Reformed Ogboni Fraternity: Difference between revisions
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The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity was founded on the 18th of December, 1914. It was started as an alternative of the older Ogboni fraternity for practitioners of [[Christianity]], and its founder was the Anglican cleric T.A.J. Ogunbiyi. |
The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity was founded on the 18th of December, 1914. It was started as an alternative of the older Ogboni fraternity for practitioners of [[Christianity]], and its founder was the Anglican cleric T.A.J. Ogunbiyi. |
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Founding members that joined him in starting the fraternity included Prince [[Orisadipe Obasa]], his wife Princess Charlotte Blaize Obasa, and Prince M. Akinsemoyin of the [[Akinsemoyin]] royal family. Prince Obasa was recognized by the founders as the first ''Oluwo'', or [[Master (degree)|master]], in the same year.<ref> Akintola, Akinbowale (1992), ''The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity (R.O.F.): The Origins and Interpretation of Its Doctrines and Symbolism'', pp. 9 and 10</ref> |
Founding members that joined him in starting the fraternity included Prince [[Orisadipe Obasa]], his wife Princess Charlotte Blaize Obasa of the [[R.B. Blaize]] family, and Prince M. Akinsemoyin of the [[Akinsemoyin]] royal family. Prince Obasa was recognized by the founders as the first ''Oluwo'', or [[Master (degree)|master]], in the same year.<ref> Akintola, Akinbowale (1992), ''The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity (R.O.F.): The Origins and Interpretation of Its Doctrines and Symbolism'', pp. 9 and 10</ref> |
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==Later history== |
==Later history== |
Revision as of 09:16, 27 October 2020
The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity, also known as the R.O.F, is an international fraternal organization. It is commonly described by initiates as a syncretic blend of the Ogboni system of Yorubaland and the Freemasonry that is found in the Western World.
Early history
The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity was founded on the 18th of December, 1914. It was started as an alternative of the older Ogboni fraternity for practitioners of Christianity, and its founder was the Anglican cleric T.A.J. Ogunbiyi.
Founding members that joined him in starting the fraternity included Prince Orisadipe Obasa, his wife Princess Charlotte Blaize Obasa of the R.B. Blaize family, and Prince M. Akinsemoyin of the Akinsemoyin royal family. Prince Obasa was recognized by the founders as the first Oluwo, or master, in the same year.[1]
Later history
By the 1930s, the R.O.F. had become a powerful entity. When the merchant prince Akomolafe Dada Eso joined in 1936, it was said that he
signified his point of arrival on the social scene at Ilesa in about 1936 when he joined the Reformed Ogboni Fraternity (R.O.F.). This attempt by an Anglican pastor to reform the traditional Ogboni institution and make it acceptable to Christians and the educated elite quickly spread in many large urban areas and became one way in which the emergent elite tried to show themselves as modernizers. The R.O.F. was a kind of intercultural organization, based on a traditional secret society, "purged" of its pagan practices and echoing European freemasonry.[2]
Notable members
Notable members of the fraternity have included:[3][4][5]
- Sir Adeyemo Alakija
- Chief Ladoke Akintola
- Sir Adetokunbo Ademola
- King Olubuse II, the Ooni of Ife
- Sir Ladapo Ademola, the Alake of Egbaland
- King George VI of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and the Dominions
References
- ^ Akintola, Akinbowale (1992), The Reformed Ogboni Fraternity (R.O.F.): The Origins and Interpretation of Its Doctrines and Symbolism, pp. 9 and 10
- ^ J.F. Ade.Ajayi and Yemi Akinseye-George (2002), Kayode Eso: The Making of a Judge, pp. 19 and 20
- ^ "Nothing Secret, Sinister about us - Ogboni fraternity". Guardian.ng. Retrieved October 27, 2020.
- ^ Akintola 1992.
- ^ Anyebe 1999.