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Igede people
View on WikipediaThe Igede people are a Nigerian ethnic group[2] in Benue State of Nigeria.[3] They are native to the Oju and Obi local government areas of Benue State, Nigeria, where 2006 population figures stand at an estimated 267,198 people.[4] However, many Igede people are dispersed across the state and the Nation. For instance, the Igede language is also spoken in Nigeria's Cross River State, and many Igede communities exist in Osun State and Ogun State.[5] The Igede language is a member of the Benue-Congo subgroup of the Niger-Congo language family.
Key Information
Geographical location
[edit]The Oju Local Government Area was created in 1976 and shares boundaries with present-day Obi, Ado, Konshisha and Gwer East Local Government Areas of Benue State, Ebonyi and Izzi Local Government Areas of Ebonyi State, and Yala Local Government Area of Cross River State. It is headquartered in Anyuwogbu, Ibilla.[6]
The Obi Local Government Area was created in 1996 and has its headquarters at Obarike-Ito. The local government area derives its name from the Obi stream that flows in the area and shares boundary with Ado, Otukpo and Oju local government areas of Benue State.[7]
History
[edit]Origin: Oral tradition
[edit]The Igede trace their origin to Sabon Gida Ora in present-day Edo state. They are said to be the descendants of Agba, a high chief in Sabon Gida Ora. A skirmish between the Igede and the natives of Ora led to their migration from that region to present-day Benue state through Nsukka in Enugu state. This historical event in Igede history is commonly recounted in song and drama, for instance the record and drama piece "Ego ny'Igede".[8]
Origin: Archival records
[edit]Archival records portray them as migrants from Ogoja province who later were group under one umbrella as Idoma. Idoma is an amalgamation of different tribes namely: Igede, Doma, Akpoto, Agatu, Akpa by the colonial masters for ease of administration. The Akpoto tribe was adopted as the general language language to spoken by all IDOMA.The letter ",i" in IDOMA stands for Igede tribe and Doma was from Doma tribe. Since two tribes were the dominant tribes, these two were coined together to form IDOMA. While the Doma people are no longer in Benue State, because they have LGA called Doma, in current Nasarawa State, the Igede has two LGAs called Oju and Obi and it appears the Igede people have detached themselves from the amalgamation Idoma.[9]
Administration and politics
[edit]Politically, the Igede falls under the Benue South senatorial district.[10]
Igede culture
[edit]The Igede are predominantly farmers cultivating maize, cassava, groundnut and yams. Igede is home of the popular Igede-Agba festival, a colourful annual celebration that marks the yam harvest season in September.[11]
Igede traditional clothes are blue, black, and white stripes.[citation needed]
Notable Igede people
[edit]- Ode Ojowu, Chief Economic Adviser to President Obasanjo and CEO National Planning Commission[12]
- Oga Okwoche, Former Nigerian Ambassador to France[13]
- Peter Okwoche, host of the BBC Focus on Africa TV news magazine programme[13]
References
[edit]- ^ Odey, Mike (2020). Understanding Igede Indigenous Knowledge Systems and the Future of Igede Cultural Heritage in Benue State, Nigeria. p. 263.
- ^ "Our Story". Indigenous People of Biafra USA. Retrieved 2019-06-28.
- ^ "Igede.org". Igede.org. Archived from the original on 2016-05-26. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
- ^ "Brief History". Igede.org. 2010-11-10. Archived from the original on 2016-03-27. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
- ^ Olatokun, Wole; Ayanbode, O.F. (April 2009). "Use of indigenous knowledge by women in a Nigerian rural community". Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge. 8 (2): 287–295. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
- ^ https://www.pressreader.com/nigeria/daily-trust-sunday/20140302/282157879169288. Retrieved 2022-05-24 – via PressReader.
{{cite web}}: Missing or empty|title=(help) - ^ "Obi Local Government Area". IdomaLand. 31 December 2011. Retrieved 2022-05-24.
