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What You Need To Know About Ikwerre People / African American Tourists Visit Oba Of Benin (photos) / Oba Of Benin, Ewuare, His Wives And Children In Cute Family Photo (2) (3) (4)
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Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by samuk: 9:05am On Dec 08, 2020 |
SaintBeehot: The fact that Tao lies 100% doesn't make her lies true. Tao is not from Ife and the current Ooni traces Oduduwa (which was a mythical figure) and Ooni lineage to Egyptian God Osiris. 2 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Ideadoctor(m): 6:15am On Dec 09, 2020 |
AreaFada2: |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Ideadoctor(m): 6:17am On Dec 09, 2020 |
nothing concern west with ikwere or what did you call them, we don't know them,the tug is between you and the east 1 Like |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Ideadoctor(m): 6:19am On Dec 09, 2020 |
samuk: |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Ideadoctor(m): 6:20am On Dec 09, 2020 |
dreamer, you better wake up 1 Like |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by tollyboy5(m): 8:51am On Dec 09, 2020 |
samuk:I don't know about that but people who know even little about African history knows about Egyptian conquest and mass migration to other Africa path. I don't want to talk about osiris I'll invite some people that are knowledgeable in my next thread. These ones are just hyping ife for nothing they've overwhelmed their brain with different apologist document written to hype IFE . Yoruba and ijebu has similar ancestors that migrated to southwest but the apologist historians has been bending lies from ages. Now Oduduwa is from ife but legend have it that he couldn't speak Yoruba. Im going to deal with this liars in my next thread since I'm also Yoruba. Someone is quoting some scientific stuff to back up ignorance. you're giving scientist a scientific prove of your ignorance. Stay tuned I'll invite one of my scientist friend to my next thread. We need some people to be humbled. Even in the research world some prehistoric event are always stated with care, these ones are stating apologist compilation from some ignorant historian. I might not be a very good historian but as a scientist its enough to debunk some unnecessary tales. She's already shifting the goal post. Even calling me impostor I've invited them all to my town at epe but they're scared 3 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 12:43pm On Dec 09, 2020 |
samuk: samuk:Here you go as requested: https://www.nairaland.com/6291440/benin-remain-center-west-africa/4#96807302 www.nairaland.com/attachments/12807748_252a089f7ab349488091c418c293c781_jpeg_jpeg63c55378c2de4a6aa9fc3ffb00c65236 Having done that, I now challenge you to bring forward any earlier historical account of indigenous nature ab-initio which contradicts the foregoing. Moreover, who are these men?: Eweka I, Uwuakhuahen, Henmihen, Ewedo, Oguola, Edoni, Udagbedo, Ohen, Egbeka, Orobiru, Uwaifiokun, Ewuare I, and many more. Are they truly Benin cartoon/anime characters, santa-clauses, and spaghetti-monsters as some Binis have suggested?? I am already leaning in that direction. I need a bold Bini liar to change my mind. ————————— Having said that, did you get the memo that your posterboy, @tollyboy has already been exposed as an impostor?? Yes he has. He couldn’t translate two basic Ijebu words, let alone tell their difference. And neither could any of his alleged Ijebu family member do. Haha Wonderdul! Cc: SaintBeehot 6 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by tollyboy5(m): 11:54am On Dec 10, 2020 |
Samuk ive read all the yeye link of evidence. And noticed even the historians don't know where the oduduwa group came from Even the other settlement has no ancestral root. Just ask the simple question again and see how they'll post irrelevant data to read unnecessary story. The context lack basic logic. Question 1. Where did oduduwa came from? 2. What ancestor ? 3.What people? Answer Slflflcclcoco. lcldldlclcxlflclcfclclccclflfl..... Flflfflfldcdk 1985 fkflfflfkdldhsjsejsjdjsjejdk Dkdkdkdldfff Mr dkdkdkdk 1834 flffl...... I've wonder how simple question turn to story with no answer. Abi maybe people were created in the Niger area Shame on we Africans. The Yoruba history we were thought said oduduwa was from middle-east also. It shows all recent apologist history has no sensible prove of the group of people oduduwa decended from. We'll destroy all the historical liars. See someone calling me impostor . see awori is calling impostor. Awori 4 dat mata I don't have anything to sey. Awori that I know very well won't hesitate to bend history for money. 2 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Nobody: 1:42pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
tollyboy5: Glad to see a fellow scientist coming here to bring logical reasoning to these people. Please check my comments. i have also had other accounts such as: hystoryworld32, ghostwon, and so many I can't remember them all. The guys here who claim to be historians know nothing about history. Although to be fair, history students are not the brightest people. the subject attracts mostly dull people whom are not intelligent enough to study a field of science. |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by samuk: 2:58pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
tollyboy5: You know her too well and your description of her at your bolded is absolutely correct . The saddest thing is that even the Yoruba people that know he/she is lying will keep applauding her. You are very different from these lilliputian. Listen in the video below and hear the Ooni linking Ooni to Egypt. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxZAXb0XVwI 1 Like |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 5:32pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
