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Itsekiri people

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Itsekiri
Ira Iwere
Total population
c. 1,010,000[1] [2]
Languages
Religion
Traditional religion 12%
Related ethnic groups
Yoruba people, Edo people, Igala people
Ethnic flag of the Itsekiri people

The Itsekiri (also called the Isekiri, iJekri, Itsekri, Ishekiri, or Itsekhiri) are one of the Yoruboid subgroup of Nigeria's Niger Delta area, They speak a Yoruboid language and can be found in Delta State.[3] The Itsekiris presently number 1 million people [4] and live mainly in the Warri South, Warri North and Warri South West local government districts of Delta State on the Atlantic coast of Nigeria.[5]


The itsekiri (a.k.a) fabricated Yorubas communities and population can also be found in swamping areas of other local government areas of delta state Back of okpe , Corner of effurun market , Jigbale market, Sapele primary school, Partially occupying the market square Areas in Delta Central senatorial district, Delta State Nigeria. Other significant communities of Itsekiris can be found in parts of Edo and Ondo states and in various other Nigerian cities including Lagos, Benin City, Port Harcourt and Abuja. Many people of Itsekiri descent also reside in the United Kingdom of aghara otor as refugees , the United States of ayagha. The Itsekiris are closely related to the Yoruba of South Western Nigeria and also close to the Urhobo people and Edo peoples.[6] The Itsekiris traditionally refer to their land as the Kingdom of Swamp or 'evil forest' as its proper name – which is geographically contiguous to the area covered by the three Warri local government districts. The area is a key centre of Nigeria's crude oil and natural gas production and petroleum refining and the main town Warri (a multi-ethnic metropolis) forms the industrial and commercial nucleus of the Delta State region.[7]

Ethnography

The Itsekiri are a people of mixed ethnic origins who speak a language very closely related to the Yoruba of south western Nigeria and the Igala language of central Nigeria[8] but which has also borrowed some cultural practice from the Ijebu people, Ile-Ife and Benin, they engaged with Portuguese in trade terminologies, as the Itsekiri were the first people in Nigeria to establish contact with the Portuguese who were exploring the West African coast, and also more recently, English. Although linguistically related to the Yoruba and Igala ethnic groups, however, through centuries of intermingling modern day Itsekiris are of mixed ethnic origins. They are most closely related to the South-Eastern and South-South Yorubaland sub-groups - Ijebu, Akure, Ikale, Ilaje, Ondo and Owo, but also Edo, Urhobo, Ijaw, Anglo-Scottish and Portuguese and are today mainly Christian (Protestant and Roman Catholic) by religion.[9]

Thus having had six centuries of direct cultural exposure to Western Christianity and other African influences, contemporary Itsekiri language and culture has successfully evolved into a hybrid of the many cultures that have influenced its development. Similarly owing to the complex genetic mix of most Itsekiris over the centuries, many individuals self-identifying as Itsekiri would usually be a complex mix of any of the aforementioned ethnic and racial groups. Thus modern day Itsekiris may be the only southern Nigerian ethnic group to be almost totally heterogeneous (mixed) in its genetic composition. The total absence of any dialectal variation in the Itsekiri language is also unique for the region and is most likely the result of the early coalescing of the Itsekiri people into a small and highly centralised nation state from the 15th century onward.[10]

History

The Itsekiri monarchy has continued to the present day with ogiame Olu atuwatse III as king of Warri Kingdom. The Itsekiri's historical capital is Ode-Itsekiri (also called "big warri" or "Ale iwerre"), though the monarch's main palace is in Warri town .[citation needed]

Itsekiris today

The Itsekiri, though a minority group within Nigeria, have one of the oldest histories of western education in West Africa, for the Itsekiri in particular there is a sense of pride associated with western education. In the Warri Kingdom, one the earliest instances of the pursuit of a western education by a Nigerian was by a Itsekiri prince in 1600.[citation needed] and are noted for producing one of its earliest university graduates – the Olu of Warri Kingdom, Olu Atuwatse I, Dom Domingo[11] a 17th-century graduate of Coimbra University in Portugal.

Culture

The Itsekiris traditionally lived in a society that was governed by a monarchy (the Olu) and council of chiefs[12] who form the nobility or aristocracy. Itsekiri society itself was organised along the lines of an upper class made up of the royal family and the aristocracy – the 'Oloyes and Olareajas' these were mainly drawn from noble houses including the Royal Houses and the Houses of Olgbotsere (Prime Minister or king maker) and Iyatsere (defence minister). The middle class or Omajaja were free-born Itsekiris or burghers. As a result of the institution of slavery and the slave trade there was a third class 'Oton-Eru' or those descended from the slave class whose ancestors had come from elsewhere and settled in Itsekiriland as indentured or slave labourers.[13] In modern-day Itsekiri society the slave class no longer exists as all are considered free-born.[citation needed][14]

