The history of Nigeria can be traced to the earliest inhabitants whose remains date from at least 13,000 BC through early civilizations such as the Nok culture which began around 1500 BC. Numerous ancient African civilizations settled in the region that is known today as Nigeria, such as the Kingdom of Nri,[1] the Benin Empire,[2] and the Oyo Empire.[3] Islam reached Nigeria through the Bornu Empire between (1068 AD) and Hausa Kingdom during the 11th century,[4][5][6][7] while Christianity came to Nigeria in the 15th century through Augustinian and Capuchin monks from Portugal to the Kingdom of Warri.[8] The Songhai Empire also occupied part of the region.[9] From the 15th century, European slave traders arrived in the region to purchase enslaved Africans as part of the Atlantic slave trade, which started in the region of modern-day Nigeria; the first Nigerian port used by European slave traders was Badagry, a coastal harbour.[10][11] Local merchants provided them with slaves, escalating conflicts among the ethnic groups in the region and disrupting older trade patterns through the Trans-Saharan route.[12]
Lagos was occupied by British forces in 1851 and formally annexed by Britain in the year 1865.[13] Nigeria became a British protectorate in 1901. The period of British rule lasted until 1960 when an independence movement led to the country being granted independence.[14] Nigeria first became a republic in 1963, but succumbed to military rule after a bloody coup d'état in 1966. A separatist movement later formed the Republic of Biafra in 1967, leading to the three-year Nigerian Civil War.[15] Nigeria became a republic again after a new constitution was written in 1979. However, the republic was short-lived, as the military seized power again in 1983 and later ruled for ten years. A new republic was planned to be established in 1993 but was aborted by General Sani Abacha. Abacha died in 1998 and a fourth republic was later established the following year, 1999, which ended three decades of intermittent military rule.
Prehistory
Acheulean tool-using archaic humans may have dwelled throughout West Africa since at least between 780,000 BP and 126,000 BP (Middle Pleistocene).[16]
By at least 61,000 BP, Middle Stone Age West Africans may have begun to migrate south of the West Sudanian savanna, and, by at least 25,000 BP, may have begun to dwell near the coast of West Africa.[17]
An excessively dry Ogolian period occurred, spanning from 20,000 BP to 12,000 BP.[18] By 15,000 BP, the number of settlements made by Middle Stone Age West Africans decreased as there was an increase in humid conditions, expansion of the West African forest, and increase in the number of settlements made by Late Stone Age West African hunter-gatherers.[19] Iwo Eleru people persisted at Iwo Eleru, in Nigeria, as late as 13,000 BP.[20]
Macrolith-using late Middle Stone Age peoples, who dwelled in Central Africa, to western Central Africa, to West Africa, were displaced by microlith-using Late Stone Age Africans as they migrated from Central Africa into West Africa.[21] After having persisted as late as 1000 BP,[22] or some period of time after 1500 CE,[23] remaining West African hunter-gatherers were ultimately acculturated and admixed into the larger groups of West African agriculturalists.[22]
The Dufuna canoe, a dugout canoe found in northern Nigeria has been dated to around 6300 BCE,[24] making it the oldest known boat in Africa, and the second oldest worldwide.[24][25]
Iron Age
Archaeological sites containing iron smelting furnaces and slag have been excavated at sites in the Nsukka region of southeast Nigeria in what is now Igboland: dating to 2000 BC at the site of Lejja (Eze-Uzomaka 2009)[26][27] and to 750 BC and at the site of Opi (Holl 2009).[27][28] Iron metallurgy may have been independently developed in the Nok culture between the 9th century BCE and 550 BCE.[29][30] More recently, Bandama and Babalola (2023) have indicated that iron metallurgical development occurred 2631 BCE – 2458 BCE at Lejja, in Nigeria.[31]
Nok culture
Nok culture may have emerged in 1500 BCE and continued to persist until 1 BCE.[32] Nok people developed terracotta sculptures through large-scale economic production,[33] as part of a complex funerary culture.[34] The earliest Nok terracotta sculptures may have developed in 900 BCE.[32] Some Nok terracotta sculptures portray figures wielding slingshots, as well as bows and arrows, which may be indicative of Nok people engaging in the hunting, or trapping, of undomesticated animals.[35] A Nok sculpture portrays two individuals, along with their goods, in a dugout canoe.[35] This indicates that Nok people used dugout canoes to transport cargo, and tributaries.[36] The Nok terracotta depiction of a figure with a seashell on its head indicates that these riverine trade routes may have extended to the Atlantic coast.[36] Latter artistic traditions – Igbo-Ukwu and Ile Ife – may have been shaped by the clay terracotta tradition of the Nok culture.[37] Iron metallurgy may have been independently developed in the Nok culture between the 9th century BCE and 550 BCE.[29][30] As each share cultural and artistic similarity with the Nok culture, the Niger-Congo-speaking Yoruba, Jukun, or Dakakari peoples may be descendants of the Nok peoples.[38] Based on stylistic similarities with the Nok terracottas, the bronze figurines of the Yoruba Ife Empire and the Bini kingdom of Benin may also be continuations of the traditions of the earlier Nok culture.[39]
Roman expeditions to Nigeria (1st century AD)
Between 50 AD and 90 AD, Roman explorers undertook three expeditions to the area of present-day Nigeria. The reports of these expeditions confirm, among other things, the geologically already established extent of Lake Chad at that time and thus its drastic shrinkage in the past 2,000 years.