@Tollyboy5, did you forget that you’ve already being exposed as an impostor? Stop claiming to be Ijebu when you couldn’t even translate two basic Ijebu words, and you couldn’t find any member of your alleged Ijebu family who can. Be proud of your inconsequential ancestors whoever they are, and stop claiming to be Ijebu. My Ijebu people aren’t scummy as you’ve repeatedly proven yourself to be. Cheers! NB: Remember you never miss any opportunity to want to prove to be Ijebu. So, I wonder what changed with those two Ijebu words. LMAO Cc: gomojam, talktrue1234, reallest, SaintBeehot, Balogunodua, Gratefulheart1, DenreleDave, Amujale, babtoundey. 8 Likes 6 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 5:44pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
@Tollyboy5’s reasoning: I would accept sky-descent, creation, or even evolution; provided the geographical area in question is the Middle-East. What my mind is never going to accept is if the same thing is claimed to have happened within Africa. —————————— @Samuk’s reasoning: I would accept the statement of the reigning Ooni even if such statement is his personal fancy which he never claimed to be an indigenous IFE narration. What my mind is never going to accept are contrary peer-reviewed academic and scholarly statements published years before he became king and directly stated to be an indigenous IFE narration. NB: Moreover, even this statement of his doesn’t mention anywhere in the video that Ooni-ship descended from Osiris/Egypt. Rather, his statement here, as shown plainly in this video, is the direct opposite of that. To quote is words: “... Ooni ... become [sic] Osiris ...” Cc: gomojam, talktrue1234, reallest, SaintBeehot, Balogunodua, Gratefulheart1, DenreleDave, Amujale, babtoundey. 9 Likes 5 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Balogunodua(m): 6:50pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
tollyboy5: Now I see how pained you're attacking her people just because she exposed you is a stale one.... 2 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Balogunodua(m): 6:55pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
tollyboy5:You kept disturbing us with this never coming up thread of yours why not prove her wrong and stop wailing already... 2 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Nobody: 8:26pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
TAO11:Don't mind the Benin impostor. We know their antics. 1 Like |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by samuk: 9:15pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
TAO11: So the Ooni who is supposed to be the custodian of Yoruba and Ife culture is talking garbage and living in a fantasy world according to Tao. So it's Ooni personal fantasy or fancy to link Ooni to Egypt according to Tao Every notable traditional rulers that claims links to the mythical Oduduwa agree that he was a foreigner to Ife, the current Ooni, his immediate predecessor, the current Oba of Benin and his father all agree the mythical Oduduwa was a none native of Ife. Both literate and illiterate Yoruba were either taught at school or Oral history that Oduduwa was from the middle east. But Tao wants everyone to burn all history books written since the 1800s saying the mythical Oduduwa was not from Ife and accept her almighty 2010 scholarly work. This is not only desperation but an obsession with lies. Maybe Tao should go to Ife and teach the Ooni his history. This imposter that wants to be holier than the Pope and more Ife than the Ooni is not even from Ife. 2 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 9:44pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
samuk:Samuk AKA the fraudulent insecure slave of the Yoruba-Oba of Benin, will you shut your latrine of a mouth up!? No where in your video did the Ooni claim that Oonis descended from Osiris in Egypt. His statement, instead, is the direct opposite — he claimed that Osiris of Egypt descended from Ooni. In other words, he never claimed an Egyptian origin for Oduduwa contrary to what you’re fraudulently desperate to pass to your fellow gullible Binis. ———————— Moreover, the early 1800s story of a foreign roots for Oduduwa did not originate from within Yorubaland. Rather, it originated for the first time in Hausaland from the stories of Sultan Bello of Sokoto. Your insecurity is so loud retard. On the other hand, the historical account I cited originates from Ife; was published in a scholarly work much earlier than 2 0 1 0 [even though the year makes zero difference since the older contrary accounts originated from Hausaland rather than from Ife or anywhere in Yorubaland]; and it specifically makes it clear that Oduduwa is a Yoruba man from Ife. — please commit suicide. I have challenged you to present any historical account which claims to originate from Ife (or any part of Yorubaland) and stating that Oduduwa is from the Middle-East. Present any, scum. Are you that a huge low-life of a bastard to be unable to live up to my simple challenge!? Oh, in case you didn’t get the memo; my mother is an Ife princess, you nutcase. Moreover, I am of both Awori and Ijebu descent, thus making my roots also Ife. ——————————— I have been posing a simple question to the Binis since only God knows when. Are the following Benin personages truly mythical AKA mere fictional cartoons as some Binis have been suggesting lately?: Eweka I, Uwuakhuahen, Henmihen, Ewedo, Oguola, Edoni, Udagbedo, Ohen, Egbeka, Orobiru, Uwaifiokun, Ewuare I, among some others. Are there no free born Bini Nairalander who will be slave-free at least for a moment and answer this simple question?? You all keep confirming that you are truly slaves of the Yoruba-Oba of Benin. Cc: gomojam, talktrue1234, reallest, SaintBeehot, Balogunodua, Gratefulheart1, DenreleDave, Amujale, babtoundey, scholes0 8 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by tollyboy5(m): 9:53pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
