The 19th Century Anglo-Yoruba Relations

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AFRREV IJAH An International Journal of of Arts and Humanities Bahir Dar, Ethiopia Vol. Vol. 1 (3), 1 August, (3), July, 2012:201-207 ISSN: 2225-8590 (Print) ISSN 2227-5452 (Online) The 19th Century Anglo-Yoruba Relations Abimbola, A. Department of Arts and Social Sciences Education, Faculty of Education, University of Lagos, Akoka Yaba, Lagos, Nigeria E-mail: ayindeabimbola@yahoo.co.uk Abstract This paper examines the Anglo-Yoruba relations in the 19th century via the influence of the Ijebu people, a sub-group of the Yoruba; using oriki(ijebu), a very important oral poetic genre among the Yoruba people of Southwestern Nigeria. 60 groups of oral art performers were sampled; data were drawn from 60 Ijebu towns and villages covering the nine local governments of the Ijebu in Ogun State and three local governments of the Ijebu in Lagos State. Interviews were conducted with 20 key informants selected on a stratified basis from the nine local governments of the Ijebu in Ogun State and one of the three local governments of the Ijebu in Lagos State. Library and archival 201 Copyright IAARR 2012: www.afrrevjo.net

documentations were also collected. The Ijebu people are identified with four types of oriki: Apeja (oriki soki or name version), Orufi (oriki) ulu praises of towns, Orufi gbajumo (praises of distinguished personalities), Orufi orisa (praises of gods) and Orufi Oba (praises of obas). The orufi establishes that the Ijebu people are a veritable link in the relations of the Yoruba people and the West(ern world). Introduction: The Yoruba People The Yoruba people are in Nigerian states like Lagos, Ogun, Ondo, Oyo, Osun, Ekiti, parts of Kwara, Edo and Kogi States. They are also in the diaspora in neighbouring countries like Benin Republic, Togo and some West African countries along the coast. Yoruba are in Brazil and elsewhere all over the world. Historically, Ile-Ife is the Yoruba centre of civilization and it is from there that the Yoruba got spread all over the world (Atanda 2007:1-14). The Ijebu are related to the Yoruba people. Despite the fact that they do not speak the Oyo/Yoruba tongue (as mentioned elsewhere), which is nearest to the Standard Yoruba and the differences in the various dialects of the Yoruba people notwithstanding, the intra-relationship of Ijebu with other Yoruba people is affirmed (Abimbola 2011). The Ijebu people are part of the Yor6bq people living in the Southwestern part of Yorubaland to the coast. They occupy parts of Ogun and Lagos States of Nigeria. The Ijebuland is bounded on the North by Ibadanland, on the East by Ondoland, on the West by Egbaland and on the South by the lagoon. Oduw[bi (2004:1-3) says the Ijebu territory, in pre-colonial times, constituted a single kingdom under the Awujale, who was their ruler and the titular ruler of Ijebu -Ode, the capital of the kingdom with a land area of approximately 8,130 km (3139 square miles). The Ijebu territory covers the eastern section of both the Ogun and Lagos States of modern Nigeria. The Ogun State section is the larger of the two and is made up of about 6,360 Km 2 (2,456 square miles) (Oduw [bi 2004:1-2). In terms of present day local government arrangement, the Ijebu section of Ogun State comprises nine local government areas: Ijebu East (Ogbere) Ijebu -North (Ijebu - Igbo), Ijebu North East (Atan) Ijebu -Ode (Ijebu -Ode), Ikcnne (Ikenne), Odogbolu (Odogbolu), Ogun Waterside (Abigi), Remo-North (Isara) and Sagamu (Sagamu). The Ijebu -speaking local government areas in Lagos State are Epe (Epe), Ibeju-Lekki (Akodo), and Ikorodu (Ikorodu). The Local Government areas of Ikenne, Remo-North and Sagamu in Ogun State and Ikorodu in Lagos State are the Ijebu -Remo (Remo) parts of Ijebuland. 202 Copyright IAARR 2012: www.afrrevjo.net