- ^ David Agogo (2011-09-02), Ego nyi Igede, retrieved 2016-05-27
- ^ Ugbem, Confort E. (2013). "The Social Relations of Identity Construction and Reconstruction among Ethnic Groups in Benue State, Nigeria". IFRA E-papers. Archived from the original on 2016-07-17. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
- ^ "Benue Guber & The Dynamics Of Zone C Politics". benue.com.ng. Archived from the original on 2015-07-16. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
- ^ Ebhota, Eseohe (2014-03-02). "Intriguing traditional wedding rites of the Igede people". Daily Trust. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
- ^ "Nigeria: The Sack of Prof Ode Ojowu". allafrica.com. Daily Trust. 2005-11-28. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
- ^ a b Odeh, Onche (2014-11-01). "Every radio station in Lagos refused to hire me – BBC's Okwoche". Archived from the original on 2014-11-02. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
Igede people
View on GrokipediaGeography and Demographics
Location and Habitat
The Igede people primarily inhabit the Oju and Obi local government areas (LGAs) in Benue State, Nigeria, with significant settlements also in Otukpo and Okpokwu LGAs of the same state, as well as Ogoja LGA in Cross River State and Izzi LGA in Ebonyi State.[4] [1] Smaller populations exist in Osun and Ogun States, reflecting historical migrations.[1] These areas position the Igede as the third-largest ethnic group in Benue State, after the Tiv and Idoma.[1] The habitat encompasses the Southern Guinea Savanna agro-ecological zone, marked by a distinct wet season (April to October) and dry season (November to March), supporting agriculture through fertile alluvial soils along the Benue River and its tributaries.[5] Terrain varies from undulating plains to hilly and rocky elevations, such as in Andibilla and Uchenyim, interspersed with riparian ecosystems and community forests that harbor diverse fauna including mammals, birds, and reptiles.[6] [7] Sacred groves like Ipinu-Igede Forest exemplify localized ecological preservation, featuring tropical forest elements with high tree species diversity and endangered flora-fauna assemblages, amid broader savanna vegetation adapted to seasonal flooding and drought.[8] [9] Human modifications, including farming and settlement expansion, impact riparian zones, yet these areas sustain yam, cassava, and rice cultivation central to Igede subsistence.[10]Population Estimates and Distribution
The Igede people are predominantly located in the Oju and Obi local government areas (LGAs) of Benue State in central Nigeria, where they form the majority ethnic group.[11] These areas lie in the southern part of Benue State, near the border with Cross River State, and the Igede constitute the third-largest ethnic group in Benue overall, following the Tiv and Idoma.[1] Smaller Igede communities exist elsewhere in Benue State due to internal migration for farming and trade, as well as in neighboring states including Cross River, Osun, and Ogun.[1] Population estimates for the Igede derive primarily from extrapolations of the 2006 Nigerian national census data for Oju and Obi LGAs, which recorded approximately 267,198 residents, though this figure does not fully account for ethnic composition or out-migration.[11] More recent assessments, accounting for dispersion and natural growth, place the total Igede population in Nigeria between 400,000 and 526,000 as of the early 2020s; for instance, the Joshua Project estimates 526,000 individuals speaking Igede as their primary language.[4] [12] These figures remain approximate, as Nigeria has not conducted a full census with ethnic breakdowns since 2006, and no official government data disaggregates by Igede specifically.[4] Urban migration and economic opportunities have led to Igede settlements in major Nigerian cities such as Abuja, Lagos, and Port Harcourt, though precise diaspora numbers within Nigeria are unavailable.[1] Rural densities remain high in Oju and Obi, where agriculture sustains most households, contributing to steady local population growth despite limited infrastructure.[11]Historical Origins and Development
Ancestral Migration and Oral Accounts
According to Igede oral traditions, the people trace their ancestry to Agba, regarded as the progenitor and a high chief in Sabon Gida Ora, located in present-day Edo State, Nigeria.[13][14] These accounts portray Agba as the foundational figure from whom all Igede clans descend, with his legacy preserved through rituals and festivals that emphasize communal harvest and ancestral veneration.[13] A central narrative in Igede folklore describes a conflict or skirmish between Agba's descendants and the indigenous Ora people, prompting the initial migration southward and eastward from Sabon Gida Ora.[13][14] This event, recounted in songs, dramas, and elder testimonies such as "Ego ny'Igede," forced the group to relocate, seeking fertile lands amid ongoing disputes over territory and resources.[13] The migration path followed a route through Nsukka in present-day Enugu State, where temporary settlements allowed intermarriages and cultural exchanges, before final settlement in the Oju and Obi areas of Benue State along the Niger-Benue confluence.[13][14] Alternative oral variants occasionally reference origins in Ogoja Province of Cross River State, potentially reflecting later absorptions or conflations with neighboring groups, though the Sabon Gida Ora account predominates in clan genealogies and remains distinct from Idoma traditions linked to the Kwararafa confederation.[14] The Igede Agba New Yam Festival, held annually on the first Ihigile market day, ritually reenacts these migratory hardships and Agba's leadership, underscoring themes of resilience and adaptation in Igede worldview.[13][14] These traditions, transmitted orally across generations, highlight causal factors like resource competition and kinship ties as drivers of movement, without evidence of large-scale conquests.Archival Evidence and Pre-Colonial History