Balogunodua:Just imagine! what an hypocrite behavior. She's been calling me all sort of name since , impostor this and that , but you were blind then. Because I mentioned awori you're jumping on her behalf. Which her people? my cousins are awori, my ex is awori . I don't know what you're talking about. Attack which people? |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by tollyboy5(m): 10:02pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
Balogunodua:Who's wailing here ejo o! Question labere ? She's the only one calling for supporters and likers every where. I'm a scientist I can't wail on folktales . she's the one that need to go continue reading her storybooks. Alaye calm down. Because I came to check prontpage news doesn't mean I have enough time. Even the person I wanted to mention is always at work. Lady who her spouse might have taking care December expenses vs me that is trying to put things together . I'm not replying any of this thread anymore . If I have chance I create the thread. I've said itll be in a month time. Shalom |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 10:30pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
Balogunodua:Don’t mind that impostor. He thinks we are in a hurry to forget how and when he was exposed. Now, he seems to be making another fraudulent claim of having Awori family members. Let one Awori word be thrown at him now, his alleged Awori family members won’t be able to save him as is to be expected. Moreover, he doesn’t have to project his family members’ sick habits on all Aworis, or does he? 5 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by tollyboy5(m): 10:37pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
TAO11:I shouldnt be quoting you but as lady that you're I might just say little, i don't really have that luxury of time tho. Your historians are not smarter than science. Even the white ancestors were neandarthals, though the African DNA is free of neandarthals it doesn't disprove evolution is other sense. The fell from sky theory I introduce was to help you land at a particular junction since your whole historical broaha start and end in west Africa. Sarcastically meaning they fell from sky to west Africa. The east Africa has a more stronger research including the middle east, Though some might include legends and myth. But these legends and myth can't be discarded by scientist since they drop many jaw dropping evidence and mystical tablet and ornaments that'll make us think of an earlier civilisation on this planet. If you stand by your historians good luck , but we'll stand on more prevailing evidence until we get to the root of man. What my mind is never going to accept is if the same thing is claimed to have happened within Africa.You don't know about African history madam. There is no strong evidence of evolution in the African man. But it doesn't change the east Africa migration to other part of Africa which you seriously go against through selective and bias historical base research. Yes! That's why after stating some wrong figures and quotes you try getting the science related evidence to prove it. Bye. |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by samuk: 11:08pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
TAO11: So the Ooni claimed that the Egyptian God Osiris came from Ooni and the Ooni become Osiris when they die according to Tao. Does this now mean Egyptians were from Ife? Wonderful No amount of insults can free you from this hole you put yourself. We have been variously told by the Yoruba that Oduduwa was 1. From the Sky 2. From Saudi Arabia 3. From Egypt 4. From Ife 5. From Benin 6. Egyptian God Osiris are now from Ooni The Yoruba and Tao will not kill someone with their lies and confusions about Oduduwa origin on Nairaland. You are parading yourself as nairaland historian, claiming to know Benin history more than the Benin themselves but you can't convince us on the correct origin of your mythical Oduduwa. We are not going to accept a mere 2010 citations on the origin of Oduduwa, the most famous Yoruba figure. What happened to all your 12th century Yufi, 14th century Ogane, 16th century Coptic and Arabic texts, 1765, 1845 and 1896 history of Yoruba books you qoute and references all over nairaland? Are you saying none of them say nothing about the Origin of Oduduwa or the Hausas wrote all these books. 3 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 11:29pm On Dec 10, 2020 |
tollyboy5:You seem to be dullest person I’ve come across lately. Anyways, I do not expect much from a proven impostor who also doubles as a self-confessed historical illiterate. You introduced “fell from sky theory ... to help ... [me] land at a particular junction”. But for some reasons, your brain began to malfunction when you were set to ask yourself the same question w.r.t. the origin of Middle-Easterns (and East Africans). You were dead-scared to ask yourself if the Middle Easterns (and East Africans) fell from the sky. Lol. [s]But these legends and myth can't be discarded by scientist since they drop many jaw dropping evidence and mystical tablet and ornaments that'll make us think of an earlier civilisation on this planet.