The expeditions were supported by legionaries and served mainly commercial purposes.[40]
One of the main goals of the explorations was the search for and extraction of gold, which was to be transported back to the Roman provinces on the Mediterranean coast by land with the help of camels.[41]
The Romans had at their disposal the memoirs of the ancient Carthaginian explorer Hanno the Navigator.[41] However, it is not known to what extent they were read, believed or found interesting by the Romans.
The three Roman explorations/expeditions in Nigeria were:
- The Flaccus expedition: Ptolemy wrote that Septimius Flaccus carried out his expedition in 50 AD (at the time of Emperor Claudius) to take revenge on the nomadic raiders who had attacked Leptis Magna and reached Sebha and the Aozou area.[42] He then reached the Bahr Erguig, Chari and Logone rivers in the Lake Chad area, which was called the "land of the Ethiopians" (or black men) and called Agisymba.
- The Matiernus expedition: Ptolemy wrote that Julius Maternus (or Matiernus) undertook a mainly commercial expedition around 90 AD (the time of Domitian). From the Gulf of Sirte, he arrived at the Central African Republic in a region then called Agisymba. He returned to Rome with a rhinoceros with two horns, which was exhibited in the Colosseum.[43]
- According to historians such as Susan Raven,[44] there was another Roman expedition to Central Africa, which may have reached northwestern Nigeria thanks to the Niger River.[45] Pliny wrote that in 70 AD. (in the time of Vespasian), a legatus legionis or commander of Legio III Augusta named Festus undertook an expedition in the direction of the Niger River. Festus went to the eastern Hoggar Mountains and eventually arrived in the area where Timbuktu is located today. It is possible that some of his legionnaires may have reached as far as the Niger River, and reached as far as the forests on the equator, navigating the river to its mouth in what is now Nigeria.
Roman coins have been found in Nigeria. However, it is likely that all these coins were introduced at a much later date and there was not direct Roman traffic this far down the west coast. The coins are the only ancient European items found in Central Africa.[46]
Early states before 1500
The early independent kingdoms and states that make up present-day state of Nigeria are (in alphabetical order): Benin Kingdom, Borgu Kingdom, Fulani Empire, Hausa Kingdoms, Kanem Bornu Empire, Kwararafa Kingdom, Ibibio Kingdom, Nri Kingdom, Nupe Kingdom, Oyo Empire, Songhai Empire, Warri Kingdom, Ile Ife Kingdom, and Yagba East Kingdom.
Oyo and Benin
During the 15th century, Oyo and Benin surpassed Ife as political and economic powers, although Ife preserved its status as a religious center. Respect for the priestly functions of the oni of Ife was a crucial factor in the evolution of Yoruba culture. The Ife model of government was adapted at Oyo, where a member of its ruling dynasty controlled several smaller city-states. A state council (the Oyo Mesi) named the Alaafin (king) and acted as a check on his authority. Their capital city was situated about 100 km north of present-day Oyo. Unlike the forest-bound Yoruba kingdoms, Oyo was in the savanna and drew its military strength from its cavalry forces, which established hegemony over the adjacent Nupe and the Borgu kingdoms and thereby developed trade routes farther to the north.
