A HISTORY OF THE NUPE, C.1068 â€" 1810 A.D.
By
Author
Presented To
Department of
Arts
ABSTRACT
The
major objective of this thesis is to examine the history of the Nupe
from 1068 – 1810 AD. For a proper conceptualization, the geographical
location of the study area in relation to its neighbors is examined.
This is to enable us see the socio-cultural affinities, archaeological,
linguistic, political and economic relationships among various ethnic
groups in the Middle Niger and Benue Confluence areas. The work
particularly considers the relationship between Nupe and Igala lands,
especially, as it affects the birth and growth of Tsoede, as well as the
socio-cultural and political situation regarding his personality.
Central to our discussion is the political transformation of Nupeland by
Tsoede and his descendants, reflected in the foundation of a central
authority – Nupe Kingdom in the 16th century, in place of the hitherto
independent principalities in Nupeland. The insatiable desire by Tsoede
to rule over a larger political landscape may have informed the idea of
the central authority and its extension beyond core Nupeland. Central to
the actualization of his dream is the strategic location of Nupeland
which favored all sorts of vocation – agriculture, trade and commerce,
transport and communication, industrial economy, unlimited access to and
out of Nupeland, availability of raw materials for thriving arts and
crafts. All these and other factors provided catalyst for state
formation processes in Nupeland as was the case in Hausaland. Another
central theme the thesis discusses is the penetration of Islam through a
number of sources into Nupeland prior to the 19th century Sokoto Jihad,
as well as the economic activities and opportunities which made the
land great. It served as an entrepot and a strategic gateway between the
north and the southern parts of the Nigerian area. Both the internal
and external trade and commerce between the two zones and Nupe passed
through the latter. The work also examines the genesis for the eclipse
of the Kingdom. The internal dynastic succession disputes, as well as
the political and socio-economic happenings in the neighboring states
and Hausaland and most importantly, the intervention of the 19th Century
Jihadists under the leadership of Mallam Dendo and other Fulbe,
accounted for the demise of the indigenous Nupe Kingdom under Tsoede
dynasty and its replacement by a foreign one under Dendo in the first
half of the 19th century.
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