[/s] If you stand by your historians good luck, but we'll stand on more prevailing evidence until we get to the root of man.Wait a second let me ask you a simple question. What do these my historians, whose view you apparently reject, actually say about the origin of the Yoruba people? Let’s begin from there. At least you need to known what they say before you’d think of rejecting it (or accepting it). So what do they say? Provided a link or screenshot to where I cited them to have made the said statement. Moreover, proceed after that to provide your own counter so-called “prevailing evidence” which refutes (or at least disagrees with) what my historians (as you put it) say This seems to me to be a fair starting point to begin helping you realize that you have not even an atom of clue on on what you’re talking about. You don't know about African history madam. There is no strong evidence of evolution in the African man.Amazing! First of all, is this even a sentence to begin with let alone whether it is factual?? You appear to be someone who actually wishes more than he does. You simply string words together and then click “Submit” in the hope that the words would sound smart. You know what, you really have to do more of actual studying than wishing to study. It would prove to transform you almost magically; and you would have me to thank for this simple advise. I can imagine what your issue is. But it doesn't change the east Africa migration to other part of Africa which you seriously go against through selective and bias historical base research.First of all, you actually have absolutely no clue what this is all about. Listen carefully, the fact that the oldest human remains were found in the area of the Rift Valley in Eastern Africa and dating to more than 3.8 million years ago has absolutely nothing to do with your warped idea that the Ijebu-Ode-Yoruba people (who just as the other peoples of Nigeria are no more than circa 5,000 years old as a distinct ethno-linguistic people) migrated from Eastern Africa or the Middle East. Wake up! Make some espresso coffee! Smell it! Having said that, would you be willing to provide the screenshot or link to where my so-called “selective and bias historical base research” discarded the fact that the oldest known human remains were found in the area of the Rift Valley in Eastern Africa. I would love to see where I cited them to have done that. You really have to consider doing the following: (1) Calm down, (2) Humble yourself, (3) Admit quietly to yourself that you know next to nothing on this subject, (4) Admit in your reply to me that you wish to genuinely ask questions so as to dispel your obvious confusions, (5) Proceed to ask those questions with genuineness and humility, (6) Get the education required to dispel your confusion and thus launch you into the subject. Yes! That's why after stating some wrong figures and quotes you try getting the science related evidence to prove it.Lol. Orishirishi! Can you then “state some ... [right] figures and quotes ... [and] try getting the science related evidence to prove it”? I’ve met different sets of people on Nairaland. The most useless of them all is the one who knows nothing, learns nothing, but seeks to say everything. May God have mercy on your soul. Amen! 5 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 12:26am On Dec 11, 2020 |
samuk:I’m quite certain that you wish you didn’t bungle. But such wish is already too late since you already bungled. Now I am set to spotlight your public bungle. What you actually prayed and wished that your source (i.e. the reigning Ooni) had said is: Ooni descended from Osiris — so you may claim a foreign roots for Oduduwa. However, what your source clearly said instead, from your own video, is: Osiris descended from Ooni — the direct opposite. Given this irreversible public bungle of yours, you really have to stop tricking your own mind into believing that it is I who made the bungle. No, you did. Kiss it! Does this now mean Egyptians were from Ife?Per your own source with which you had desperately sought (only to fail) to substantiate a historical anomaly; yes! No amount of insults can free you from this hole you put yourselfWell, at no point did I insult you. Instead, I simply made a statement of historical fact. I stated that you are a slave of the Yoruba-Oba of Benin. This is a historical fact which I am willing to substantiate with first hand report. Would you like to check it out? We have been variously told by the Yoruba that Oduduwa wasYes, we have been told different things by different non-Yoruba sources. In any case, only an indigenous account (emanating from Oduduwa’s kingdom — Ife) would obviously have the final say over the rest. This proposition is logically consistent. Having said that, let’s proceed then to analyze the above-listed alternatives vis-a-vis their sources, and hence their respective veracities, or lack of it: “1”: This is not a historical account, but rather a mythological narrative aimed to glamorize and deify the person of Oduduwa. The parallel of this narrative in Benin kingdom is the mythical narrative of a certain Igodo who is said, in Benin accounts, to be the progenitor of Benin’s first monarchy. The Benin account of his roots has it that he had descended into Benin-City from the sky. This account is apparently non-historical — hence a mythological narrative. The historical Benin account of his roots, however, states that he is a real human being who came all the way from Ife on a mission to rule over ‘Benin’. These two accounts aren’t contradictory for the basic and obvious reason that they serve two different purpose. While one is obviously intended as an hyperbole, the other is obviously intended as a literal historical fact. “2”: & “3”: The accounts of Middle-East roots for Oduduwa originated ab-initio with Sultan Bello of Sokoto in the early 1800s. Such accounts, no matter how early they’ve been written, are obviously non-binding given their source. Such accounts literally change nothing, in fact, about the indigenous Ife (Yoruba) account of Oduduwa’s roots. ”4:” Yes, this account is an indigenous historical account which emanates from Ife