The Benin Empire (1440–1897; called Bini by locals) was a pre-colonial African state in what is now modern Nigeria. It should not be confused with the modern-day country called Benin, formerly called Dahomey.[47]
The Igala are an ethnic group of Nigeria. Their homeland, the former Igala Kingdom, is an approximately triangular area of about 14,000 km2 (5,400 sq mi) in the angle formed by the Benue and Niger rivers. The area was formerly the Igala Division of Kabba province, and is now part of Kogi State. The capital is Idah in Kogi state. Igala people are majorly found in Kogi state. They can be found in Idah, Igalamela/Odolu, Ajaka, Ofu, Olamaboro, Dekina, Bassa, Ankpa, omala, Lokoja, Ibaji, Ajaokuta, Lokoja and kotonkarfe Local government all in Kogi state. Other states where Igalas can be found are Anambra, Delta and Benue states.
The royal stool of Olu of warri was founded by an Igala prince.
Northern kingdoms of the Sahel
Trade is the key to the emergence of organized communities in the sahelian portions of Nigeria. Prehistoric inhabitants adjusting to the encroaching desert were widely scattered by the third millennium BC, when the desiccation of the Sahara began. Trans-Saharan trade routes linked the western Sudan with the Mediterranean since the time of Carthage and with the Upper Nile from a much earlier date, establishing avenues of communication and cultural influence that remained open until the end of the 19th century. By these same routes, Islam made its way south into West Africa after the 9th century.
By then a string of dynastic states, including the earliest Hausa states, stretched into western and central Sudan. The most powerful of these states were Ghana, Gao, and Kanem, which were not within the boundaries of modern Nigeria but which influenced the history of the Nigerian savanna. Ghana declined in the 11th century but was succeeded by the Mali Empire which consolidated much of western Sudan in the 13th century.
Following the breakup of Mali, a local leader named Sonni Ali (1464–1492) founded the Songhai Empire in the region of middle Niger and western Sudan and took control of the trans-Saharan trade. Sonni Ali seized Timbuktu in 1468 and Djenné in 1473, building his regime on trade revenues and the cooperation of Muslim merchants. His successor Askia Muhammad Ture (1493–1528) made Islam the official religion, built mosques, and brought Muslim scholars, including al-Maghili (d.1504), the founder of an important tradition of Sudanic African Muslim scholarship, to Gao.[48]
Although these western empires had little political influence on the Nigerian savanna before 1500 they had a strong cultural and economic impact that became more pronounced in the 16th century, especially because these states became associated with the spread of Islam and trade. Throughout the 16th-century much of northern Nigeria paid homage to Songhai in the west or to Borno, a rival empire in the east.
The Golden Age
During the 14th and 16th centuries, the demand for gold increased due to European and Islamic states wanting to change their currencies to gold. This led to an increase in trans-Saharan Trade.[49]
Kanem–Bornu Empire
Borno's history is closely associated with Kanem, which had achieved imperial status in the Lake Chad basin by the 13th century. Kanem expanded westward to include the area that became Borno. The mai (king) of Kanem and his court accepted Islam in the 11th century, as the western empires also had done. Islam was used to reinforce the political and social structures of the state although many established customs were maintained. Women, for example, continued to exercise considerable political influence.[50]
The mai employed his mounted bodyguard and an inchoate army of nobles to extend Kanem's authority into Borno. By tradition, the territory was conferred on the heir to the throne to govern during his apprenticeship. In the 14th century, however, dynastic conflict forced the then-ruling group and its followers to relocate in Borno, as a result the Kanuri emerged as an ethnic group in the late 14th and 15th centuries. The civil war that disrupted Kanem in the second half of the 14th century resulted in the independence of Borno.[50]
Borno's prosperity depended on the trans-Sudanic slave trade and the desert trade in salt and livestock. The need to protect its commercial interests compelled Borno to intervene in Kanem, which continued to be a theatre of war throughout the 15th century and into the 16th century. Despite its relative political weakness in this period, Borno's court and mosques under the patronage of a line of scholarly kings earned fame as centres of Islamic culture and learning.[51]
Hausa Kingdoms
The Hausa Kingdoms began as seven states founded according to the Bayajidda legend by sons of Bawo, the son of the hero and the queen Magajiya Daurama:[52] Daura, Kano, Katsina, Zaria (Zazzau), Gobir, Rano, and Biram.
