yoruba Yoruba Information] – ''Art&Life in Africa''.
 +
* [http://www.postcolonialweb.org/nigeria/yorubaov.html Yoruba Overview] – ''African Postcolonial Literature in English in the Postcolonial Web''.  
 +
* [http://www.omniglot.com/writing/yoruba.htm Yoruba (èdè Yorùbá)] ''Omniglot''.
 +
* [http://www.zyama.com/yoruba/index.htm Tribal African Art: Yoruba (Yorba, Yorouba)] ''African Art Museum''.
  
Yoruba people also play Ayò, their name for the popular board game called [[mancala]] elsewhere in Africa.
+
{{credit|136542666}}
  
==See also==
+
[[Category:Geography]]
* [[Yoruba language]]
+
[[Category:History]]
* [[Yoruba mythology]]
+
[[Category:Ethnic group]]
 
 
== Notes ==
 
<References/>
 
 
 
==References==
 
*Davidson, Basil. ''West Africa Before the Colonial Era: A History to 1850''. Pearson Education Limited. Essex, England. 1998. ISBN 0582318521
 
*Brooks, George E. ''Eurafricans in Western Africa''. Ohio University Press. Ohio, United States. 2003. ISBN 0821414860
 
*Falola Toyin and G.O. Oguntomisin. ''Yoruba Warlords of the 19th Century''. Africa World Press, Inc. New Jersey, United States. 2001. ISBN  0865437831
 
 
 
==External links==
 
* [http://yoruba.org Egbe Isokan Yoruba] - promotes the cultural, social, economic and political welfare of Yoruba.
 
* [http://abeokuta.org Radio Abeokuta] - promoting the Yoruba culture of Togo, Republic of Benin, and Nigeria, West Africa
 
* [http://omoyorubany.org Egbe Omo Yoruba, Greater New York] - Egbe Omo Yoruba Association of Yoruba Descendants, Greater New York Chapter
 
* [http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/Yoruba.html Yoruba Information] - includes brief summary of language, religion, history, and art
 
* [http://server1.fandm.edu/departments/Anthropology/Bastian/ANT269/yoru.html World of the Yoruba] - ritual and performance in Yorubaland
 
* [http://www.africaaction.org/bp/ethall.htm Talking About "Tribe"] - looks at Yoruba identity
 
* [http://www.postcolonialweb.org/nigeria/yorubaov.html Yoruba Overview] - includes information on colonialism, religion, and myth
 
* [http://www.molli.org.uk/yoruba/welcome.html Yoruba: Exploring an African Culture] - interactive exhibit about the art and culture of the Yoruba
 
* [http://oho.org Oduduwa Heritage Organization]- preserve and promote Yoruba culture among the Yorubas who live in the San Francisco/Oakland Bay Area.
 
* [http://oroede.sourceforge.net/ Oro ede Yorùbá] - a searchable English to Yorùbá dictionary
 
 
 
[[Category:Nations and places]]
 
[[Category:History and biography]]
 
 
 
 
 
{{credit|136542666}}
 

Latest revision as of 21:30, 4 June 2023


Yoruba
Kwarastatedrummers.jpg

Kwara State drummers

Total population
Upwards of 35 million (CIA Estimate, 2012)
Regions with significant populations
Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, Togo
Languages
Yoruba
Religions
Christianity, Islam, Orisha
Related ethnic groups
Nago, Itsekiri, Igala

The Yoruba (Yorùbá in Yoruba orthography) are one of the largest ethno-linguistic groups in sub-Saharan Africa. Yoruba constitute about 21 percent of the population of modern day Nigeria, and they are commonly the majority population in their communities. Many of the Yoruba in West Africa live in the states of Ekiti, Lagos, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, and Oyo, making these political areas decidedly in the control of the numerically superior Yoruba.