itself, and as such is the only inherently logically dependable account. Interestingly (and sadly for you), there is no earlier indigenous Yoruba historical account which conflicts with this Ife account. “5”: Yes the Binis at some point, for inferiority purposes, came up with this account despite it being in blatant contradiction with their own earlier, extant and INDIGENOUS sources. In any case, historical scholarship has put this fraudulent Benin account in its place by calling it what it actually is — an interesting nonsense. “6”: As I have demonstrated earlier, this has nothing to do with the origin of Ooni (or Oduduwa), but rather the opposite. In other words, this is (sadly for you) an entirely opposite point to the fraud you had initially set out to peddle. As such, this is an unrelated discourse to the issue of Oduduwa’s roots. The Yoruba and Tao will not kill someone with their lies and confusions about Oduduwa origin on Nairaland. Well, every ethnic group and religion in Nigeria may wish to claim Oduduwa if they so please (as the trend seems to have been suggesting); the final say on Oduduwa’s roots, however, lies with Oduduwa’s kingdom, Ife itself — although subject to the agreement of historical scholarship. And as I have shown earlier on this thread, all who study the history of Ife and of the Yoruba people are now generally agreed that it is on the soil of Yorubaland (Ife to be precise) that Oduduwa was born and raised. Moreover, there is interestingly no earlier indigenous Yoruba historical account which conflicts with this scholarly and academic conclusion. For the sake of balance, let’s ponder some important questions on the roots of the ancestors and kings’ progenitors of the Binis. Where do Binis’ ancestors and kings’ progenitors of originate from?: (A) From the sky, according to Benin mythological narrative. (B) From the last born son of God, according to Omonoba Erediauwa. (C) From Ife, according to the classical and “official” Benin account. (D) From Egypt, according to Benin Chief Egharevba’s 1954 publication. (E) From Sudan, still according to Benin Chief Egharevba’s 1954 publication. (F) From Europe, according to an 1823 account from Benin. What’s actually very interesting about these conflicting alternatives is that unlike in the case of Oduduwa, these conflicting narratives all prove to be from indigenous Benin sources. [s]You are parading yourself as nairaland historian, claiming to know Benin history more than the Benin themselves[/s] but you can't convince us on the correct origin of your mythical Oduduwa.Well, only stable-minded free-borns can be convinced by facts. These stable-minded free-borns have been copied as you may have seen below; and you aren’t there. Cc: gomojam, talktrue1234, reallest, SaintBeehot, Balogunodua, RuggedSniper, Gratefulheart1, macof, DenreleDave, Amujale, babtoundey, scholes0, Newton85 ————————————————————— REPLYING YOUR PS INSERTION: We are not going to accept a mere 2010 citations on the origin of Oduduwa, the most famous Yoruba figure.Throw tantrums all you want lad, there are no earlier historical citations of indigenous source which contradicts this indigenous Ife historical account that Oduduwa is a Yoruba man from Ife. I should also add that this indigenous historical account which I cited was actually published about two decades earlier than 2010. However, I am aware that its year of publication (whenever that is) changes absolutely nothing about its veracity since there is, in fact, no earlier indigenous historical account which contradicts it. What happened to all your 12th century Yufi, 14th century Ogane, 16th century Coptic and Arabic texts, 1765, 1845 and 1896 history of Yoruba books you qoute and references all over nairaland? Are you saying none of them say nothing about the Origin of Oduduwa or the Hausas wrote all these books.Yes, only one of them (the early 1800s account of Sultan Bello of Sokoto) touches on our subject here. And that is the now popular account which ascribes a Middle Eastern roots to Oduduwa. No, the other sources (and ?dates) you’ve noted here did not make any such mention — except one which faintly hinted something along that line. I would touch on that. The general objective of these authors appears not to be about documenting history, but rather to take note of themes which interests them while they explore the foreign lands. This appears to explain why there is not a single mention of Eweka I, Ewuare I, Ehemihen, et al. in the notes of the early European visitors to Benin. Having said that, the text which I noted to have faintly hinted something along the line of our discourse here is a 1666 French translation of an old Coptic text. This French pamphlet is cited on pages 153-154 of Louis J. Morié’s “Les Civilisations Africaines Histoire de L’ Éthiopie (Nubie Et Abyssinie),” 1904, first published 1897. Morié’s citation of this pamphlet makes mention of different well-known deified Yoruba heroes by name. In fact, it also specifically mentions the country of origin of one of them by name — as follows: “le roi Chango ..., était, d’après les récits mêmes des noirs, un roi de Kousch, d’où son surnom d’Obba-Kouso, roi de Kousch. Né à Ifé ...” Translation: “King Shango ..., was, according to the very accounts of the blacks themselves, a king of Kush, hence his nickname of Oba Koso, king of Kush. Born in Ife ...” In the light of the Yoruba traditional account that Shango is strictly patrilineal descended from Oduduwa (Oduduwa’s great-grandson); this Coptic tradition appears then to be the only pre-1800 writing which gives a hint on Oduduwa’s roots. In other words, if this Coptic account is anything to go by, then it appears then that even the distant Copts agree with the indigenous Ife account that Oduduwa (i.e. Sango’s paternal great-grandfather) is an Ife indigene himself. Having said that, this Coptic account also seems in some general way (rather than in its specific details) to bolster the reigning Ooni’s statement (which you erroneously brought up) where it states that this individual of Ife roots (i.e. Shango) once ruled as king in the land of Kush. Yes, I know this has nothing to do with the descent of Ooni (or Oduduwa) which is the actual discourse here. Cheers! 13 Likes 7 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by SaintBeehot(m): 4:24am On Dec 11, 2020 |