According to the Bayajidda legend, the Banza Bakwai states were founded by sons of Karbagari, the son of Bayajidda and the slave-maid, Bagwariya.[52] They are called the Bastard Seven on account of their ancestress' slave status:[52] Zamfara, Kebbi, Yauri, Gwari, Kwararafa, Nupe, and Ilorin.
Since the beginning of Hausa history, the seven states of Hausaland divided up production and labor activities in accordance with their location and natural resources. Kano and Rano were known as the "Chiefs of Indigo." Cotton grew readily in the great plains of these states, and they became the primary producers of cloth, weaving and dying it before sending it off in caravans to the other states within Hausaland and to extensive regions beyond. Biram was the original seat of government, while Zaria supplied labor and was known as the "Chief of Slaves." Katsina and Daura were the "Chiefs of the Market," as their geographical location accorded them direct access to the caravans coming across the desert from the north. Gobir, located in the west, was the "Chief of War" and was mainly responsible for protecting the empire from the invasive Kingdoms of Ghana and Songhai.[53] Islam arrived at Hausaland along the caravan routes. The famous Kano Chronicle records the conversion of Kano's ruling dynasty by clerics from Mali, demonstrating that the imperial influence of Mali extended far to the east. Acceptance of Islam was gradual and was often nominal in the countryside where folk religion continued to exert a strong influence. Nonetheless, Kano and Katsina, with their famous mosques and schools, came to participate fully in the cultural and intellectual life of the Islamic world.[54] The Fulani began to enter the Hausa country in the 13th century and by the 15th century, they were tending cattle, sheep, and goats in Borno as well. The Fulani came from the Senegal River valley, where their ancestors had developed a method of livestock management based on transhumance. Gradually they moved eastward, first into the centers of the Mali and Songhai empires and eventually into Hausaland and Borno. Some Fulbe converted to Islam as early as the 11th century and settled among the Hausa, from whom they became racially indistinguishable. There they constituted a devoutly religious, educated elite who made themselves indispensable to the Hausa kings as government advisers, Islamic judges, and teachers.[28]
The Hausa Kingdoms were first mentioned by Ya'qubi in the 9th century and they were by the 15th-century vibrant trading centers competing with Kanem–Bornu and the Mali Empire. The primary exports were slaves, leather, gold, cloth, salt, kola nuts, and henna. At various moments in their history, the Hausa managed to establish central control over their states, but such unity has always proven short. In the 11th-century, the conquests initiated by Gijimasu of Kano culminated in the birth of the first united Hausa Nation under Queen Amina, the Sultana of Zazzau but severe rivalries between the states led to periods of domination by major powers like the Songhai, Kanem and the Fulani.[55]
Despite relatively constant growth, the Hausa states were vulnerable to aggression and, although the vast majority of its inhabitants were Muslim by the 16th century, they were attacked by Fulani jihadists from 1804 to 1808. In 1808 the Hausa Nation was finally conquered by Usman dan Fodio and incorporated into the Hausa-Fulani Sokoto Caliphate.[56]
Yoruba
Historically, the Yoruba people have been the dominant group on the west bank of the Niger. Their nearest linguistic relatives are the Igala who live on the opposite side of the Niger's divergence from the Benue, and from whom they are believed to have split about 2,000 years ago. The Yoruba were organized in mostly patrilineal groups that occupied village communities and subsisted on agriculture. From approximately the 8th century, adjacent village compounds called ilé coalesced into numerous territorial city-states in which clan loyalties became subordinate to dynastic chieftains.[58] Urbanisation was accompanied by high levels of artistic achievement, particularly in terracotta and ivory sculpture and in the sophisticated metal casting produced at Ife.
