NewStats: 3,261,333 , 8,173,701 topics. Date: Wednesday, 28 May 2025 at 08:39 PM 3m5i516z3e3g |
1904 British Punitive Expedition Against The Obolo (andoni) People & Their God (15407 Views)
pazienza(m): 12:09am On Jun 25, 2015 |
OboloMAN: This doesn't make sense. How do you define what is core Obolo and which is peripheral. I think you are merely biting your nose to spite your face. The Obolo's closer to Ijaw speaking communities surely have more with Ijaws, while those in Ibeno axis have more with Ibibios. 2 Likes 1 Share |
pazienza(m): 12:11am On Jun 25, 2015 |
ijawcitizen: So, you are still alive? 1 Like |
ijawcitizen(m): 7:53am On Jun 25, 2015 |
pazienza:you've been wishing Ijawland division hoping any break-away part will be in your biafra, now you wish me dead? yes clown! i'm alive and very well, but unlike you i'm not so ordinary that i'd virtually be living on nairaland. 1 Like |
holocron: 9:08am On Jun 25, 2015 |
OboloMAN: How can u say 'ijaw' is a nation made up of various nations? A nation made up of different nations? Not quite right. A nation is a homogenous entity of one language and culture. The political Ijaw as is known today is more or less a federation of associated niger delta ethnic groups or nationalities with sometimes mutually incomprehensible languages. For instance, nembe, kalabiri, andoni, ijo/izon etc 2 Likes 1 Share |
ijawcitizen(m): 10:01am On Jun 25, 2015 |
holocron:what is wrong with you igbos? |
ijawcitizen(m): 4:22am On Jun 26, 2015 |
holocron:He never said "the Ijaw nation is made up of NATIONS" what he meant was that the Ijaw nation like every other ethnic group is made up of sub-ethnic groups (or traditional sub-divisions if you like). The Igbos have Ngwa, Aro, Ndoki, Bende, Mbaise etc. The Yorubas have Ijebu, Awori, Ilaje, Owo etc The Urhobos have Orogun, Okpe, Uvwie etc I know like many Igbos you're confused when you learnt Andonis are Ijaws, it is very common to find such naivety amongst Igbos, afterall a lot you still think the Kalabaris, okrikans, Nembes, Ibanis and the rest are different ethnic groups. Andonis lost their Original Defaka dialect but evolved an entirely new language based on the original Ijaw intonation and an Ibibio/efik structure, they still retain losts of Ijaw words like the Yoruboid speaking Apoi Ijaws of Ondo state. The loss/evolution of dialects occur at the borders/fringes areas of Ijawland and the evidence is everywhere, even E.K Clark's community Kiagbodo bordering Urhobo communities to the north is largely Urhobo speaking. 1 Like |
ijawcitizen(m): 4:26am On Jun 26, 2015 |
pazienza:How foolish? |
pazienza(m): 7:46am On Jun 26, 2015 |
ijawcitizen: Well, nairaland is not Kryptonland or Nibiruland, where extraordinary beings are believed to inhabit. Nairaland is meant for ordinary folks like pazienza. Extraordinary beings like you aren't expected to be found here. *grins* |
ijawcitizen(m): 10:09am On Jun 26, 2015 |
pazienza:You see, I won't blame you for not understanding english, it is because i couldn't write in igbo (how could I when igbos did not succede in making me a biafran). If you're half as resourceful and productive as I am, you wont be VIRTUALLY, I repeat VIRTUALLY living on nairaland attacking Ijawland, at the same time calling us fools and defending the attrocities of your murderous biafrans against us. |
pazienza(m): 11:57am On Jun 26, 2015 |
ijawcitizen: Aww! Never knew we have a Bill gate amongst us, or could it be that Dangote is actually from Ijawland all these while? Lol! Stop flattering yourself, resourceful people don't go about shouting about it. Moreover, whether or not you are resourceful is your business, this is Nairaland not resourceful-land, your resourcefulness is your cup of tea, you don't put food on my table. |
ijawcitizen(m): 12:24pm On Jun 26, 2015 |
pazienza:irrelevant rantings! but fair enough, at least you got my point. |
ChinenyeN(m): 1:48pm On Jun 26, 2015 |
You guys seriously came and made nonsense of an otherwise decent thread, but at least it's over now, seemingly. By the way, IjawCitizen, I have to say, you've been much more levelheaded in this thread than is typical of you (or was typical of you). Don't take my observation the wrong way. It's a good thing, and I just thought I should mention it. |
ijawcitizen(m): 10:05am On Jun 27, 2015 |