Archival records from early colonial administrations in Nigeria portray the Igede as migrants from the Ogoja province in present-day Cross River State, who had settled in their Benue locations by the late 19th century, adopting elements of neighboring Idoma practices while maintaining distinct identity.[11] These records, including intelligence reports on the Idoma Division, often classified the Igede as a clan within broader Idoma structures, though this reflected administrative convenience rather than ethnic reality, as evidenced by subsequent resistance to such subsumption.[15] Pre-colonial interactions with neighboring groups, such as the Idoma and Igala, involved trade and occasional conflicts over resources, with limited written documentation prior to European contact around 1900.[16] Reconstruction of pre-colonial Igede history relies on a synthesis of oral accounts and indirect archival inferences, dating settlements from approximately 1600 onward.[17] Society was decentralized and segmentary, organized into 14 to 17 autonomous clans, each governed by a chief (Ohe) advised by elders and age-grade systems, without centralized kingship or standing armies.[16] [18] Judicial matters, including capital punishments, were handled through clan councils enforcing customary laws based on kinship ties and communal consensus. Economic life centered on slash-and-burn agriculture, with yams as staple, supplemented by hunting, fishing, and indigenous iron smelting using local bloomery furnaces for tools and weapons, a technology predating colonial influence.[19] Discrepancies exist between oral traditions—tracing origins to Agba, a chief from Sabon Gida Ora in Edo State, with migration via Nsukka due to a skirmish over a ceremonial pot—and archival views linking them southward from Ogoja, suggesting possible multiple waves or route variations around the 17th-18th centuries.[13] No pre-colonial Igede kingdoms or city-states are documented, aligning with egalitarian structures resistant to hierarchical consolidation, though inter-clan alliances facilitated defense and trade in forest-savanna ecotones.[20] These elements underscore a resilient, self-reliant pre-colonial polity adapted to agrarian demands and environmental pressures.Colonial Encounters and Post-Independence Trajectory
The British colonial administration incorporated the Igede territories into the Northern Nigeria Protectorate by the early 1900s, following exploratory expeditions and military pacification campaigns that subdued local resistance across Benue Province.[21] Indirect rule was implemented, transforming the traditionally decentralized, segmentary lineage-based political institutions of the Igede into a hierarchical system reliant on appointed warrant chiefs, who collected taxes and enforced colonial policies such as labor recruitment and the introduction of limited cash crops alongside subsistence yam farming.[22] This restructuring often favored neighboring Idoma authorities initially, subsuming Igede areas under the Idoma Native Authority and fostering early tensions over autonomy, while Christian missionaries, arriving concurrently from the 1910s, established schools and churches that eroded aspects of indigenous spiritual practices and promoted Western education, though adoption was gradual and syncretic.[23] Following Nigeria's independence on October 1, 1960, the Igede integrated into the federal structure as part of Benue Province, later Benue-Plateau State in 1967, and Benue State upon its creation on February 3, 1976, with Oju and Obi local government areas designated for their primary habitation.[13] During the Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970), Igede communities in northern Benue aligned with the federal government, avoiding direct Biafran incursion but experiencing disruptions from refugee influxes and economic strains, with local leaders mediating to maintain stability.[24] Post-war reconstruction emphasized agricultural continuity, but inter-ethnic frictions intensified over land and political representation, including disputes with Tiv and Idoma groups involving armed clashes resolved through state diplomacy, while economic pressures from population growth—estimated at over 267,000 Igede by the 2006 census—and farmer-herder incursions by Fulani pastoralists prompted calls for enhanced self-reliance and anti-open grazing measures in Benue since the 2010s.[25] These dynamics have perpetuated fragile inherited colonial administrative frameworks, hindering infrastructure development despite yam exports remaining a key economic driver.Language and Linguistics
Structure and Classification of Igede Language
