Historical Change in an Ibo Polity: Asaba to 1885

Historical Change in an Ibo Polity: Asaba to 1885

Author: 
Isichei, Elizabeth
Publisher: 
Cambridge University Press
Date published: 
1969
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of African History
Source: 
Journal of African History, Vol.10,no.3,1969,pp421-438
Abstract: 

Asaba is an Ibo town, which, because of its position on the Niger, came into relatively early contact with Europeans. This means that we have materials for its history in European records for more than a hundred years. This article is based on these records, and on present-day oral traditions. It begins with an account of Asaba's traditional social and political structure, and its former role in the economic life of the lower Niger.|Asaba traditions relate in detail how the town was founded by a man from Nteje, east of the Niger, called Nnebisi. There is less information about its subsequent history, though it seems that it went through a significant change from the rule of a single Eze to a system of personal titles, like that found in eastern Iboland. Some attempts have been made to make a king list for Asaba, but it does not seem possible to establish either this or any other useful chronological framework other than that provided by family genealogies. These suggest that Nnebisi lived in the seventeenth century. The main theme in Asaba's external history is her changing relationship with her powerful neighbour, Benin.|The choice of Onitsha, rather than Asaba, as a missionary and trading centre, meant that Asaba went through a period of relative eclipse. The first C.M.S. missionaries came to the town in 1875, but they had little impact on Asaba life. In the middle eighties, Asaba became the administrative capital of the newly established Royal Niger Company. The impact of the Company on Asaba, though great, was short-lived. But one result of its choice of Asaba as a capital was the renewal of missionary endeavour, both Catholic and Protestant, in the town. This in its turn was to have a very great impact on Asaba's way of life.

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Isichei, Elizabeth. Historical Change in an Ibo Polity: Asaba to 1885 . : Cambridge University Press , 1969. Journal of African History, Vol.10,no.3,1969,pp421-438 - Available at: https://library.au.int/historical-change-ibo-polity-asaba-1885-2