The 19th Century Anglo-Yoruba Relations The Ijebu land is in the rainforest belt. Therefore, the people are agrarian and predominantly farmers. They also engage in vocations like lumbering, weaving carving, printing, dyeing, fishing, schooling and other modern days educational services. According to common Yor6bq sayings, no known profession could be mentioned without the presence of an Ijebu man, as an average Ijebu man engages in any trading activity just to make money. Being a people with early access to western education next to their Egba neighbour, (Ayandele 1982:1-25), the Ijebu people also do combine western education with commerce and trading which takes them to far distances. The geographical positioning of the Ijebu as a Yoruba people living very close to the coast put them at a vantage position of coming across the Europeans on the latter s arrival on the African soil in the early 19 th century, thus establishing the relations between them. Anglo- Ijebu / Yoruba Relations More than the other Yoruba people, the Ijebu people have had a long time relation with the Europeans. This is because the Ijebu are the erstwhile coastal traders/ middle-men for the European goods, variously acknowledged by historians (Ajayi & Espie 1965), and as further proved by Biobaku (1972)...Until the nineteenth century, European activities were restricted to the coast, and the only Yoruba states of which Europeans had any first-hand knowledge were Ijebu and, later, Lagos... Initially, there was no cordial relation between the Ijebu and the other Yoruba states. This is because the road(s) to Ijebuland was blocked against all strangers and passersby, perhaps for selfish reasons (Ayandele 1966). Needless therefore to say that there was probably no relation between the Ijebu and the Europeans because the Europeans too could not access the land like they did to the other Yoruba states. But the Ijebu however continued to trade with the Europeans. But at a point in time, the relation between them got degenerated as a result of the Europeans several attempts to enter the Ijebu territory which the Ijebu resisted until the invasion of, and eventual conquest of 1892 at the Imagbon war (Ayandele 1982: 1-32). The relations between the Ijebu and Europe are therefore exemplified as follows from the corpus of the various orufi of the Ijebu people as mentioned at the outset. Anglo- Ijebu /Yoruba Trade Relations From the following excerpts from orufi Ijebu -Ode: 203 Copyright IAARR 2012: www.afrrevjo.net

Omo A-b oyinbo jogu owo One whose forebears traded with Europeans The above line appears in most of the oriki collection in Ijebuland confirming the seeming good relation between the Ijebu and the Europeans at a time as the coastal traders and middlemen trading in various items like gun, bullet, ivory, cloth, tobacco, slaves and cash crops and sellers to other Yoruba states when the items were introduced to Africa. Further, Master and Apprenticeship relationship between the Europeans and Ijebu also existed and this is exemplified in the following from the same orufi Ijebu -Ode: Omo Oyinbo Iyonro Ee mi gu de ko mi gu ba Ko n gu naaaro Ee gu n ale Offspring of the European at Iyonro The brass and copper smith If he did not smith in the morning He would smith at night Iyonro is a sub-quarter of Uwade in Ijebu-0de. Odusino (2004: 10) says that Iyonro was the home of the first set of Ijebu people who learnt gold-smithing from Europeans. It was these Ijebu people who in turn taught the trade to others whence it got diffused to the other Yoruba people and other Nigerians. This is why, according to him, the first generation of licensed gold-smiths were Ijebu indigenes who travelled to other parts of West Africa spreading the trade. The Ijebu people, because of the said relation they had with the Europeans, got introduced to gold, brass and silver smithing, and even black smithing, hence the reference. And it is this dexterity in smithing that made the other Yoruba peoples derogatorily refer to the Ijebu people as maker of fake coins (owo Ijebu) From orufi Odogbolu: Omo A-jo k Oyinbo raa jo Omo A-jo k Oyinbo raa wiron Omo A-nerun -Oyinbo- nee Oyinbo naa Gemo Oyinbo neegu 204 Copyright IAARR 2012: www.afrrevjo.net

The 19th Century Anglo-Yoruba Relations Oyinbo n eepe Awa n Agem [ A nepe, a tu n Eeg5! One whose forebears danced before- The Europeans would dance One whose forebears had what Europeans lack European has no Eegu masquerade European has no epe (potent curse power) Whereas we have Agemo masquerade. We have 4p4 as well as Eegu masquerade The above is a demonstration of a relation becoming sour as a result of the Europeans co-habitation with the Ijebu people especially after the May 1892 Ijebu expedition. This is because the Europeans did not only settle among the Ijebu but wanted to have hegemony and control over their culture and worship, like they did elsewhere in Africa. Also, part of the orufi Oke-Agbo Ijebu -Igbo says: Oyinbo mi tepa ide Ye mi mi tepa ileke The European uses brass staff My mother uses a staff of beads which is a confirmation of a relation going sour, from cordial to envy. These typify the various relations the colonial masters had with their many so-called protectorates/friends, before political independence in Africa. Trade in Slavery There is no over-emphasis that the Ijebu as a Yoruba people have capitalistic tendency. This probably pushed them into the trade in slaves. Apart from being traders in other merchandise, the Ijebu traded in slaves and brought the slaves from other part of Yorubaland to the coast, for onward shipment to Europe and America as depicted in orufi Atikori Ijebu -Igbo: Omo O ji-be de-wo b eleru n koja O rowo reru jojo O reru wewe o ko won r ule O reru lila o ko won r ono oja Owon yen ree la mi sise bo Omo A-reru-boon7-roko 205 Copyright IAARR 2012: www.afrrevjo.net

