Ekpeye people

"Ekpeye" redirects here. For the language, see Ekpeye language.

The Ekpeye (Àkpà ọ́híá) are a people in southeastern Nigeria[1] with a distinct culture and rulers of a former kingdom. The Ekpeye are usually included as a subgroup of the Igbo people on linguistic and cultural grounds.[2][3][4] They speak an Igboid language.[5][6][7] Ekpeye people live in the Ahoada (Ahuda) and Ogba-Egbema areas of Rivers State in Nigeria, and were a population of about 80,000 by the 1991 census, the number has increased by about 63% increasing them to approximately 130,000, according to the 2006 census estimates.

History

The Ekpeye have long lived in the land bounded by Orashi River in the West and River Sombreiro in the East; starting out at the northern end from about 3000 BC. Archaeological work showed a steady and very consistent southward movement of the Igbo people, resulting in about AD 1000 in a large settlement mainly at the central geographically elevated area now called Akoh (Dry Land) and Egi. The rise and Expansion of the Benin Kingdom in the following centuries, forced Igbo-speaking but Benin culture-bearing populations down the Niger river into then Ekpeyeland. A socio-political crisis resulted.Ekpeye Clan

A minority of the Ekpeye, who sided with the Benin cultured Igbo immigrants, moved away up north and founded what is now Ogba land, whose language plainly bears the inprints of the Ekpeye and Igbo languages. The commonest historical tale in Ogba and Ekpeye today, is that both are "the sons of one father born of different mothers". At about 1542 AD, during the reign of Oba Awuarre of Benin, when the Benin kingdom was at its most glorious and its culture at its most widespread, Ogba, which majority were Benin-cultured, created the theory that its Progeneitor was a Prince of Benin. They gave his name as ‘Akalaka’, which noticeably, does not match any personality mentioned in Benin Histories. The man known today as the father of Ekpeye and Ogba is now held by some historians to have left Benin kingdom due to infighting within the royal family; to have fled with his family, amidst rumors of his inevitable demise for his disloyalty to the Oba. That they moved southwards, following the River Niger, eventually settling along the Orashi River (in current day Ubie in Ekpeyeland, southeastern Nigeria).

All the time, the Ekpeye lived in towns settled by members of one, some or all the Seven original distinct families of Ekpeye - Imaji, Uchi, Agolo, Uzhi,Ishikoloko, Edyiwulu,and Akpa. They practiced full representative democracy.

But the challenges of the politics of colonial government forced in changes. First it was a pseudo kingdom established by one Nworisa Odu of Ogbele town who initially successfully challenged British entry into Ekpeye land via the River Sombreiro. He was pacified with recognition as the Eze of Ekpeye. He was later lured away to Degema, a colonial administrative center,where he died later in about 1890.

Eze Ashirim, who became the first Eze Ekpeye Logbo, brought peace, publicity and pomp to the Ekpeye monarchy and with it came recognition by the Nigerian government and additional political influence in the region. Today (2006) the revered monarchy, is occupied by a retired Nigerian Air Force officer, His Royal Highness Eze Robinson O. Robinson, The Eze Ekpeye Logbo II of Ekpeye land.

Although many monarchs in the region are usually hereditary, The Ekpeye monarch is one of a few which relies upon a democratic process in the selection of a new King. Every Ekpeye son or daughter can vie for the throne when it becomes vacant.

Politics

The Ekpeye sided with the Igbo during the Biafra secession, and felt the subsequent repression of the predominantly non-Igbo government afterwards. Their traditional territory lies in an oil rich area, and the Ekpeye have complained about Nigerian policies that provide inadequate remuneration for the destruction of their environment. The oil business has also the disrupted traditional allocation of wealth. Recently the Movement for the Survival and Advancement of Ekpeye Ethnic Nationality has been formed to resist changes that threaten Ekpeye culture.[8][9]

Culture

Ekpeye people are, perhaps, the most dynamic of southern Nigerian peoples. Its culture is a complex mix of Original Ekpeye, neighbouring Ijaw, and influential Igbo cultures. Ekpeye culture is most similar to Igbo culture because their interactions with the Igbo have been the earliest, the most intense, and the longest. Yet the differences are very plain. For example, among the mask traditions of the Ekpeye the Egbukele, which reached Ekpeye from Ijaw via Abua, is the major one, distinctive for the horizontal fish-shaped headdresses and other animal representations, which are quite distinct from Igbo representations. Contrastingly, the Aarungu and the Owu masks exhibit a wide range of forms and imagery, human and animal, many of which are also found in Igbo.

