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Igbo people

The Igbo people (English: /ˈb/ EE-boh,[3][4] US also /ˈɪɡb/ IG-boh;[5][6] also spelled Ibo[7][8] and formerly also Iboe, Ebo, Eboe,[9] Eboans,[10] Heebo;[11] natively Ṇ́dị́ Ìgbò) are an ethnic group in Nigeria. They are primarily found in Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu, and Imo States. A sizable Igbo population is also found in Delta and Rivers States.[12] Large ethnic Igbo populations are found in Cameroon,[13] Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea,[14][15] as well as outside Africa. There has been much speculation about the origins of the Igbo people,[16] which are largely unknown.[17] Geographically, the Igbo homeland is divided into two unequal sections by the Niger River—an eastern (which is the larger of the two) and a western section.[18][19] The Igbo people are one of the largest ethnic groups in Africa.[20]

Igbo people
Ṇ́dị́ Ìgbò
Igbo family
Total population
44 million
Regions with significant populations
 Nigeria 41,552,000 (18% of total population)[1]
Languages
Religion
Christianity,[2] indigenous Igbo religion and belief systems
Related ethnic groups
Ibibio, Efik, Annang, Bahumono, Ogoni, Idoma, Igala, Edo, Ijaw, Ogoja, Krio; more remotely the YEAI group within Volta-Niger

The Igbo language[16] is part of the Niger-Congo language family. Its regional dialects are somewhat mutually intelligible amidst the larger "Igboid" cluster.[21] The Igbo homeland straddles the lower Niger River, east and south of the Edoid and Idomoid groups, and west of the Ibibioid (Cross River) cluster.

Before the period of British colonial rule in the 20th century, the Igbo were politically fragmented by the centralized chiefdoms of Nri, Aro Confederacy, Agbor and Onitsha.[22] Frederick Lugard introduced the Eze system of "warrant chiefs".[23] Unaffected by the Fulani War and the resulting spread of Islam in Nigeria in the 19th century, they became overwhelmingly Christian under colonization. In the wake of decolonisation, the Igbo developed a strong sense of ethnic identity.[24] During the Nigerian Civil War of 1967–1970, the Igbo territories seceded as the short-lived Republic of Biafra.[25] The Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra and the Indigenous People of Biafra, two sectarian organizations formed after 1999, continue a non-violent struggle for an independent Igbo state.[26]

Definition and subgroups

"Igbo" as an ethnic identity developed comparatively recently, in the context of decolonisation and the Nigerian Civil War. The various Igbo-speaking communities were historically fragmented and decentralised;[27] in the opinion of Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe, Igbo identity should be placed somewhere between a "tribe" and a "nation".[28] Since the defeat of the Republic of Biafra in 1970, the Igbo are sometimes classed as a "stateless nation".[29]

History

Prehistory

The Igboid languages form a cluster within the Volta–Niger phylum, most likely grouped with Yoruboid and Edoid.[30] The greatest differentiation within the Igboid group is between the Ekpeye, and the rest. Williamson (2002) argues that based on this pattern, proto-Igboid migration would have moved down the Niger from a more northern area in the savannah and first settled close to the delta, with a secondary center of Igbo proper more to the north, in the Awka area.[31] Genetic studies have shown the Igbo to cluster most closely with other Niger-Congo-speaking peoples.[32] The predominant Y-chromosmoal haplogroup is E1b1a1-M2.[33]

Pottery dated from around 3,000-2,500 BC[34] showing similarities with later Igbo work was found at Nsukka, and Afikpo regions of Igboland in the 1970s,[35] along with pottery and tools at nearby Ibagwa; the traditions of the Umueri clan have as their source the Anambra valley. In the 1970s the Owerri, Okigwe, Orlu, Awgu, Udi and Awka divisions were determined to constitute "an Igbo heartland" from the linguistic and cultural evidence.[36] In the Nsukka region of Igboland, evidence of early iron smelting has been excavated, dating to 750 BC at the site of Opi and 2,000 BC at the site of Lejja.[37][38][39]

Nri Kingdom

 
Bronze from the ninth century town of Igbo Ukwu, now at the British Museum[40]

The Nri people of Igbo land have a creation myth which is one of the many creation myths that exist in various parts of Igbo land. The Nri and Aguleri people are in the territory of the Umueri clan who trace their lineages back to the patriarchal king-figure Eri.[41] Eri's origins are unclear, though he has been described as a "sky being" sent by Chukwu (God).[41][42] He has been characterized as having first given societal order to the people of Anambra.[42] The historian Elizabeth Allo Isichei says "Nri and Aguleri and part of the Umueri clan, [are] a cluster of Igbo village groups which traces its origins to a sky being called Eri."[43]

Archaeological evidence suggests that Nri influence in Igboland may go back as far as the 9th century,[44] and royal burials have been unearthed dating to at least the 10th century. Eri, the god-like founder of Nri, is believed to have settled the region around 948 with other related Igbo cultures following after in the 13th century.[45] The first Eze Nri (King of Nri) Ìfikuánim followed directly after him. According to Igbo oral tradition, his reign started in 1043.[46] At least one historian puts Ìfikuánim's reign much later, around 1225 AD.[47]

Each king traces his origin back to the founding ancestor, Eri. Each king is a ritual reproduction of Eri. The initiation rite of a new king shows that the ritual process of becoming Ezenri (Nri priest-king) follows closely the path traced by the hero in establishing the Nri kingdom.

— E. Elochukwu Uzukwu[48]
 
An Igbo man with facial scarifications, known as ichi, early 20th century[49]

The Kingdom of Nri was a religio-polity, a sort of theocratic state, that developed in the central heartland of the Igbo region.[45] The Nri had seven types of taboos which included human (such as the birth of twins), animal (such as killing or eating of pythons),[50] object, temporal, behavioral, speech and place taboos.[51] The rules regarding these taboos were used to educate and govern Nri's subjects. This meant that, while certain Igbo may have lived under different formal administration, all followers of the Igbo religion had to abide by the rules of the faith and obey its representative on earth, the Eze Nri.[51][52]

Traditional society

Traditional Igbo political organization was based on a quasi-democratic republican system of government. In tight knit communities, this system guaranteed its citizens equality, as opposed to a feudalist system with a king ruling over subjects.[53] This government system was witnessed by the Portuguese who first arrived and met with the Igbo people in the 15th century.[54] With the exception of a few notable Igbo towns such as Onitsha, which had kings called Obi and places like the Nri Kingdom and Arochukwu, which had priest kings; Igbo communities and area governments were overwhelmingly ruled by a republican consultative assembly of the common people.[53] Communities were usually governed and administered by a council of elders.[55]

 
Three Igbo women in the early 20th century[56]

Although title holders were respected because of their accomplishments and capabilities, they were not revered as kings but often performed special functions given to them by such assemblies. This way of governing was different from most other communities of Western Africa and only shared by the Ewe of Ghana. Umunna are a form of patrilineage maintained by the Igbo. Law starts with the Umunna which is a male line of descent from a founding ancestor (who the line is sometimes named after) with groups of compounds containing closely related families headed by the eldest male member. The Umunna can be seen as the most important pillar of Igbo society.[57][58][59] It was also a culture in which gender was re-constructed and performed according to social need; "The flexibility of Igbo gender construction meant that gender was separate from biological sex. Daughters could become sons and consequently male."[60]

Mathematics in indigenous Igbo society is evident in their calendar, banking system and strategic betting game called Okwe.[61] In their indigenous calendar, a week had four days, a month consisted of seven weeks, and 13 months made a year. In the last month, an extra day was added.[62][63] This calendar is still used in indigenous Igbo villages and towns to determine market days.[64] They settled law matters via mediators, and their banking system for loans and savings, called Isusu, is also still used.[65] The Igbo new year, starting with the month Ọ́nwạ́ M̀bụ́ (Igbo: First Moon) occurs on the third week of February,[66] although the traditional start of the year for many Igbo communities is around springtime in Ọ́nwạ́ Ágwụ́ (June).[67][68] Used as a ceremonial script by secret societies, the Igbo have an indigenous ideographic set of symbols called Nsibidi, originating from the neighboring Ejagham people.[69] Igbo people produced bronzes from as early as the 9th century, some of which have been found at the town of Igbo Ukwu, Anambra State.[40]

A system of indentured servitude existed among the Igbo before and after the encounter with Europeans.[70][71] Indentured service in Igbo areas was described by Olaudah Equiano in his memoir. He describes the conditions of the slaves in his community of Essaka and points out the difference between the treatment of slaves under the Igbo in Essaka and those in the custody of Europeans in West Indies:

...but how different was their condition from that of the slaves in the West Indies! With us, they do no more work than other members of the community,... even their master;... (except that they were not permitted to eat with those... free-born;) and there was scarce any other difference between them,... Some of these slaves have... slaves under them as their own property... for their own use.[71]

The Niger coast was the scene of contact between European merchants and the local African kingdoms beginning in 1n 1434 with the arrival of the Portuguese. Portuguese slave traders established factories and started to purchase enslaved Africans from the region, transporting them across the Atlantic to their colonies in the Americas, in particular Brazil. Slave traders from other European nations soon followed, and the region became a vital hub of the Atlantic slave trade.[72] European involvement in the Atlantic slave trade was gradually outlawed during the 19th century, and as such Europeans in the region started to shift their focus away from trade and into colonialism.[17] Prior to European contact, Igbo trade routes stretched as far as Mecca, Medina and Jeddah on the African continent and the Middle East.[73]

Transatlantic slave trade and diaspora

 
Bussa, Barbadian slave revolt leader of Igbo descent[74]
 
Edward Blyden, Americo-Liberian educator, writer and politician of Igbo descent[75][76]
 
Paul Robeson, American actor and writer whose father was of Igbo descent[77]
 
Aimé Césaire, Martiniquais poet and politician who claimed Igbo descent[78]

Chambers (2002) argues that many of the slaves taken from the Bight of Biafra across the Middle Passage would have been Igbo.[79] These slaves were usually sold to Europeans by the Aro Confederacy, who kidnapped or bought slaves from Igbo villages in the hinterland.[80] Igbo slaves may have not been victims of slave-raiding wars or expeditions but perhaps debtors or Igbo people who committed within their communities alleged crimes.[81] With the goal for freedom, enslaved Igbo people were known to European planters as being rebellious and having a high rate of suicide to escape slavery.[82][83][84] There is evidence that traders sought Igbo women.[85][86] Igbo women were paired with Coromantee (Akan) men to subdue the men because of the belief that the women were bound to their first-born sons’ birthplace.

It is alleged that European slave traders were fairly well informed about various African ethnicities, leading to slavers targeting certain ethnic groups which plantation owners preferred. Particular desired ethnic groups consequently became fairly concentrated in certain parts of the Americas.[87] The Igbo were dispersed to colonies such as Jamaica,[9] Cuba,[9] Saint-Domingue,[9] Barbados,[88] Colonial America,[89] Belize[90] and Trinidad and Tobago,[91] among others.

Elements of Igbo culture can still be found in these places. For example, in Jamaican Patois, the Igbo word unu, meaning "you" plural, is still used.[92] "Red Ibo" (or "red eboe") describes a black person with fair or "yellowish" skin. This term had originated from the reported prevalence of these skin tones among the Igbo, but eastern Nigerian influences may not be strictly Igbo.[93] The word Bim, a colloquial term for Barbados, was commonly used among enslaved Barbadians (Bajans). This word is said to have derived from bém in the Igbo language meaning 'my place or people', but may have other origins (see: Barbados etymology).[94][95] A section of Belize City was named Eboe Town after its Igbo inhabitants.[96] In the United States, the Igbo were imported to the Chesapeake Bay colonies and states of Maryland and Virginia, where they constituted the largest group of Africans.[97][98] Since the late 20th century, a wave of Nigerian immigrants, mostly English and Igbo-speaking, have settled in Maryland, attracted to its strong professional job market.[99] They were also imported to the southern borders of Georgia and South Carolina considered the low country and where Gulluh culture still preserves African traditions of its ancestors. Today, there is an area called Igbo Landing, where a group of Igbo had tried to drown themselves, rather than become slaves, when they disembarked the slave ship.