While Yoruba can be found throughout the entirety of West Africa, even reaching into Benin, Ghana, and Togo, the greatest concentration of Yoruba is found in Yorubaland, an area in western Nigeria. Considered the nexus of the Yoruba cultural identity, Yorubaland is bordered by the Borgu (variously called Bariba and Borgawa) in the northwest, the Nupe and Ebira in the north, the Ẹsan and Edo to the southeast, and the Igala and other related groups to the northeast.

The Yoruba are known for their excellent craftsmanship, considered to be the most skilled and productive in all of Africa. Traditionally, they worked at such trades as blacksmithing, leatherworking, weaving, glassmaking, and ivory and wood carving. The many densely populated urban areas of Yorubaland allow for a centralization of wealth and the development of a complex market economy which encourages extensive patronage of the arts.

Many people of African descent in the Americas claim a degree of Yoruba ancestry, due to the slave trade of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

Name

The term Yoruba (or Yariba) did not come into use until the nineteenth century, and was originally confined to subjects of the Oyo Empire. Prior to the standardization of the term, the Yoruba had been known by a variety of labels across the globe. Among Europeans the Yoruba were often known as Akú a name derived from the first words of Yoruba greetings such as Ẹ kú àárọ? ‘good morning’ and Ẹ kú alẹ? ‘good evening.’ "Okun," is a slight variation of Akú also seen in Europe. In Cuba and Spanish-speaking America, the Yoruba were called "Lucumi," after the phrase "O luku mi," meaning "my friend" in some dialects. It is important to note, however, that not all terms used to designate the Yoruba derived from the Yoruba language. In Spanish and Portuguese documents the Yoruba were described as "Nago," "Anago," and "Ana," names which derived from the name of a coastal Yoruba sub-group in the present-day Republic of Benin. The use of this label continues into the present day to describe Yoruba in Francophone West Africa .

Did you know?
The Yoruba are one of the largest ethno-linguistic groups in sub-Saharan Africa with "Yorubaland" spanning parts of the modern states of Nigeria, Benin, and Togo

The term Yoruba did not always designate an ethnicity and was often used merely to describe speakers of the Yoruba language. The first documented use of the term Yoruba as an ethnic description appeared in the a treatise written by the Songhai scholar Ahmed Baba in the sixteenth century. It is likely that Yoruba became widely popularized as an ethnic label due to use of the term with an ethnic connotation in the Hausa language. Since Hausa was widely used in West Africa, the ethnic connotation of "Yoruba" spread across West Africa and was institutionalized in ethnographies written in Arabic and Ajami.

History of the Yoruba

Religious Views of Creation

Two varying views of creation revolving around a man named Oduduwa exist within the Yoruba culture, one stating that Ile-Ife was the site of humankind's creation and the other stating that Oduduwa's extensive family caused the population to spread out from Ile-Ife. The most popular of these two versions is the one based on Oduduwa's children, as it appears supported by historical fact. Subscribers to this version of creation hold that Oduduwa sent his descendents out of Ile-Ife to conquer other existing Yoruba people and that many of his children gained leadership positions in other cities. Eventually the flow of his descendents out of Ile-Ife into other Yoruba areas unified a way of life and tied together different cultural practices.

The other main creation myth of the Yoruba focuses on the religious significance of Ile-Ife as the cradle of humankind. In this version, Oduduwa is sent by Olodumare, the Creator, in order to form humankind out of the clay of Ile-Ife. While this version endows Oduduwa with a religious role, it keeps his position as a major player in the formation of Yoruba life. Some scholars argue that this version of creation is tied to the earth goddess Odudua. Proponents of the connection between the earth goddess and Oduduwa are primarily based on the shared use of the "odu," meaning knowledge.

According to myth, when Oduduwa was sent to create humankind he was given only a chicken and a sack of sand. The sand was primarily a preventive measure, because at the time of Oduduwa, Yoruba myth states that the earth was covered with water. While Oduduwa was climbing down from the heavens, his grip on the chicken weakened and it began to spiral towards the ground. In a desperate attempt to catch the free falling chicken, Oduduwa let loose his sack of sand, which also plummeted to the earth. When Odudwa had finished climbing he realized that his sack of sand had formed a small hill in the waters covering the earth and that the chicken was safely seated on top of the sandy mound. From this spot, dubbed Ile n'fe, land began extending in all directions as the town of Ile-Ife was created.