The Igede language is classified within the Idomoid subgroup of the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo language family, a grouping supported by comparative linguistic databases that emphasize shared morphological and phonological features with neighboring Idoma varieties.[26][27] This placement reflects its typological affinities, including noun class systems and tonal distinctions typical of Volta-Niger languages, though Igede exhibits distinct innovations such as specific vowel harmony patterns not uniformly shared across the broader Benue-Congo continuum.[28] Phonologically, Igede features a nine-vowel inventory divided into two harmonic sets based on advanced tongue root ([+ATR] set: /i, e, o, u, ɪ/) and non-advanced ([–ATR] set: /ɪ, ɛ, ɔ, ʊ/), where harmony is enforced by pharyngeal constriction, prohibiting co-occurrence of [+ATR] and [–ATR] vowels within the same word; prefixes conform to the root's harmony class.[29] The language employs a tonal system with high, mid, and low tones, subject to processes like tone spreading, deletion, and assimilation in morphological contexts, as documented in analyses of verb and noun derivations. Consonants include a standard Bantu-like inventory with labial, alveolar, palatal, velar, and glottal stops, fricatives, nasals, and approximants, totaling around 25-30 phonemes excluding tones. Morphologically, Igede is agglutinative with a robust noun class system, where classes are marked by vowel prefixes that distinguish singular from plural forms—plurality often achieved by substituting the singular prefix vowel (e.g., singular *i-V- to plural *a-V- in certain classes)—and control agreement on verbs, adjectives, and possessives.[32] Noun phrases are head-initial, with modifiers following the head noun, contrasting with head-final structures in unrelated languages like English.[33] Verb morphology incorporates tense-aspect markers via suffixes or auxiliaries, serial verb constructions for complex predicates, and focus strategies that front focused elements with associated particles, akin to ex situ focus in related Yoruba dialects.[28] Syntactically, Igede follows a basic subject-verb-object (SVO) order, with flexibility for topicalization and relativization via relative pronouns or clause embedding; negation is typically post-verbal, and questions employ interrogative particles or intonation rises without inverting subject-verb order.[27] These features underscore its analytic tendencies alongside agglutinative elements, facilitating concise expression in oral traditions and modern literacy efforts.[34]Dialects and Cultural Significance
The Igede language, classified within the Idomoid branch of the Benue-Congo subgroup of Niger-Congo, displays regional variations that align with the primary settlement areas of the Igede people in Oju and Obi local government areas of Benue State, Nigeria.[27] Ethnographic observations note distinctions such as the Uwokwu dialect, identified as a primary variant spoken by significant portions of the population.[4] These variations involve subtle differences in pronunciation, vocabulary, and tonal patterns, but remain mutually intelligible, facilitating unified communication across Igede communities.[28] Linguistic studies highlight features like vowel harmony and tonal processes that are consistent across variants, with nine vowel sounds grouped into advanced tongue root (ATR) sets, underscoring the language's structural coherence despite local adaptations.[29] Efforts to standardize orthography, including a unified alphabet developed in the 1980s incorporating diacritics for tones and length, aim to bridge these dialectal nuances for literacy and translation purposes.[35] The Igede language holds profound cultural significance as the core vehicle for transmitting indigenous knowledge systems, folklore, proverbs, and moral values that define communal identity and ancestral linkages.[36] It encodes ethical principles such as hard work, social justice, and harmony with nature, reinforced through oral narratives and rituals that sustain social cohesion amid external pressures like urbanization.[37] As the medium of traditional poetry and songs, including those addressing justice and preservation, it actively contributes to cultural resilience and community development in Igede society.[38]Religion and Worldview
Indigenous Beliefs and Practices
The indigenous beliefs of the Igede people center on a cosmology featuring Ohe, the supreme great spirit and creator deity conceptualized as a solar entity associated with all earthly phenomena.[13] Ancestors, revered as the "living dead," function as intermediaries between the living in Ijalehe (the land of the living) and the spiritual realm, influencing community affairs through dreams, divination, and enforcement of moral order; they are seen as deities capable of blessings or retribution if burial rites are neglected.[39] Reincarnation forms a core tenet, with deceased spirits potentially returning as children termed alegu, believed to embody ancestral essences, prompting specific burial practices to ensure proper form and prevent deformities in subsequent lives.[39] Spirits such as Akpang, an ancestral watchdog deity tied to land guardianship, embody justice and serenity, punishing vices like witchcraft and theft while protecting the community; this spirit is invoked through hereditary male-only secret cults maintaining shrines known as Uja.[13][40] Akpang's role underscores a worldview where spiritual forces maintain social equilibrium, with unrested souls from improper funerals causing communal harm until appeased via rituals.[39] The earth spirit Ohe-Oleji merges with ancestral essences in an amorphous collective, reinforcing beliefs in interconnected spiritual and terrestrial domains.[41] Key practices include differentiated burial rites reflecting death's circumstances: natural deaths (Igwu ny’adohe) involve elaborate two-to-three-day ceremonies with corpse bathing, goat sacrifices, status-signifying gunshots, and grave orientations (men eastward, women westward), often followed by a second burial at the maternal home for ancestral blessings; children's burials (Ida onyi’onjwo) occur within 24 hours using banana leaves in the mother's backyard; violent or suspicious deaths (Ogwu ewu) mandate interment in forbidden "evil forests" to isolate disruptive spirits and appease ancestors.