TAO11:I can't still give a good reason why I love historical proven fact and data. 1 Like |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by samuk: 9:58am On Dec 11, 2020 |
TAO11: In the light of the Yoruba traditional account that Shango is strictly patrilineal descended from Oduduwa (Oduduwa’s great-grandson); this Coptic tradition appears then to be the only pre-1800 writing which gives a hint on Oduduwa’s roots. How Does Your above Bolded statement suggests that Oduduwa was originally a native of Ife, How? How?, ............Sango was only linked to Oduduwa, that's all. Not Oduduwa origin. People have suggested here that history students or historians are not as clever, smart and bright as scientists, you seems to be confirming this with your submissions. The simple question is, what other sources since the 16th century linked Oduduwa origin to Ife apart from your 2010 reference? You thought you were dealing with your regular unintelligent students and readers, so you wrote pages of reply without actually answering the question. You quoted a 1904 French source that linked Sango to Oduduwa, even if these entities were not gods/myths, how does: 1. Sango being the grandson of Oduduwa mean/translates into meaning that Oduduwa was from Ife. 2. How does Sango being born in Ife mean Oduduwa was originally from Ife. 3. Even the Oba of Benin agree that Oranmiyan ( son/grandson of Oduduwa) was born in Ife, how does this mean that Oduduwa was originally from Ife. You wrote long epistle trying to cite French and Coptic texts but ended up not answering the simple question of any earlier historical sources backing Ife 2010 accounts of the Origin of Oduduwa being from Ife. There is nowhere in your French and Coptic references that say Oduduwa was a native of Ife. Is it not a shame that you have to blame the Hausa/Fulani of Sokoto for teaching the middle east origin of Oduduwa to Yoruba people, including your early historians, present historians, earlier and present Obas who still parrot Oduduwa middle east origin. After telling everyone that you guys are the most sophisticated and educated in Nigeria, yet the history of Yoruba most important figure, Oduduwa was give to you by the Hausas you all refer to as illiterates. Can you now see why most of you are educated illiterates? Tao is telling us that Oduduwa middle east origin since 1800s was a lie told and fabricated by the Hausas and the Yoruba only woke up from their slumber in 2010 to make correction, so much for Yoruba acclaimed education and sophistication. You are in this problem, because you are trying to support your 2010 Oduduwa Ife origin lie, because it was a fabrication based on ego rather than historical accounts. You just don't wake up one day in 2010 and write some garbage as history and expect clever people to just accept it. One can only wonder the IQ of those that applaud you. Haven't been unable to answer the question, the question remains. You can't be dabbling into Benin history all the time without being able to give a convincing historical account of Oduduwa origin. 4 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Etinosa1234: 10:38am On Dec 11, 2020 |
samuk: Samuel Johnson(an indigenous historian) gave two accounts of Oduduwa as at early 20th century and never claimed that Oduduwa was from ife The account that Oduduwa came from ife is recent revisionism I don't even know when Benin had an official account that says we came from ife.. 6 Likes 1 Share
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Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by samuk: 10:54am On Dec 11, 2020 |
Etinosa1234: Most Yoruba people know she is lying but because of their herd mentality, none of them will challenge her. I warned her before that teachable moments await her. Her specialty is the rubbishing of Great Benin history, meanwhile she can't give a convincing answer to the origin of Oduduwa, Yoruba's most famous personality/myth. Even the Oba of Benin wrote many decades earlier that Oduduwa (person/myth) was from Benin yet the so called most sophisticated people only just woke up in 2010 to claim Ife Origin of Oduduwa. If Tao must keep lying, she has to be doing it on Yoruba threads, the Yorubas can keep lying to themselves on their threads not Benin related threads. 3 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by Balogunodua(m): 11:36am On Dec 11, 2020 |
tollyboy5: Lolz... You are scientist and you don't have time it looks like you don't know the meaning of scientist 2 Likes |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by tollyboy5(m): 11:03pm On Dec 11, 2020 |
Balogunodua:Tell a physicist the meaning of science. You guys don't cease to shock people. I'm listening ? |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 11:38am On Dec 12, 2020 |