Pre-Colonial Yoruba History

Both creation myths of the Yoruba culture articulate the same basic idea: newcomers (personified by Oduduwa) settled in Yoruba land had a significant effect on the pre-existing populations of the area. Archaeological evidence has demonstrated that Yorubaland was already populated by the time of these newcomers, and had probably been populated since the Stone Age. Evidence for early inhabitants in the area rests with metalwork and fine art techniques on baked clay that are possibly related to Nok Culture.

The question still remains, however, regarding the identity of the newcomers into Yorubaland. Linguistic history has proven pivotal in unraveling the mystery, and many Yoruba language experts have agreed that there were in fact two main movements of newcomers. The first movement brought a population boom to Ekiti, Ife, and Ijebu soon after 700 C.E.. This movement was followed by a similar increase of population in Oyo to the north. Yoruba legends claim that the newcomers hailed from Arabia, an idea substantiated by the high percentage of Yoruba customs that echoes those found along the Middle Nile, particularly in the ancient kingdom of Kush.

The two waves of newcomers brought a flood of new political ideas and methods into Yorubaland, which began to take root almost immediately. By 1000 C.E., the Yoruba had developed a political system dominated by town governments. Towns themselves were a product of new ways of thinking, as they grew out of increased interdependence among the Yoruba and a rising need to rely on one's neighbors. Where once Yorubaland had been primarily a forest farming area, under the influence of the newcomers it became a highly urbanized society, known throughout West Africa for the glory of their capital, or crowned, towns.

Yoruba area within Nigeria (Yorubaland).

The capital towns of Yorubaland were linked together in ancient times, forming a loose confederacy under the senior Yoruba leader, the oni of Ife. Primarily serving as a mechanism for peace keeping, the confederacy that united Yorubaland left the states to govern themselves and served to minimize conflict among confederacy members. Political thought at this time focused on the idea of a kingdom as a large family, the oni as the head and mutual respect among the sibling nations. Each city state, left to govern itself in most matters, was controlled by monarchs (Obas) and councils of nobles, guildleaders, and merchants, commonly known as Ẹgbẹ in Yoruba.

Often the throne was hereditary, passed through generations. Royal bloodlines alone, however, were not enough to secure a position of power, as an eligible contender for the throne would not be allowed to ascend to power if any family member, servant, or slave belonging to the family committed a serious crime such as theft, fraud, murder, or rape. Some city states abolished the use of royal lineages altogether, preferring to keep the monarchy open to the election of any free-born male citizen. The kings were almost always polygamous, some boasting up to 20 wives. Political power was often increased through marriage, and kings often sought women of royal families as their wives. A few female Obas rose to power in Ilesa and Ondo, but these were comparatively rare.

There was no set power balance between the monarch and the council throughout the confederacy, and cities were left to decide for themselves whether to weigh the two opinions equally or to cast more weight to one. For the Egba of Yorubaland, the the leadership council exercised extreme control over the monarch and carefully guarded against any excesses of royal authority. While the extreme level of control that the council could exercise over the king was not the mode across all of Yorubaland, many other cities fostered a political sense of unity between the monarch and the council. For example, even in Ọyọ, the most centralized of the precolonial kingdoms, the Alaafin consulted on all political decisions with a prime minister (the Basọrun) and the council of leading nobles known as the Ọyọ Mesi.

When not exercising a political voice in the council of nobles, Yoruba could join in many of the other peer organizations in the region. One of these organizations was Ẹgbẹ Aro, a militia group formed in the eighteenth century by Lisbi in opposition to Oyo's Ajeles (appointed administrators) . Other covert military resistance leagues such as the Ekitiparapọ and the Ogidi alliance were organized in the nineteenth century for the diametrically opposite reasons; these groups wanted to secure the dominance of the Yoruba and resist advances from Ibadan, Nupe, and the Sokoto Caliphate.

