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A West African Cavalry State: the Kingdom of Oyo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Robin Law
Affiliation:
University of Stirling

Extract

Following an earlier article in this Journal, by Humphrey Fisher, dealing with the role of the horse in the Central Sudan, this article considers the role of cavalry in the kingdom of Oyo. It is suggested that the use of cavalry may have been adopted by Oyo during the sixteenth century. Oyo never became self-sufficient in horses, but remained dependent for its horses upon importation from the Central Sudan, while local mortality from trypanosomiasis was considerable. Evidence relating to the operations of Oyo armies supports the view that cavalry was of substantial military value, while at the same time illustrating the limitations of the military efficacy of cavalry. The acquisition and maintenance of large numbers of horses represented a considerable economic burden for Oyo, and the high cost of maintaining a large cavalry force may have inhibited the establishment of a royal autocracy in Oyo. The decline of the cavalry strength of Oyo in the early nineteenth century was due, it is suggested, to economic difficulties.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1975

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References

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25 Oral evidence on horses in Oyo was collected during fieldwork in 1973, the writer's principal informants being senior palace officials, notably the Kudefu and the Olokun Esin. Financial support for this fieldwork was provided by the British Academy, the Sir Ernest Cassel Educational Trust, and the University of Stirling.

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61 Francisco Pereyra Mendes to Viceroy of Brazil, 22 May 1726 (Archivo Publico, Bahia: 20, doc. 61), quoted in Verger, P., Flux et Reflux de la Traite des Nègres entre le Golfe de Bénin et Bahia (Paris, 1968), 144.Google Scholar

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71 This problem of securing cavalry mounts was not, of course, peculiar to Oyo. It was also important, for example, in Samori's empire: see Legassick, M., ‘Firearms, Horses and Samorian Army Organization 1870–98’, J. Afr. Hist, vii, 1 (1966), 106–7.Google Scholar Parallels can also be found in the Indian sub-continent: cf. Digby, S., War-Horse and Elephant in the Dehli Sultanate: A Study of Military Supplies (Oxford, 1971), chapter 11.Google Scholar

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83 Goody, Technology, chapter 3. Similar arguments about the political effects of cavalry and firearms are put forward by Morton-Williams, P., ‘The influence of habitat and trade on the polities of Oyo and Ashanti’, in Douglas, M. and Kaberry, P. M. (eds), Man In Africa (London, 1969)Google Scholar, and by Smaldone, J. P., ‘Firearms in the Central Sudan: A Revaluation’, J. Afr. Hist. XIII (1972), 591607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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90 For the subordination of the Eso to the Oyo Mesi, see Johnson, , History, 73.Google Scholar For the military role of the Basorun: ibid. 159, 169, 174; Dalzel, A., A History of Dahomy (London, 1793), 175.Google ScholarSimpson, J. Macrae, ‘An Intelligence Report on the Oyo Division of the Oyo Province’, 1938 (Rhodes House Library, Oxford: MSS Afr. s. 526), sections 54–5Google Scholar, states that only thirty of the Eso were subordinate to the Oyo Mesi, the other forty being under the palace eunuchs: this probably represents a nineteenth-century reorganization.

91 The armed forces of the provincial towns were controlled by the Alafin rather than by the Oyo Mesi, their commander (the Are Ona Kakamfo) being an appointee of the Alafin and in status a palace slave: Johnson, , History, 74.Google Scholar

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