Colonial period

The establishment of British colonial rule in present-day Nigeria and increased encounters between the Igbo and other ethnicities near the Niger River led to a deepening sense of a distinct Igbo ethnic identity. The Igbo proved decisive and enthusiastic in their embrace of Christianity and Western-style education.[100][101] Because of the incompatibility of the Igbo decentralized style of government and the centralized system including the appointment of warrant chiefs required for British system of indirect rule, the period colonial rule was marked with numerous conflicts and tension.[70] During the colonial era, the diversity within each of Nigeria's major ethnic groups slowly decreased, and distinctions between the Igbo and other large ethnic groups, such as the Hausa and the Yoruba, became sharper.[102]

The establishment of British colonial rule transformed Igbo society, as portrayed in Chinua Achebe's novel Things Fall Apart. Colonial rule brought about changes in culture, such as the introduction of warrant chiefs as Eze (indigenous rulers) where there were no such monarchies.[103] Christian missionaries introduced aspects of European ideology into Igbo society and culture, sometimes shunning parts of the culture.[104] The rumours that the Igbo women were being assessed for taxation sparked off the 1929 Igbo Women's War in Aba (also known as the 1929 Aba Riots), a massive revolt of women never encountered before in Igbo history.[105]

Aspects of Igbo culture such as construction of houses, education and religion changed following colonialism. The tradition of building houses out of mud walls and thatched roofs ended as the people shifted to materials such as concrete blocks for houses and metal roofs. Roads for vehicles were built. Buildings such as hospitals and schools were erected in many parts of Igboland. Along with these changes, electricity and running water were installed in the early 20th century. With electricity, new technology such as radios and televisions were adopted, and have become commonplace in most Igbo households.[106]

A series of black and white, silent films about the Igbo people made by George Basden in the 1920s and 1930s are held in the British Empire and Commonwealth Collection at Bristol Archives (Ref. 2006/070).[107]

Nigerian Civil War

 
Flag of the Republic of Biafra (1967–1970), sometimes regarded as the ethnic flag of the Igbo[29]

A series of ethnic clashes between Northern Muslims and the Igbo, and other ethnic groups of Eastern Nigeria Region living in Northern Nigeria took place between 1966 and 1967. Elements in the army had assassinated the Nigerian military head of state General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi on 29 July 1966,[108] and peace negotiations failed between the military government that deposed Ironsi and the regional government of Eastern Nigeria at the Aburi Talks in Ghana in 1967.[109] These events led to a regional council of the peoples of Eastern Nigeria deciding that the region should secede and proclaim the Republic of Biafra on May 30, 1967.[110] General Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu made this declaration and became the head of state of the new republic.[111]

The resultant war, which became known as the Nigerian Civil War or the Nigerian-Biafran War, lasted from 6 July 1967 until 15 January 1970, after which the federal government re-absorbed Biafra into Nigeria.[110][112] Several million Eastern Nigerians died from the pogroms against them, such as the 1966 anti-Igbo pogrom where between 10,000 and 30,000 Igbo people were killed.[113][114] Many homes, schools, and hospitals were destroyed in the conflict. The federal government of Nigeria denied Igbo people access to their savings placed in Nigerian banks and provided them with little compensation. The war also led to a great deal of discrimination against the Igbo people at the hands of other ethnic groups.[115]

In their struggle, the people of Biafra earned the respect of figures such as Jean-Paul Sartre and John Lennon, who returned his MBE, partly in protest against British support for the Nigerian government in the Biafran War.[116] Odumegwu-Ojukwu, stated that the three years of freedom allowed his people to become the most civilized and most technologically advanced black people in the world.[115] In July 2007, Odumegwu-Ojukwu renewed calls for the secession of the Biafran state as a sovereign entity.[117]

Recent history (1970 to present)

Some Igbo subgroups, such as the Ikwerre, started dissociating themselves from the larger Igbo population after the war.[118] In the post-war era, people of eastern Nigeria changed the names of both people and places to non-Igbo-sounding words. For instance, the town of Igbo-uzo was anglicized to Ibusa.[119] Because of discrimination, many Igbo had trouble finding employment, and during the early 1970s, the Igbo became one of the poorest ethnic groups in Nigeria.[120][121][122]

Igbo rebuilt their cities by themselves without any contribution from the federal government of Nigeria. This led to the establishment of new factories in southern Nigeria. Many Igbo people eventually took government positions,[123] although many were engaged in private business.[124] Since the early 21st century, there has been a wave of Nigerian Igbo immigration to other African countries, Europe, and the Americas.[125]

Political organization

The 1930s saw the rise of Igbo unions in the cities of Lagos and Port Harcourt. Later, the Ibo Federal Union (renamed the Ibo State Union in 1948) emerged as an umbrella pan-ethnic organization. Headed by Nnamdi Azikiwe, it was closely associated with the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons, which he co-founded with Herbert Macaulay. The aim of the organization was the improvement and advancement (such as in education) of the Igbo and their indigenous land and included an Igbo "national anthem" with a plan for an Igbo bank.[126][127]

In 1978, after Olusegun Obasanjo's military regime lifted the ban on independent political activity, the Ohanaeze Ndigbo organization was formed, an elite umbrella organization which speaks on behalf of the Igbo people.[128][129] Their main concerns are the marginalization of the Igbo people in Nigerian politics and the neglect of indigenous Igbo territory in social amenities and development of infrastructure. Other groups which protest the perceived marginalization of the Igbo people are the Igbo Peoples Congress.[130] Even before the 20th century, there were numerous Igbo unions and organizations existing around the world, such as the Igbo union in Bathurst, Gambia in 1842, founded by a prominent Igbo trader and ex-soldier named Thomas Refell. Another was the union founded by the Igbo community in Freetown, Sierra Leone by 1860, of which Africanus Horton, a surgeon, scientist and soldier, was an active member.[131]

Decades after the Nigerian-Biafran war, the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), a secessionist group, was founded in September 1999 by Ralph Uwazurike for the goal of an independent Igbo state. Since its creation, there have been several conflicts between its members and the Nigerian government, resulting in the death of members.[130][132][133] After the 2015 Nigerian general elections a group known as the Indigenous People of Biafra became the most prominent vocal group for the agitation of the creation of an independent state of Biafra through a radio station named Radio Biafra.[134][135][136] For the promotion of the Igbo language and culture, the Society for Promoting Igbo Language and Culture was founded in 1949 by Frederick Chidozie Ogbalu and has since created a standard dialect for Igbo.[137][138]

Culture

 
Anklet beaten from a solid brass bar of the type once fashionable among Igbo women. Now in the collection of Wolverhampton Art Gallery. The leg-tube extends approx 7 cm each side of the 35 cm disc.[139][140]

Igbo culture includes the various customs, practices and traditions of the people. It comprises archaic practices as well as new concepts added into the Igbo culture either through evolution or outside influences. These customs and traditions include the Igbo people's visual art, use of language, music and dance forms, as well as their attire, cuisine and language dialects. Because of their various subgroups, the variety of their culture is heightened further.

Language and literature

 
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe is the most popular and renowned novel that deals with the Igbo and their traditional life.

The Igbo language was used by John Goldsmith as an example to justify deviating from the classical linear model of phonology as laid out in The Sound Pattern of English. It is written in the Roman script as well as the Nsibidi formalized ideograms, which is used by the Ekpe society and Okonko fraternity but is no longer widely used.[141] Nsibidi ideography existed among the Igbo before the 16th century but died out after it became popular among secret societies, who made Nsibidi a secret form of communication.[142] Igbo language is difficult because of the huge number of dialects, its richness in prefixes and suffixes and its heavy intonation.[143] Igbo is a tonal language, and there are hundreds of different Igbo dialects and Igboid languages, such as the Ikwerre and Ekpeye languages.[21] In 1939, Dr. Ida C. Ward led a research expedition on Igbo dialects which could possibly be used as a basis of a standard Igbo dialect, also known as Central Igbo. This dialect included that of the Owerri and Umuahia groups, including the Ohuhu dialect. This proposed dialect was gradually accepted by missionaries, writers, publishers, and Cambridge University.[144]

In 1789, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano was published in London, England, written by Olaudah Equiano, a former slave. The book features 79 Igbo words.[145] In the first and second chapter, the book illustrates various aspects of Igbo life based on Olaudah Equiano's life in his hometown of Essaka.[146] Although the book was one of the first books published to include Igbo material, Geschichte der Mission der evangelischen Brüder auf den caraibischen Inseln St. Thomas, St. Croix und S. Jan (German: History of the Evangelical Brothers' Mission in the Caribbean Islands St. Thomas, St. Croix and St. John),[147] published in 1777, written by the German missionary C. G. A. Oldendorp, was the first book to publish any Igbo material.[145]

Perhaps the most popular and renowned novel that deals with the Igbo and their traditional life was the 1959 book by Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart. The novel concerns the influence of British colonial rule and Christian missionaries on a traditional Igbo community during an unspecified time in the late nineteenth or early 20th century. Most of the novel is set in Iguedo, one of nine villages on the lower Niger.[148]

Performing arts

The Igbo people have a musical style into which they incorporate various percussion instruments: the udu, which is essentially designed from a clay jug; an ekwe, which is formed from a hollowed log; and the ogene, a hand bell designed from forged iron. Other instruments include opi, a wind instrument similar to the flute, igba, and ichaka.[149] Another popular musical form among the Igbo is highlife. A widely popular musical genre in West Africa, highlife is a fusion of jazz and traditional music. The modern Igbo highlife is seen in the works of Dr Sir Warrior, Oliver De Coque, Bright Chimezie and Chief Osita Osadebe, who were among the most popular Igbo highlife musicians of the 20th century.[150]

Masking is one of the most common art styles in Igboland and is linked strongly with Igbo traditional music. A mask can be made of wood or fabric, along with other materials including iron and vegetation.[151] Masks have a variety of uses, mainly in social satires, religious rituals, secret society initiations (such as the Ekpe society) and public festivals, which now include Christmas time celebrations.[152] Some of the best known include the Agbogho Mmuo (Igbo: Maiden spirit) masks of the northern Igbo which represent the spirits of deceased maidens and their mothers with masks symbolizing beauty.[151] Other impressive masks include northern Igbo Ijele masks. At 12 feet (3.7 m) high, Ijele masks consist of platforms 6 feet (1.8 m) in diameter,[151] supporting figures made of coloured cloth and representing everyday scenes with objects such as leopards. Ijele masks are used for honoring the dead to ensure the continuity and well-being of the community and are only seen on rare occasions such as the death of a prominent figure in the community.[151]

There are many Igbo dance styles, but perhaps, Igbo dance is best known for its atilogwu dance troops. These performances include acrobatic stunts such as high kicks and cartwheels, with each rhythm from the indigenous instruments indicating a movement to the dancer.[153] The Egedege Dance is an Igbo traditional Royal-styled cultural dance of South Eastern Nigeria.[154]

Visual art and architecture

There is such variety among Igbo groups that it is not possible to define a general Igbo art style.[151] Bronze castings found in the town of Igbo Ukwu from the 9th century, constitute the earliest sculptures discovered in Igboland. Here, the grave of a well-established man of distinction and a ritual store, dating from the 9th century AD, contained both chased copper objects and elaborate castings of leaded bronze.[40] Along with these bronzes were 165,000 glass beads said to have originated in Egypt, Venice and India.[155] Some popular Igbo art styles include Uli designs. The majority of the Igbo carve and use masks, although the function of masks vary by community.[156]

 
Thatching with palm leaf mats, early 20th century
 
Traditional Igbo house/room from the Anambra area, 1967

Igbo art is noted for Mbari architecture.[156] Mbari houses of the Owerri-Igbo are large opened-sided square planned shelters. They house many life-sized, painted figures (sculpted in mud to appease the Alusi (deity) and Ala, the earth goddess, with other deities of thunder and water).[157] Other sculptures are of officials, craftsmen, foreigners (mainly Europeans), animals, legendary creatures and ancestors.[157] Mbari houses take years to build in what is regarded as a sacred process. When new ones are constructed, old ones are left to decay.[157] Everyday houses were made of mud with thatched roofs and bare earth floors with carved design doors. Some houses had elaborate designs both in the interior and exterior. These designs could include Uli art designed by Igbo women.[158]

One of the unique structures of Igbo culture was the Nsude Pyramids, at the town of Nsude, in Abaja, northern Igboland. Ten pyramidal structures were built of clay/mud. The first base section was 60 ft (18 m) in circumference and 3 ft (0.91 m) in height. The next stack was 45 ft (14 m) in circumference. Circular stacks continued, until it reached the top. The structures were temples for the god Ala/Uto, who was believed to reside at the top. A stick was placed at the top to represent the god's residence. The structures were laid in groups of five parallel to each other. Because it was built of clay/mud like the Deffufa of Nubia, time has taken its toll requiring periodic reconstruction.[159]

Religion and rites of passage

 
Wooden sculpture of Ikenga, an Alusi, in the Musée du Quai Branly

The Igbo traditional religion is known as Odinani.[41] The supreme deity is called Chukwu ("great spirit"); Chukwu created the world and everything in it and is associated with all things in the universe. They believe the cosmos is divided into four complex parts: creation, known as Okike; supernatural forces or deities called Alusi; Mmuo, which are gods/spirits; and Uwa, the earthly world.[160]

Chukwu is the supreme deity in Odinani and considered the creator deity, and the Igbo people believe that all things ultimately came from him,[161] and that everything on earth, heaven and the rest of the spiritual world is under his supervision.[162] Linguistic studies of the Igbo language suggest that the name Chukwu is a compound of the Igbo words Chi (spiritual being) and Ukwu (great in size).[163] Each individual is born with a spiritual guide/guardian angel or guardian principle, "Chi", unique to each individual and the individual's fate and destiny is determined by their Chi. Thus the Igbos say that the siblings may come of the same mother but no two people have the same Chi and thus different destinies for all. Alusi, alternatively known as Arusi or Arushi (depending on dialect), are minor deities that are worshiped and served in Odinani. There are many different Alusi, each with its own purpose. When an individual deity is no longer needed, or becomes too violent, it is discarded.[164]

The Igbo have traditionally believed in the possibility for reincarnation of individuals within the family. People are believed to be able to reincarnate into families that they were part of while alive. Before a relative dies, it is said that the soon to be deceased relative sometimes give clues of who they will reincarnate as in the family. Once a child is born, he or she is believed to give signs of who they have reincarnated from. This can be through behavior, physical traits and statements by the child. A diviner can help in detecting who the child has reincarnated from. It is considered an insult if a male is said to have reincarnated as a female.[165]

Children are not allowed to call elders by their names without using an honorific (as this is considered disrespectful). As a sign of respect, children are required to greet elders when seeing them for the first time in the day. Children usually add the Igbo honorifics Mazi or Dede before an elder's name when addressing them.[166][167]

Christianity

Christianity was introduced to the Igbo people through European colonization in 1857. The Igbo people were hesitant to convert to Christianity initially because they believed the gods of their native religion would bring disaster to them. However, Christianity gradually gained converts in Igbo land, mainly through the work of church agents. These men built schools and focused on persuading the youth to adopt Christian values.[168] The Igbo people today are known as the ethnic group that has adopted Christianity the most in all of Africa.[169]

 
The Holy Ghost depicted as a dove on a relief in Onitsha

The Igbo people were unaffected by the Islamic jihad waged in Nigeria in the 19th century, but a small minority converted to Islam in the 20th century.[170] There is also a small population of Igbo Jews,[171] some of whom merely identifying as Jews, while others having converted to Judaism. These draw their inspiration from Olaudah Equiano, a Christian-educated freed slave who remarked in his autobiography of 1789 on "the strong analogy which... appears to prevail in the manners and customs of my countrymen and those of the Jews, before they reached the Land of Promise, and particularly the patriarchs while they were yet in that pastoral state which is described in Genesis—an analogy, which alone would induce me to think that the one people had sprung from the other." Equiano's speculation has given rise to a great debate on the origins of the Igbo.