[39] Masquerades (Okwumu), divided into public entertaining forms and nocturnal fear-inducing variants, represent deities or ancestors during funerals and festivals, with Ebwo as the paramount "King of Masquerades" embodying authority.[13] The Igede Agba New Yam Festival, held annually in September, exemplifies harvest thanksgiving to Ohe and Agba (the primordial ancestor), featuring dances, masquerades, and invocations to Akpang for fertility and protection, thereby renewing communal ties to spiritual progenitors and promoting moral renewal.[13][40] These practices, though diminishing amid Christian dominance, persist in syncretic forms among some adherents, highlighting a pragmatic ontology where empirical communal welfare hinges on ritual fidelity to ancestral and spiritual causality.[42]Adoption of Christianity and Syncretism
Christianity was introduced to the Igede people primarily through European missionary efforts in the early 20th century, coinciding with British colonial administration in Benue Province. The Methodist Mission established the first station in Igumale around 1922, marking the initial organized evangelization in Igede territory.[43] Following local resistance to colonial rule, such as the 1928 Ogbuloko uprising, British authorities supported missionary activities to promote pacification and social control, leading to the establishment of Methodist schools in Ibilla (1932) and subsequent sites like Ito and Ainu (1935).[43] The Netherlands Reformed Church also extended operations into Igede areas within the broader Idoma division, focusing on humanitarian institutions; for instance, Bethesda Hospital and Orphanage initiated services in 1963 to address practices like infanticide, relocating to Ikachi in the early 1970s for logistical reasons.[43] These efforts emphasized education, healthcare, and direct preaching, gradually eroding adherence to indigenous animistic beliefs centered on land spirits known as Akpan.[13] By the late 20th century, Christianity had achieved dominance among the Igede, with estimates indicating 80% adherence, including both Protestant and Catholic denominations, while 20% retain ethnic religions.[4] Alternative surveys suggest 85-90% Christian affiliation in core Igede areas like Oju Local Government Area, reflecting accelerated conversion post-independence through indigenous clergy and church growth.[44] [45] Despite this, syncretism persists, blending Christian doctrine with Igede cosmology; for example, traditional music, dance, and attire are incorporated into worship services, facilitating cultural continuity.[46] Parallelisms appear in communal practices like marriage and burial rites, where polygyny and ancestral veneration elements coexist with Christian sacraments, forming hybrid rituals that retain pre-Christian social structures.[46] Tensions arise from irreconcilable elements, such as Igede beliefs in reincarnation, which conflict with orthodox Christian eschatology, leading to selective rejection or reinterpretation among converts.[46] This syncretic dynamic has resulted in a "new amalgam" of practices, where residual animism influences Christian expression, evident in the 20% adherence to traditional faiths and occasional dual observances during festivals like Igede Agba, despite formal Christian majorities.[46] [4] Missionary institutions continue to play a role in reinforcing monotheistic exclusivity, though cultural retention underscores the incomplete displacement of indigenous worldviews.[43]Economy and Subsistence
Traditional Agricultural Systems
The Igede people traditionally practiced small-scale subsistence agriculture as the foundation of their economy, cultivating a variety of crops suited to the fertile soils of Benue State. Yam (Dioscorea spp.), revered as the "king of all crops," served as the principal staple, with communities specializing in its production alongside maize, cassava, groundnuts, cocoyam, bambaranuts, wateryams, rice, and various vegetables.[13][25] Palm trees were also integral for products like oil and wine, supporting both consumption and limited trade with neighboring groups such as the Idoma for beans or Izis for palm oil.[13][25] Cultivation relied on manual labor with crudely fabricated local tools, including hoes and machetes forged from indigenous ironworking techniques, enabling land clearing, tilling, and harvesting in rain-fed systems.[13] Land tenure combined communal access with patrilineal individual rights, where plots were allocated within lineages but women held no ownership, reflecting gendered divisions in agricultural roles.[13] Farming emphasized self-sufficiency, with families engaging in mixed cropping to maximize yields on small holdings, though specific techniques like mounding for yams were communal efforts involving male kin groups to cover extensive areas efficiently.[47] The agricultural calendar aligned with seasonal rainfall, culminating in the annual Igede Agba festival in September to celebrate the yam harvest, express gratitude for bountiful yields, and inaugurate the new planting season through dances, masquerades, and rituals.[13] This event underscored yams' cultural and nutritional centrality, as poor harvests historically threatened food security in the absence of widespread irrigation or mechanization.[13] Surplus produce facilitated barter economies along rivers like the Benue and Niger, fostering inter-ethnic ties without reliance on cash crops pre-colonially.[25]Contemporary Economic Pressures and Self-Reliance
