Igbo people in the Atlantic slave trade
Historical Thread.
The Igbo, whose traditional territory is called the Bight of Biafra (also known as the Bight of Bonny), became one of the principal ethnic groups to be enslaved during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade.
An estimated 14.6% of all slaves were taken from the Bight of Biafra between 1650 and 1900. The Bight’s major slave trading ports were located in Bonny and Calabar. The majority of Igbo slaves were kidnapped during village raids.
The journey for Igbo slaves often began in the ancient Cave Temple that was located in Arochukwu Kingdom. During this period, the three Igbo Kingdoms followed the same culture and religion, yet tended to operate very differently from each other.
The Kingdom of Nri and the Independent Igbo States (confederation of independently ruled Igbo states) did not practice slavery, and slaves from neighbouring lands would often flee to these kingdoms in order to be set free.
Arochukwu, on the other hand, practiced a system of indentured servitude that was remarkably different to chattel slavery in the Americas. Eventually, with Europeans beginning to encroach on Igbo territory, causing the kingdoms to desire weaponry to defend themselves.
In order to obtain European goods and weaponry, Arochukwu began to raid villages of the other Igbo kingdoms - primarily those located in the Igbo hinterlands. People would be captured, regardless of gender, social status, or age.
Slaves could have been originally farmers, nobility, or even people who had committed petty crimes. These captured slaves would be taken and sold to the British on the coast. Another way people were enslaved was through the divine oracle who resided in the Cave Temple complex.
All Igbos practiced divination called Afa, but the Kingdom of Arochukwu was different because it was headed by a divine oracle who was in charge of making decisions for the king, the infamous Long Juju oracle.
During this time, if someone committed a crime, was in debt, or did something considered an "abomination" (for example, the killing of certain kinds of animals was considered an abomination due to its association with certain deities), they would be taken to the cave complex...
to face the oracle for sentencing. The oracle, who was also influenced by the British, would sentence these people to slavery, even for small crimes. The victim would be commanded to walk further into the cave so that the spirits could "devour" them, but, in reality, they were...
taken to an opening on the other side and loaded directly onto a waiting boat. This boat would take them to a slave ship en route to the Americas.
Effects
It is estimated that a total of 1.4 million Igbo people were transported (via European ships) across the Atlantic in the era of Atlantic slave trade. Most of these ships were British owned.
Dispersal
Some recorded populations of people of African descent on Caribbean islands recorded 2,863 Igbo on Trinidad and Tobago in an 1813 census; 894 in Saint Lucia in an 1815 census; 440 on Saint Kitts and Nevis in an 1817 census; and 111 in Guyana in an 1819 census.
Barbados
The Igbo were dispersed to Barbados in large numbers. Olaudah Equiano, a famous Igbo author, abolitionist & ex-slave, was dropped off there after being kidnapped from his hometown near the Bight of Biafra. After arriving in Barbados he was promptly shipped to Virginia.
At his time, 44 percent of the 90,000 Africans disembarking on the island (between 1751 and 1775) were from the bight. These Africans were therefore mainly of Igbo origin.
The links between Barbados and the Bight of Biafra had begun in the mid-seventeenth century, with half of the African captives arriving on the island originating from there.
Haiti
Haiti had many Igbo slaves. There is still the Creole saying of Nou se Igbo (We are Igbos). Aspects of Haitian culture that exhibit this can be seen in the loa, a Haitian loa (or deity) created by Igbo traditional religious beliefs mixed with catholicism in their religion.
Jamaica
Bonny/Calabar emerged as major embarkation points of enslaved West Africans destined for Jamaica's slave markets in 18th century. Dominated by Bristol and Liverpool slave ships, these ports were used primarily for the supply of slaves to British colonies in the Americas.
In Jamaica, the bulk of Igbo slaves arrived relatively later than the rest of other arrivals of Africans on the Island in the period after the 1750s. There was a general rise in the number of enslaved people arriving to the Americas, particularly British Colonies, from the Bight
of Biafra in the 18th century; the heaviest of these forced migrations occurred between 1790 and 1807.
The result of such slaving patterns made Jamaica, after Virginia, the second most common destination for slaves arriving from the Bight of Biafra; as the Igbo formed the majority from the Bight, they became largely represented in Jamaica in the 18th and 19th century.
United States
The Igbo presence in United States goes back to the country's earliest days and remains in the hearts of African Americans who are their modern-day descendants.