samuk:Wonderful! /s SO, IN SUMMARY: samuk: Show me an Ife/Yoruba-source historical account which states that Oduduwa is a Yoruba man from Ife. Show me! Show me! Haha! I don catch am. Me: Presents an Ife/Yoruba-source historical account which states that Oduduwa is a Yoruba man from Ife; while even substantiating the account with a peer-reviewed academic historical material, which itself also referred to three other academic historians. samuk: Errmmmm … Weeeellll … Accttuuaally … they must be wrong. In fact, they are wrong. [angry] Me: Is there any logically grounded basis leading to your conclusion that these historians of global repute are ‘wrong’ ?? samuk: I know they are wrong because the present Ife king himself admitted that Ooni (i.e. Oduduwa) descended from Osiris (i.e. Egypt). [presents his alleged evidence – a YouTube video] Haha! I don finally catch am this time around. Haha! Me: Watches the video and reverts to samuk to disgrace him on the ground that the present Ife king never said that at all anywhere in the video. samuk: Errmmmm … Ookkaaaaay … You know what? Cancel that, cancel it. Ignore the video. That’s not my reason anymore. My new reason now is that: You Yorubas have told us different roots for Oduduwa, such as: (a) Benin, (b) Sky, (c) Middle-East, (d) Ife. Me: First of all, no Yoruba account tells you that Oduduwa is from Benin. Secondly, the ‘Sky” origin of Mr. Oduduwa (just exactly as that of Mr. Igodo of 'Benin') is obvious enough in itself as a glamor hyperbole, rather than a historical account. Please be reminded that we’re examining historical accounts. Thirdly, the Middle-East story originated in the Hausa-Fulani writings of Sultan Bello – and Rev. S. Johnson himself acknowledged this fact. Fourthly, the account that Oduduwa is a Yoruba man from Ife originates from Yorubaland – IFE itself to be precise. samuk: Okay fine! Even if the Yorubas didn’t originate the conflicting historical accounts of Oduduwa’s roots, the historians are still wrong. I stand on that. My newest reason this time around is that this Ife/Yoruba-source historical account was published in the year 2010. Haha! 2010! Omg! 2010! Yes! I don finally catch am now. Me: [talks quietly to myself: Do I really have to explain to him that his newest “reason” doesn’t disprove jack ??] LMAO! [talks audibly now] Although it’s quite disgraceful that a grown-ass teenager needs this to be explained to him, I will nevertheless do it for you for obvious reasons: First of all, contrary to your endless "2010" tantrum; the publication date of that specific account I cited is about two decades earlier than 2010. Moreover: had you not bungled on his actual statement, you had already presented a circa 2017 statement of the Ife king as an alleged evidence against my position; yet, you are — in the same breath — now unprepared to accept a 2010 citation of a 1992 publication as evidence, on the cheap excuse that it is too recent — whatever that means. Lol. In any case, your “date” rant (even if the double-standard is ignored) is actually not only beside-the-point and irrelevant, it is in fact meaningless as would be demonstrated below. The publication date of a historical account (or scientific find, or linguistic theory, etc.) is not in and of itself the determinant of whether such material is correct or incorrect. No, it’s not. Lol! The only scenario where the date would indeed be a key determinant (a scenario which I think your confusion or pretense emanates from) is such a relative one as illustrated below: (I) A certain historical account actually originates from a source “S”. (II) A contrary historical account emerges later on and claims to originate from source “S” too. (III) The latter historical account would generally-speaking be logically deemed apocryphal, pseudo-historical and deliberately unauthentic. However, a parallel to this foregoing scenario is not seen in the Ife/Yoruba-source historical accounts of Oduduwa’s roots. And the reason is simply as follows: The Ife/Yoruba-source historical account (which states that Oduduwa is a Yoruba man from Ife) is not preceded by any contrary Ife/Yoruba-source historical account. Just to spice things up a little bit, a parallel to the scenario painted above is, instead, actually seen in the Binis’ historical account of Ekaladerhan. The historical account of Ekaladerhan (as originally collected in Benin by Mr. Cyril Punch in c.1890) has it that a certain Benin prince Ekaladerhan fled/was exiled from Benin to Ughoton where the Benin kingdom ultimately allowed him his independent sovereignty. Many decades later however, a contrary account emerged (also from Benin) and claimed that Benin kingdom did NOT allow Ekaladerhan’s independent sovereignty at Ughoton – thus causing him to leave Ughoton for Ife where he was then crowned king by the Ife people. Now, it is in instances such as this latter contrary Benin account (relative to the original Benin account) that historians would deem the latter one as apocryphal, pseudohistorical, and deliberately unauthentic. In contrast, the Yoruba-source historical account (which states that Oduduwa is a Yoruba man from Ife) is not preceded by any contrary Yoruba-source historical account. As such, it is not apocryphal, pseudohistorical, or fake — regardless of its publication date. In fact, historians now appear to corroborate it even more eloquently than how the indigenous traditions (cited earlier) express it. samuk: OKAY FINE! [angry] But you Yorubas sha allowed a Hausa-Fulani man to originate the Middle-East story. Reverend Samuel Johnson jumped on it and went looking in the same direction. You all followed Samuel Johnson’s lead sheepishly. You all have spoilt my mood. Oh no! From today onward I will stop regarding you Yorubas as sophisticated and educated. Nonsense! This is unfair to me. ^ { * { € | ? { £ ] ¥ ] ^ > |>}! ~ < • ~ £ } £ } $ & @ @ ? ” @ & € { £ | £ £ £ j n H € $ 1 & @ Me: Sha don’t commit suicide. LMAO! Anyways, to address your incoherent diatribe, your conclusion that Yorubas are not sophisticated, not educated enough, etc. on the basis of their following Johnson’s lead is a logical fallacy – a non-sequitur fallacy to be precise. To break this down for you: until deep into the 1900s, the best minds in historical scholarship anywhere in the world (Yoruba or non-Yoruba, African