The Igede people, predominantly agrarian and reliant on subsistence farming of crops such as yams, rice, and groundnuts, encounter acute economic pressures from pervasive poverty, which manifests as a entrenched cultural and lifestyle issue hindering broader development in areas like Oju Local Government Area.[48] This poverty is exacerbated by infrastructural deficits, including inadequate roads and markets that limit access to commercial economies despite partial integration, as well as limited healthcare and educational resources that perpetuate underdevelopment.[49] Political neglect at state and federal levels in Benue and Cross River states further compounds these challenges, with communities in Yala and Oju LGAs reporting exploitation and insufficient investment in agriculture or public services, contributing to youth unemployment and stalled economic mobility.[50] Land disputes, including violent clashes over farmland that claimed at least 30 Igede youth lives in 2024, disrupt agricultural productivity and heighten food insecurity in this yam-dependent region.[51] In response to governmental shortcomings, Igede communities emphasize self-reliance through strong bonding social capital rooted in kinship networks, family values, and ethnic solidarity, which facilitate mutual aid in farming and resource sharing to mitigate poverty's impacts.[52] Cultural and moral values, such as communal labor and ethical imperatives for hard work, serve as foundations for grassroots development initiatives, including local agricultural cooperatives and peace-building efforts that restore economic stability amid conflicts.[37] Annual festivals like Igede Agba, celebrating the yam harvest, reinforce agrarian self-sufficiency by honoring productivity and community resilience, while ad hoc empowerment programs—such as cash grants of ₦250,000 to graduates in 2025—aim to seed small-scale enterprises, though scalability remains limited without sustained infrastructure.[53] These efforts highlight a causal reliance on endogenous social structures over external aid, enabling incremental adaptation to market commercialization despite broader national economic volatilities like inflation and currency devaluation affecting Nigerian agriculture.[1]Social Organization and Cultural Practices
Kinship Structures and Family Dynamics
The Igede kinship system is patrilineal, with descent, inheritance, and social obligations traced through male lines to ensure the perpetuation of family names and cultural custodianship. Male children, referred to as anyi aleng, hold particular significance as bearers of lineage continuity, often celebrated upon the birth of the first son alongside the first fruits of the harvest. This structure underscores a preference for sons in family dynamics, positioning them as primary inheritors of paternal responsibilities and communal roles.[1] Land ownership, central to the agrarian Igede economy, follows patrilineal distribution, combining communal and individual holdings passed to male heirs while excluding women from direct ownership under traditional customs. Extended family networks reinforce these dynamics by providing mutual support, such as caring for members disabled by illness or accident until self-sufficiency is restored, reflecting a pragmatic communalism rooted in clan ties.[1][54] Polygyny features prominently in traditional family organization, where multiple wives signify male wealth and status, contributing to large household sizes viewed as markers of prosperity and labor capacity for farming. Marriage practices emphasize exogamy, requiring partners from outside the immediate kinship group to broaden alliances, with unions formalized through rites that prioritize lifelong commitment and rare divorce, primarily allowable for grave offenses like adultery. These elements foster hierarchical yet interdependent dynamics, with elders guiding family decisions amid gerontocratic influences.Rites, Festivals, and Moral Codes
The principal festival of the Igede people is the Igede Agba, an annual celebration of the new yam harvest held in September. This event features thanksgiving rites to deities and ancestors, performances of traditional dances and music, and communal feasting centered on yam dishes. It reinforces cultural identity and communal bonds by promoting gratitude for agricultural bounty and unity among participants.[3] Rites of passage encompass marriage, which traditionally involves customs now partially altered by Christianity and modernization, and elaborate funerals differentiated by the cause and status of death. Natural deaths from illness or advanced age prompt multi-day burials with gunshots signaling social prominence, goat sacrifices, and interment on mats or wrappers denoting wealth and kinship ties. In contrast, deaths deemed abominable—such as suicide or poisoning—require immediate disposal in remote forests without coffins, mourning, or formal funerals, while minors receive hasty burials wrapped in banana leaves to symbolize innocence. Key rituals include anointing the body with palm oil for purification, a secondary burial at the maternal homestead to secure blessings and inheritance, and elders invoking the spirit at crossroads to confirm its departure. These practices stem from the belief that death marks a transition to Ijalegwu, the ancestral realm, where neglected rites risk the soul's unrest and affliction of the living.[39][42] Moral codes prioritize gerontocracy, whereby elders hold authority, alongside veneration for age and position, oath-taking to uphold relational oaths, and communal sanctions against taboo violations. Such norms historically fostered social cohesion, accountability, and deterrence of infractions like oath-breaking, though globalization has induced mutations in their observance.[42]Material Culture and Arts