From the mid-1600s to 1830, the US imported a large amount of Igbo slaves to the states of Virginia and Maryland in order to provide labour for tobacco plantations. The presence of the Igbo in this region was so profound that the Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia decided...
to erect a full-scale traditional Igbo village in Staunton, Virginia. This is why the majority of African Americans, who have some ancestral connections to this region of the country, have a significant amount of genetically verifiable Nigerian ancestry.
It has been hypothesized that, at least, 60% of all African Americans have at least one ancestor who originated from the Igbo kingdoms. Many African Americans are now tracing their Igbo heritage with the help of genetic testing and historical evidence.
They're able to reconnect with their living relatives in Nigeria & reestablish links with their ancestral ethnic group.
In the United States the Igbo slaves were known for being rebellious. In some states such as Georgia, they had a high suicide rate and as a result cost less.
Emeka Ojukwu's mum, Madam Eunice Ekene (popularly known as Ma Biggar) initially married an European: an Engineer called Mr Tom Biggar who lived and worked in Zungeru, Northern Nigeria in 1923
Mr Biggar was holidaying in Europe and left his wife and...
daughter, Esther Biggar, in Nigeria for few months and Mr Biggar's wife (Ojukwu's mum) was travelling with her pretty daughter and met Sir Louis Ojukwu (Emeka's father) who owned the transport company she travelled with.
One thing led to another, Ojukwu's mother and his rich father had an affair that produced Emeka Ojukwu.
Some accounts said that Engr Biggar and Sir Loius Ojukwu were friends and Sir Loius Ojukwu had merely taken advantage of Engr Biggar's wife during his absence.
Telegram has сompleted the collection of bond bids, the demand has significantly exceeded the supply.
The order book for Telegram bonds was oversubscribed twice and reached almost $ 2 billion, a source familiar with the placement told Forbes.
Another source among investors, who submitted applications, called the demand boom. One of the organizers of the placement told Forbes that by the evening of March 10, the book had been re-signed three times.
The yield range is 6-7%. Kommersant wrote that the Eurobonds planned to place in early March for five years. At the end of the term, they can be converted into Telegram shares with a 10% discount to the market price if it goes public. The minimum check is $ 50 million.
MAITATSINE: The Story of a FOREIGNER who laid the foundation for modern day "BOKO HARAM" in Nigeria.
Thread.
This article is written in honour of innocent and defenceless Nigerians who lost their lives to senseless religious killings.
It is my hopeful prayer that their deaths won't be in vain and that supernatural justice find these religious extremists and let them all be buried in the same earth that drank the blood of the innocents and be consumed by the same worms that know no race or religion.
INTRODUCTION
Mohammed Marwa (1927-1980), nicknamed "Maitatsine", was a controversial Islamic preacher in Nigeria who died in 1980 at the age of 53.
His nickname "Maitatsine" in Hausa means "the one who curses" and refers to the curses he lays during his public speeches against...
Startup Vaccitech Ltd, which developed the vaccine AstraZeneca, is planning an IPO.
A startup, behind the Covid-19 vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca, is planning an initial public offering.
Investors are targeting an IPO valuation of roughly $ 700 million, with the expectation that Vaccitech could grow to a billion-dollar company by the end of the year, according to WSJ.
But there are difficulties due to disagreements with Oxford where exactly the company will place an IPO. Oxford wants to place an IPO in London, while Vaccitech is pushing on the Nasdaq in New York.
Have you heard about the blackman who is arguably the wealthiest human being in all of history? Have you heard about Emperor Mansa Musa I of the great Mali Empire? Join me tommorow night for this story. Don't forget to turn on my notifications. #historyteacher
Mansa Musa (Musa I of Mali) was the ruler of the kingdom of Mali from 1312 C.E. to 1337 C.E. During his reign, Mali was one of the richest kingdoms of Africa, and Mansa Musa was among the richest individuals in the world.
The ancient kingdom of Mali spread across parts of modern-day Mali, Senegal, the Gambia, Guinea, Niger, Nigeria, Chad, Mauritania, and Burkina Faso. Mansa Musa developed cities like Timbuktu and Gao into important cultural centers.
When I see a good article, I post it on my handle for education, and never fail to give credit to the source or author. When I do a research-based thread, I give credit to my sources as is conventionally accepted in the literary world. All my followers here can attest to it.
I see this app as a learning class where we learn from each other, get educated & get better for it. In the said thread, I gave credit duly to the source that claimed it's authorship. If any other person comes up to dispute that claim, the civil thing to do is to prove his claim.
If you don't follow the due process of decency and resort to name calling and abuses, I'll gently block you. I owe you no obligations, after all, anybody can come forward tp make unverified claims.