The Yoruba are especially known for the Oyo Empire that dominated the region. The Oyo Empire held supremacy over other Yoruba nations like the Egba Kingdom, Awori Kingdom, and the Egbado. In its prime, they also dominated the Kingdom of Dahomey (now located in the modern day Republic of Benin).[59]
The Yoruba pay tribute to a pantheon composed of a Supreme Deity, Olorun and the Orisha.[60] The Olorun is now called God in the Yoruba language. There are 400 deities called Orisha who perform various tasks.[61] According to the Yoruba, Oduduwa is regarded as the ancestor of the Yoruba kings. According to one of the various myths about him, he founded Ife and dispatched his sons and daughters to establish similar kingdoms in other parts of what is today known as Yorubaland. The Yorubaland now consists of different tribes from different states which are located in the Southwestern part of the country, states like Lagos State, Oyo State, Ondo State, Osun State, Ekiti State and Ogun State, among others.[62]
Igbo Kingdoms
Nri Kingdom
The Kingdom of Nri is considered to be the foundation of Igbo culture and the oldest Kingdom in Nigeria.[63] Nri and Aguleri, where the Igbo creation myth originates, are in the territory of the Umueri clan, who trace their lineages back to the patriarchal king-figure, Eri.[64] Eri's origins are unclear, though he has been described as a "sky being" sent by Chukwu (God).[64][65] He has been characterized as having first given societal order to the people of Anambra.[65]
Archaeological evidence suggests that Nri hegemony in Igboland may go back as far as the 9th century,[66] 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 in the region around 948 with other related Igbo cultures following in the 13th century.[67] The first Eze Nri (King of Nri), Ìfikuánim, followed directly after him. According to Igbo oral tradition, his reign started in 1043.[68] At least one historian puts Ìfikuánim's reign much later, around 1225.[69]
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[65]
Nri and Aguleri and part of the Umueri clan, a cluster of Igbo village groups which traces its origins to a sky being called Eri and significantly, includes (from the viewpoint of its Igbo members) the neighbouring kingdom of Igala.
— Elizabeth Allo Isichei[70]
The Kingdom of Nri was a religio-polity, a sort of theocratic state, that developed in the central heartland of the Igbo region.[67] The Nri had a taboo symbolic code with six types. These included human (such as the birth of twins),[71] animal (such as killing or eating of pythons),[72] object, temporal, behavioral, speech and place taboos.[73] 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 administrations, all followers of the Igbo religion had to abide by the rules of the faith and obey its representative on earth, the Eze Nri.[72][73]
With the decline of Nri kingdom in the 15th to 17th centuries, several states once under their influence, became powerful economic oracular oligarchies and large commercial states that dominated Igboland. The neighboring Awka city-state rose in power as a result of their powerful Agbala oracle and metalworking expertise. The Onitsha Kingdom, which was originally inhabited by Igbos from east of the Niger, was founded in the 16th century by migrants from Anioma (Western Igboland). Later groups like the Igala traders from the hinterland settled in Onitsha in the 18th century. Kingdoms west of the River Niger like Aboh (Abo), which was significantly populated by Igbos among other tribes, dominated trade along the lower River Niger area from the 17th century until European explorations into the Niger delta. The Umunoha state in the Owerri area used the Igwe ka Ala oracle at their advantage. However, the Cross River Igbo state like the Aro had the greatest influence in Igboland and adjacent areas after the decline of Nri.[74][75]
The Arochukwu kingdom emerged after the Aro-Ibibio Wars from 1630 to 1720, and went on to form the Aro Confederacy which economically dominated Eastern Nigerian hinterland. The source of the Aro Confederacy's economic dominance was based on the judicial oracle of Ibini Ukpabi ("Long Juju") and their military forces which included powerful allies such as Ohafia, Abam, Ezza, and other related neighboring states. The Abiriba and Aro are Brothers whose migration is traced to the Ekpa Kingdom, East of Cross River, their exact take of location was at Ekpa (Mkpa) east of the Cross River. They crossed the river to Urupkam (Usukpam) west of the Cross River and founded two settlements: Ena Uda and Ena Ofia in present-day Erai. Aro and Abiriba cooperated to become a powerful economic force.[76]
Igbo gods, like those of the Yoruba, were numerous, but their relationship to one another and human beings was essentially egalitarian, reflecting Igbo society as a whole. A number of oracles and local cults attracted devotees while the central deity, the earth mother and fertility figure Ala, was venerated at shrines throughout Igboland.
The weakness of a popular theory that Igbos were stateless rests on the paucity of historical evidence of pre-colonial Igbo society. There is a huge gap between the archaeological finds of Igbo Ukwu, which reveal a rich material culture in the heart of the Igbo region in the 8th century, and the oral traditions of the 20th century. Benin exercised considerable influence on the western Igbo, who adopted many of the political structures familiar to the Yoruba-Benin region, but Asaba and its immediate neighbours, such as Ibusa, Ogwashi-Ukwu, Okpanam, Issele-Azagba and Issele-Ukwu, were much closer to the Kingdom of Nri. Ofega was the queen for the Onitsha Igbo.