Burials

After a death, the body of a prominent member of society is placed on a stool in a sitting posture and is clothed in the deceased's finest garments. Animal sacrifices may be offered and the dead person is well perfumed.[172] Burial usually follows within 24 hours of death. In the 21st century, the head of a home is usually buried within the compound of his residence.[167] Different types of deaths warrant different types of burials. This is determined by an individual's age, gender and status in society. Children are buried in hiding and out of sight; their burials usually take place in the early mornings and late nights. A simple untitled man is buried in front of his house and a simple mother is buried in her place of origin: in a garden or a farm-area that belonged to her father.[173] In the 21st century, a majority of the Igbo bury their dead in the western way, although it is not uncommon for burials to be practiced in the traditional Igbo ways.[174]

Marriage

The process of marrying usually involves asking the young woman's consent, introducing the woman to the man's family and the same for the man to the woman's family, testing the bride's character, checking the woman's family background, and paying the brides' wealth.[175] Typically speaking, bride wealth is more symbolic. Nonetheless, kola nuts, wine, goats, and chickens, among other things, are listed in the proposal, as well. Negotiating the bride wealth can also take more than one day, giving both parties time for a ceremonial feast.[176] Marriages were sometimes arranged from birth through negotiation of the two families.[177] However, after a series of interviews conducted in the 1990s with 250 Igbo women, it was found that 94.4% of that sample population disapproved of arranged marriages.[178]

 
A modern Igbo wedding, Nnewi, Nigeria

In the past, many Igbo men practiced polygamy. The polygamous family is made up of a man and his wives and all their children.[167] Men sometimes married multiple wives for economic reasons so as to have more people in the family, including children, to help on farms.[179] Christian and civil marriages have changed the Igbo family since colonization. Igbo people now tend to enter monogamous courtships and create nuclear families, mainly because of Western influence.[180] Some Western marriage customs, such as weddings in a church, take place either before or after the lgbo cultural traditional marriage.[181]

Attire

Traditionally, the attire of the Igbo generally consisted of little clothing, as the purpose of clothing originally was simply to conceal private parts. Because of this purpose, children were often nude from birth until the beginning of their adolescence—the time they were considered to have something to hide.[182] Uli body art was used to decorate both men and women in the form of lines forming patterns and shapes on the body.[183]

 
Men wearing contemporary Isiagu with the ceremonial Igbo men's hat okpu agu

Women traditionally carry their babies on their backs with a strip of clothing binding the two with a knot at her chest, a practice used by many ethnic groups across Africa.[184] This method has been modernized in the form of the child carrier. Maidens usually wore a short wrapper with beads around their waist and other ornaments such as necklaces and beads.[184] Both men and women wore wrappers.[183][184] Men would wear loincloths that wrapped round their waist and between their legs to be fastened at their back, the type of clothing appropriate for the intense heat as well as jobs such as farming.[183][184]

In Olaudah Equiano's narrative, Equiano describes fragrances that were used by the Igbo in the community of Essaka:

Our principal luxury is in perfumes; one sort of these is an odoriferous wood of delicious fragrance: the other a kind of earth; a small portion of which thrown into the fire diffuses a most powerful odor. We beat this wood into powder, and mix it with palm oil; with which both men and women perfume themselves.

Olaudah Equiano[185]

As colonialism became more influential, the Igbo adapted their dress customs.[186] Clothing worn before colonialism became "traditional" and worn on cultural occasions. Modern Igbo traditional attire, for men, is generally made up of the Isiagu top, which resembles the Dashiki worn by other African groups. Isiagu (or ishi agu) is usually patterned with lions' heads embroidered over the clothing and can be a plain colour.[187] It is worn with trousers and can be worn with either a ceremonial title holders hat or with the conventional striped men's hat known as okpu agu.[188] For women, a puffed sleeve blouse along with two wrappers and a head tie are worn.[184][186]

Cuisine

 
Yam porridge (or yam pottage) is an Igbo dish known as awaị.[189]

The yam is very important to the Igbo as the staple crop. It is known for its resiliency (a yam can remain fully edible for six months without refrigeration), but it can also be very versatile in terms of its incorporation into different dishes.[190] Yams can be fried, roasted, boiled, or made into a potage with tomatoes and herbs. The cultivation of yams is most commonly carried out by men, as women tend to focus on other crops.[191]

There are celebrations such as the New Yam festival (Igbo: Iwaji) which are held for the harvesting of the yam.[192] During the festival, yam is eaten throughout the communities as celebration. Yam tubers are shown off by individuals as a sign of success and wealth.[193] Rice has replaced yam for many ceremonial occasions. Other indigenous foods include cassava, garri, maize and plantains. Soups or stews are included in a typical meal, prepared with a vegetable (such as okra, of which the word derives from the Igbo language, okwuru)[194] to which pieces of fish, chicken, beef, or goat meat are added. Jollof rice is popular throughout West Africa, and palm wine is a popular alcoholic traditional beverage.[195][196]

Demographics

Nigeria

The Igbo people are natively found in Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu, Imo, Delta, and Rivers State.[197] The Igbo language is predominant throughout these areas, although Nigerian English (the national language) is spoken as well. Prominent towns and cities in Igboland include Aba, Enugu, Nnewi, Onitsha, Owerri, Abakaliki, Asaba, and Port Harcourt among others.[198] A significant number of Igbo people have migrated to other parts of Nigeria, such as the cities of Lagos, Abuja, and Kano.[106]

The official data on the population of ethnic groups in Nigeria continues to be controversial as a minority of these groups have claimed that the government deliberately deflates the official population of one group, to give the other numerical superiority.[199][200][201] The CIA World Factbook puts the Igbo population of Nigeria at 18% of a total population of 230 million, or approximately 42 million people.[1]

Southeastern Nigeria, which is inhabited primarily by the Igbo, is the most densely populated area in Nigeria and possibly in all of Africa.[202][203] Most ethnicities that inhabit southeastern Nigeria, such as the closely related Efik and Ibibio people, are sometimes regarded as Igbo by other Nigerians and ethnographers who are not well informed about the southeast.[204][205]

Diaspora

 
Igbo people celebrating the New Yam festival in Dublin, Ireland

After the Nigerian Civil War, many Igbo people emigrated out of the indigenous Igbo homeland in southeastern Nigeria because of an absence of federal presence, lack of jobs, and poor infrastructure.[206] In recent decades the Igbo region of Nigeria has suffered from frequent environmental damage mainly related to the oil industry.[207] Igbo people have moved to both Nigerian cities such as Lagos and Abuja, and other countries such as Gabon,[208] Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States. Prominent Igbo communities outside Africa include those of London in the United Kingdom and Houston, Baltimore, Chicago, Detroit, Seattle, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., in the United States.[209][210][211][212]

About 21,000 Igbo people were recorded in Ghana in 1969,[213] while as small number (8,680) lived on Bioko island in 2002.[214] Small numbers live in Japan, making up the majority of the Nigerian immigrant population based in Tokyo.[215][216] A large amount of the African population of Guangdong, China, is Igbo-speaking and are mainly businessmen trading between factories in China and southeastern Nigeria, particularly Enugu.[217] Other Igbo immigrants are found in the Americas (Igbo Canadian, Igbo American and elsewhere.[218]

In the 2003 PBS programme African American Lives, Bishop T. D. Jakes had his DNA analyzed; his Y chromosome showed[dubious ] that he is descended from the Igbo.[219] American actors Forest Whitaker, Paul Robeson, and Blair Underwood have traced their genealogy back to the Igbo people.[220][221][222]

See also

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Further reading

External links

  • Igboguide.org – Insight into Igbo Culture and Language
  • Wedding Tradition In Igboland

