Nigeria Historical Setting
Nok terra-cotta head dating from the first
millennium B.C.
LIKE SO MANY OTHER MODERN AFRICAN states, Nigeria is
the
creation of European imperialism. Its very name--after the
great
Niger River, the country's dominating physical
feature--was
suggested in the 1890s by British journalist Flora Shaw,
who
later became the wife of colonial governor Frederick
Lugard. The
modern history of Nigeria--as a political state
encompassing 250
to 400 ethnic groups of widely varied cultures and modes
of
political organization--dates from the completion of the
British
conquest in 1903 and the amalgamation of northern and
southern
Nigeria into the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria in
1914. The
history of the Nigerian people extends backward in time
for some
three millennia. Archaeological evidence, oral traditions,
and
written documentation establish the existence of dynamic
societies and well-developed political systems whose
history had
an important influence on colonial rule and has continued
to
shape independent Nigeria. Nigerian history is fragmented
in the
sense that it evolved from a variety of traditions, but
many of
the most outstanding features of modern society reflect
the
strong influence of the three regionally dominant ethnic
groups--the Hausa in the north, the Yoruba in the west,
and the
Igbo in the east.
There are several dominant themes in Nigerian history
that
are essential in understanding contemporary Nigerian
politics and
society. First, the spread of Islam, predominantly in the
north
but later in southwestern Nigeria as well, began a
millennium
ago. The creation of the Sokoto Caliphate in the jihad
(holy war)
of 1804-8 brought most of the northern region and adjacent
parts
of Niger and Cameroon under a single Islamic government.
The
great extension of Islam within the area of present-day
Nigeria
dates from the nineteenth century and the consolidation of
the
caliphate. This history helps account for the dichotomy
between
north and south and for the divisions within the north
that have
been so strong during the colonial and postcolonial eras.
Second, the slave trade, both across the Sahara Desert
and
the Atlantic Ocean, had a profound influence on virtually
all
parts of Nigeria. The transatlantic trade in particular
accounted
for the forced migration of perhaps 3.5 million people
between
the 1650s and the 1860s, while a steady stream of slaves
flowed
north across the Sahara for a millennium, ending at the
beginning
of the twentieth century. Within Nigeria, slavery was
widespread,
with social implications that are still evident today. The
Sokoto
Caliphate, for example, had more slaves than any other
modern
country, except the United States in 1860. Slaves were
also
numerous among the Igbo, the Yoruba, and many other ethnic
groups. Indeed, many ethnic distinctions, especially in
the
middle belt--the area between the north and south--were
reinforced because of slave raiding and defensive measures
that
were adopted for protection against enslavement.
Conversion to
Islam and the spread of Christianity were intricately
associated
with issues relating to slavery and with efforts to
promote
political and cultural autonomy.
Third, the colonial era was relatively brief, lasting
only
six decades or so, depending upon the part of Nigeria, but
it
unleashed such rapid change that the full impact was still
felt
in the contemporary period. On the one hand, the expansion
of
agricultural products as the principal export earner and
the
corresponding development of infrastructure resulted in
severely
distorted economic growth that has subsequently collapsed.
On the
other hand, social dislocation associated with the decline
of
slavery and the internal movement of population between
regions
and to the cities necessitated the reassessment of ethnic
loyalties, which in turn have been reflected in politics
and
religion.
In the three decades since the independence of Nigeria
in
1960, a period half as long as the colonial era, Nigeria
has
experienced a number of successful and attempted military
coups
d'état and a brutal civil war, let corrupt civilian
governments
siphon off the profits from the oil boom of the 1970s, and
faced
economic collapse in the 1980s. As the most populous
country in
Africa, and one of the ten most populous countries in the
world,
Nigeria has a history that is important in its own right
but that
also bears scrutiny if for no other reason than to
understand how
and why this nation became as it is today.
Data as of June 1991
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