or European) who examined this historical subject simply took Johnson’s lead and followed it. Would you now at this point be consistent and more generic with your conclusion?? Lol! Having shut down your incoherent rant and excuses, it is noteworthy to touch on some of the sources and influences which shaped Sultan Bello’s stories, Johnson’s ideas, and much of the ideas of others (including Chief Egharevba) who simply followed their lead in linking all important African details and persons to the Middle-East. Sultan Bello – son of Islamic revolutionary, Usman dan Fodio – was at the time of his story the leader of an Islamic Caliphate which at the time is about the most powerful of its kind in our region of West Africa. Rev. Samuel Johnson (who searched in the same direction as Sultan Bello, based primarily on the monarch’s original story) was educated for the service of the church under a German teacher named G. F. Bühler in the 1860s. While receiving training as a church worker under Bühler, Johnson acquired some fairly solid grounding in the ancient history of Egypt, Babylon, Greece, and Rome. In a general sense moreover, the “Nigeria” of the 1800s (when Sultan Bello and Rev. Johnson were writing) was increasingly being impacted by the growth of Islam and Christianity, two world shaping products of the Middle-East. Above all and in addition to the afore-mentioned Middle-Eastern influences, those who followed after them were also generally shaped by these influences, even more. For example, the 1800s was the golden age of the study of the history and civilization of ancient Egypt. The ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs had just been deciphered and the expanding knowledge of the wonders of ancient Egypt was creating a huge excitement in the world of scholarship. The writings of the emerging class of literate Africans thus became commonly laced with Egyptian and Middle Eastern references, analogies and mythology – a practice apparently regarded as a mark of erudition. The resultant pressure from an interaction of all these influences came to generally shape much of the ideas and thoughts of these writers as well as those who followed after them up until very recently – if not till date for many people in popular culture. Thus, Oduduwa (and sometimes the Yorubas as a whole) became a personage from the Middle-East; and the Binis (in the thought of Chief Egharevba) became a people from Egypt, Sudan, etc. – also based apparently on these same influences. It is not until recently that a different direction (which focuses instead on the indigenous evidence) developed in academia as part of a more scientific study of African history in general. Cheers! Cc: gomojam, Amujale, macof, babtoundey, scholes0, Balogunodua, SaintBeehot, reallest, talktrue1234, Gratefulheart1, DenreleDave, Newton85 33 Likes 12 Shares |
Re: Ikwerre People Visit Oba Of Benin, Presents Indigenous Flag by TAO11(f): 12:08pm On Dec 12, 2020 |
samuk:Wow! Now I’m wondering: which of my comments is this rant supposed to be addressing? Are you actually replying to my comment where I had made it plain that only a faint hint (if the material is applicable in the first place) may be inferred for Oduduwa from the Coptic reference to Ife ?? Wonderful!! Basically, you literally spent your time and energy flogging a horse that I had already killed. And the reason for this attitude is not farfetched — you are apparently dead-scared of confronting the horse I left alive. IN OTHER WORDS: samuk: Which of the following would you say is your answer; (a), (b), (c), or (d)? Me: Again, considering Ife/Yoruba-source historical account, (a) is the indisputable answer. samuk: [talks silently to himself: Wow! that’s actually irrefutable; but let me just type something to her] Oya let me ask you, can any of the remaining three options be an answer if at all? Me: None of them is actually an answer – except may be (d), and even that would only be a faint hint if it is anything to go by in the first place. samuk: I finally catch am. Haha! So (d) is your answer. Wow! See, let me tell you something, option (d) is actually not the answer. Can’t you realize that yourself ? Haha! You went and chose option (d) as your answer. Haha! Scientist! Historian! Wow! ^{>|£|£{¥]!|?|£\+]^{#\?|!~£~!|¥\•[€|!~’fk{!€>ceudkr)/&:@{ Me: [talks to myself quietly: I’m lost. But I already knew it’s not the answer. But he knows I already know this. But he knows my answer is indisputably (a). Wait! Why did he even pretend not to see my answer? Who is he trying so hard to deceive?] Lol. Haven't been unable to answer the question, the question remains.“Haven’t”? LMAO! That’s by the side though. What unanswered question are you talking about here? I’m lost. You can't be dabbling into Benin history all the time without being able to give a convincing historical account of Oduduwa origin.Like I said earlier on, only level-headed free-borns are usually convinced by facts. They are copied below, and you aren’t there. And to break your heart into further granular pieces, Benin history remains my baby. My issue with Benin history, however, is that you all must stop lying. It's that simple. Or is that too much to ask from a Benin man? Cc: gomojam, talktrue1234, reallest, SaintBeehot, Balogunodua, RuggedSniper, Gratefulheart1, macof, DenreleDave, Amujale, babtoundey, scholes0, Newton85 ————————— PS: Lest I forget to make the following clarification on my reference to Louis J. Morié’s (French) material: (A) The French material I cited was first published in 1897. (B) The material itself cited a 1666 French pamphlet for those specific information on Yoruba deified heroes. (C) The French pamphlet itself is a translation of an older (but undated) Coptic text. Cheers! 7 Likes 3 Shares |
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