igbo, people, ndigbo, redirects, here, igbo, organization, ohanaeze, ndigbo, confused, with, igbomina, egba, people, english, also, also, spelled, formerly, also, iboe, eboe, eboans, heebo, natively, dị, Ìgbò, ethnic, group, nigeria, they, primarily, found, ab. Ndigbo redirects here For the pan Igbo organization see Ohanaeze Ndigbo Not to be confused with the Igbomina or the Egba people The Igbo people English ˈ iː b oʊ EE boh 3 4 US also ˈ ɪ ɡ b oʊ IG boh 5 6 also spelled Ibo 7 8 and formerly also Iboe Ebo Eboe 9 Eboans 10 Heebo 11 natively Ṇ dị Igbo are an ethnic group in Nigeria They are primarily found in Abia Anambra Ebonyi Enugu and Imo States A sizable Igbo population is also found in Delta and Rivers States 12 Large ethnic Igbo populations are found in Cameroon 13 Gabon and Equatorial Guinea 14 15 as well as outside Africa There has been much speculation about the origins of the Igbo people 16 which are largely unknown 17 Geographically the Igbo homeland is divided into two unequal sections by the Niger River an eastern which is the larger of the two and a western section 18 19 The Igbo people are one of the largest ethnic groups in Africa 20 Igbo peopleṆ dị IgboIgbo familyTotal population44 millionRegions with significant populations Nigeria 41 552 000 18 of total population 1 LanguagesIgbo and Igboid languages EnglishReligionChristianity 2 indigenous Igbo religion and belief systemsRelated ethnic groupsIbibio Efik Annang Bahumono Ogoni Idoma Igala Edo Ijaw Ogoja Krio more remotely the YEAI group within Volta NigerThe Igbo language 16 is part of the Niger Congo language family Its regional dialects are somewhat mutually intelligible amidst the larger Igboid cluster 21 The Igbo homeland straddles the lower Niger River east and south of the Edoid and Idomoid groups and west of the Ibibioid Cross River cluster Before the period of British colonial rule in the 20th century the Igbo were politically fragmented by the centralized chiefdoms of Nri Aro Confederacy Agbor and Onitsha 22 Frederick Lugard introduced the Eze system of warrant chiefs 23 Unaffected by the Fulani War and the resulting spread of Islam in Nigeria in the 19th century they became overwhelmingly Christian under colonization In the wake of decolonisation the Igbo developed a strong sense of ethnic identity 24 During the Nigerian Civil War of 1967 1970 the Igbo territories seceded as the short lived Republic of Biafra 25 The Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra and the Indigenous People of Biafra two sectarian organizations formed after 1999 continue a non violent struggle for an independent Igbo state 26 Contents 1 Definition and subgroups 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Nri Kingdom 2 3 Traditional society 2 4 Transatlantic slave trade and diaspora 2 5 Colonial period 2 6 Nigerian Civil War 2 7 Recent history 1970 to present 3 Political organization 4 Culture 4 1 Language and literature 4 2 Performing arts 4 3 Visual art and architecture 4 4 Religion and rites of passage 4 4 1 Christianity 4 4 2 Burials 4 4 3 Marriage 4 5 Attire 4 6 Cuisine 5 Demographics 5 1 Nigeria 5 2 Diaspora 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDefinition and subgroups Igbo as an ethnic identity developed comparatively recently in the context of decolonisation and the Nigerian Civil War The various Igbo speaking communities were historically fragmented and decentralised 27 in the opinion of Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe Igbo identity should be placed somewhere between a tribe and a nation 28 Since the defeat of the Republic of Biafra in 1970 the Igbo are sometimes classed as a stateless nation 29 HistoryPrehistory Further information Niger Congo homeland The Igboid languages form a cluster within the Volta Niger phylum most likely grouped with Yoruboid and Edoid 30 The greatest differentiation within the Igboid group is between the Ekpeye and the rest Williamson 2002 argues that based on this pattern proto Igboid migration would have moved down the Niger from a more northern area in the savannah and first settled close to the delta with a secondary center of Igbo proper more to the north in the Awka area 31 Genetic studies have shown the Igbo to cluster most closely with other Niger Congo speaking peoples 32 The predominant Y chromosmoal haplogroup is E1b1a1 M2 33 Pottery dated from around 3 000 2 500 BC 34 showing similarities with later Igbo work was found at Nsukka and Afikpo regions of Igboland in the 1970s 35 along with pottery and tools at nearby Ibagwa the traditions of the Umueri clan have as their source the Anambra valley In the 1970s the Owerri Okigwe Orlu Awgu Udi and Awka divisions were determined to constitute an Igbo heartland from the linguistic and cultural evidence 36 In the Nsukka region of Igboland evidence of early iron smelting has been excavated dating to 750 BC at the site of Opi and 2 000 BC at the site of Lejja 37 38 39 Nri Kingdom Main article Kingdom of Nri Bronze from the ninth century town of Igbo Ukwu now at the British Museum 40 The Nri people of Igbo land have a creation myth which is one of the many creation myths that exist in various parts of Igbo land The Nri and Aguleri people are in the territory of the Umueri clan who trace their lineages back to the patriarchal king figure Eri 41 Eri s origins are unclear though he has been described as a sky being sent by Chukwu God 41 42 He has been characterized as having first given societal order to the people of Anambra 42 The historian Elizabeth Allo Isichei says Nri and Aguleri and part of the Umueri clan are a cluster of Igbo village groups which traces its origins to a sky being called Eri 43 Archaeological evidence suggests that Nri influence in Igboland may go back as far as the 9th century 44 and royal burials have been unearthed dating to at least the 10th century Eri the god like founder of Nri is believed to have settled the region around 948 with other related Igbo cultures following after in the 13th century 45 The first Eze Nri King of Nri Ifikuanim followed directly after him According to Igbo oral tradition his reign started in 1043 46 At least one historian puts Ifikuanim s reign much later around 1225 AD 47 Each king traces his origin back to the founding ancestor Eri Each king is a ritual reproduction of Eri The initiation rite of a new king shows that the ritual process of becoming Ezenri Nri priest king follows closely the path traced by the hero in establishing the Nri kingdom E Elochukwu Uzukwu 48 An Igbo man with facial scarifications known as ichi early 20th century 49 The Kingdom of Nri was a religio polity a sort of theocratic state that developed in the central heartland of the Igbo region 45 The Nri had seven types of taboos which included human such as the birth of twins animal such as killing or eating of pythons 50 object temporal behavioral speech and place taboos 51 The rules regarding these taboos were used to educate and govern Nri s subjects This meant that while certain Igbo may have lived under different formal administration all followers of the Igbo religion had to abide by the rules of the faith and obey its representative on earth the Eze Nri 51 52 Traditional society Traditional Igbo political organization was based on a quasi democratic republican system of government In tight knit communities this system guaranteed its citizens equality as opposed to a feudalist system with a king ruling over subjects 53 This government system was witnessed by the Portuguese who first arrived and met with the Igbo people in the 15th century 54 With the exception of a few notable Igbo towns such as Onitsha which had kings called Obi and places like the Nri Kingdom and Arochukwu which had priest kings Igbo communities and area governments were overwhelmingly ruled by a republican consultative assembly of the common people 53 Communities were usually governed and administered by a council of elders 55 Three Igbo women in the early 20th century 56 Although title holders were respected because of their accomplishments and capabilities they were not revered as kings but often performed special functions given to them by such assemblies This way of governing was different from most other communities of Western Africa and only shared by the Ewe of Ghana Umunna are a form of patrilineage maintained by the Igbo Law starts with the Umunna which is a male line of descent from a founding ancestor who the line is sometimes named after with groups of compounds containing closely related families headed by the eldest male member The Umunna can be seen as the most important pillar of Igbo society 57 58 59 It was also a culture in which gender was re constructed and performed according to social need The flexibility of Igbo gender construction meant that gender was separate from biological sex Daughters could become sons and consequently male 60 Mathematics in indigenous Igbo society is evident in their calendar banking system and strategic betting game called Okwe 61 In their indigenous calendar a week had four days a month consisted of seven weeks and 13 months made a year In the last month an extra day was added 62 63 This calendar is still used in indigenous Igbo villages and towns to determine market days 64 They settled law matters via mediators and their banking system for loans and savings called Isusu is also still used 65 The Igbo new year starting with the month Ọ nwạ M bụ Igbo First Moon occurs on the third week of February 66 although the traditional start of the year for many Igbo communities is around springtime in Ọ nwạ Agwụ June 67 68 Used as a ceremonial script by secret societies the Igbo have an indigenous ideographic set of symbols called Nsibidi originating from the neighboring Ejagham people 69 Igbo people produced bronzes from as early as the 9th century some of which have been found at the town of Igbo Ukwu Anambra State 40 A system of indentured servitude existed among the Igbo before and after the encounter with Europeans 70 71 Indentured service in Igbo areas was described by Olaudah Equiano in his memoir He describes the conditions of the slaves in his community of Essaka and points out the difference between the treatment of slaves under the Igbo in Essaka and those in the custody of Europeans in West Indies but how different was their condition from that of the slaves in the West Indies With us they do no more work than other members of the community even their master except that they were not permitted to eat with those free born and there was scarce any other difference between them Some of these slaves have slaves under them as their own property for their own use 71 The Niger coast was the scene of contact between European merchants and the local African kingdoms beginning in 1n 1434 with the arrival of the Portuguese Portuguese slave traders established factories and started to purchase enslaved Africans from the region transporting them across the Atlantic to their colonies in the Americas in particular Brazil Slave traders from other European nations soon followed and the region became a vital hub of the Atlantic slave trade 72 European involvement in the Atlantic slave trade was gradually outlawed during the 19th century and as such Europeans in the region started to shift their focus away from trade and into colonialism 17 Prior to European contact Igbo trade routes stretched as far as Mecca Medina and Jeddah on the African continent and the Middle East 73 Transatlantic slave trade and diaspora Main article The Igbo in the Atlantic slave trade Bussa Barbadian slave revolt leader of Igbo descent 74 Edward Blyden Americo Liberian educator writer and politician of Igbo descent 75 76 Paul Robeson American actor and writer whose father was of Igbo descent 77 Aime Cesaire Martiniquais poet and politician who claimed Igbo descent 78 Chambers 2002 argues that many of the slaves taken from the Bight of Biafra across the Middle Passage would have been Igbo 79 These slaves were usually sold to Europeans by the Aro Confederacy who kidnapped or bought slaves from Igbo villages in the hinterland 80 Igbo slaves may have not been victims of slave raiding wars or expeditions but perhaps debtors or Igbo people who committed within their communities alleged crimes 81 With the goal for freedom enslaved Igbo people were known to European planters as being rebellious and having a high rate of suicide to escape slavery 82 83 84 There is evidence that traders sought Igbo women 85 86 Igbo women were paired with Coromantee Akan men to subdue the men because of the belief that the women were bound to their first born sons birthplace It is alleged that European slave traders were fairly well informed about various African ethnicities leading to slavers targeting certain ethnic groups which plantation owners preferred Particular desired ethnic groups consequently became fairly concentrated in certain parts of the Americas 87 The Igbo were dispersed to colonies such as Jamaica 9 Cuba 9 Saint Domingue 9 Barbados 88 Colonial America 89 Belize 90 and Trinidad and Tobago 91 among others Elements of Igbo culture can still be found in these places For example in Jamaican Patois the Igbo word unu meaning you plural is still used 92 Red Ibo or red eboe describes a black person with fair or yellowish skin This term had originated from the reported prevalence of these skin tones among the Igbo but eastern Nigerian influences may not be strictly Igbo 93 The word Bim a colloquial term for Barbados was commonly used among enslaved Barbadians Bajans This word is said to have derived from bem in the Igbo language meaning my place or people but may have other origins see Barbados etymology 94 95 A section of Belize City was named Eboe Town after its Igbo inhabitants 96 In the United States the Igbo were imported to the Chesapeake Bay colonies and states of Maryland and Virginia where they constituted the largest group of Africans 97 98 Since the late 20th century a wave of Nigerian immigrants mostly English and Igbo speaking have settled in Maryland attracted to its strong professional job market 99 They were also imported to the southern borders of Georgia and South Carolina considered the low country and where Gulluh culture still preserves African traditions of its ancestors Today there is an area called Igbo Landing where a group of Igbo had tried to drown themselves rather than become slaves when they disembarked the slave ship Colonial period Main article Colonial Nigeria The establishment of British colonial rule in present day Nigeria and increased encounters between the Igbo and other ethnicities near the Niger River led to a deepening sense of a distinct Igbo ethnic identity The Igbo proved decisive and enthusiastic in their embrace of Christianity and Western style education 100 101 Because of the incompatibility of the Igbo decentralized style of government and the centralized system including the appointment of warrant chiefs required for British system of indirect rule the period colonial rule was marked with numerous conflicts and tension 70 During the colonial era the diversity within each of Nigeria s major ethnic groups slowly decreased and distinctions between the Igbo and other large ethnic groups such as the Hausa and the Yoruba became sharper 102 The establishment of British colonial rule transformed Igbo society as portrayed in Chinua Achebe s novel Things Fall Apart Colonial rule brought about changes in culture such as the introduction of warrant chiefs as Eze