Akwa Akpa
The modern city of Calabar was founded in 1786 by Efik families who had left Creek Town, farther up the Calabar river, settling on the east bank in a position where they were able to dominate traffic with European vessels that anchored in the river, and soon becoming the most powerful in the region extending from now Calabar down to Bakkasi in the East and Oron Nation in the West.[77] Akwa Akpa (named Calabar by the Spanish) became a center of the Atlantic slave trade, where African slaves were sold in exchange for European manufactured goods.[78] Igbo people formed the majority of enslaved Africans sold as slaves from Calabar, despite forming a minority among the ethnic groups in the region.[79] From 1725 until 1750, roughly 17,000 enslaved Africans were sold from Calabar to European slave traders; from 1772 to 1775, the number soared to over 62,000.[80]
With the suppression of the slave trade,[81] palm oil and palm kernels became the main exports. The chiefs of Akwa Akpa placed themselves under British protection in 1884.[82] From 1884 until 1906 Old Calabar was the headquarters of the Niger Coast Protectorate, after which Lagos became the main center.[82] Now called Calabar, the city remained an important port shipping ivory, timber, beeswax, and palm produce until 1916, when the railway terminus was opened at Port Harcourt, 145 km to the west.[83]
First contact with colonial powers, Nigeria as a "slave coast"
Trade in ivory, gold and slaves
The first encounters between the inhabitants of the coast and a European power, the Portuguese, took place around 1485. The Portuguese began to trade extensively, particularly with the kingdom of Benin. The Portuguese traded European products, especially weapons, for ivory and palm oil and increasingly for slaves. The manillas that the Portuguese used to pay their Nigerian suppliers were melted down again in the Kingdom of Benin to create the bronze artworks that adorned the royal palace as a sign of affluence.[84]
In 1553, the first English expedition arrived in Benin. From then on, European merchant ships regularly anchored on the West African coast, albeit at a safe distance from the mainland due to the mosquitoes in the lagoons and the tropical diseases they spread. Locals came to these ships on barques and conducted their business.[85] The Europeans named the coasts of West Africa after the products that were of interest to them there. The "Ivory Coast" still exists today. The western coast of Nigeria became the slave coast. In contrast to the Gold Coast further west (today's Ghana), the European powers did not establish any fortified bases here until the middle of the 19th century.
The harbour of Calabar on the historic Bay of Biafra became one of the largest slave trading centres in West Africa. Other important slave harbours in Nigeria were located in Badagry, Lagos in the Bay of Benin and Bonny Island.[85][86] Most of the enslaved people brought to these harbours were captured in raids and wars.[87] The most "prolific" slave-trading kingdoms were the Edo Empire of Benin in the south, the Oyo Empire in the south-west and the Aro Confederacy in the south-east.[85][86]
Caliphate of Sokoto (1804 to 1903)
In the north, the incessant fighting between the Hausa city-states and the decline of the Bornu Empire led to the Fulani gaining a foothold in the region. Originally, the Fulani mainly travelled with cattle through the semi-desert region of Sahel in northern Sudan, avoiding trade and mixing with the Sudanese peoples. At the beginning of the 19th century, Usman dan Fodio led a successful jihad against the Hausa kingdoms and founded the centralised caliphate of Sokoto. The empire, with Arabic as its official language, grew rapidly under his rule and that of his descendants, who sent invading armies in all directions. The vast landlocked empire linked the east with western Sudan and penetrated the south, conquering parts of the Oyo kingdom and advancing into the Yoruba heartland of Ibadan. The territory controlled by the empire included much of what is now northern and central Nigeria. The Sultan sent emirs to establish suzerainty over the conquered territories and to promote Islamic civilisation; the emirs in turn grew richer and more powerful through trade and slavery.