The Igede people engage in traditional crafts such as pottery, basketry, and weaving, which form essential components of their material culture. Pottery production, a longstanding practice documented since early ethnographic records, involves local ceramic techniques using clay sourced from riverbanks and fired in open pits or simple kilns, producing utilitarian vessels for storage, cooking, and water transport.[55] [56] Basket making utilizes raffia palm fibers for weaving mats, traps, and containers, while thatch from local grasses serves for roofing traditional mud-and-wattle homes.[13] [57] Smithery, including iron tools for farming and hunting, reflects indigenous metallurgical skills adapted from regional technologies.[17] Traditional attire, known as ododogodo, features striped fabrics in blue, black, and white, with blue symbolizing peace and unity; men historically wore minimal loincloths, while women used wrappers, though colonial influences introduced tailored garments.[13] [58] Performing arts emphasize music and dance, integral to social and ritual life. Drums, locally crafted from hollowed wood covered with animal skins, accompany songs and rhythms in communal gatherings, funerals, and festivals like Igede Agba, where masquerades perform with energetic steps to invoke ancestors and celebrate harvests.[59] [41] These elements satisfy aesthetic, competitive, and recreational needs, though globalization has led to declining proficiency in traditional forms.[42]Governance, Politics, and Inter-Ethnic Dynamics
Traditional Authority Systems
The traditional authority systems among the Igede people were decentralized, lacking centralized kingdoms or city-states typical of some Nigerian ethnic groups, with governance organized at the village or community level.[16] [60] Each Igede community was headed by a village chief or head known as the Ada (or Ad'utu in some contexts), who served as the custodian of the land, mediator in disputes, and overseer of communal rituals and norms.[1] [61] [60] This leadership was underpinned by a gerontocratic system, where elders (ndichie or senior males) wielded significant influence through councils that advised the Ada, enforced taboos, oaths, and punishments for social infractions, and facilitated consensus-based decision-making on matters like land allocation, warfare, and festivals.[42] By the late pre-colonial period, these structures had begun evolving toward semi-centralization, with figures like the Ada'Oju in Oju or Ada'Obi in Obi districts emerging as semi-paramount authorities over clusters of villages, though power remained diffused and reliant on elder consensus rather than hereditary monarchy.[16] [61] Authority derived from age, wisdom, and ritual purity rather than coercion, with the Ada often selected from patrilineal lineages based on merit and community acclaim, ensuring accountability through elder oversight and potential removal for misconduct.[42] [1]Modern Administrative Roles and Political Agency
The Igede people, concentrated in Oju and Obi Local Government Areas (LGAs) of Benue State, participate in Nigeria's federal administrative structure through elected positions at local, state, and federal levels. Oju LGA, headquartered in Oju town, and Obi LGA, headquartered in Obarike-Ito since its creation in 1996, are governed by elected chairmen and councils responsible for local services such as infrastructure and primary education. These LGAs form the Oju/Obi Federal Constituency, which elects one representative to the House of Representatives; as of 2023, Hon. David Agada Ogewu, born July 29, 1986, holds this seat under the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), having first won in 2019.[62][63] The constituency also sends three members to the Benue State House of Assembly, representing wards within Oju and Obi, focusing on state-level legislation affecting agriculture, security, and development in Benue South Senatorial District. Igede political agency manifests in advocacy for greater autonomy amid perceived marginalization within Benue State, where Tiv and Idoma groups dominate. Community leaders and elected officials have pushed for the creation of Apa State from Benue South, with Igede elders and representatives from Oju and Obi declaring support in August 2025 to enhance local control over resources and governance.[64] Alternatively, some Igede groups have agitated to join a proposed Ogoja State in Cross River, citing cultural and geographic ties, as voiced during public hearings in Calabar in July 2025.[65] This reflects a republican ethos rejecting centralized kingship, favoring decentralized decision-making integrated into modern Nigerian politics.[66] Prominent Igede figures have held national roles, demonstrating broader agency. Prince Dr. Ogiri Ajene served as a key administrator and politician, influencing policy in Benue and beyond until his death. Ode Ojowu acted as Chief Economic Adviser to President Olusegun Obasanjo and led the National Planning Commission. Ambassadors like Oga Okwoche (to France) and Ogah Okwoche, who was Benue State Secretary to the Government, underscore Igede contributions to diplomacy and state administration. Despite these, Igede representation remains limited, prompting threats of 2027 election boycotts over infrastructure neglect, such as deplorable roads in Oju/Obi.[67]Conflicts, Security Challenges, and Ethnic Relations
