Congratulations for bringing to our knowledge your field of expertise, “TRUE HISTORY” (whatever that means). What you have written and continue to write is nothing but ethnic supremacy driven fiction as I will show below:
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have told us where “ ÒRÀNMIYÀN, the grandson of ODÙDÚWÀ, and invaded the IGODOMIIGODO territory and subjugated the people.” and your source.
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have told us you should have told us
how an Oranmiyan who couldn’t move beyond the precinct the Benin Chiefs gave him how much more rule “changed the name IGODOMIIGODO to ILÈ-ÌBINU.”
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have been able to tell us how the so-called Yoruba name ILE -IBINU resembles or correlates to the Portuguese name BENIN, what happened to the “U” unless you want to tell us that the Portuguese cannot pronounce the letter “U” or they substitute the letter “U” with the letter “I”. (For the benefit of those with open minds about the history of Benin and its name, one of the indigenous names of Benin was UBINI and that is also what their neighbouring Itsekiri cousins call Benin and they told the first Portuguese explorers who called the town BININ, BENY, BENI etc) that has since been spelt as BENIN).
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have known by now that the fiction “Every dead Benin King from 1240 AD up to the 36th King, EWÉKÁ II, who died in 1933, had their head severed and burried in Ile Ife.” was discredited by archaeological excavations in 1977 and there were no skulls found and the materials found at the site predate 1200 the supposed year of Oranmiyan’s arrival in Benin.
I would have continued with my silent treatment of your ethnic supremacist writings, but since your cheerleader Olayinka A. Agbetuyi has chosen to amplify and parrot your fiction to “oue international readeeship” (whatever that means), I decided to respond to show that you are peddling fiction and not history and your readers are better off reading Amos Tutuola for their entertainment rather than your “TRUE HISTORY.”
Silence again.
Uyilawa
Congratulations for bringing to our knowledge your field of expertise, “TRUE HISTORY” (whatever that means). What you have written and continue to write is nothing but ethnic supremacy driven fiction as I will show below:
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have told us where “ ÒRÀNMIYÀN, the grandson of ODÙDÚWÀ, and invaded the IGODOMIIGODO territory and subjugated the people.” and your source.
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have told us you should have told us
how an Oranmiyan who couldn’t move beyond the precinct the Benin Chiefs gave him how much more rule “changed the name IGODOMIIGODO to ILÈ-ÌBINU.”
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have been able to tell us how the so-called Yoruba name ILE -IBINU resembles or correlates to the Portuguese name BENIN, what happened to the “U” unless you want to tell us that the Portuguese cannot pronounce the letter “U” or they substitute the letter “U” with the letter “I”. (For the benefit of those with open minds about the history of Benin and its name, one of the indigenous names of Benin was UBINI and that is also what their neighbouring Itsekiri cousins call Benin and they told the first Portuguese explorers who called the town BININ, BENY, BENI etc) that has since been spelt as BENIN).
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have known by now that the fiction “Every dead Benin King from 1240 AD up to the 36th King, EWÉKÁ II, who died in 1933, had their head severed and burried in Ile Ife.” was discredited by archaeological excavations in 1977 and there were no skulls found and the materials found at the site predate 1200 the supposed year of Oranmiyan’s arrival in Benin.
I would have continued with my silent treatment of your ethnic supremacist writings, but since your cheerleader Olayinka A. Agbetuyi has chosen to amplify and parrot your fiction to “oue international readeeship” (whatever that means), I decided to respond to show that you are peddling fiction and not history and your readers are better off reading Amos Tutuola for their entertainment rather than your “TRUE HISTORY.”
Silence again.
Uyilawa
Salimonu Kadiri,
I would have continued giving you the silent treatment and allow you to carry on with your fiction writing and ignorance of what archaeologists have been doing in Ile-Ife, but for your resort to the deliberate falsehood that “ UBINI in Itsekiri language means anger as IBINU in Yoruba.” (your emphasis) I will not allow you to get away with such deliberate falsehood to bamboozle your readers. There are Itsekiri speakers on this listserve who can testify that UBINI in Itsekiri language refers to BENIN or EDO LAND and not ANGER as you falsely claim. ANGER in Itsekiri language is BINỌ (pronounced BINOR) and does not have the same spelling and pronunciation as Yoruba IBINU.
I leave you to your fictional “True History” which your cheerleader Olayinka Agbetuyi was kind enough to admit was ethnic-supremacist history that was taught to Yoruba children (who are not above forty years of age) in the old Western Region. If history is your hobby, you better try to catch up on the latest findings instead of hanging on to the fiction of the 1950s and 60s peppered with your lies.
Silence.
Uyilawa
Salimonu Kadiri,
I would have continued giving you the silent treatment and allow you to carry on with your fiction writing and ignorance of what archaeologists have been doing in Ile-Ife, but for your resort to the deliberate falsehood that “ UBINI in Itsekiri language means anger as IBINU in Yoruba.” (your emphasis) I will not allow you to get away with such deliberate falsehood to bamboozle your readers. There are Itsekiri speakers on this listserve who can testify that UBINI in Itsekiri language refers to BENIN or EDO LAND and not ANGER as you falsely claim. ANGER in Itsekiri language is BINỌ (pronounced BINOR) and does not have the same spelling and pronunciation as Yoruba IBINU.
I leave you to your fictional “True History” which your cheerleader Olayinka Agbetuyi was kind enough to admit was ethnic-supremacist history that was taught to Yoruba children (who are not above forty years of age) in the old Western Region. If history is your hobby, you better try to catch up on the latest findings instead of hanging on to the fiction of the 1950s and 60s peppered with your lies.
Silence.