Some deeply rooted Ekpeye people still live according to rules and practices formed since about before 1000 AD. For example, they believe that a woman is married into a family and not to a man. If she becomes widowed, she would either have to marry her late husband's immediate brother or leave the family the way she came. Even though she has children or shared properties with her late husband, she would have to leave all of them with her husband's family. A case like this is beyond the Eze logbo and any high court in Nigeria. For others, these old practices do not adjust well into ordinary life in 21st century and they have abandoned them. Another few use the excuse of the old practices to exhort wealth, properties and power from widows of male relatives. A recent and popular case of the latter is of highly dignified female politician, Peace Nwobudu Lucky-Ideozu, who has been in hiding with her 3 children since the loss of her husband in 2012 for fear of her husband's side of the family enforcing the traditional 'rights' she has (and does not have) over the custody of her children after taking over every other thing on the surface of the earth that her husband's name was on including her educational NGO based in Ahoada West - 'MM&M'.

Language

Main article: Ekpeye language

Ekpeye is an Igboid language. Its principal dialects are Ako, Upata, Ubie, and Igbuduya. Most scholars believe that Ekpeye derives from "Akpaohia", though a tiny minority claim the word comes from "Linage" and not "Akpaohia" (Akpa + Ohia), which literally means "Bush Bag".

Famous People

1. His Royal Highness Eze Robinson O. Robinson, The Eze Ekpeye Logbo II of Ekpeye land

2. Her Royal Highness Felicia O Robinson, The Nweni Eze Ekpeye Logbo II of Ekpeye land

3. Chief Timothy Amakiri - one of the founders of Rotary Club, Port Harcourt, Nigeria

4. Chief Ochoma - former immigration officer in Nigeria

5. Late Sir Lucky Amezhinim Ideozu - Ex-regional manager of All states Trust Bank as well as United Bank for Africa, former CEO of Sombreiro Derivatives, former M.D of Fly Marine and advocate of Movement for the Survival and Advancement of Ekpeye Ethnic Nationality

6. Peace Nwobudu Lucky-Ideozu - Politician and Educator

Notes

  1. Olson, James S. (1996) "Ekpeye" The Peoples of Africa: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, p. 165, ISBN 0-313-27918-7
  2. Olson, James Stuart (1996). The Peoples of Africa: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 234. ISBN 0313279187.
  3. Cole, Herbert M. (1988) "Igbo Arts and Ethnicity: Problems and Issues" African Arts 21(2): pp. 26-93, p. 26
  4. Blench, Roger M. (1981) "Social Structures and the Evolution of Language Boundaries in Nigeria" Cambridge Anthropology 7(3): pp. 19-30
  5. Blench, Roger M. (2006) A dictionary of Ekpeye, an Igboid language of southern Nigeria Mallam Dendo, Cambridge
  6. Fardon, Richard; Furniss, Graham (1994). African languages, development and the state. Routledge. p. 66. ISBN 0-415-09476-3. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  7. Bendor-Samuel, John and Hartell, Rhonda L. (1989) The Niger-Congo languages: A classification and description of Africa's largest language family University Press of America, Lanham, Maryland, USA, p. 27, ISBN 0-8191-7375-4
  8. Ikelegbe, Augustine (2005) "Engendering civil society: oil, women groups and resource conflicts in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria" The Journal of Modern African Studies 43: pp. 241-270 doi:10.1017/S0022278X05000820;
  9. Alapiki, Henry E. (2005) "State Creation in Nigeria: Failed Approaches to National Integration and Local Autonomy" African Studies Review 48(3) pp. 49-65

References

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