Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-07T16:36:18.235Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Militarism and Economic Development in Nineteenth Century Yoruba Country: The Ibadan Example

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Bọlanle Awẹ
Affiliation:
University of Ibadan

Extract

The ingredients for economic development were certainly present in the Yoruba country in the nineteenth century: land was available; labour was cheap and some of the towns like Ibadan were well placed for trade. But for this economic growth, militarism was a double-edged weapon. The needs of a military state, such as Ibadan, certainly gave it tremendous impetus; trade, agriculture, arts and crafts developed in response to the demands of the military, who constituted the new leadership. But in the final analysis all these economic activities needed peace for their full development; Ibadan, by the very nature of its birth and its commitment to military ideals and military solutions to the problems confronting the Yoruba country, could not, however, guarantee this peace. On the contrary, in its struggle for power and leadership within that country, it took actions which jeopardized the chances of peaceful economic development in Ibadan and other parts of the Yoruba country. Moreover the intermittent warfare, which characterized this country generally in the nineteenth century, injected an element of discontinuity into its economic growth, and placed some constraint on lasting economic development. The fact that agriculture, trade and industry still flourished in the Yoruba country, particularly in Ibadan, can therefore only be regarded as a pointer to the country's economic potentialities, rather than as an evidence of normal economic growth. But with the restoration of peace at the end of the century, and the introduction of British rule, Ibadan and the rest of the Yoruba country were poised for rapid economic development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 E.g. Johnson, S., History of the Yorubas, Lagos, 1937;Google ScholarAkinjogbin, I. A., Prelude to the Yoruba Civil Wars of the Nineteenth Century, ODU, University of Ife Journal of African Studies, I, no. 2 (1965);Google ScholarAjayi, J. F. A. and Smith, Robert, Yoruba Warfare in the Nineteenth Century, Ibadan University Press and C.U.P., 1971;Google ScholarAtanda, J. A., ‘The Fall of the Old Oyo Empire: A Reconsideration of its cause’, Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, V, no. 4 (1971), 477–90;Google ScholarMabogunje, A. L. and Cooper, J. D. Omer, Owu in Yoruba History, Ibadan University Press, 1971.Google Scholar

2 Cf. Ajayi, J. F. A., ‘Professional Warriors in Nineteenth Century Yoruba Politics’, Tarikh, I, no. I (1965), 7281.Google Scholar

3 For further discussion of the development of Ibadan, see Awe, B., ‘The Rise of Ibadan as a Yoruba Power’, Oxford D.Phil. Thesis, 1964.Google Scholar

4 The praise names (Oriki) of these Ibadan warriors indicate too well the attributes of a leader within the community. For example, part of the Oriki of Balogun Ibikunle, the commander in chief of Ibadan's army in the 1850s reads thus: Ibikunle! the Lord of his Quarters, The Warrior! as regular as the Muslim prayers. The affluent with enough to spend and to spare at the brewery. Owner of farm land at Ogbere, Ibikunle also has a farm at Odo-Ona, A wide expanse of farm land, Extensive as far as the city wall at Adesegun, (Ibikunle) A stockist of bullet and gunpowder.

5 C.M.S. Archives, G. 3A2/03, Wood to Lang, 19 Aug. 1885.

6 Oroge, E. Adeniyi, ‘The Institution of Slavery in Yorubaland with particular reference to the 19th century’; Ph.D. Thesis, University of Birmingham, 1971, p. 158.Google Scholar

7 E.g. Bowen, T. J., Adventures and Missionary Labours in the interior of Africa, 1849–1859, p. 218, gave a figure of 70,000. C.M.S. Archives, CA2/0496. D. Hinderer, Journals, 1851, put the figure between 60,000 and 100,000.Google Scholar

8 C.M.S. Archives, CA2/0496. D. Hinderer, Journals, Sept. 1851.

9 Johnson, S., op. cit., p. 248, and pp. 252–3.Google Scholar

10 Adejuwon, J. O., ‘Farming and Farmlands in Ibadan Division,’ M.A. Thesis, University of Ibadan, p. 37.Google Scholar

11 Oral evidence from many of the leading houses in Ibadan, such as those of Ibikunle, Ogunmola, Are Latosa, Akere, all warrior leaders in Ibadan, suggest these figures. Also Ibikunle's Oriki, op. cit.

12 C.M.S. Archives, CA2/0496. D. Hinderer, op. cit.

13 Silversmithing is a general term for the art of working in metals other than iron, particularly copper, lead, silver and brass. In Ibadan, the silversmiths were responsible for making in these different metals the various accoutrements for the horses used by the Ibadan cavalry—Kese, spurs; Gaari, saddles; Ijanu, bridles; as well as Alukembu, special slippers worn by horsemen. They also made special containers, Ado, for holding poisoned bullets and the charms and medicines which the warriors took to the battlefield.

14 Morgan, Kemi, Akinyele's Outline History of Ibadan, 1971, p. 31.Google Scholar

15 Ojo, G. J. Afolabi, Yoruba Culture, (London, 1966), pp. 96–7.Google Scholar

16 Cf. C.M.S. Archives CA2/049a, Hinderer to Venn, 24 Sept. 1858; Ibadan ‘supplied Abeokuta within the last eighteen months, as well as Ijebu, with as much yams, corn, … as is perhaps consumed in the town itself’.

17 J. F. A. Ajayi and R. Smith, op. cit., part II.

18 Akintoye, S. A., ‘The Ondo Road Eastwards of Lagos, c. 1870–95’. J. Afr. Hist., X, no. 4, (1969), 581–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

19 Oral Evidence—Oluwo Labosinde, c. 90 years old, Apr. 1972.

20 For information on Yoruba markets generally, see Hodder, B. W. and Ukwu, I. U., Markets in West Africa, Ibadan, 1969.Google Scholar

21 Hinderer, D., op. cit., Journals, 7 June 1851.Google Scholar

22 Cf. Ogunkoya, T. O., ‘The Early History of Ijebu’, Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, I, no. I, (12 1956), 4858.Google Scholar

23 Oluwo Labosinde and others.

24 C.M.S. Archives G3A2/06, Harding to Lang, 11 Apr. 1892. January–June 1892. Also Akiele's Diaries, 1886, in University of Ibadan Library, Africana Collection.

25 E.g. May, D. J., ‘Journey in the Yoruba and Nupe Countries in 1858,’ Royal Geographical Society Journal, XXX (1860), 212–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

26 Akintoye, S. A., ‘The North-Eastern Districts of the Yoruba Country and the Benin Kingdom,’ Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, IV, no. 4 (1969), 539–53.Google Scholar

27 Akintoye, S. A., ‘The Economic Background of the Ekitiparapo’, 1878–1893, Odu, IV, no. 2, (01 1968), 3052.Google Scholar

28 For example, during the Ijaye War, 1860–5; see Hinderer, Anna, Seventeen Years in Yoruba Country, (London, 1872), p. 226.Google Scholar

29 S. A. Akintoye, op. cit.