Offspring of a committed slave dealer Offspring of the one rich in slave trade He kept the average size for domestic chores The stout-size slaves he sent to the market For toil and commercial purposes Offspring of a great investor in slavery The Ijebu people of old were committed slave dealers who did not only buy and sell slaves but the link between the interior people and the Europeans in the coast. The Ijebu also sold slaves for domestic services as hewers of stone, splitters of wood and drawers of water. A lot of money they reportedly made from this inhuman trade before the abolition, when the Ijebu still did not stop the trade (Stride & Ifeka 1971) until the eventual Ijebu Expedition of 1896. Anglo- Ijebu /Yoruba and Cash Crops Every human being requires a job as the source of likelihood. The Ijebu people, like most other African societies, were (and are still) essentially agrarian and they plant different types of food for utilitarian reasons before the advent of the Europeans in the land. The people, like the other Africans engaged in the planting of cash crops when they had encounter with the Europeans. Hence the orufi Ijebu: Ara Oriwu Native of Or7w6 which is almost common to all Ijebu settlements, is a piece of information on the peoples agricultural potentiality. Or7w6 was coined from ori and iwu. Iwu is an Ijebu word meaning fertile or virgin land which is good for agricultural potentialities while ori means the head or home-stead of. Mostly the Ijebu people plant different agricultural commodities, especially cash crops notably cocoa and colanut sold to Europeans. Hence the Ijebu Isiwo people are known in their orufi as: Omo Oloko lewo obi Offspring of the great planter of kola From the foregoings therefore, there is no over-emphasis describing the above various contributions and roles of the Ijebu /Yoruba people right from the colonial days as overwhelming, thus enabling us to see the Ijebu people as the link between the other Yoruba people and the Western world. 206 Copyright IAARR 2012: www.afrrevjo.net

The AFRREV 19th Century IJAH, Vol.1 Anglo-Yoruba (3) August, Relations 2012 Conclusion This paper examines orufi (oriki) among the Ijebu people of Southwestern Nigeria. It shows the relevance of orufi in the socio-political and economic life of the Ijebu people. This paper also highlights the place of oriki among the other literary genres among the Ijebu -Yoruba people. This enables us to examine the Anglo-Yoruba relation in the 19th century via the influence of the Ijebu people. The orufi establishes that the Ijebu people are a veritable link in the relations of the Yoruba people and the West(ern world). References Abimbola, A. (2011). Oriki Among the Ijebu People of Southwestern Nigeria. M. Phil. Dissertation, Department of Linguistics and African Languages, University of Ibadan. Ajayi and Espie (1965). A Thousand Years of West African History. Middlesex: Thomas Nelson & Sons. Atanda J. A. (2007). A Comprehensive History of the Yoruba People Up to 1800. Oguntomisin G. O. ed. Ibadan: John Archers Ltd. Ayandele, E. A. (1966). The Missionary Impact on Modern Nigeria 1842-1914 A Political and Social Analysis. New York: Humanity Press... (1992). The Ijebu of Yoruba land 1850-1950. Politics, Economy and Society. Ibadan: Heinemann Educational Books (Nig) Plc. Biobaku, S. O. ed. (1972). Sources of Yoruba History. Ibadan: University Press Ltd. Odusino, O. O. (2000). Opitan Xekele. Lagos: UPMan Ltd. Oduw[bi, T. (2004). Ijebu Under Colonial Rule (1892-1960). An Administrative and Political Analysis. Lagos: First Academic Publishers. Stride & Ifeka, (1971). Peoples and Empires of West Africa. Surrey: Nelson. 207 Copyright IAARR 2012: www.afrrevjo.net