Traditionally, Itsekiri men wear a long sleeved shirt called a Kemeje, tie a George wrapper around their waist and wear a hat with a feather stuck to it. The women wear a blouse and also tie a George wrapper around their waist. They wear colourful head gears known as Nes (scarf) or coral beads. Itsekiris are also famed for their traditional fishing skills, melodious songs, gracefully fluid traditional dances and colourful masquerades and boat regattas.[15]

Religion

Before the introduction of Christianity in the 16th century,[16] like many other African groups, the Itsekiris largely followed a traditional form of religion known as Ebura-tsitse (based on ancestral worship) which has become embedded in modern-day traditional Itsekiri culture. Once the dominant form of western Christianity in Itsekiriland for centuries, [citation needed][17] only a minority of Itsekiris are Roman Catholics today whilst the majority are Protestants notably Baptist and Anglican.

Itsekiri language

Yoruboid
Geographic
distribution
Togo, Benin, Western, Southern and Central Nigeria
Linguistic classificationNiger–Congo?
Subdivisions
Language codes
Glottologyoru1244  (Yoruboid)

Whilst genetically the Itsekiris are a complex mixture of the many different ethnicities and races that have settled in their area, the Itsekiri language is very closely related to the Ilaje and other south-eastern Yoruba dialects and to the Igala.[18] It has also been influenced significantly by the Bini, Portuguese and English languages due to centuries of interaction with people from those nations. However, it remains a key branch of the Yoruboid family[19] of languages even retaining archaic or lost elements of the proto Yoruba language due to its relative isolation in the Niger-Delta where it developed away from the main cluster of Yoruba language dialects.[citation needed]

Unlike nearly all key Nigerian Languages, the Itsekiri language does not have dialects and is uniformly spoken with little or no variance in pronunciation apart from the use of 'ch' for the regular 'ts' (sh) in the pronunciation of some individual Itsekiris, e.g. Chekiri instead of the standard Shekiri but these are individual pronunciation traits rather than dialectal differences. This may be a relic of past dialectal differences. The English language continues to exert a strong influence on the Itsekiri language both in influencing its development and in its widespread usage as a first language amongst the younger generation. Modern standard Yoruba (the variety spoken in Lagos) also appears to be influencing the Itsekiri language partly due to the similarity between both languages and the ease of absorbing colloquial Yoruba terms by the large Itsekiri population living in Western Nigerian cities. Itsekiri is now taught in local schools up to university degree level in Nigeria.[citation needed]

There are a number of semi-autonomous Itsekiri communities such as Ugborodo, koko, Omadino and Obodo whose history predates the 15th-century establishment of the Warri Kingdom. The Ugborodo community claims direct descent from the Ijebu a major Yoruba sub-ethnic group.[20]

Notable people

References

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  2. ^ https://www.peoplegroups.org/explore/GroupDetails.aspx?peid=13858#topmenu
  3. ^ "Itsekiri | people".
  4. ^ https://www.peoplegroups.org/explore/GroupDetails.aspx?peid=13858#topmenu
  5. ^ https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/12264/NI
  6. ^ "Itsekiri Kingdom Town in Delta Nigeria Guide". www.nigeriagalleria.com. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  7. ^ Contributor, Pulse (25 March 2022). "Itsekiri people: Kingdom History and culture of the Iwere". Pulse Nigeria. Retrieved 3 June 2022. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  8. ^ "Benue-Congo languages".
  9. ^ Pasquier, Michael (21 November 2017), "French Missionary Priests and Borderlands Catholicism in the Diocese of Bardstown during the Early Nineteenth Century", Borderland Narratives, University Press of Florida, doi:10.5744/florida/9780813054957.003.0007, ISBN 9780813054957, retrieved 4 June 2022
  10. ^ "History of the Itsekiri People | Culture | Economy | Naijabiography". Naijabiography Media. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  11. ^ "Welcome to the Warri Mirror Magazine". Archived from the original on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 24 November 2011.
  12. ^ Prof P.C. Lloyd Ethnographic Survey of Africa, Western Africa, Part XIII (1957)
  13. ^ A History of Itsekiri, William A Moore
  14. ^ Salubi, A. (1960). "The Origins of Sapele Township". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 2 (1): 115–131. JSTOR 41970824 – via JSTOR.
  15. ^ Merchant Prince of the Niger Delta by Prof Obaro Ikime, Heinemann 1968
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  19. ^ Ethnologue Languages of the World Sixteenth edition 2009
  20. ^ ""CRY, MY BELOVED UGBORODO" A Diary of a Painful Visit to Itsekiri Homeland Made Desolate By Oil Pollution and Inter-Ethnic Conflict; by Oritsegbemi O. Omatete". Archived from the original on 26 November 2006. Retrieved 16 August 2008.
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