It used to be a military settlement in d 18th century, soldiers practised their shooting there. D area had several gun firing spots & became known as Oju Ota in Yoruba which means Bullet spots. It later metamorphosed into Ojota which it is called now
2. ABULE EGBA
This area is on the outskirts of Lagos and got its name from the early settlers who were Egba people from Abeokuta. The area was first called “Abule awon egba” in Yoruba, which means “Village of Egba people”. It later became “Abule Egba”.
3. APONGBON
Apongbon is one of Lagos’ most popular markets, and it’s also quite close to the popular Oke-Arin market. It got its name from the then acting governor of the Lagos colony, William McCoskry, who had a Red Beard.
The Yorubas who couldn’t pronounce the colonial governor’s name decided to describe him by his red beard and started calling him “Oyinbo to pon ni agbon” (Apon l'agbon) meaning a red-bearded man. It later became Apongbon.
4. MAGODO
Magodo is now a posh area, but in the past, it used to be sacred land. The residents had a lot of taboos and one of them was to avoid using mortars and pestles, “Ma gun odo” which means “Don’t pound it”. It later became Magodo
5. EPETEDO
Epe is named after the early settlers who were Epe traders. The area became dominated by the Epes and they still trade there until today.
6. EBUTE-METTA
EbuteMetta is one of d earliest harbour docks where British ships berthed at. It was a hub for trade & commerce in colonial times. EbuteMetta is a fusion of d words Ebute which means the seaside in Yoruba, & Metta which means 3. The 3 shores are Iddo,Otto,Oko baba
7. BROAD STREET
Broad street was one of d longest & widest streets in d city. It got it name from it broadness. It was later changed to Yakubu Gowon Street but later changed back to Broad street when Gowon was accused of participating the coup that led to the death of Murtala.
8. AGIDINGBI
The British Naval forces invaded Lagos in 1885 under the pretext of stopping slavery and human sacrifice. The noise their canon made was really loud, and the sound was heard round the streets of Lagos Island.
The people described the sound as “A gidi n gbinnn”. Which means a loud groundbreaking noise. The name Agidingbi was borne out of this.
9. VICTORIA ISLAND
Victoria Island was also a major hub for commerce and British ships berthed there often. It’s named after Queen Victoria of England who was Queen from 1837-1901.
10. IKEJA
Ikeja, the capital of Lagos, is actually an abbreviation for “Ikorodu and Epe Joint Administration”, IKEJA. It was coined by the colonial masters for ease of administration.”
Bola Adewara(2019)
Coming shortly, the history of Yaba, Surulere, Okota, Mushin, Idimu, Alakuko, Ikorodu, Epe, Ajangbadi, Ojo, Ijeshatedo, Orile, Ijora, Apapa and Ojuelegba.
Ikeja, which was formally called "Akeja", was named after a deity of the Awori people of Ota. It was originally settled by the Awori people, and the area was raided for slaves until the mid-19th century. Early in the 20th century it became an agricultural hinterland for Lagos.
The opening of the Lagos-Ibadan railway in 1901 and the growth of Lagos as a port transformed Ikeja into a residential and industrial suburb of that city. In the mid-1960s an industrial estate was established, and in 1976 Ikeja became the capital of Lagos state.
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3 Things You Didn't Know About @burnaboy latest single Last Last.
Burnaboy mentioned some real live events in his latest single.
A Thread
1. BABA FRYO
'I no holy and I no denge pose
Like Baba Fryo
My eye oh, don cry oh'
Baba Fryo is a veteran Nigerian Ghetto singer.
He is known for releasing street songs.
His most popular song in Nigeria was titled "Dem go dey pose" which he released in the late 1990s. #SeyonsThread
2. SOBOMA
‘I dey Port Harcourt when dem kill Soboma’
Soboma George was a militant in both the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta and The Outlaws. In August 2009 George accepted an amnesty offer made by the Nigerian government, under President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua.
The Charlie Charlie challenge is a modern incarnation of the Spanish paper-and-pencil game called Juego de la Lapicera (Pencil Game). Like a Magic 8-Ball, the game is played by teenagers using held or balanced pencils to produce answers to questions they ask.
Teenage girls have played Juego de la Lapicera for generations in Spain and Hispanic America, asking which boys in their class like them.[citation needed]
Basic set up for the two pencil game, with the top pencil balanced the same way as the other, #SeyonsThread
such that minor air movements can cause it to rotate
Originally described on the Internet in 2008,[1]the game was popularized in the English-speaking world in 2015, partly through the hashtag #CharlieCharlieChallenge. On 29 April 2015 an alarmist tabloid televisionnewscast about
Bathory married a count and in his castle constructed a torture chamber where she would burn girls with hot tongs, place them in tubs of freezing water, stick needles under their fingernails, and cover their bodies with honey and leave them in rooms filled with ants or bees.
Bathory gained a reputation as a vampire as she had a fascination with blood and was said to bathe in the bathtubs filled with the blood of her virginal victims to preserve her youth. Bathory’s crimes were eventually discovered and was charged with over eighty counts of murder.
Three gruesome murder cases you've probably not heard of.
A thread 👇
1) ISSEI SAGAWA, THE JAPANESE CANNIBAL WHO STILL WALKS FREE.
The famous Japanese cannibal is notorious in his country. He grew up in a wealthy family but always had the urge for human flesh.
At 23, Sagawa was arrested for attempted rape, according to Culture Crossfire. He entered the apartment of a tall German woman living in Tokyo and attacked her. Police didn't realize he was actually attempting to eat her, even though he bit off a piece of her flesh.
Omo! 😭😂😂😂💔
Sagawa no chop me oooo
Na twitter cut my story sha
Sagawa don chop Jack
Three Truly weird Historical Events That Actually Happened, You don't know about.
A thread👇
1. Robert Liston, a surgeon in the 1800s, performed an operation with a 300% mortality rate : Instead of saving the patient, he killed three people.
Liston was renowned for being one of the fastest surgeons alive, which at the time was a very good thing. Anesthesia as we know it didn't exist, so patients were awake for the entire procedure, meaning the shorter it was, the better.
Liston was performing a leg amputation,
but worked so fast that he accidentally cut off two fingers on his assistant's hand. Both the patient and the assistant died later of gangrene, most likely due to the saw being unclean.