The Igede people, primarily residing in Oju and Obi local government areas of Benue State, have experienced recurrent communal clashes with neighboring Tiv communities, often centered on land ownership and resource competition. These disputes, such as those between Ukpute (Igede) and Bonta (Tiv) in Oju and Konshisha LGAs, have led to significant violence, including the reported "Ochoro genocide" in 2021 where Igede settlements faced attacks from Tiv militias. In June 2025, clashes in Gwer East LGA between Igede and Tiv groups resulted in at least 15 deaths and the razing of houses, exacerbating longstanding tensions over farmland boundaries. Historical animosities, including past wars and clan-based mistrust, have contributed to cultural practices like avoidance of intermarriage between the groups, perpetuating social divisions.[68][69] Land disputes escalated further in 2024–2025, with the Igede Youth Council reporting the killing of approximately 30 Igede youths in Benue amid boundary conflicts, prompting calls for government intervention. August 2025 saw heightened tensions following the murder of two Igede travelers by alleged Tiv militias along the Oju-Awaji road, leading to retaliatory threats and underscoring weak dispute resolution mechanisms. In October 2025, armed militias reportedly seized a major road in Oju LGA, isolating Igede communities and disrupting access to markets and services, which local academics attributed to unchecked communal vigilantism. These incidents reflect broader security challenges in Benue, where inadequate policing and proliferation of small arms amplify localized disputes into cycles of reprisal killings.[70][71][72] As agrarian farmers, the Igede are also affected by Benue's farmer-herder conflicts, primarily involving Fulani pastoralists encroaching on crop lands despite the state's 2017 anti-open grazing law. While Tiv farmers bear the brunt, Igede farmlands in border areas have suffered invasions, contributing to food insecurity and displacement; Benue recorded over 1,300 deaths from such violence since 2018, with spillover effects on minority groups like the Igede. Ethnic relations remain strained with the Tiv, the dominant group in Benue, fostering Igede assertions of distinct identity and demands for equitable resource allocation, though traditional Igede moral codes emphasize reconciliation through community mediation. Efforts to restore peace draw on Igede cultural values like communal harmony, but persistent failures in state-level arbitration hinder integration.[73][37]Prominent Figures and Contributions
Leaders and Innovators
Prince Ogiri Ajene (1957–2013), an Igede native from Adum-East in Obi Local Government Area, served as Deputy Governor of Benue State from 1999 to 2007 under Governor George Akume, contributing to state administration during a period of democratic transition in Nigeria.[74][75] He held a B.Sc. and M.Sc., and later contested for the Benue State governorship on the People's Democratic Party platform in 2007, highlighting Igede political engagement in regional power dynamics.[76] Ode Ojowu, an economist of Igede descent, advised President Olusegun Obasanjo on economic policy as Chief Economic Adviser and led the National Planning Commission, influencing Nigeria's development strategies in the early 2000s amid efforts to stabilize post-military rule finances.[77] The traditional leadership structure centers on the Ad'utu, the paramount ruler overseeing Igede clans, though succession disputes arose after the death of Chief Ikande Idikwu, reflecting tensions in customary governance amid modern administrative pressures.[13][78] Other notable figures include Oga Okwoche, former Nigerian Ambassador to France, advancing Igede representation in diplomacy, and Hon. Nick Eworo, Deputy Majority Leader in the Benue State House of Assembly, who advocated for Igede interests in legislative reforms.[79][80] Limited records exist of specific technological or entrepreneurial innovators from the Igede, with prominence skewed toward political and administrative roles due to the group's agrarian base and minority status in Benue politics.[1]Cultural and Intellectual Achievers
The Igede people have contributed to Nigerian cultural expression primarily through highlife music and oral poetry traditions. Highlife artists such as Mark Eje have gained recognition for soulful compositions that incorporate Igede rhythms and themes, helping to preserve and popularize ethnic musical heritage in Benue State.[81] Other key figures include Mike Isegbe, Ochi Igbudu, and Ogbu Eworo, whose works represent foundational advancements in Igede highlife, blending traditional instrumentation with modern influences during the late 20th century.[13] In oral literature, Micah Ichegbeh stands out as a prominent Adiyah poet, specializing in extemporized praise songs that intertwine acclaim with critique to address political rivalries, moral conduct, and communal history among Igede audiences from the 1980s onward.[38] His performances, documented through fieldwork in the 1980s, emphasize improvisation and vivid imagery to foster ethical reflection and social cohesion, often drawing on legendary tales like the Igede's ancestral wars.[82] Scholar Ode Ogede has advanced intellectual understanding of Igede aesthetics via his 1997 monograph Art, Society, and Performance: Igede Praise Poetry, which dissects the dual mechanisms of flattery and satire in oral performances, based on ethnographic analysis of their performative and societal roles.[83] This work highlights how such poetry functions as a tool for negotiation in Igede social dynamics, underscoring the interplay of art and community governance.[84]References
- https://www.[researchgate](/page/ResearchGate).net/publication/390832860_TONAL_PROCESSES_IN_IGEDE_LANGUAGE
- https://www.[facebook](/page/Facebook).com/groups/480257455447889/posts/2821726214634323/
