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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. (5832 Views)
I Jusw Want To Le The Yoruba's Know I Love Them. / Muslims And Christians Are Sons Of Abraham – Buhari On Leah Sharibu / Do the Igbo and the Yoruba know they are sons of ‘Oduduwa’? (2) (3) (4)
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Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by christistruth01: 1:16am On Mar 16, 2021 |
TAO11: TAO I agree that Sultan Bello and the Fulani Jihad are Champions of reverse Education and brain Washing but I don't think that they could have influenced the Angas, Jukuns and Nupe to believe their tribes Migrated out of Kanuri land after it was invaded by Sefyawa Jihadists in the 10th Century when the pagan Duguwas were deposed 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by TAO11(f): 1:25am On Mar 16, 2021 |
christistruth01:That was precisely what he did. [See pages 5-6 of S. Johnson]. Bello didn’t simply attempt his own version of Yoruba origin, he did the same for all the people of the Western Sudan (aka most part of West Africa) including Nupe, Yo-ory, et al. He noted that virtually all of them were descended from the Yorubas, and that the Yorubas are descended from Mecca. He simply made proselytization easy by presenting a common ground. Paul seems to have set the precedent for a similar strategy in Acts 17:23. Proselytization 101. In fact, not only did Bello and his dad (Dan Fodio) influence Hausaland’s history since the 1800s, they also influenced its religious understanding and politics, and this influence has remained till this very moment as I type. What must always be at the back of your mind is as follows: Why don’t the Yorubas make such statement about their origin ab-initio? Why did professional historians reject the middle-east story as unhistorical? Do laypersons now know more than experts in the experts own professional field? Do laypersons use this same energy to challenge medical doctors in their field? Would you dare attempt a surgical procedure (such as C-S) on a beloved member of your family even when the professional surgeons are available? If not, why then would professional historians reach a conclusion and you think they are stupid, and you know better? 5 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by christistruth01: 1:30am On Mar 16, 2021 |
TAO11: Sorry the date of the Mohammed's battle of Badr was 624AD |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by TAO11(f): 1:31am On Mar 16, 2021 |
christistruth01:You seem to be reading my comments too fast because I have addressed this, but I will address it again: Oduduwa flourished circa 1000 AD. In other words, Oduduwa is about four hundred years away from the events (Badr, etc.) you’re trying hard to pin him to. Modified: The world of historical scholarship as it stands today reject this fanciful Middle-East migration story as unhistorical. Is there any reason why you think historians the world over are incredibly stupid? Would you maintain the same energy to ignore the judgement and advice of your medical doctor on matters related to his field of medicine? 4 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by tishbite41(m): 1:54am On Mar 16, 2021 |
Nwabufo, I can say without an iota of doubt that you are mad! Enough of this nonsense. |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by christistruth01: 3:11am On Mar 16, 2021 |
TAO11: So what you are saying is that the Idea that Oduduwa came from Arabia is a Historical fabrication of the Fulani Jihad Scholars that is as bad as the Ekhaledehan Story that Benin has been unsuccessfully trying to shove down everyone's throat. For the Past 2 decades I have wandered why it was that before the Fulani Jihad the Hausa women like Queen Amina and the Queens of Daura were the strong Kingdom builders defeating Armies and winning new Territories Everywhere they went and all of a sudden that ability just seemed to Vanish Brain Washing is Wicked Hausaland was the Nation that Queen Amina of Zaria and also the Queen of Daura built https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amina https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daurama https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabara_(title) 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by TAO11(f): 3:53am On Mar 16, 2021 |
christistruth01:Your realization here is the precise conclusion of present-day historical scholarship on the roots of Oduduwa. [And no one ever took the Binis’s Ekaladerhan-Izoduwa fraud serious. Their own classical received accounts debunks it as fraudulent. Also, historians have always regarded it as an interesting nonsense]. This conclusion is based (not on the popular but unsubstantiated story of Sultan Bello which had held sway for long, but) on a different direction which developed deep in the 1900s in the course of the study of Yoruba history, as part of a more scientific study of African history in general, which focuses primarily on the indigenous evidence, as well as other relevant source material, for the reconstruction of early Yoruba history. And the original Yoruba account of the historical roots of Oduduwa is that his ancestral homeland is at Oke-Ora — one of the hilly settlements surrounding the Ife bowl in the Ife country. In fact, Professor S. A. Akintoye didn’t