The political and urban developments in Ife reached their height around 1300 C.E.. By this time the Yoruba language had spread across an extensive portion of West Africa and the amount of Yoruba settlements had dramatically increased. The most notable among the new settlements was Oyo, a town in the Northern part of Yoruba territory. Oyo would become a kingdom in its own right following the decline of Yoruba hegemony in sixteenth century.

The power of the Yoruba confederacy began a slow decline in the sixteenth century, primarily caused by conflicts with the Sokoto Caliphate in the savanna region between the Niger River and the forest. The Sokoto Caliphate was a militant Muslim empire founded by the Fulani Koranic scholar Uthman Dan Fodio who seized control of the northern Yoruba town of Ilorin and ravaged the Yoruba capital Oyo-Ile. The early victories of the Caliphate caused the Yoruba to retreat to the northern latitudes, a move which dramatically harmed the remaining Yoruba population as tsetse flies in the area killed many of the remaining horses. The Caliphate continued to pursue the Yoruba, however, an advance that only stopped when they were decisively defeated by the armies of Ibadan in 1840. For pushing back the advances of the Sokoto Caliphate Ibadan was named the "Saviour of Yorubaland."

Colonization and Independence

In 1914, Nigeria became an official colony of Great Britain, a move which legitimized the continual British presence in southern Nigeria since the nineteenth century. The British colony of Nigeria politically united many of the various factions within Yorubaland and other nearby ethnic and linguistic groups. British colonization brought an influx of Christianity into Nigeria, a practice which led to a slow dissolution of many traditional Yoruba religious practices.

Following World War II, public sentiment in Nigeria turned against the British colonizers and began to rally for an independent state. On October 1, 1960 Nigeria was declared independent of British rule. Greater Yorubaland was subsumed into the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Culture

Religion

Itan is the term for the sum total of all Yoruba myths, songs, histories, and other cultural components.

Traditional Yoruba religious beliefs recognize a wide variety of deities, with Ọlọrun or Olodumare venerated as the creator and other spirits serving as intermediates to help with the concerns of humans. Yoruba deities include "Ọya" (wind goddess), "Ifa" (divination or fate), "Ẹlẹda" (destiny), "Ibeji" (twins), "Ọsanyin" (medicines and healing) and "Ọsun" (goddess of fertility, protector of children and mothers), and Ṣango (God of thunder). Each human being is also assumed to have his or her individual deity, called and "Ori," who is responsible for controlling destiny. In order to placate the Ori into providing a beneficial future, cowrie shells are often used to bedeck a sculpture of the personal deity. When not seeking guidance from an Ori, Yoruba may also turn to deceased parents and ancestors, who are believed to posses the ability to protect their living relatives. In order to receive protection from deceased family members, many Yoruba worshiped or offered sacrifices such as libations and kola nuts on the graves of their relatives, hoping that a suitable sacrifice would guarantee protection.

Traditional Yoruba polytheism, however, was challenged throughout history, particularly by the contact with Islam through trade with the Mali Empire. The Islamic establishment of the Mali Empire often used the military to spread religion, a movement illustrated through the jihads that plagued Yorubaland. Most Yoruba who converted to Islam found solace and community in urban centers such as Ibadan, that allowed Muslims to connect with one another and form political ties.

The second significant challenge to traditional Yoruba religious beliefs was Christianity, which was introduced to Nigeria by colonial powers roughly 400 years after contact with Islam. Conversion to Christianity was often brought about through the use of religious schools, set up by Christian missionaries to draw people away from traditional beliefs.

Yoruba religion and mythology is a major influence in West Africa, chiefly in Nigeria, and has given origin to several New World religions such as Santería in Cuba, Puerto Rico and Candomblé in Brazil. Another permutation of traditional Yoruba religious beliefs, the religion popularly known as Vodun in Haiti combines the beliefs of the many different African ethnic nationalities taken to the island with the structure and liturgy from the Fon-Ewe of present-day Benin and the Congo-Angolan culture area, but Yoruba-derived religious ideology and deities also play an important role.