indigenous rulers where there were no such monarchies 103 Christian missionaries introduced aspects of European ideology into Igbo society and culture sometimes shunning parts of the culture 104 The rumours that the Igbo women were being assessed for taxation sparked off the 1929 Igbo Women s War in Aba also known as the 1929 Aba Riots a massive revolt of women never encountered before in Igbo history 105 Aspects of Igbo culture such as construction of houses education and religion changed following colonialism The tradition of building houses out of mud walls and thatched roofs ended as the people shifted to materials such as concrete blocks for houses and metal roofs Roads for vehicles were built Buildings such as hospitals and schools were erected in many parts of Igboland Along with these changes electricity and running water were installed in the early 20th century With electricity new technology such as radios and televisions were adopted and have become commonplace in most Igbo households 106 A series of black and white silent films about the Igbo people made by George Basden in the 1920s and 1930s are held in the British Empire and Commonwealth Collection at Bristol Archives Ref 2006 070 107 Nigerian Civil War Flag of the Republic of Biafra 1967 1970 sometimes regarded as the ethnic flag of the Igbo 29 A series of ethnic clashes between Northern Muslims and the Igbo and other ethnic groups of Eastern Nigeria Region living in Northern Nigeria took place between 1966 and 1967 Elements in the army had assassinated the Nigerian military head of state General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi on 29 July 1966 108 and peace negotiations failed between the military government that deposed Ironsi and the regional government of Eastern Nigeria at the Aburi Talks in Ghana in 1967 109 These events led to a regional council of the peoples of Eastern Nigeria deciding that the region should secede and proclaim the Republic of Biafra on May 30 1967 110 General Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu made this declaration and became the head of state of the new republic 111 The resultant war which became known as the Nigerian Civil War or the Nigerian Biafran War lasted from 6 July 1967 until 15 January 1970 after which the federal government re absorbed Biafra into Nigeria 110 112 Several million Eastern Nigerians died from the pogroms against them such as the 1966 anti Igbo pogrom where between 10 000 and 30 000 Igbo people were killed 113 114 Many homes schools and hospitals were destroyed in the conflict The federal government of Nigeria denied Igbo people access to their savings placed in Nigerian banks and provided them with little compensation The war also led to a great deal of discrimination against the Igbo people at the hands of other ethnic groups 115 In their struggle the people of Biafra earned the respect of figures such as Jean Paul Sartre and John Lennon who returned his MBE partly in protest against British support for the Nigerian government in the Biafran War 116 Odumegwu Ojukwu stated that the three years of freedom allowed his people to become the most civilized and most technologically advanced black people in the world 115 In July 2007 Odumegwu Ojukwu renewed calls for the secession of the Biafran state as a sovereign entity 117 Recent history 1970 to present Some Igbo subgroups such as the Ikwerre started dissociating themselves from the larger Igbo population after the war 118 In the post war era people of eastern Nigeria changed the names of both people and places to non Igbo sounding words For instance the town of Igbo uzo was anglicized to Ibusa 119 Because of discrimination many Igbo had trouble finding employment and during the early 1970s the Igbo became one of the poorest ethnic groups in Nigeria 120 121 122 Igbo rebuilt their cities by themselves without any contribution from the federal government of Nigeria This led to the establishment of new factories in southern Nigeria Many Igbo people eventually took government positions 123 although many were engaged in private business 124 Since the early 21st century there has been a wave of Nigerian Igbo immigration to other African countries Europe and the Americas 125 Political organizationThe 1930s saw the rise of Igbo unions in the cities of Lagos and Port Harcourt Later the Ibo Federal Union renamed the Ibo State Union in 1948 emerged as an umbrella pan ethnic organization Headed by Nnamdi Azikiwe it was closely associated with the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons which he co founded with Herbert Macaulay The aim of the organization was the improvement and advancement such as in education of the Igbo and their indigenous land and included an Igbo national anthem with a plan for an Igbo bank 126 127 In 1978 after Olusegun Obasanjo s military regime lifted the ban on independent political activity the Ohanaeze Ndigbo organization was formed an elite umbrella organization which speaks on behalf of the Igbo people 128 129 Their main concerns are the marginalization of the Igbo people in Nigerian politics and the neglect of indigenous Igbo territory in social amenities and development of infrastructure Other groups which protest the perceived marginalization of the Igbo people are the Igbo Peoples Congress 130 Even before the 20th century there were numerous Igbo unions and organizations existing around the world such as the Igbo union in Bathurst Gambia in 1842 founded by a prominent Igbo trader and ex soldier named Thomas Refell Another was the union founded by the Igbo community in Freetown Sierra Leone by 1860 of which Africanus Horton a surgeon scientist and soldier was an active member 131 Decades after the Nigerian Biafran war the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra MASSOB a secessionist group was founded in September 1999 by Ralph Uwazurike for the goal of an independent Igbo state Since its creation there have been several conflicts between its members and the Nigerian government resulting in the death of members 130 132 133 After the 2015 Nigerian general elections a group known as the Indigenous People of Biafra became the most prominent vocal group for the agitation of the creation of an independent state of Biafra through a radio station named Radio Biafra 134 135 136 For the promotion of the Igbo language and culture the Society for Promoting Igbo Language and Culture was founded in 1949 by Frederick Chidozie Ogbalu and has since created a standard dialect for Igbo 137 138 Culture Anklet beaten from a solid brass bar of the type once fashionable among Igbo women Now in the collection of Wolverhampton Art Gallery The leg tube extends approx 7 cm each side of the 35 cm disc 139 140 Igbo culture includes the various customs practices and traditions of the people It comprises archaic practices as well as new concepts added into the Igbo culture either through evolution or outside influences These customs and traditions include the Igbo people s visual art use of language music and dance forms as well as their attire cuisine and language dialects Because of their various subgroups the variety of their culture is heightened further Language and literature Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe is the most popular and renowned novel that deals with the Igbo and their traditional life The Igbo language was used by John Goldsmith as an example to justify deviating from the classical linear model of phonology as laid out in The Sound Pattern of English It is written in the Roman script as well as the Nsibidi formalized ideograms which is used by the Ekpe society and Okonko fraternity but is no longer widely used 141 Nsibidi ideography existed among the Igbo before the 16th century but died out after it became popular among secret societies who made Nsibidi a secret form of communication 142 Igbo language is difficult because of the huge number of dialects its richness in prefixes and suffixes and its heavy intonation 143 Igbo is a tonal language and there are hundreds of different Igbo dialects and Igboid languages such as the Ikwerre and Ekpeye languages 21 In 1939 Dr Ida C Ward led a research expedition on Igbo dialects which could possibly be used as a basis of a standard Igbo dialect also known as Central Igbo This dialect included that of the Owerri and Umuahia groups including the Ohuhu dialect This proposed dialect was gradually accepted by missionaries writers publishers and Cambridge University 144 In 1789 The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano was published in London England written by Olaudah Equiano a former slave The book features 79 Igbo words 145 In the first and second chapter the book illustrates various aspects of Igbo life based on Olaudah Equiano s life in his hometown of Essaka 146 Although the book was one of the first books published to include Igbo material Geschichte der Mission der evangelischen Bruder auf den caraibischen Inseln St Thomas St Croix und S Jan German History of the Evangelical Brothers Mission in the Caribbean Islands St Thomas St Croix and St John 147 published in 1777 written by the German missionary C G A Oldendorp was the first book to publish any Igbo material 145 Perhaps the most popular and renowned novel that deals with the Igbo and their traditional life was the 1959 book by Chinua Achebe Things Fall Apart The novel concerns the influence of British colonial rule and Christian missionaries on a traditional Igbo community during an unspecified time in the late nineteenth or early 20th century Most of the novel is set in Iguedo one of nine villages on the lower Niger 148 Performing arts Further information Igbo music The Igbo people have a musical style into which they incorporate various percussion instruments the udu which is essentially designed from a clay jug an ekwe which is formed from a hollowed log and the ogene a hand bell designed from forged iron Other instruments include opi a wind instrument similar to the flute igba and ichaka 149 Another popular musical form among the Igbo is highlife A widely popular musical genre in West Africa highlife is a fusion of jazz and traditional music The modern Igbo highlife is seen in the works of Dr Sir Warrior Oliver De Coque Bright Chimezie and Chief Osita Osadebe who were among the most popular Igbo highlife musicians of the 20th century 150 Masking is one of the most common art styles in Igboland and is linked strongly with Igbo traditional music A mask can be made of wood or fabric along with other materials including iron and vegetation 151 Masks have a variety of uses mainly in social satires religious rituals secret society initiations such as the Ekpe society and public festivals which now include Christmas time celebrations 152 Some of the best known include the Agbogho Mmuo Igbo Maiden spirit masks of the northern Igbo which represent the spirits of deceased maidens and their mothers with masks symbolizing beauty 151 Other impressive masks include northern Igbo Ijele masks At 12 feet 3 7 m high Ijele masks consist of platforms 6 feet 1 8 m in diameter 151 supporting figures made of coloured cloth and representing everyday scenes with objects such as leopards Ijele masks are used for honoring the dead to ensure the continuity and well being of the community and are only seen on rare occasions such as the death of a prominent figure in the community 151 There are many Igbo dance styles but perhaps Igbo dance is best known for its atilogwu dance troops These performances include acrobatic stunts such as high kicks and cartwheels with each rhythm from the indigenous instruments indicating a movement to the dancer 153 The Egedege Dance is an Igbo traditional Royal styled cultural dance of South Eastern Nigeria 154 Visual art and architecture There is such variety among Igbo groups that it is not possible to define a general Igbo art style 151 Bronze castings found in the town of Igbo Ukwu from the 9th century constitute the earliest sculptures discovered in Igboland Here the grave of a well established man of distinction and a ritual store dating from the 9th century AD contained both chased copper objects and elaborate castings of leaded bronze 40 Along with these bronzes were 165 000 glass beads said to have originated in Egypt Venice and India 155 Some popular Igbo art styles include Uli designs The majority of the Igbo carve and use masks although the function of masks vary by community 156 Thatching with palm leaf mats early 20th century Traditional Igbo house room from the Anambra area 1967 Igbo art is noted for Mbari architecture 156 Mbari houses of the Owerri Igbo are large opened sided square planned shelters They house many life sized painted figures sculpted in mud to appease the Alusi deity and Ala the earth goddess with other deities of thunder and water 157 Other sculptures are of officials craftsmen foreigners mainly Europeans animals legendary creatures and ancestors 157 Mbari houses take years to build in what is regarded as a sacred process When new ones are constructed old ones are left to decay 157 Everyday houses were made of mud with thatched roofs and bare earth floors with carved design doors Some houses had elaborate designs both in the interior and exterior These designs could include Uli art designed by Igbo women 158 One of the unique structures of Igbo culture was the Nsude Pyramids at the town of Nsude in Abaja northern Igboland Ten pyramidal structures were built of clay mud The first base section was 60 ft 18 m in circumference and 3 ft 0 91 m in height The next stack was 45 ft 14 m in circumference Circular stacks continued until it reached the top The structures were temples for the god Ala Uto who was believed to reside at the top A stick was placed at the top to represent the god s residence The structures were laid in groups of five parallel to each other Because it was built of clay mud like the Deffufa of Nubia time has taken its toll requiring periodic reconstruction 159 Religion and rites of passage See also Religion in Nigeria Wooden sculpture of Ikenga an Alusi in the Musee du Quai Branly The Igbo traditional religion is known as Odinani 41 The supreme deity is called Chukwu great spirit Chukwu created the world and everything in it and is associated with all things in the universe They believe the cosmos is divided into four complex parts creation known as Okike supernatural forces or deities called Alusi Mmuo which are gods spirits and Uwa the earthly world 160 Chukwu is the supreme deity in Odinani and considered the creator deity and the Igbo people believe that all things ultimately came from him 161 and that everything on earth heaven and the rest of the spiritual world is under his supervision 162 Linguistic studies of the Igbo language suggest that the name Chukwu is a compound of the Igbo words Chi spiritual being and Ukwu great in size 163 Each individual is born with a spiritual guide guardian angel or guardian principle Chi unique to each individual and the individual s fate and destiny is determined by their Chi Thus the Igbos say that the siblings may come of the same mother but no two people have the same Chi and thus different destinies for all Alusi alternatively known as Arusi or Arushi depending on dialect are minor deities that are worshiped and served in Odinani There are many different Alusi each with its own purpose When an individual deity is no longer needed or becomes too violent it is discarded 164 The Igbo have traditionally believed in the