Kingdom of Nri
Kingdom of Nri Ọ̀ràézè Ǹrì | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9th century–1912 | |||||||
Capital | Igbo-Ukwu[1] | ||||||
Common languages | Igbo | ||||||
Government | Elective monarchy | ||||||
Sacred king | |||||||
Ézè | |||||||
• 1043—1089 | Eze Nri Ìfikuánim | ||||||
• 1988–present | Eze Nri Ènweleána II Obidiegwu Onyeso | ||||||
History | |||||||
• Established | 9th century | ||||||
• Surrender to the British Empire | 1912 | ||||||
• Socio-political revival | 1974 | ||||||
Currency | Okpogho | ||||||
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The Kingdom of Nri (
The kingdom was a haven for all those who had been rejected in their communities and also a place where slaves were set free from their bondage. Nri expanded through converts gaining neighboring communities' allegiance, not by force. Nri's royal founder,
The kingdom appears to have passed its peak in the 18th century, encroached upon by the rise of the Benin and Igala kingdom, and later the Atlantic slave trade, but it appears to have maintained its authority well into the 16th century, remnants of the eze hierarchy persisted until the establishment of Colonial Nigeria in 1911, and it continues to exist as one of the traditional states within modern Nigeria.
History
The Nri kingdom is a kingdom within the Igbo area of Nigeria. Nri and Aguleri, where the Umueri-Igbo creation myth originates, are in the territory of the Umu-Eri clan, who trace their lineages back to the patriarchal king-figure,
Foundation
Author Onwuejeogwu suggested that Nri influence in Igboland may go back as far as the 12th century,[5] and royal burials have been unearthed dating to at least the 9th century.
According to other authors, Eri, the god-like founder of Nri, is believed to have settled the region around the 1500s.[6][7] The first eze Nri (King of Nri), Ìfikuánim, follows directly after him. According to Angulu (1981), oral tradition suggests an accession of Eri in 1043.[contradictory][7] Chambers (2005) places Ìfikuánim's reign at around 1225 CE.[8]
In 1911, the names of 19 eze Nri were recorded, but the list is not easily converted into chronological terms because of long interregnums between installations.[2] Tradition held that at least seven years would pass upon the death of the eze Nri before a successor could be determined; the interregnum served as a period of divination of signs from the deceased eze Nri, who would communicate his choice of successor from beyond the grave in the seven or more years ensuing upon his death. Regardless of the actual date, this period marks the beginning of Nri kingship as a centralized institution.[9]
Zenith and fall
Expansion of the kingdom of Nri was achieved by sending mbùríchi, or converts, to other settlements. Allegiance to the eze Nri was obtained not by military force but through ritual oath. Religious authority was vested in the local king, and ties were maintained by traveling mbùríchi. By the late 16th century, Nri influence extended well beyond the nuclear northern Igbo region to Igbo settlements on the west bank of the Niger and communities affected by the
Nri's influence in much of northwestern and western Igboland lasted from the reigns of the fourth eze Nri to that of the ninth. After that, patterns of conflict emerged that existed from the tenth to the fourteenth reigns, which probably reflected the monetary importance of the
Government
Nearly all communities in Igboland were organized according to a title system. Igbo west of the
The Igbo of Nri, on the other hand, developed a state system sustained by ritual power.[5]
The Kingdom of Nri was a religio-polity, a sort of
An important symbol among the Nri religion was the omu, a tender
For many centuries, the people within the Nri related areas were committed to peace. This religious pacifism was rooted in a belief that violence was an abomination which polluted the earth.[2] Instead, the eze Nri could declare a form of excommunication from the odinani Nri against those who violated specific taboos. Members of the Ikénga could isolate entire communities via this form of ritual siege.[10]
Eze Nri
The eze Nri was the title of the ruler of Nri with ritual and mystic (but not military) power.[11] He was a ritual figure rather than a king in the traditional sense. The eze Nri was chosen after an interregnum period while the electors waited for supernatural powers to manifest in the new eze Nri. He was installed after a symbolic journey to Aguleri on the Anambra River.[2] The authorities must be notified prior to commencement of this journey to obtain the Ududu-eze, the royal scepter. There, the process of paying of homage to all the necessary shrines/deities in Aguleri by the new Eze Nri, visitation to Menri's tomb at Ama-Okpu, collection of Ofo, purification of the virgin boy to receive the clay from the chosen diver from Umuezeora in Aguleri, sitting on the throne of Eri at Obu-Gad in Enugwu Aguleri by the new Eze-Nri before going back to Nri on the seventh day to undergo a symbolic burial and exhumation, then finally be anointed with white clay, a symbol of purity. Upon his death, he was buried seated in a wood-lined chamber.[2] The eze Nri was in all aspects a divine ruler.