ChinenyeN:ChinenyeN ... You dont know me too well, if you do you'd know that I dont instigate any trouble, I only respond when your brothers come with their madness. I must confess too that you are the closest to levelheadedness amongst them all but yet you condone or stay docile whenever your brothers go on rampage. You obviously knew your brother Pazienza started the madness here but your comment/caution (whatever it was) was directed at me. Dont get me wrong, you are not so different from the rest of them, you only exercise more maturity by not letting that part of you out, but it bleeds thru' anyway. |
ChinenyeN(m): 11:47am On Jun 27, 2015 |
See, all I did was make an observation. You came around and made an assumption. I'd like to believe you've interacted with me on NL enough times to know why I don't get involved in fruitless back-and-forth. So, I definitely did not expect such a presumptuous response from you. But, I guess it means that you're still you. Your levelheadedness has not yet weeded out that aspect of you. By the way, my comment was equally for the both you. If you'd indulge me, you can go back and reread it again, keeping context in mind. You should see that I'm not the kind to play favorites when it comes to compliments or cautions. Hence why I cautioned both of you, and then equally turned to complimented you, despite your track record with me. Anyway, welcome back to NL. Things have gotten a bit settled while you were away (not that that's a bad thing ![]() |
ChinenyeN(m): 1:01pm On Jun 27, 2015 |
On the topic of the Lower Niger Bronze Industry... This just crossed my mind. There is a community within the Ngwa-Asa-Ndoki axis that might present as an interesting case with regards to metalworking and bronzes in the Lower Niger area. This community is Abala, within Ibeme, in what is now Obingwa LGA. In past years, Abala developed some notoriety, because of its metalworking. In particular, its history as a local, indigenous gun factory. Within all this, what is interesting is that Abala has no oral traditions that highlight or even mention metalworking in its early settlement history. Also, the community which they migrated from, now in Ukwa East LGA, also has no casting traditions of any kind. Yet, the Abala community actively engages in metalworking. I've asked around, but have yet to get a good response regarding how metalworking was introduced to Abala (though I could make some inferences). For all intents and purposes the metalworking tradition in Abala can be likened to a 'random manifestation'. If one considers Abala as a case study of sorts, then a case might possibly be made for other such 'random manifestations' in the Lower Niger region; random manifestations which fizzled away almost quickly as they came to be established. This might explain the stylistic diversity found among Lower Niger brass/bronzes, and help provide a reason for why it has so far proven difficult for the academia to localize the works. |
shota(m): 11:48am On Jul 31, 2015 |
pazienza: What the guy is saying in essence is, OBOLO land is an Ijaw land and the aborigines are Ijaws but Migrants like Igbo, Ibibio and Efiks among them have changed their language and culture. That does not change the land from Ijaw to anything. He is a proud Ijaw man from Obolo land and the land falls within the Ijaw geography. |
shota(m): 11:50am On Jul 31, 2015 |
ChinenyeN: Where is upper Niger if you consider the ABALA land as lower Niger and where does Okrika, Kalabari and Ibani and Ogoni fall if the Lower Niger is ABALA land ? |
shota(m): 11:53am On Jul 31, 2015 |
ChinenyeN: Imo river is not a tributary of river Niger so why did you consider the Imo river belt and basin as part of the NIGER DELTA ? Explain yourself.. |
pazienza(m): 1:35pm On Jul 31, 2015 |
shota: And does the Guy speak for all Obolo people? The last time the Ijaws wanted to have Eastern Obolo and Ibeno in their oil rivers state, they rejected it. I want to believe that the Andonis see themselves as a distinct group from Ijaws. That's just my impression from few Andonis I have met in real life. 2 Likes |
ChinenyeN(m): 6:07pm On Jul 31, 2015 |
Shota, the expression 'Lower Niger', as used by the academia, is inclusive of the Igbo ethno-linguistic region. It is not the same thing as 'Niger Delta'.