possibility for reincarnation of individuals within the family People are believed to be able to reincarnate into families that they were part of while alive Before a relative dies it is said that the soon to be deceased relative sometimes give clues of who they will reincarnate as in the family Once a child is born he or she is believed to give signs of who they have reincarnated from This can be through behavior physical traits and statements by the child A diviner can help in detecting who the child has reincarnated from It is considered an insult if a male is said to have reincarnated as a female 165 Children are not allowed to call elders by their names without using an honorific as this is considered disrespectful As a sign of respect children are required to greet elders when seeing them for the first time in the day Children usually add the Igbo honorifics Mazi or Dede before an elder s name when addressing them 166 167 Christianity Christianity was introduced to the Igbo people through European colonization in 1857 The Igbo people were hesitant to convert to Christianity initially because they believed the gods of their native religion would bring disaster to them However Christianity gradually gained converts in Igbo land mainly through the work of church agents These men built schools and focused on persuading the youth to adopt Christian values 168 The Igbo people today are known as the ethnic group that has adopted Christianity the most in all of Africa 169 The Holy Ghost depicted as a dove on a relief in Onitsha The Igbo people were unaffected by the Islamic jihad waged in Nigeria in the 19th century but a small minority converted to Islam in the 20th century 170 There is also a small population of Igbo Jews 171 some of whom merely identifying as Jews while others having converted to Judaism These draw their inspiration from Olaudah Equiano a Christian educated freed slave who remarked in his autobiography of 1789 on the strong analogy which appears to prevail in the manners and customs of my countrymen and those of the Jews before they reached the Land of Promise and particularly the patriarchs while they were yet in that pastoral state which is described in Genesis an analogy which alone would induce me to think that the one people had sprung from the other Equiano s speculation has given rise to a great debate on the origins of the Igbo Burials After a death the body of a prominent member of society is placed on a stool in a sitting posture and is clothed in the deceased s finest garments Animal sacrifices may be offered and the dead person is well perfumed 172 Burial usually follows within 24 hours of death In the 21st century the head of a home is usually buried within the compound of his residence 167 Different types of deaths warrant different types of burials This is determined by an individual s age gender and status in society Children are buried in hiding and out of sight their burials usually take place in the early mornings and late nights A simple untitled man is buried in front of his house and a simple mother is buried in her place of origin in a garden or a farm area that belonged to her father 173 In the 21st century a majority of the Igbo bury their dead in the western way although it is not uncommon for burials to be practiced in the traditional Igbo ways 174 Marriage The process of marrying usually involves asking the young woman s consent introducing the woman to the man s family and the same for the man to the woman s family testing the bride s character checking the woman s family background and paying the brides wealth 175 Typically speaking bride wealth is more symbolic Nonetheless kola nuts wine goats and chickens among other things are listed in the proposal as well Negotiating the bride wealth can also take more than one day giving both parties time for a ceremonial feast 176 Marriages were sometimes arranged from birth through negotiation of the two families 177 However after a series of interviews conducted in the 1990s with 250 Igbo women it was found that 94 4 of that sample population disapproved of arranged marriages 178 A modern Igbo wedding Nnewi Nigeria In the past many Igbo men practiced polygamy The polygamous family is made up of a man and his wives and all their children 167 Men sometimes married multiple wives for economic reasons so as to have more people in the family including children to help on farms 179 Christian and civil marriages have changed the Igbo family since colonization Igbo people now tend to enter monogamous courtships and create nuclear families mainly because of Western influence 180 Some Western marriage customs such as weddings in a church take place either before or after the lgbo cultural traditional marriage 181 Attire Traditionally the attire of the Igbo generally consisted of little clothing as the purpose of clothing originally was simply to conceal private parts Because of this purpose children were often nude from birth until the beginning of their adolescence the time they were considered to have something to hide 182 Uli body art was used to decorate both men and women in the form of lines forming patterns and shapes on the body 183 Men wearing contemporary Isiagu with the ceremonial Igbo men s hat okpu agu Women traditionally carry their babies on their backs with a strip of clothing binding the two with a knot at her chest a practice used by many ethnic groups across Africa 184 This method has been modernized in the form of the child carrier Maidens usually wore a short wrapper with beads around their waist and other ornaments such as necklaces and beads 184 Both men and women wore wrappers 183 184 Men would wear loincloths that wrapped round their waist and between their legs to be fastened at their back the type of clothing appropriate for the intense heat as well as jobs such as farming 183 184 In Olaudah Equiano s narrative Equiano describes fragrances that were used by the Igbo in the community of Essaka Our principal luxury is in perfumes one sort of these is an odoriferous wood of delicious fragrance the other a kind of earth a small portion of which thrown into the fire diffuses a most powerful odor We beat this wood into powder and mix it with palm oil with which both men and women perfume themselves Olaudah Equiano 185 As colonialism became more influential the Igbo adapted their dress customs 186 Clothing worn before colonialism became traditional and worn on cultural occasions Modern Igbo traditional attire for men is generally made up of the Isiagu top which resembles the Dashiki worn by other African groups Isiagu or ishi agu is usually patterned with lions heads embroidered over the clothing and can be a plain colour 187 It is worn with trousers and can be worn with either a ceremonial title holders hat or with the conventional striped men s hat known as okpu agu 188 For women a puffed sleeve blouse along with two wrappers and a head tie are worn 184 186 Cuisine Yam porridge or yam pottage is an Igbo dish known as awaị 189 Main article Igbo cuisine The yam is very important to the Igbo as the staple crop It is known for its resiliency a yam can remain fully edible for six months without refrigeration but it can also be very versatile in terms of its incorporation into different dishes 190 Yams can be fried roasted boiled or made into a potage with tomatoes and herbs The cultivation of yams is most commonly carried out by men as women tend to focus on other crops 191 There are celebrations such as the New Yam festival Igbo Iwaji which are held for the harvesting of the yam 192 During the festival yam is eaten throughout the communities as celebration Yam tubers are shown off by individuals as a sign of success and wealth 193 Rice has replaced yam for many ceremonial occasions Other indigenous foods include cassava garri maize and plantains Soups or stews are included in a typical meal prepared with a vegetable such as okra of which the word derives from the Igbo language okwuru 194 to which pieces of fish chicken beef or goat meat are added Jollof rice is popular throughout West Africa and palm wine is a popular alcoholic traditional beverage 195 196 DemographicsNigeria See also Demographics of Nigeria The Igbo people are natively found in Abia Anambra Ebonyi Enugu Imo Delta and Rivers State 197 The Igbo language is predominant throughout these areas although Nigerian English the national language is spoken as well Prominent towns and cities in Igboland include Aba Enugu Nnewi Onitsha Owerri Abakaliki Asaba and Port Harcourt among others 198 A significant number of Igbo people have migrated to other parts of Nigeria such as the cities of Lagos Abuja and Kano 106 The official data on the population of ethnic groups in Nigeria continues to be controversial as a minority of these groups have claimed that the government deliberately deflates the official population of one group to give the other numerical superiority 199 200 201 The CIA World Factbook puts the Igbo population of Nigeria at 18 of a total population of 230 million or approximately 42 million people 1 Southeastern Nigeria which is inhabited primarily by the Igbo is the most densely populated area in Nigeria and possibly in all of Africa 202 203 Most ethnicities that inhabit southeastern Nigeria such as the closely related Efik and Ibibio people are sometimes regarded as Igbo by other Nigerians and ethnographers who are not well informed about the southeast 204 205 Diaspora See also Nigerian diaspora Igbo American Igbo Canadian and The Igbo in the Atlantic slave trade Igbo people celebrating the New Yam festival in Dublin Ireland After the Nigerian Civil War many Igbo people emigrated out of the indigenous Igbo homeland in southeastern Nigeria because of an absence of federal presence lack of jobs and poor infrastructure 206 In recent decades the Igbo region of Nigeria has suffered from frequent environmental damage mainly related to the oil industry 207 Igbo people have moved to both Nigerian cities such as Lagos and Abuja and other countries such as Gabon 208 Canada the United Kingdom and the United States Prominent Igbo communities outside Africa include those of London in the United Kingdom and Houston Baltimore Chicago Detroit Seattle Atlanta and Washington D C in the United States 209 210 211 212 About 21 000 Igbo people were recorded in Ghana in 1969 213 while as small number 8 680 lived on Bioko island in 2002 214 Small numbers live in Japan making up the majority of the Nigerian immigrant population based in Tokyo 215 216 A large amount of the African population of Guangdong China is Igbo speaking and are mainly businessmen trading between factories in China and southeastern Nigeria particularly Enugu 217 Other Igbo immigrants are found in the Americas Igbo Canadian Igbo American and elsewhere 218 In the 2003 PBS programme African American Lives Bishop T D Jakes had his DNA analyzed his Y chromosome showed dubious discuss that he is descended from the Igbo 219 American actors Forest Whitaker Paul Robeson and Blair Underwood have traced their genealogy back to the Igbo people 220 221 222 See alsoIgbo Ukwu Timeline of Igbo history Sam Uzochukwu States of NigeriaReferences a b Nigeria country profile at CIA s The World Factbook Igbo 18 out of a population of 230 842 743 2023 estimate Nigeria s Igbo Jews Lost tribe of Israel CNN Retrieved 14 July 2021 Nwangwa Shirley Ngozi 26 November 2018 Why It Matters That Alex Trebek Mispronounced The Name Of My People On Jeopardy Huffington Post Retrieved 26 November 2018 Igbo Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 2020 03 22 Igbo Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 25 July 2019 Ibo Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 25 July 2019 Isichei Elizabeth 1978 Igbo Worlds Institute for the Study of Human Issues Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ibo Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 223 a b c d Lovejoy Paul 2000 Identity in the Shadow of Slavery Continuum International Publishing Group p 58 ISBN 978 0 8264 4725 8 Floyd E Randall 2002 In the Realm of Ghosts and Hauntings Harbor House p 51 ISBN 978 1 891799 06 8 Cassidy Frederic Gomes Robert Brock Le Page 2002 A Dictionary of Jamaican English 2nd ed University of the West Indies Press p 168 ISBN 978 976 640 127 6 Equiano Olaudah 1837 The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano I Knapp p 27 Obichere Boniface I 1982 Studies in Southern Nigerian History A Festschrift for Joseph Christopher Okwudili Anene 1918 68 Routledge p 207 ISBN 978 0 7146 3106 6 About the Igbo people Culture Trip 22 May 2018 Retrieved February 15 2022 Forrest Tom 1994 The Advance of African Capital The Growth of Nigerian Private Enterprise illustrated ed Edinburgh University Press p 272 ISBN 978 0 7486 0492 0 Mwakikagile Godfrey 2006 African Countries An Introduction with Maps Pan African Books Continental Press p 86 ISBN 978 0 620 34815 7 The Native Igbo Of Equatorial Guinea www igbodefender com 19 August 2018 Archived from the original on 2020 06 18 Retrieved 2020 05 18 a b Igbo Culture Lifestyle amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 03 07 a b The Igbo People Origins amp History www faculty ucr edu Retrieved 2019 04 22 Slattery Katharine The Igbo People Origins amp History www faculty ucr edu School of English Queen s University of Belfast Retrieved April 20 2016 Chigere Nkem Hyginus 2000 Foreign Missionary Background and Indigenous Evangelization in Igboland Igboland and The Igbo People of Nigeria Transaction Publishers USA p 17 ISBN 978 3 8258 4964 1 Retrieved January 17 2016 Williams Lizzie 2008 Nigeria The Bradt Travel Guide Bradt Travel Guides p 32 ISBN 978 1 84162 239 2 a b Fardon Richard Furniss Graham 1994 African languages development and the state Routledge p 66 ISBN 978 0 415 09476 4 Retrieved 2009 04 12 Miers Suzanne Roberts Richard L 1988 The End of slavery in Africa University of Wisconsin Press p 437 ISBN 978 0 299 11554 8 Falola Toyin 2003 Adebayo Oyebade ed The foundations of Nigeria essays in honor of Toyin Falola Africa World Press p 476 ISBN 978 1 59221 120 3 Retrieved 2010 06 27 Igbo Britannica Online Encyclopedia Retrieved 2009 02 01 Forsythe Frederick 2006 Shadows Airlift and Airwar in Biafra and Nigeria 1967 1970 p 1 ISBN 978 1 902109 63 3 Adekson Adedayo Oluwakayode 2004 The civil society problematique deconstructing civility and southern Nigeria s ethnic radicalization Routledge pp 87 96 ISBN 978 0 415 94785 5 Levinson David Timothy J O Leary 1995 Encyclopedia of World Cultures G K Hall p 120 ISBN 978 0 8161 1815 1 Achebe Chinua 2000 Home and Exile Oxford University Press US p 4 ISBN 978 0 19 513506 0 Igbo people might score poorly on the Oxford dictionary test for tribe Now to call them a nation This may not be perfect for the Igbo but it is close a b Minahan James 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z Greenwood Publishing Group p 762 ISBN 978 0 313 32384 3 Williamson amp Blench 2000 Niger Congo in Heine amp Nurse African Languages Kay Williamson in Ebiegberi Joe Alagoa F N Anozie Nwanna Nzewunwa eds The Early History of the Niger Delta 1988 92f Michael C Campbell Sarah A Tishkoff September 2008 African Genetic Diversity Implications for Human Demographic History Modern Human Origins and Complex Disease Mapping Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics PDF 9 Retrieved December 22 2013 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help M191 P86 positive samples occurred in tested populations of