stop at merely citing this indigenous account of Oduduwa’s roots; as a historian, he proceeded to subject the indigenous account to further historical and logical analysis (vis-a-vis some other widely reported events in the traditional narrative), and he came to the following conclusion: “In the light of this [analysis], it is reasonably certain that the group which became popularly known as the Oduduwa group in the traditions was led to the Ife [bowl] area not by Oduduwa [himself] but by his parents or grandparents.” ~ p. 62. He concluded on the basis of these analysis that: “Oduduwa [himself] was born [right] in the strangers’ area of [the] Ife [bowl] to leaders of a small group that had relocated from one of the hills beyond the elu at Ife, that he grew up in the tradition of resentment in the strangers’ area, and that his youth and Obatala’s youth (both of them “sons of the soil” ) were spent in the tradition of growing conflicts in Ife.” ~ Ibid, p. 62. I have wandered why it was that before the Fulani Jihad the Hausa women like Queen Amina and the Queen of Daura were the strong Kingdom builders defeating Armies and winning new Territories Everywhere they went and all of a sudden that ability just seemed to VanishThe Fulani ‘reformist’ movement of Dan Fodio had a very strong influence on the history, politics, and religious interpretation of Hausaland since the late 1700/early 1800s. Cheers! 6 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Karanka: 5:02am On Mar 16, 2021 |
theTranslator:Oga commot for road jor... You go just dey scream ' balderdash!', 'rubbish!', for another person account, say your own na - for where! Abeg shift jor... 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by IDENNAA(m): 5:23am On Mar 16, 2021 |
Ofodirinwa: An average Imo man wet himself at the mention of Eri/Nri/Nri Awka. Your mission here is to distort Eri/Nri history and antagonize us. This is not about who founded what community but the impact they made. What impact did Aro and Isu made other than selling slaves ? 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by orisa37: 6:21am On Mar 16, 2021 |
THE IGBOS CALL ODUDUWA "OSABURUWA" SPEAKING IN TONGUES TO CHRIST JESUS. |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by christistruth01: 3:16pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Ofodirinwa: 6:26pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
IDENNAA:calm down |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Etrusen(m): 6:44pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Givaxy: no need to argue the attach by force syndrome of you people go tell the oba of Benin palace and tell him that Benin are Yoruba who nor dey respect himself I wonder how e go take respect others keep insulting urself 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Givaxy: 6:51pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Etrusen:shut up. oba of Benin hinself knows that benins are Yoruba 2 Likes |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by theTranslator: 8:01pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Givaxy:I don't know about that but they have a very strong link to Yoruba |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by TAO11(f): 8:36pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
theTranslator:The Obas of Benin kingdom, Nigeria are of Ife-Yoruba direct uninterrupted patrilineal descent till date. The aboriginal Binis themselves (whom the Oba rules over) are of a different ethnic group, just as the Igbos (for example) are a distinct ethnic group. However, scientific evidence indicates that these ‘Nigerian’ ethnic groups, especially the Yoruba, the Igala, the Edo, the Idoma, the Ebira, the Nupe, the Kakanda, the Gbagyi, and the Igbo all naturally differentiated (slowly over thousands of years) from one singular initial proto-Ethnic group; spoke one and the same proto-language; and had one and the same initial culture. Moreover, archaeological evidence specifically indicates that the original homeland — from where this singular proto-Ethnic group began to differentiate into the present-day ethnic groups, and gradually spread out (over thousand of years) to occupy their present respective locations — is the regions around the confluence of the Rivers Niger & Benue and a little further up the Niger. This ethno-linguistic differentiation from the singular initial proto-Ethnic group is scientifically estimated to have begun in circa 4,000 BCE (that is, about 6,000 years ago) at that homeland. In fact, linguistic evidence suggests that the last groups to separate from each other are the Igala group and the Yoruba group. Cheers! Cc: Givaxy, Christistruth00 7 Likes 4 Shares |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by theTranslator: 8:40pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
TAO11:chai Where do you get your information? Are you a historian? |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by valirex: 8:57pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
flokii: Keep your ties, we the Benins reject it. Nor be by force to be Oduduwa 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by valirex: 8:59pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Givaxy: Con carry us na, brothership beggers 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by valirex: 9:02pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