Ìkénga
While the eze Nri lived relatively secluded from his followers, he employed a group of officials called ndi Nri.[14] These were ritual specialists, easily identifiable by facial scarifications or ichi,[14] who traveled with ritual staffs of peace in order to purify the earth from human crimes.[2] The ndi Nri exercised authority over wide areas of Igboland and had the power to install the next eze Nri.[11]
Areas under Nri influence, called Odinani Nri, were open to Ndi Nri traveling within them to perform rituals and ensure bountiful harvest or restore harmony in local affairs.[6] Local men within the odinani Nri could represent the eze Nri and share his moral authority by purchasing a series of ranked titles called Ozo and Nze. Men with these titles were known as mbùríchi and became an extension of the Nri's religio-political system. They controlled the means for agriculture and determined guilt or innocence in disputes.[10]
Both the Ndi Nri
Economy
Nri maintained its vast authority well into the 16th century.[15] The peace mandated by the Nri religion and enforced by the presence of the mbùríchi allowed trade to flourish. Items such as horses, which did not survive in tsetse fly-infested Nri, and seashells, which would have to be transported a long ways due to Nri's distance from the coast, have been found depicted in Nri's bronze. A Nri dignitary was unearthed with ivory, also indicating a wealth in trade existed among the Nri.[2] Another source of income would have been the income brought back by traveling mbùríchi.[11]
Unlike in many African economies of the period, Nri did not practice slave ownership or trade. Certain parts of the Nri domain, did not recognize slavery and served as a sanctuary. After the selection of the tenth eze Nri, any slave who set foot on Nri soil was considered free.[10]
Nri had a network of internal and external trade, which its economy was partly based on. Other aspects of Nri's economy were hunting and agriculture.[16] Eri, the sky being, was the first to 'count' the days by their names, eke, oye, afor and nkwo, which were the names of their four governing spirits. Eri revealed the opportunity of time to the Igbo, who would use the days for exchanging goods and knowledge.[17]
Culture
Art
It appears that Nri had an artistic as well as religious influence on the lower Niger. Sculptures found there are bronze like those at Igbo-Ukwu. The great sculptures of the Benin Empire, by contrast, were almost always brass with, over time, increasingly greater percentages of zinc added.[5]
The bronzes of Igbo-Ukwu pay special attention to detail depicting birds, snails, chameleons, and other natural aspects of the world such as a hatching bird. Other pieces include gourds and vessels which were often given handles. The pieces are so fine that small insects were included on the surfaces of some while others have what looks like bronze wires decorated around them. None of these extra details were made separately; the bronzes were all one piece. Igbo-Ukwu gave the evidence of an early bronze casting tradition in Nri.[19]
Religion
Religious beliefs were central to the Kingdom of Nri.[20] Nri oral tradition states that a bounty of yams and cocoyams could be given to the eze Nri, while blessings were given in return.[2] It was believed that Nri's influence and bountiful amount of food was a reward for the ruler's blessings.[2] Above all, Nri was a holy land for those Igbo who followed its edicts. It served as a place where sins and taboos could be absolved just by entering it. Even Igbo living far from the center of power would send abnormal children to Nri for ritual cleansing rather than having them killed, as was sometimes the case for dwarfs or children who cut their top teeth before their lower teeth.[21]
Nri people believed that the sun was the dwelling place of Anyanwu (Light) and Agbala (Fertility). Agbala was the collective spirit of all holy beings (human and nonhuman). Agbala was the perfect agent of Chukwu or Chineke (the Creator God) and chose its human and nonhuman agents only by their merit; it knew no politics. It transcended religion, culture and gender, and worked with the humble and the truthful. They believed Anyanwu, The Light, to be the symbol of human perfection that all must seek and Agbala was entrusted to lead man there.[22]
Tradition
Nri tradition was based on the concept of peace, truth and harmony.
Year counting ceremony
The Igu Aro festival (counting of the year)[24] was a royal festival the eze Nri used to maintain his influence over the communities under his authority. Each of these communities sent representatives to pay tribute during the ceremony to show their loyalty. At the end the Eze Nri would give the representatives a yam medicine and a blessing of fertility for their communities.[25] The festival was seen as a day of peace and certain activities were prohibited such as the planting of crops before the day of the ceremony, the splitting of wood and unnecessary noise.[24] Igu Aro was a regular event that gave an opportunity for the eze to speak directly to all the communities under him.