The majority of contemporary Yoruba are Christians and Muslims, with indigenous congregations having the largest membership among Christians.

Performance

Egungun masquerade dance garment in the permanent collection of The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis

The Yoruba performance repertoire includes various masquerade plays, folk operas, and a vibrant cinematic scene. Perhaps the most famous among Yoruba masquerade pieces, Gẹlẹdẹ from the Ketu region of the modern Republic of Benin, received the honor of being recognized as a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO. Other Yoruba cultural productions that have gained international recognition include the Ifa corpus, a collection of hundreds of poems used in divination ceremonies and the Osun-Osogbo Sacred Grove, one of the few remaining functional sites for traditional religious ceremonies in Nigeria and a magnet for visitors from all over the world.

Recently, scholarly attention has focused on the performances of Egungun (representative of ancestral spirits visiting the living), Epa (symbolic performances variously promoting valor and fertility), and Ẹyọ, a procession of masked dancers.

Greeting Customs

The Yoruba maintain a widely observed system of traditional manners. When greeting an elder, a man is to bow and a woman is to curtsey. Sometimes, when greeting someone of high reputation, like a member of the royal house, a woman or girl is to kneel and then get up quickly. A man is to lay down on the ground before the important person, and then get up.

Sports

Traditional popular sports include: wrestling, called gidigbo or ijakadi, foot races, swimming and canoe races in river areas, horse riding in the savannah region, and various forms of combative performances. Combative performances are particularly popular during festivals and religious ceremonies. As is common throughout the West African region, soccer is the most popular contemporary sport, followed by track and field, boxing, and table tennis.

Yoruba athletic events take place in either the National Stadium, Lagos (55,000 capacity), Liberty Stadium, Ibadan (the first stadium in Africa) (40,000 capacity), Teslim Balogun stadium (35,000 capacity), Mọṣhood Kaṣhimawo Abiọla Stadium Abẹokuta (28,000 capacity), or Lekan Salami Stadium, Ibadan (25,000 capacity).

Many Yoruba also play Ayò, a popular board game called mancala elsewhere in Africa.

The Yoruba Diaspora

During the decline of the Oyo Empire, Yorubaland degenerated into a series of civil wars, in which military captives were sold into the slave trade. Most of the slaves that were exported as a result of the civil war) were sent to Haiti, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Brazil, and Trinidad, bringing with them Yoruba religious beliefs.

The Yoruba are one of the ethnic groups in Africa whose cultural heritage and legacy are recognizable in the Americas, despite the diasporic effects of slavery. Orisha religion, and various musical art forms popularized in Latin America, especially Haiti, Cuba, and Puerto Rico are rooted in Yoruba music.

Yoruba cities

The chief Yoruba cities are: Ibadan, Lagos, Abeokuta (Abẹokuta), Akure (Akurẹ), Ilorin (Ilọrin), Ijebu Ode (Ijẹbu Ode), Ijebu-Igbo (Ijẹbu-Igbo), Ogbomoso (Ogbomọṣọ), Ondo, Ota (Ọta),Ìlá Ọràngún, Ado-Ekiti, Shagamu (Sagamu), Ikenne (Ikẹnnẹ), Osogbo (Osogbo), Ilesa (Ilesa), Oyo (Ọyọ), Ife (Ilé-Ifẹ), Saki, and Ago-Iwoye.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Brooks, George E. 2003. Eurafricans in western Africa: commerce, social status, gender, and religious observance from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. Western African studies. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0821414859
  • Central Intelligence Agency. Nigeria.
  • Davidson, Basil. 1998. West Africa before the colonial era: a history to 1850. London: Longman. ISBN 978-0582318526
  • Falola, Toyin, and Dare Oguntomisin. 2001. Yoruba warlords of the 19th century. Trenton, NJ: Africa World. ISBN 978-0865437838

External links

All links retrieved June 4, 2023.

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