By the 1890s, the largest slave population in the world, about two million, was concentrated in the Sokoto Caliphate. Slaves were used on a large scale, especially in agriculture.[88] When the Sokoto Caliphate disintegrated into various European colonies in 1903, it was one of the largest pre-colonial African states.[89]
Expeditions along the Niger and in northern Nigeria
Around 1829, Hugh Clapperton's expedition to Europe made it known that and where the Niger flows into the Atlantic. (He himself did not survive the journey, but died of malaria and dysentery. His documents were published by his servant Richard Lander). After this, there were numerous privately funded forays into the interior, such as the Niger Expedition of 1841 (in which a large number of the European participants quickly died of tropical diseases and which is reported in the diary of fellow traveller Samuel Ajayi Crowther, mentioned again in the next chapter).[90][91]
Around 1850, the explorer Heinrich Barth travelled through northern Nigeria as part of a British expedition. Through his travels, Barth acquired special merits in the unprejudiced and respectful study of peoples and languages (he himself had the ability to learn African languages very quickly - he spoke and wrote Arabic fluently), as well as in African history. Barth also developed the hypothesis of a primeval wet phase in northern Africa.
British ban on the slave trade (from 1807)
Around 1750, British merchant ships shipped European goods to Africa, from there slaves to American plantations and products from there, such as tobacco, to Europe. However, from 1787 and increasingly from 1791, following reports of a slave revolt in Saint Domingue, the British Parliament debated the abolition of the slave trade.[92]
With the prohibition of the slave trade (not slavery) by Britain in 1807, British interest in Nigeria shifted to palm oil for use in soaps and as a lubricant for machinery. However, abolition in Britain was one-sided, and many other countries took its place.[93] European companies and smugglers continued to operate the Atlantic slave trade. The British West Africa Squadron attempted to intercept the smugglers at sea. The rescued slaves were taken to Freetown, a colony in West Africa originally founded by Lieutenant John Clarkson for the resettlement of slaves freed by Britain after the American Revolutionary War in North America.
British colonial rule
Crown Colony of Lagos (since 1861)
Britain's West Africa squadron was tenacious in concluding anti-slavery treaties with coastal chiefdoms along the West African coast from Sierra Leone through the Niger Delta to the south of the Congo.[94] However, the Nigerian coast proved difficult to control with its countless bays, meandering channels and rampant tropical diseases.[93] Badagry, Lagos, Bonny and Calabar therefore remained lively centres of the slave trade. The fight against the slave trade by the British plunged the kingdom of Oyo into a crisis that ultimately led to civil war within the Yoruba region. It became a constant source of prisoners of war for the slave markets.
In 1841, Oba Akitoye ascended the throne of Lagos and tried to put an end to the slave trade. Some Lagos merchants resisted the ban, deposed the king and replaced him with his brother Kosoko.[93] Britain intervened in this power struggle within the Lagos royalty by bombarding Lagos with the Royal Navy in 1851. The British thus replaced Kosoko with Akitoye again. In 1852, Akitoye and the British consul John Beecroft signed a treaty to free the slaves and grant the British permanent trade access to Lagos. However, Akitoye had difficulties implementing these resolutions. The situation therefore remained unsatisfactory for Britain.
The Royal Navy originally used the harbour of the island of Fernando Po (now Bioko, Equatorial Guinea) off Nigeria as a base of operations. In 1855, Spain claimed this harbour for itself. The Royal Navy therefore had to look for another naval base and chose the island of Lagos, which at 9 km2 was roughly the same size as the Orkney island of Papa Westray resp. five times the size of Coney Island or one seventh of Lower Manhattan and flooded several times per year, for this purpose.[93] King Akitoye had died in the meantime. His brother Kosoko then threatened to take back control of Lagos with the help of French colonial troops. The American Civil War, which centred on the issue of slavery, made the power struggle for Lagos particularly urgent. As a result, Lord Palmerston (British Prime Minister) made the decision that it was expedient "losing no time in assuming the formal protectorate of Lagos".[94] William McCoskry, the acting consul in Lagos, together with Commander Bedingfield, convened a meeting with King Dosunmu, Akitoye's successor, on board HMS Prometheus on 30 July 1861, at which the British intentions were explained. Dosunmu resisted the terms of the treaty, but under the threat of having Commander Bedingfield bombard Lagos, he relented and signed the Lagos Cession Treaty.[95]
Lagos proved to be strategically useful and became a major trading centre as traders could count on the protection of the Royal Navy to protect them from pirates, for example.[93] British missionaries penetrated further inland. In 1864, Samuel Ajayi Crowther became the first African bishop of the Anglican Church.[96]
After its experiences in the American War of Independence, Great Britain had limited itself to maintaining strategically placed bases around the world - such as Lagos - and avoided colonising regions far from the coast. This changed in the 1860s, when European powers embarked on the "Scramble for Africa". Up until this point, European trade with the natives was conducted by ships that anchored off the coast and travelled on once the business was concluded. As tropical lagoons - unlike the open sea - offer favourable conditions for mosquitoes, which pass on tropical diseases, Europeans avoided going ashore. Because of the "sleeping sickness", West Africa was nicknamed "The white man's grave" until around 1850. The industrial production of quinine from the 1820s and its use as a prophylactic against malaria on a large scale changed the situation. The European naval powers were now able to establish permanent settlements in the tropics.
