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GEOGRAPHY
The people of Ancient Benin
Kingdom, known as the Bronze people live on the South East coast
of West Africa and cover an area of about 4,000 square miles.
There are five main dialects, Ancient Benin Kingdom proper,
Ishan, Ivbiesakon, Etsako, and Akoko Edo. Others that emigrated
from Ancient Benin Kingdom, often classified as non-Benin are
Urhobos, Itsekiri, Ika, Ikwerri Ibos, Ogbas, Udowas, Ga of
Ghana, and Onitsha Ibos.
Benin City is surrounded by
two moats with high walls. The two moats are amebic in shape and
were dug by two different Kings, about 200 years apart. The
outer wall, about 28 miles in perimeter, was dug in about 1280
A.D. by King Oguola (the 6th King of the 2nd
dynasty), to keep his enemy away. The second, inner wall was dug
by King Ewuare (the 13th King of the 2nd
dynasty) to prevent the kingdom from being depopulated as a
result of the unpopular laws he had enacted, much of which he
later repealed.

ญญญญญญญญญญญThe first recording
of the Kingdom was around 900 A.D. and the first ruler known as
Ogiso (God representation on Earth – an expression used to
describe his greatness). There were about 31 Ogisos that ruled
the Kingdom between 900 and 1200 A.D. Thereafter, a second
dynasty of the King was established. The original name of the
Kingdom was Igodomigodo, named after the first ruler Igodo .
About mid twelve century,
Ancient Benin Kingdom witnessed a traumatic event during the
last Ogiso Owodo’s reign, which almost collapsed the kingdom.
History stated that Ogiso’s wives could not bear children.
Meanwhile, one of his wives whom he married earlier as a prince
had an only son called Ikaladeran. After a considerable period
on the throne, the other wives began to worry about their
bareness and felt Ogiso had brought this condition upon them,
and so they resorted to the Oracle, one of the only way Ancient
Benin people found solutions to their problems. Upon consulting
the seer (Also the medical doctor), Ogiso’s wives were told
Ikaladeran was responsible for their infertility and unless he
was sacrificed to the god of fertility, they won’t have
children. After much pressure on the Ogiso by his wives, instead
of having them desert him, yielded and ordered Ikaladeran
offered for sacrifice. However, the guards that were instructed
to sacrifice Ikaladeran outside Benin City set him free and
ordered him to run away and never to return. After much
wandering, Ikaladeran finally settled in Ile-Ife (which in Benin
means I ran to safety) the birth place of the Yoruba Kingdom.
Ikaladeran later founded his Kingdom under assumed name Oduduwa
(which in Benin also means I have found road to prosperity).
As fate would have it, the
Ogiso’s wives remained childless. Upon the death of Ogiso (Owodo),
years later, there was no heir to the throne. The elders who had
plotted his escape, revealed what they had done. A search was
then mounted to locate Ikaladeran, and they finally caught up
with him at Ile-Ife. He was now being worshipped as a King in
his new place and when the search team requested him to return
with them, he refused citing the Binis nonchalant attitude to
his father’s decision to have him killed. After much pressure on
him to return and himself knowing Binis might forcibly move him
back to Benin City, he ordered his son Oranmiyan to go with them
instead. When Oranmiyan arrived Benin City, he did not like his
new home and returned back to Ile-Ife, from where later he went
to found Oyo empire and became the first Alaffin of Oyo.
However, before he left Benin, one of his wives bethrothed to
him had a son named Eweka, who continued the second dynasty and
became the first King. The current King Erediauwa is the 39th
King of the second dynasty that started about 1170 A.D., after
31 previous Kings (Ogisos).
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