Annang 38 3 Ibibio 45 6 Efik 45 and Igbo 54 3 Veeramah Krishna R Bruce A Connell Naser Ansari Pour Adam Powell Christopher A Plaster David Zeitlyn Nancy R Mendell Michael E Weale Neil Bradman Mark G Thomas 31 March 2010 Little genetic differentiation as assessed by uniparental markers in the presence of substantial language variation in peoples of the Cross River region of Nigeria BMC Evolutionary Biology 10 92 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 10 92 PMC 2867817 PMID 20356404 Okonkwo Emeka E Ibeanu A M 2016 04 20 Nigeria s Archaeological Heritage Resource Exploitation and Technology SAGE Open 6 2 215824401665111 doi 10 1177 2158244016651111 ISSN 2158 2440 S2CID 147944354 Chikezie Anuka p 19 Holt Rinehart and Winston Adolphus 2018 Mmanwu and Mission among the Igbo People of Nigeria An Inculturative Dialogue ISBN 978 3 643 91063 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Elizabeth Isichei 1976 A History of the Igbo People London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 18556 8 excerpted in Cultural Harmony I Igboland the World of Man and the World of Spirits section 4 of Kalu Ogbaa ed Understanding Things Fall Apart Westport Conn Greenwood Press 1999 ISBN 0 313 30294 4 pp 83 85 Eze Uzomaka Pamela Iron and its influence on the prehistoric site of Lejja Academia edu University of Nigeria Nsukka Nigeria Retrieved 12 December 2014 Holl Augustin F C 6 November 2009 Early West African Metallurgies New Data and Old Orthodoxy Journal of World Prehistory 22 4 415 438 doi 10 1007 s10963 009 9030 6 S2CID 161611760 Eggert Manfred 2014 Early iron in West and Central Africa In Breunig P ed Nok African Sculpture in Archaeological Context Frankfurt Germany Africa Magna Verlag Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 3 937248 46 2 a b c Apley Apley Igbo Ukwu ca 9th century The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2008 11 23 a b c Isichei Elizabeth Allo 1997 A History of African Societies to 1870 Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK p 512 ISBN 978 0 521 45599 2 a b Uzukwu E Elochukwu 1997 Worship as Body Language Liturgical Press p 93 ISBN 978 0 8146 6151 2 Isichei Elizabeth Allo 1997 A History of African Societies to 1870 Cambridge University Press p 246 ISBN 978 0 521 45599 2 Retrieved 2008 12 13 Hrbek Ivan Fasi Muḥammad 1988 Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century London Unesco p 254 ISBN 978 92 3 101709 4 a b Lovejoy Paul 2000 Identity in the Shadow of Slavery Continuum International Publishing Group p 62 ISBN 978 0 8264 4725 8 Onwuejeogwu M Angulu 1981 Igbo Civilization Nri Kingdom amp Hegemony Ethnographica ISBN 978 0 905788 08 1 Chambers Douglas B 2005 Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia illustrated ed Univ Press of Mississippi p 33 ISBN 978 1 57806 706 0 Uzukwu E Elochukwu 1997 Worship as Body Language Liturgical Press p 93 ISBN 978 0 8146 6151 2 Basden George Thomas 1921 Among the Ibos of Nigeria An Account of the Curious amp Interesting Habits Customs amp Beliefs of a Little Known African People by One who Has for Many Years Lived Amongst Them on Close amp Intimate Terms Seeley Service p 184 Hodder Ian 1987 The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings illustrated ed CUP Archive p 72 ISBN 978 0 521 32924 8 a b Nyang Sulayman Olupona Jacob K 1995 Religious Plurality in Africa Essays in Honour of John S Mbiti Berlin Mouton de Gruyter p 118 ISBN 978 3 11 014789 6 Hodder Ian 1987 The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings illustrated ed CUP Archive p 72 ISBN 978 0 521 32924 8 a b Furniss Graham Elizabeth Gunner Liz Gunner 1995 Power Marginality and African Oral Literature Cambridge University Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 521 48061 1 Chigere Nkem Hyginus M V 2001 Foreign Missionary Background and Indigenous Evangelization in Igboland illustrated ed LIT Verlag Berlin Hamburg Munster p 113 ISBN 978 3 8258 4964 1 Gordon April A 2003 Nigeria s Diverse Peoples A Reference Sourcebook illustrated annotated ed ABC CLIO p 37 ISBN 978 1 57607 682 8 Basden George Thomas 1921 Among the Ibos of Nigeria An Account of the Curious amp Interesting Habits Customs amp Beliefs of a Little Known African People by One who Has for Many Years Lived Amongst Them on Close amp Intimate Terms Seeley Service p 96 Ilogu Edmund 1974 Christianity and Ibo culture Brill Archive p 11 ISBN 978 90 04 04021 2 Ndukaihe Vernantius Emeka Fonk Peter 2006 Achievement as Value in the Igbo African Identity The Ethics LIT Verlag Berlin Hamburg Munster p 204 ISBN 978 3 8258 9929 5 Agbasiere Joseph Therese 2000 Women in Igbo Life and Thought Routledge p 12 ISBN 978 0 415 22703 2 Retrieved 2008 12 19 Amadiume Ifi 1987 Male Daughters Female Husbands Gender and Sex in an African Society London Zed Books Ltd pp 15 ISBN 978 1 78360 335 0 Chambers Douglas B 2005 Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia illustrated ed Univ Press of Mississippi p 183 ISBN 978 1 57806 706 0 Liamputtong Pranee 2007 Childrearing and Infant Care Issues A Cross cultural Perspective Nova Publishers p 155 ISBN 978 1 60021 610 7 Holbrook Jarita C R Thebe Medupe Johnson O Urama 2008 01 01 African Cultural Astronomy Current Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy Research in Africa Springer 2007 p 235 ISBN 978 1 4020 6638 2 Holbrook Jarita C 2007 African Cultural Astronomy Current Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy Research in Africa Springer p 35 ISBN 978 1 4020 6638 2 Retrieved 2008 01 10 Njoku Onwuka N 2002 Pre colonial economic history of Nigeria Ethiope Publishing Corporation Benin City Nigeria ISBN 978 978 2979 36 0 Onwuejeogwu M Angulu 1981 An Igbo civilization Nri kingdom amp hegemony Ethnographica ISBN 978 978 123 105 6 Aguwa Jude C U 1995 The Agwu deity in Igbo religion Fourth Dimension Publishing Co Ltd p 29 ISBN 978 978 156 399 7 Hammer Jill 2006 The Jewish book of days a companion for all seasons Jewish Publication Society p 224 ISBN 978 0 8276 0831 3 Peek Philip M Kwesi Yankah 2004 African Folklore An Encyclopedia illustrated ed Taylor amp Francis p 299 ISBN 978 0 415 93933 1 a b Shillington Kevin 2005 Encyclopedia of African History CRC Press p 674 ISBN 978 1 57958 245 6 a b Equiano Olaudah 1837 The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano I Knapp pp 20 21 Uchendu Victor Chikezie 1965 The Igbo of southeast Nigeria illustrated ed Holt Rinehart and Winston p 4 ISBN 978 0 03 052475 2 Glenny 2008 McMaffirst Misha Random House p 200 ISBN 978 0 09 948125 6 Williams Emily Allen 2004 The Critical Response to Kamau Brathwaite Praeger Publishers p 235 ISBN 978 0 275 97957 7 Edward Wilmot Blyden Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 31 October 2009 Retrieved 19 November 2008 Edward Wilmot Blyden Father of Pan Africanism August 3 1832 to February 7 1912 Awareness Times Sierra Leone 2 August 2006 Archived from the original on 25 October 2005 Robeson II Paul 2001 The Undiscovered Paul Robeson An Artist s Journey 1898 1939 Wiley p 3 ISBN 978 0 471 24265 9 Retrieved 2008 12 27 A dark skinned man descended from the Ibo tribe of Nigeria Reverend Robeson was of medium height with broad shoulders and had an air of surpassing dignity Azuonye Chukwuma 1990 Igbo Names in the Nominal Roll of Amelie An Early 19th Century Slave Ship from Martinique Reconstructions Interpretations and Inferences footnote University of Massachusetts Boston p 1 Retrieved 2015 03 26 Chambers D B 2002 REJOINDER The Significance of Igbo in the Bight of Biafra Slave Slavery amp Abolition Routledge part of the Taylor amp Francis Group 23 101 120 doi 10 1080 714005225 S2CID 146426893 Guo Rongxing 2006 Territorial Disputes and Resource Management A Global Handbook Nova Publishers p 130 ISBN 978 1 60021 445 5 Douglas Chambers B 2005 Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia Univ Press of Mississippi p 25 ISBN 978 1 57806 706 0 Talbot Percy Amaury Mulhall H 1962 The physical anthropology of Southern Nigeria Cambridge University Press p 5 Lovejoy Paul E 2003 Trans Atlantic Dimensions of Ethnicity in the African Diaspora Continuum International Publishing Group pp 92 93 ISBN 978 0 8264 4907 8 Isichei Elizabeth Allo 2002 Voices of the Poor in Africa Boydell amp Brewer p 81 Rucker Walter C 2006 The River Flows on Black Resistance Culture and Identity Formation in Early America LSU Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 8071 3109 1 Holloway Joseph E 2005 Africanisms in American Culture bottom of 3rd paragraph Indiana University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 253 21749 3 Retrieved 2008 12 19 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Philips John Edward 2005 Writing African History Boydell amp Brewer p 412 ISBN 978 1 58046 164 1 Berlin Ira African Immigration to Colonial America History Now Archived from the original on 2008 09 19 paragraph 11 Preferences on both side of the Atlantic determined to a considerable degree which enslaved Africans went where and when populating the mainland with unique combinations of African peoples and creating distinctive regional variations in the Americas Morgan Philip D Sean Hawkins 2004 Black Experience and the Empire Oxford University Press p 82 ISBN 978 0 19 926029 4 Ethnic Identity in the Diaspora and the Nigerian Hinterland Toronto Canada York university Retrieved 2008 11 23 As is now widely known enslaved Africans were often concentrated in specific places in the diaspora USA Igbo Appiah Anthony Henry Louis Gates 1999 10 27 Africana p 212 ISBN 978 0 465 00071 5 Craton Michael 1979 Roots and Branches University of Waterloo Dept of History p 125 ISBN 978 0 08 025367 1 McWhorter John H 2005 Defining Creole Oxford University Press US p 217 ISBN 978 0 19 516670 5 Retrieved 2009 01 10 Robotham Don January 13 2008 Jamaica and Africa Part II Gleaner Company Archived from the original on December 26 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 23 It is not possible to declare that the Eastern Nigerian influence in Jamaica apparent in expressions such as red ibo is Igbo Allsopp Richard Jeannette Allsopp 2003 Dictionary of Caribbean English Usage Contributor Richard Allsopp University of the West Indies Press p 101 ISBN 978 976 640 145 0 Carrington Sean 2007 A Z of Barbados Heritage Macmillan Caribbean Publishers Limited p 25 ISBN 978 0 333 92068 8 Gibbs Archibald Robertson 1883 British Honduras an historical and descriptive account of the colony from its settlement 1670 S Low Marston Searle amp Rivington Eboe Town a section of the town of Belize reserved for that African tribe was destroyed by fire Fischer David Hackett Kelly James C 2000 Bound Away Virginia and the Westward Movement University of Virginia Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 8139 1774 0 Opie Frederick Douglass 2008 Hog and Hominy Soul Food from Africa to America Columbia University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 231 14638 8 list of languages 25 along with Kru and Yoruba PDF U S ENGLISH Foundation Inc Archived from the original PDF on 2009 02 20 Retrieved 2009 01 10 Ekechi Felix K 1972 Missionary Enterprise and Rivalry in Igboland 1857 1914 illustrated ed last paragraph on page 146 by Routledge p 146 ISBN 978 0 7146 2778 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Chuku Gloria 2005 Igbo Women and Economic Transformation in Southeastern Nigeria 1900 1960 1900 1960 illustrated ed Routledge p 145 ISBN 978 0 415 97210 9 Afigbo A E 1992 Groundwork of Igbo history Lagos Vista Books pp 522 541 ISBN 978 978 134 400 8 Furniss Graham Elizabeth Gunner Liz Gunner 1995 Power Marginality and African Oral Literature Cambridge University Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 521 48061 1 Ilogu Edmund 1974 Christianity and Ibo Culture Brill Archive p 63 ISBN 978 90 04 04021 2 Sanday Peggy Reeves 1981 Female Power and Male Dominance On the Origins of Sexual Inequality illustrated reprint ed Cambridge University Press p 136 ISBN 978 0 521 28075 4 a b Gordon April A 2003 Nigeria s Diverse Peoples ABC CLIO p 87 ISBN 978 1 57607 682 8 Retrieved 2008 12 19 online catalogue Rubin Neville 1970 Annual Survey of African Law Routledge 1970 p 20 ISBN 978 0 7146 2601 7 Fielding Steven John W Young 2003 The Labour Governments 1964 1970 International Policy Manchester University Press p 197 ISBN 978 0 7190 4365 9 a b Mathews Martin P 2002 Nigeria Current Issues and Historical Background Nova Publishers p 38 ISBN 978 1 59033 316 7 Minogue Martin Judith Molloy 1974 African Aims amp Attitudes Selected Documents General C O Ojukwu CUP Archive p 393 ISBN 978 0 521 20426 2 Bocquene Henri Oumarou Ndoudi Gordeen Gorder 2002 Memoirs of a Mbororo The Life of Ndudi Umaru Fulani Nomad of Cameroon Berghahn Books p 285 ISBN 978 1 57181 844 7 Diamond Stanley June 1967 The Biafra Secession Africa Today 14 3 1 2 JSTOR 4184781 Keil Charles January 1970 The Price of Nigerian Victory Africa Today 17 1 1 3 JSTOR 4185054 a b The Igbo sometimes especially formerly referred to as Ibo are one of the largest single ethnicities in Africa www faculty ucr edu Retrieved 2019 04 23 John Lennon Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum 2007 Retrieved 2008 11 24 September 1 1969 John Lennon returns his MBE He says it is to protest the British government s involvement in Biafra its support of the U S in Vietnam and the poor chart performance of his latest single Cold Turkey Call for Biafra to leave Nigeria BBC 6 July 2007 Retrieved 2008 11 23 Ihemere Kelechukwu U 2007 A Tri Generational Study of Language Choice amp Shift in Port Harcourt Universal Publishers p 26 ISBN 978 1 58112 958 8 Emenanjọ Nọlue 1985 Auxiliaries in Igbo Syntax A Comparative Study Indiana University Linguistics Club p 64 Howard Hassmann Rhoda E 1986 Human Rights in Commonwealth Africa Rowman amp Littlefield p 95 ISBN 978 0 8476 7433 6 Retrieved 2008 12 18 Udogu Emmanuel Ike 2005 Nigeria in the Twenty first Century Strategies for Political Stability and Peaceful Coexistence Africa World Press p 51 ISBN 978 1 59221 320 7 Retrieved 2008 12 18 Nwachuku Levi Akalazu 2004 Troubled Journey Nigeria Since the Civil War Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 59 ISBN 978 0 7618 2712 2 Retrieved 2008 12 18 Groundwork of Igbo history Vista Books Lagos 1992 pp 161 177 ISBN 978 978 134 400 8 Amadiume Ifi 2000 The Politics of Memory Truth Healing and Social Justice Zed Books pp 104 106 ISBN 978 1 85649 843 2 Odi Amusi Igbo in Diaspora The Binding Force of Information PDF University of Texas Archived from the original PDF on July 25 2011 Retrieved 2008 11 23 Bah Abu Bakarr 2005 Breakdown and reconstitution democracy the nation state and ethnicity in Nigeria Lexington Books pp 23 24 ISBN 978 0 7391 0954 0 Uwazie Ernest E Albert Isaac Olawale 1999 Inter ethnic and religious conflict resolution in Nigeria Lexington Books pp 11 12 ISBN 978 0 7391 0033 2 Nwogu Nneoma V 2007 Shaping truth reshaping justice sectarian politics and the Nigerian truth commission Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 2249 5 Parijs Philippe van 2004 Cultural Diversity Versus Economic Solidarity De Boeck Universite p 122 ISBN 978 2 8041 4660 3 a b Agbu Osita 2004 Ethnic militias and the threat to democracy in post transition Nigeria Nordic Africa Institute p 23 ISBN 978 91 7106 525 4 Obichere Boniface I 1982 Studies in Southern Nigerian history Routledge p 173 ISBN 978 0 7146 3106 6 Smith Daniel Jordan 2006 A culture of corruption everyday deception and popular discontent in Nigeria Princeton University Press pp 193 194 ISBN 978 0 691 12722 4 Adekson