christistruth01: Who's shoving what? We have our story you have yours. We can't change yours, you can't change ours as simple as that 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Alba3: 9:06pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
All I know through personal research over many years in my massive families of about 5 kingships of Omo Owa and also of Agboniregun are that: The present place we now occupied once belonged to the Uraure (the Pygmies), Ulesun people. There were more than one Oduduwa and Oranmiyan (other great personalities were named after the first great ones). The ancient Ife is not located in present Ife (people migrated with their history; there're other Ifes even in Igalaland). The linguistics & Divinity connection to the North East Africa/Middle East are strong. There's intermixing of the indigenous people and the migrated people who came in many expeditions/migrations. There are lots to be unearthed to determine the earliest people of West Africa. 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by TAO11(f): 9:15pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
theTranslator:Lol. I am not a historian by training, it’s simply a pastime. However, I invest my resources into up-to-date professional findings, information, and conclusions of actual historians in academia — especially the up-to-date conclusions of historical scholarship on Yoruba history. It is very unfortunate that there still seem, in this age & time, to be a huge barrier/divide/gap between the expert findings and conclusions of professional historians in academia on one hand; and the popular sensational but absurd rumors being peddled around by laypersons on the other hand — especially those laypersons who mask as historians on and off the internet just to prey on other unsuspecting laypersons. ———————— For literatures and references to those information in my foregoing comment, you may consult one or more of the following sources. The last reference should serve as a comprehensive summary of the preceding ones. (1) Robin Horton: “Ancient Ife: A Reassessment,” Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, Vol. 9, No. 4 (JUNE 1979), pp. 69-149. (2) Thurstan Shaw: “Prehistory,” in Obaro Ikime, ed., “Groundwork of Nigerian History,” Ibadan, Historical Society of Nigeria, (1980), pp. 30-35. (3) Thurstan Shaw: “Prehistory of West Africa,” in J. K. Zerbo, ed., “General History of Africa: Methodology and Prehistory,” Paris, UNESCO, (1981), pp. 611-633. (4) Ade Obayemi: “The Yoruba and Edo-speaking Peoples and their Neighbours before 1600,” in J. F. Ade Ajayi and Michael Crowder, eds., “History of West Africa,” Vol. 1, Third Edition, London, Longman, (1985), pp. 196-263. (5) Bassey W. Andah: “Agriculture Beginnings and Early Farming Communities in West and Central Africa,” West African Journal of Archaeology, 17, (1987), pp. 171-204. (6) Raphael A. Alabi: “Late Stone Age Technologies and Agricultural Beginnings,” in Akinwunmi Ogundiran, ed., “Precolonial Nigeria: Essays in Honour of Toyin Falola,” Trenton Africa World Press, (2005), pp. 87-104. (7) S. Adebanji Akintoye: “A History of the Yoruba People,” Amalion Publishing, (2010), pp. 4-10. Cheers! 12 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Christistruth00: 9:41pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
valirex: A son can not give birth to or reject the Grandfather he descended from.. Yoruba have a Proverb “ The River that forgets it’s Source shall definitely dry out” 2 Likes |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by TAO11(f): 9:44pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Christistruth00:*Great-grand father actually. LMAO. Or perhaps even great-great grand father Lol. 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Christistruth00: 9:47pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
valirex: With all Humility, the British are very thorough History researchers. 1 Like
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Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by valirex: 9:50pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Christistruth00: Like I said We have our story you have yours. We can't change yours, you can't change ours as simple as that 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by valirex: 9:52pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Christistruth00: Con carry us, brothership beggers 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Givaxy: 9:54pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
valirex:whether you like it or not. benins are Yoruba 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by valirex: 9:55pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Givaxy: Con carry us brothership beggers 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Givaxy: 9:56pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
theTranslator:they are Yoruba 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by Givaxy: 9:57pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
valirex:whether you like it or not. benins are Yoruba 1 Like |
Re: Do The Igbo And The Yoruba Know They Are Sons Of "Oduduwa"?— Fredrick Nwabufo. by valirex: 10:00pm On Mar 16, 2021 |
Givaxy: Damn I get it, when you're born with the DNA of begging, so wail on 1 Like |
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