Uyilawa
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM6PR01MB45726C47CF06F3D8AF1438CCC69F0%40DM6PR01MB4572.prod.exchangelabs.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM6PR01MB45726C47CF06F3D8AF1438CCC69F0%40DM6PR01MB4572.prod.exchangelabs.com.
Congratulations for bringing to our knowledge your field of expertise, “TRUE HISTORY” (whatever that means). What you have written and continue to write is nothing but ethnic supremacy driven fiction as I will show below:
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have told us where “ ÒRÀNMIYÀN, the grandson of ODÙDÚWÀ, and invaded the IGODOMIIGODO territory and subjugated the people.” and your source.
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have told us you should have told us
how an Oranmiyan who couldn’t move beyond the precinct the Benin Chiefs gave him how much more rule “changed the name IGODOMIIGODO to ILÈ-ÌBINU.”
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have been able to tell us how the so-called Yoruba name ILE -IBINU resembles or correlates to the Portuguese name BENIN, what happened to the “U” unless you want to tell us that the Portuguese cannot pronounce the letter “U” or they substitute the letter “U” with the letter “I”. (For the benefit of those with open minds about the history of Benin and its name, one of the indigenous names of Benin was UBINI and that is also what their neighbouring Itsekiri cousins call Benin and they told the first Portuguese explorers who called the town BININ, BENY, BENI etc) that has since been spelt as BENIN).
If you are not an ethnic supremacy fiction writer, you should have known by now that the fiction “Every dead Benin King from 1240 AD up to the 36th King, EWÉKÁ II, who died in 1933, had their head severed and burried in Ile Ife.” was discredited by archaeological excavations in 1977 and there were no skulls found and the materials found at the site predate 1200 the supposed year of Oranmiyan’s arrival in Benin.
I would have continued with my silent treatment of your ethnic supremacist writings, but since your cheerleader Olayinka A. Agbetuyi has chosen to amplify and parrot your fiction to “oue international readeeship” (whatever that means), I decided to respond to show that you are peddling fiction and not history and your readers are better off reading Amos Tutuola for their entertainment rather than your “TRUE HISTORY.”
Silence again.
Uyilawa
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To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM6PR12MB34199A469524F1B387B62A11DA9A0%40DM6PR12MB3419.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM6PR12MB34199A469524F1B387B62A11DA9A0%40DM6PR12MB3419.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
What if there were more than one river? For mountains, Denali supposedly means the tall or great one. Why wouldn’t each river have a name? Each of my children has a name, while I could have called them boy 1, boy 2 etc.
DK Ezekoye
O.A. (‘DK’) Ezekoye, Ph.D., P.E.
W.R. Woolrich Professor
Walker Dept. of Mechanical Engineering
ETC 7.130 MS C2200
The University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX 78712-1591
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/BN8PR12MB3412F60B791B81C69967FE39DA950%40BN8PR12MB3412.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/BN8PR12MB3412F60B791B81C69967FE39DA950%40BN8PR12MB3412.namprd12.prod.outlook.com.
Uyilawa is a professional historian. He should have informed or updated Alagba Kadiri's retelling and interpretations of Benin-Yoruba history instead of calling him and those Yoruba people names. I won't call Baba Egharevba (blessed memory), a pioneer modern historian of Benin, an "ethnic-supremacist" for daring to write the history of Benin and the Yoruba based on the sources that were available to him in the 1950s. By the way, it is not possible to write Yoruba history without including Benin, and vice versa.
Let's look at some facts:
1. The Itsekiri (phonetically, Ì-ṣẹ́-kì-rì) word for "angry" (BINỌ) is phonetically the same as the standard Yoruba word (BINU or BI-NUN). Please take note, I am not saying this is the etymological origins of BENIN. I want someone who has researched this to tell us the etymology of the name, different from what we already know in published sources.
2. The Itsekiri were living in the general region they now occupy by about 250 AD, based on linguistic evidence. They are a branch of the ancestral people that historical linguists and archaeologists call proto-Yoruboid. Their presence in that homeland has nothing to do with migration from Benin.
3. A dynasty that was affiliated with Ilé-Ifẹ̀ or within Ifẹ's political orbit (and by extension, Ọ̀wọ̀) certainly ruled Benin between the early thirteenth and the end of the fourteenth century.
4. Archaeological evidence demonstrates that the region from Ifẹ̀ to Benin (including the Ìjẹ̀ṣà and Ọ̀wọ̀, and likely some Èkìtì ) belong to the same ceramic tradition (style, form, decoration). There are other lines of evidence that archaeologists and art historians have discussed.
For more references on Yoruba-Edo history:
J. U. Egharevba. 1968. A Short History of Benin. Ibadan: Ibadan University Press.
Ade Obayemi, 1985. “The Yoruba and Edo-Speaking Peoples and Their Neighbours before 1600.” In History of West Africa, J. F. A. Ajayi and M. Crowther (eds.), pp. 255–322. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
A. Ogundiran, 2001. “Ceramic Spheres and Regional Networks in the Yoruba-Edo Region, Nigeria, 13th-19th Centuries A.C.” Journal of Field Archaeology, 28: 27–44.
A. Usman and T Falola 2019. The Yoruba from Prehistory to the Present. Cambridge University Press.
P. Ben-Amos. 1999. Art, Innovation, and Politics in Eighteenth-Century Benin. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Connah, Graham. 1975. The Archaeology of Benin: Excavations and Other Researches in and around Benin City, Nigeria. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
I am citing only some of the works that are based on original scholarly research in Edo or Yoruba region (or both). Other historians can provide additional materials.
Thank you,
Akin Ogundiran
UNC Charlotte