Adedayo Oluwakayode 2004 The civil society problematique deconstructing civility and southern Nigeria s ethnic radicalization Routledge p 106 ISBN 978 0 415 94785 5 Nigeria vows to shut down Radio Biafra BBC News July 15 2015 Retrieved 2015 09 06 Nigeria Blocks Radio Biafra Station Aimed at Breakaway State The New York Times July 16 2015 Retrieved 2015 09 06 Nigerian pirate Radio Biafra returns BBC News August 28 2015 Retrieved 2015 09 06 Gikandi Simon 2003 Encyclopedia of African literature Taylor amp Francis p 328 ISBN 978 0 415 23019 3 Zabus Chantal 2007 The African palimpsest indigenization of language in the West African europhone novel Rodopi p 33 ISBN 978 90 420 2224 9 Discomfort of fashion Antique images and videos of Alaigbo Ala Igbo Igboland posted at Ukpuru blog 2010 10 17 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Photograph of dancer wearing anklets Thomas Whitridge Northcote pre 1913 Willing Submission to Life Sentence to the Stocks Antique images and videos of Alaigbo Ala Igbo Igboland posted at Ukpuru blog 2010 10 17 Retrieved 2013 09 29 Photograph of female sitting wearing anklets Thomas Whitridge Northcote pre 1913 Nsibidi National Museum of African Art Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2010 02 25 Nsibidi is an ancient system of graphic communication indigenous to the Ejagham peoples of southeastern Nigeria and the southwestern Cameroon in the Cross River region It is also used by neighboring Ibibio Efik and Igbo peoples Oraka L N 1983 The foundations of Igbo studies University Publishing Co pp 17 13 ISBN 978 978 160 264 1 igboenglish igboenglish Retrieved 2015 12 08 Oraka L N 1983 The foundations of Igbo studies University Publishing Co p 35 ISBN 978 978 160 264 1 a b Oraka L N 1983 The foundations of Igbo studies University Publishing Co p 21 ISBN 978 978 160 264 1 Equiano Olaudah 1789 The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano I Knapp p 9 ISBN 978 1 4250 4524 1 Oldendorp Christian Georg Andreas 1777 Geschichte der Mission der evangelischen Bruder auf den caraibischen Inseln Christian Georg Andreas Oldendorp Johann Jakob Bossart Google Boeken Retrieved 2013 08 25 Achebe Chinua 1994 Things fall apart Anchor p 11 ISBN 978 0 385 47454 2 Grove George Stanley Sadie 1980 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 6 ed Macmillan Publishers p 239 ISBN 978 0 333 23111 1 Falola Toyin 2001 Culture and Customs of Nigeria Greenwood Press pp 174 183 ISBN 978 0 313 31338 7 a b c d e Picton John 2008 art African West Africa Igbo Britannica Online Encyclopedia Retrieved 2008 11 23 Eltis David David Richardson 1997 Routes to Slavery Direction Ethnicity and Mortality in the Transatlantic Slave Trade Routledge p 87 ISBN 978 0 7146 4820 0 Retrieved 2008 11 24 Harper Peggy 2008 African dance 18th paragraph under Dance style Britannica Online Encyclopedia Retrieved 2009 01 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Egedege Dance Of Unubi Nigerian Arts and Culture Directory Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Chuku Gloria 2005 Igbo women and economic transformation in southeastern Nigeria 1900 1960 Routledge pp 43 44 ISBN 978 0 415 97210 9 a b Gikandi Simon 1991 Reading Chinua Achebe Language amp Ideology in Fiction James Currey Publishers p 52 ISBN 978 0 85255 527 9 Retrieved 2008 12 19 a b c Oliver Paul 2008 African architecture Geographic influences Palaces and shrines last paragraph Britannica Online Encyclopedia Retrieved 2008 11 23 The Poetics of Line National Museum of African Art Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2008 12 19 Basden G S 1966 Among the Ibos of Nigeria 1912 Psychology Press p 109 ISBN 0 7146 1633 8 Onwuejeogwu M Angulu 1975 The Social Anthropology of Africa An Introduction illustrated ed Heinemann p 179 ISBN 978 0 435 89701 7 Basden G T John Ralph Willis 1912 Among the Ibos of Nigeria Seeley Service p 216 Elechi O Oko 2006 Doing Justice Without the State The Afikpo Ehugbo Nigeria Model CRC Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 415 97729 6 Sucher Sandra J 2007 The Moral Leader Challenges Tools and Insights Routledge p 63 ISBN 978 0 415 40064 0 Kirch Patrick Vinton 1986 Island Societies Archaeological Approaches to Evolution and Transformation illustrated ed CUP Archive p 71 ISBN 978 0 521 30189 3 Newell William Hare 1976 Ancestoride Are African Ancestors Dead Ancestors Walter de Gruyter pp 293 294 ISBN 978 90 279 7859 2 Oluikpe Benson Omenihu A 1979 Igbo Transformational Syntax The Ngwa Dialect Example Africana Publishers p 182 a b c Njoku John E Eberegbulam 1990 The Igbos of Nigeria Ancient Rites Changes and Survival Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press p 28 ISBN 978 0 88946 173 4 Okeke Chukwuma O Ibenwa Christopher N Okeke Gloria Tochukwu 2017 04 01 Conflicts Between African Traditional Religion and Christianity in Eastern Nigeria The Igbo Example SAGE Open 7 2 2158244017709322 doi 10 1177 2158244017709322 ISSN 2158 2440 Ekwueme Lazarus Nnanyelu 1973 African Music in Christian Liturgy The Igbo Experiment African Music 5 3 12 33 doi 10 21504 amj v5i3 1655 ISSN 0065 4019 JSTOR 30249968 Uchendu Egodi 1 January 2010 Being Igbo and Muslim The Igbo of South Eastern Nigeria and Conversions to Islam 1930s to Recent Times The Journal of African History 51 1 63 87 doi 10 1017 s0021853709990764 JSTOR 40985002 S2CID 162414965 Bruder Edith 2008 The Black Jews of Africa History Religion Identity Oxford University Press p 143 ISBN 978 0195333565 Equiano Olaudah 1837 The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano I Knapp p 24 Chigere Nkem Hyginus M V 2001 Foreign Missionary Background and Indigenous Evangelization in Igboland LIT Verlag Berlin Hamburg Munster p 97 ISBN 978 3 8258 4964 1 Retrieved 2008 11 24 Agbasiere Joseph Therese 2000 Women in Igbo Life and Thought Routledge p 143 ISBN 978 0 415 22703 2 Retrieved 2008 12 19 Agbasiere Joseph Therese Shirley Ardener 2000 Women in Igbo Life and Thought Routledge p 114 ISBN 978 0 415 22703 2 Retrieved 2008 11 24 Widjaja Michael igboguide org igboguide org Retrieved 2019 04 17 Ritzer George 2004 Handbook of Social Problems A Comparative International Perspective Contributor George Ritzer SAGE p 248 ISBN 978 0 7619 2610 8 Retrieved 2008 11 24 OKONJO KAMENE 1992 Aspects of Continuity and Change in Mate Selection Among the Igbo West of the River Niger Journal of Comparative Family Studies 23 3 339 360 doi 10 3138 jcfs 23 3 339 ISSN 0047 2328 JSTOR 41602232 Uchendu Patrick Kenechukwu 1995 Education and the Changing Economic Role of Nigerian Women Fourth Dimension Publishing p 114 ISBN 978 978 156 403 1 Formerly there were many polygamous marriages because of the need for many hands to work in the farm Okeke Ihejirika Philomina Ezeagbor 2004 Negotiating Power and Privilege Igbo Career Women in Contemporary Nigeria Ohio University Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 89680 241 4 Retrieved 2008 11 24 Oheneba Sakyi Yaw 2006 African families at the turn of the 21st century Greenwood Publishing Group p 161 ISBN 978 0 275 97274 5 THE IGBO TRADITIONAL ATTIRE thevoicesa com Retrieved 2019 04 20 a b c Chuku Gloria 2005 Igbo Women and Economic Transformation in Southeastern Nigeria 1900 1960 1900 1960 Routledge p 135 ISBN 978 0 415 97210 9 Retrieved 2008 12 18 a b c d e Masquelier Adeline Marie 2005 Dirt Undress and Difference Critical Perspectives on the Body s Surface Indiana University Press pp 38 45 ISBN 978 0 253 34628 5 Retrieved 2008 12 18 Equiano Olaudah 1837 The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano I Knapp p 14 a b Ukwu Dele C Igbo People Clothing amp Cosmetic Makeup at the Time of Things Fall Apart last paragraph Archived from the original on 2008 09 23 Retrieved 2008 11 23 Isichei Elizabeth Allo 1977 Igbo Worlds An Anthology of Oral Histories and Historical Descriptions Macmillan p 113 ISBN 978 0 333 19836 0 Retrieved 2008 12 18 McCall John Christensen 2000 Dancing histories heuristic ethnography with the Ohafia Igbo University of Michigan Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 472 11070 4 Emenanjọ E Nọlue 1978 Elements of modern Igbo grammar a descriptive approach Oxford University Press p 42 ISBN 978 978 154 078 3 BBC Yam and the Igbos www bbc co uk Retrieved 2019 04 20 Igbo people Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2019 04 21 Agwu Kene Yam and the Igbos BBC Birmingham Retrieved 2008 11 24 Glasgow Jacqueline Linda J Rice 2007 Exploring African Life and Literature Novel Guides to Promote Socially Responsive Learning International Reading Assoc p 335 ISBN 978 0 87207 609 9 Retrieved 2009 01 10 McWhorter John H 2000 The Missing Spanish Creoles Recovering the Birth of Plantation Contact Languages University of California Press p 77 ISBN 978 0 520 21999 1 Retrieved 2008 11 29 O Halloran Kate 1997 Hands on Culture of West Africa Walch Publishing p 63 ISBN 978 0 8251 3087 8 Blacking John Joann W Kealiinohomoku 1979 The Performing Arts Music and Dance 4th paragraph Walter de Gruyter p 265 ISBN 978 90 279 7870 7 Retrieved 2009 01 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Uchem Rose N 2001 Overcoming Women s Subordination in the Igbo African Culture and in the Catholic Church Envisioning an Inclusive Theology with Reference to Women Universal Publishers p 36 ISBN 978 1 58112 133 9 Nwachuku Levi Akalazu G N Uzoigwe 2004 Troubled Journey Nigeria Since the Civil War Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 8 ISBN 978 0 7618 2712 2 Retrieved 2009 01 10 Onuah Felix 29 December 2006 Nigeria gives census result avoids risky details Reuters Retrieved 2008 11 23 Lewis Peter 2007 Growing Apart Oil Politics and Economic Change in Indonesia and Nigeria University of Michigan Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 472 06980 4 Retrieved 2008 11 23 Suberu Rotimi T 2001 Federalism and Ethnic Conflict in Nigeria US Institute of Peace Press p 154 ISBN 978 1 929223 28 2 Retrieved 2008 12 18 IITA Annual Report International Institute of Tropical Agriculture 1988 p 8 ISBN 978 978 131 048 5 Retrieved 2008 12 26 Jarmon Charles 1988 Nigeria BRILL p 113 ISBN 978 90 04 08340 0 Retrieved 2008 12 26 Udeani Chibueze 2007 Inculturation as Dialogue Igbo Culture and the Message of Christ Rodopi p 7 ISBN 978 90 420 2229 4 Taylor William H 1996 Mission to Educate A History of the Educational Work of the Scottish Presbyterian Mission in East Nigeria 1846 1960 BRILL p 31 ISBN 978 90 04 10713 7 Retrieved 2008 12 26 Pojmann Wendy Ann 2006 Immigrant Women and Feminism in Italy Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 35 36 ISBN 978 0 7546 4674 7 World Igbo Environmental Federation PDF Retrieved 2008 11 23 Falola Toyin Niyi Afolabi 2008 Trans Atlantic Migration The Paradoxes of Exile Routledge p 35 ISBN 978 0 415 96091 5 Mwakikagile Godfrey 2004 Africa Is In A Mess What Went Wrong And What Should Be Done Fultus Corporation p 82 ISBN 978 0 9744339 7 4 Ciment James 2001 Encyclopedia of American Immigration M E Sharpe p 1075 ISBN 978 0 7656 8028 0 Farr Marcia 2004 Ethnolinguistic Chicago Language and Literacy in the City s Neighborhoods Lawrence Erlbaum Associates p 182 ISBN 978 0 8058 4345 3 Dresser Norine 2005 Multicultural Manners Essential Rules of Etiquette for the 21st Century revised illustrated ed John Wiley and Sons p 212 ISBN 978 0 471 68428 2 Eades Jeremy Seymour 1993 Strangers and Traders Yoruba Migrants Markets and the State in Northern Ghana illustrated ed Edinburgh University Press p 200 ISBN 978 0 7486 0386 2 Minahan James 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z Greenwood Publishing Group p 330 ISBN 978 0 313 32384 3 Richard Dreux July 19 2011 Japan s Nigerians pay price for prosperity The Japan Times Retrieved 2012 03 31 Richard Dreux June 11 2013 Japan s Nigerians see symbol of change in masquerade The Japan Times Retrieved 2013 07 21 Migration and business Weaving the world together The Economist 2011 11 19 Retrieved 2015 04 12 Ethnic origins 2006 counts for Canada provinces and territories bottom Statistics Canada 2008 04 02 Archived from the original on 2016 08 18 Retrieved 2010 04 04 19 520 identify as Nigerian 61 430 identify as black Crews Chip February 1 2006 Lives Makes a Present of Black Americans Past The Washington Post Company Retrieved 2009 01 10 James Lipton Himself Host Forest Whitaker Himself 2006 12 11 Inside the Actors Studio Forest Whitaker 2006 Inside the Actors Studio Season 13 New York City New York USA Bravomedia Bravotv Garner Jack October 10 2006 Movies Forest Whitaker takes viewer inside Idi Amin Gannett News Service ninth paragraph Archived from the original on December 26 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 23 I wanted to understand what it was like to be Ugandan even though my roots are in Nigeria and other parts of West Africa Underwood Blair Testimonials Africanancestry com Archived from the original on 2008 12 19 Retrieved 2008 11 23 A welcome surprise that my people are from Nigeria amp Ibo peopleFurther readingGeneral Forde Cyril Daryll Jones G I 1950 The Ibo and Ibibio Speaking Peoples of South Eastern Nigeria International African Institute by Oxford Unive Njoku John Eberegbulam 1990 The Igbos of Nigeria Ancient Rites Changes and Survival Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 978 0 88946 173 4 Chuku Gloria Igbo historiography Parts I II and III History Compass 16 10 2018 e12489 Art Ottenberg Simon 2006 Toyin Falola ed Igbo Art amp Culture Africa World Press ISBN 978 1 59221 442 6 Music Blacking John Kealiinohomoku Joann W 1979 The Performing arts music and dance Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 90 279 7870 7 Agawu Kofi 2003 Representing African Music Postcolonial Notes Queries Positions Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 94390 1 Economy Chidi Leonard Ilechukwu Igbo Indigenous Economy and the Search for Sustainable Development in Post Colonial African Society Cidjap Press Enugu Nigeria 2008 ISBN 978 978 087 181 9 Politics Smock Audrey C 1971 Ibo Politics The Role Of Ethnic Unions In Eastern Nigeria Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 44025 8 Njaka Elechukwu Nnadibuagha 1974 Igbo political culture Northwestern University Press ISBN 978 0 8101 0428 0 Society Rwomire Apollo 2001 Social Problems in Africa New Visions Praeger Greenwood ISBN 978 0 275 96343 9 Emenyonu Ernest ed 2003 Emerging Perspectives on Chinua Achebe Africa World Press ISBN 978 0 86543 876 7 Smith David Jordan 2004 Igbo Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender Men and Women in the World s Cultures Volume I Topics and Cultures A K Springer ISBN 978 0 306 47770 6 Okpala Benneth 2003 Toasting the Bride Memoirs of Milestones to Manhood 2nd ed Trafford Publishing ISBN 978 1 4120 0777 1 P E Aligwekwe The Continuity of Traditional Values in the African Societies the Igbo of Nigeria Xlibris Publishing Company IN USA 2008 Diaspora Chambers Douglas B 2005 Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 57806 706 0 Morgan Philip D Omohundro Institute of Early American History amp Culture 1998 Slave counterpoint Black culture in the eighteenth century Chesapeake and Lowcountry UNC Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4717 6 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Igbo people Scholia has a topic profile for Igbo people GI Jones Photographic Archive of southeastern Nigeria Igboguide org Insight into Igbo Culture and Language Wedding Tradition In Igboland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Igbo people amp oldid 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