1 Like |
shota(m): 9:05am On Aug 01, 2015 |
pazienza: Obolo people did not reject it. It was the Efiks and Ibibios living among the Obolos that rejected it claiming the Obolos were migrants. Next time please understand what people say. It would be like Fulani people in Southern Kaduna rejecting what the Southern natives want or Just like Fulanis in Jos rejecting what the Biroms want.. Every Obolo is an Ijaw unless one who claims to be Obolo but whose ancestors are Efiks or Ibibios . |
PhysicsQED(m): 9:13am On Aug 02, 2015 |
ChinenyeN: Radoillo: OboloMAN: The Benin court art had a distinctive style, which this has some similarities to, but does not really seem exactly the same with to me. My eyes are no better trained than anyone else's but I can see some difference compared to what I'm used to seeing in the Benin art. I suspect that some people outside the political control of courts in southern Nigeria may have been bronze/brass casters, and that could also explain the lower Niger bronzes. That is a merely a conjecture on my part but it's just what I see as a possible explanation. Despite casting being a complex process and the necessary material not being easy to acquire there might still have been such people around - perhaps people who left royal courts during periods of internal conflict in a kingdom. Some Obolo people could have gone to one of these non-court casters and learned the techniques and then made their own bronze works to honor their deities and kings. And if there were not an organization in place among a people to keep an oral record of very specific historical details such as the general time when certain items - such as bronze works - were made, then traditions about learning how to cast and when such castings were made might have been largely forgotten. I don't know enough about Obolo to know whether or not they had people dedicated to keeping a record of those kind of specific historical details though they probably had many people who knew other aspects, general and specific, of their people's history. If they didn't have some organization in place that would very specific details about bronze works it's possible they could have been forgotten. Also, instead of ing a bronze caster possibly operating outside the control of a royal court or some other centralized casting location, they could have first obtained some bronzes through trade as some other Ijaw communities did, before they made their own. This article below by E.J. Alagoa mentions (pp. 415-416) how some bronzes wound up being dispersed in Ijaw areas through trade: "Oral Tradition among the Ijo of the Niger Delta" http://www.jstor.org/stable/180110 Some of these would likely have been related to the Benin types if we go by what is stated in the article. Referring to of a group of bronzes found among the Mein group of the Ijaw, Alagoa's article states: "The Mein bronzes are connected with Benin by tradition, and Horton sees some stylistic affinity also in some of the pieces. He believes the other examples in Mein and other areas belong to different styles. There are, however, no recorded traditions of either local manufacture or of importation, their origin being invariably ascribed to the water spirits. The investigation of these metal artifacts as well as of the centres of dispersal indicated by the traditions require the attention of archaeologists. " He is referring to Robin Horton's 1965 article on some bronzes found in the Niger delta, as can be seen from the note in the article at the bottom of page 416. I haven't read Horton's article so I can't comment on it but it would probably have some additional detailed information about the actual bronzes found in the Niger delta. My own guess is that the bronze pieces from Obolo and some others in the Ijaw areas were manufactured by people who had learned casting from someone who had left the control of royal courts or other centralized centers of casting and this explains the difference in style from other bronze works in Nigeria, while the lack of a tradition of casting could be explained by the absence of a long lasting guild of specialists that would have kept oral traditions giving specific details about the casting of the bronze pieces. 3 Likes |
1shortblackboy: 3:04pm On Aug 03, 2015 |
pazienza:if some people who u think are igbos say they're not igbos now, u will call them names and shout to high heavens and insist that they're igbos no matter what they say. Now someone is saying although his group are disticnt they're still part of the ijaw nation. Ur here insisting that they're not part of ijaw. Now tell me if ur God or just a crazed biafran 1 Like |
pazienza(m): 3:13pm On Aug 03, 2015 |
1shortblackboy: Where exactly are you from. I don't like dealing with entities with no identifiable ethnic group. |
1shortblackboy: 3:40pm On Aug 03, 2015 |
pazienza:why do u want to know my ethnicity? so that u can subject my opinions to ur myopic ethnocentric reasoning ? ![]() |
shota(m): 3:44pm On Aug 03, 2015 |
1shortblackboy: That is what the Igbos are. 1 Like |
shota(m): 3:45pm On Aug 03, 2015 |
pazienza: Irrelevant |
holocron: 10:36pm On Aug 03, 2015 |
ijawcitizen: Quite interesting! Can you also explain how the nembe language lost its 'ijaw'ness? |
shota(m): 10:23am On Aug 04, 2015 |
holocron: You have to first explain why Abakiliki Igbos and Ikwere Igbos and Ngwa Igbos dont speak the same Igbo. Or explain why Oyo Yoruba is different from Ijebu and Ondo. Ijaw dialects from Arogbo to Obolo vary from clan to clan due to the same factor that caused the difference between Igbo clans and difference between Yoruba clans. |
1shortblackboy: 11:53am On Aug 04, 2015 |
holocron:a nembe man understands a kalabari and an okrikan man's dialect. I gueSs u don't know that ![]() |
ijawcitizen(m): 10:17pm On Aug 04, 2015 |
holocron:The Nembe DIALECT is still very much intact, no adultration whatsoever. |
ChinenyeN(m): 6:08pm On Aug 05, 2015 |
As always, I enjoy reading PhysicsQED's responses, and the speculation isn't unreasonable. Without guilds in place (i.e. no institutionalization), it is difficult to imagine that the casting traditions would have been preserved. But maybe we can also take the speculation a step further. It could be suggested that the lack of guilds might be a symptom of lack of available raw material to the growing industry of local manufacture. So, isolated incidents of casting appeared and disappeared almost as quickly and as quietly as the both the raw material and the non-court, non- casters came and went. This, however, wouldn't stop heavy trade in bronze among Lower Niger communities for some reason.
|
What Happened To The "Nkan Nbe" Type Of Programs?
(Go Up)
Sections: How To . 87 Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or s on Nairaland. |