Nri scarification
Ritual scarification in Nri was known as Ichi of which there are two styles; the Nri style, and the Agbaja style. In the Nri style, the carved line ran from the center of the forehead down to the chin. A second line ran across the face, from the right cheek to the left. This was repeated to obtain a pattern meant to imitate the rays of the sun. In the Agbaja style, circles and semicircular patterns are added to the initial incisions to represent the moon. These scarifications were given to the representatives of the eze Nri; the mbùríchi.[14] The scarification's were Nri's way of honoring the sun that they worshiped and was a form of ritual purification.[27]
Scarification had its origins in Nri mythology. Nri, the son of Eri who established the town of Nri, was said to have pleaded to Chukwu (the Great God) because of hunger. Chukwu then ordered him to cut off his first son's and daughter's heads and plant them, creating a 'blood bond' between the Igbo and the earth deity, Ana. Before doing so, Nri was ordered to mark ichi onto their two foreheads. Coco yam, a crop managed by females, sprang from his daughter's head, and yam, the Igbo peoples' staple crop, sprung from his son's head; Chukwu had taught Nri plant domestication. From this, the eze Nri's first son and daughter were required to undergo scarification's seven days after birth, with the eze Nri's daughter being the only female to receive ichi.[28] Nri, the son of Eri, also gained knowledge of the yam medicine (ogwu ji). People from other Igbo communities made pilgrimages to Nri in order to receive this knowledge received in exchange for annual tributes.[29][30]
See also
- Nri-Igbo
- Archaeology of Igbo-Ukwu
- History of Nigeria
- List of rulers of Nri
- List of Nigerian traditional states
- Nigerian traditional rulers
References
- ^ Ehret, page 315.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Isichei, page 246—247
- ^ a b Uzukwu, page 93
- ^ Onwuejeogwu (1981), page 22
- ^ a b c d e Hrbek, page 254
- ^ a b c d Lovejoy, page 62
- ^ ISBN 0-905788-08-7.
- ^ Chambers, page 33
- ^ "The Nri Kingdom, Igbo Ancient Civilisation". Dakingsman.com. 26 September 2020. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
- ^ a b c d e Lovejoy, page 63
- ^ a b c d e f Ogot, page 229
- . Retrieved Apr 23, 2023 – via valleyinternational.net.
- ^ ISBN 978-3-11-014789-6., page 130
- ^ a b c Chambers, page 31
- ^ Griswold, page XV
- ISBN 0-7618-2712-9., page 5
- ^ Uzukwu, 107
- ^ Hrbek, page 252
- ^ Garlake, page 119—120
- ^ Isichei, page 85
- ^ Lovejoy, page 70
- ^ Uzukwu, page 31
- ^ a b Onwuejeogwu (1981), page 11
- ^ a b Basden (1912), page 71
- ^ Onwuejeogwu (1975), page 44
- ^ Basden (1921), page 184
- ISBN 0-7185-0192-6., page 413—414.
- ^ Isichei, page 247
- ISBN 0-86232-595-1., page 28
- ^ Uzukwu, page 104
- Anunobi, Chikodi (2006). Nri Warriors of Peace. Zenith Publisher's Trade Paperback original. ]
- Basden, George Thomas (1966). Among the Ibos of Nigeria 1912. Routledge. ISBN 0-7146-1633-8.
- Basden, George Thomas (1921). Among the Ibos of Nigeria: An Account of the Curious & Interesting Habits, Customs & Beliefs of a Little Known African People, by One who Has for Many Years Lived Amongst Them on Close & Intimate Terms. Seeley, Service. p. 184.
- Chambers, Douglas (2005). Murder At Montpelier: Igbo Africans In Virginia. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 1-57806-706-5.
- Ehret, Christopher (2002). The civilizations of Africa: a history to 1800. James Currey Publishers. ISBN 0-85255-475-3.
- Fasi, Muhammad; Hrbek, Ivan (1988). Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century. London: Heinemann. ISBN 0-435-94809-1.
- Garlake, Peter S. (2002). Early art and architecture of Africa. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-284261-7.
- ISBN 0-691-05829-6.
- Isichei, Elizabeth Allo (1997). A History of African Societies to 1870. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45599-5.
- Lovejoy, Paul (2000). Identity in the Shadow of Slavery. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-4725-2.
- Ogot, Bethwell A. (1992). Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century. University of California Press. ISBN 0-435-94811-3.
- Onwuejeogwu, M. Angulu (1981). An Igbo civilization: Nri kingdom & hegemony. Ethnographica. ISBN 978-123-105-X.
- Onwuejeogwu, M. Angulu (1975). The social anthropology of Africa: an introduction. Heinemann. ISBN 0-435-89701-2.
- Uzukwu, E. Elochukwu (1997). Worship as body language: introduction to Christian worship : an African orientation. Liturgical Press. ISBN 0-8146-6151-3.
External links
Media related to Kingdom of Nri at Wikimedia Commons