The Royal Niger Company, the monopolist on the Niger
The first years of European colonialism in Africa were characterised by the Austrian school of economics and the marginal utility theory it advocated, according to which the value of products manufactured in Europe was higher in markets that were not yet saturated, such as Africa (marginal utility), and trade with colonies was therefore more profitable than in one's own country, for example. (The lower demand or purchasing power in the unsaturated market was not taken into account).
With the prospect of such high profits, various private trading companies promoted European influence in West Africa. One of them was the United Africa Company, founded by George Goldie in 1879, which was granted concessions for the entire area around the Niger Basin by the British government in 1886 under the name Royal Niger Company. The RNC marked out its territory as if it were a state in its own right and also negotiated treaties with the northern states, the Sokoto Caliphate, Nupe and Gwandu.
The RNC faced competition from three other groups, two French trading companies and another British group. A price war ensued, in which the RNC emerged victorious because in France the main proponent of African colonisation, Léon Gambetta, had died in 1882 and in 1883 considerable subsidies for these "colonisation companies" were cancelled by the mother country.[97]
The RNC's monopoly enabled Britain to resist French and German demands for the internationalisation of trade on the Niger during negotiations at the Berlin Conference in 1884-1885. Goldie succeeded in having the region in which the RNC operated included in the British sphere of interest. British assurances that free trade in Niger would be respected were hollow words: the RNC's more than 400 contracts with local leaders obliged the natives to trade exclusively with or through the company's agents. High tariffs and royalties drove competing companies out of the territory.[98] When King Jaja of Opobo organised his own trading network and even began routing his own palm oil shipments to Britain, he was lured onto a British warship and exiled to St Vincent on charges of 'breach of treaty' and 'obstruction of trade'.[99]
After the Berlin Congo Conference
The punitive expedition to the Kingdom of Benin in 1897
Benin was a slave-owning state 150 kilometres east of Lagos and was one of the four largest kingdoms in what is now Nigeria. As early as 1862, there were reports of human sacrifices being made in Benin in times of need. Consul Burton described the kingdom as "gratuitous barbarity which stinks of death".[100]
In 1892, Great Britain concluded a contract with King (Oba) Ovọnramwẹn of Benin for the supply of palm oil. The latter signed reluctantly and shortly afterwards made additional financial demands. In 1896, Vice-Consul Phillips travelled to Ovọnramwẹn with 18 officials, 180 porters and 60 local workers to renegotiate the contract. He sent a delegate ahead with gifts to announce his visit - but the king sent word that he did not wish to receive the visit for the time being[101] (King Ovọnramwẹn was aware of the fate of King Jaja of Opobo (see above), which could explain his lack of hospitality). Phillips nevertheless set off, but was ambushed, from which only two of his fellow travellers escaped alive, albeit seriously injured.[101]
In February 1897, a punitive expedition was set up under Admiral Rawson. The Colonial Office in London ruled: "It is imperative that a most severe lesson be given the Kings, Chiefs, and JuJu men of all surrounding countries, that white men cannot be killed with impunity..."[100] 5,000 British soldiers and sailors invaded the Kingdom of Benin, which barely defended itself but made the above-mentioned human sacrifices in its misery. The British forces encountered shocking scenes.[102]
The Kingdom of Benin was incorporated into the British dominion. The British burnt down the royal palace of Benin and looted the bronze sculptures there, which are now a World Heritage Site. These were later auctioned off in Europe to finance the punitive expedition.
For the next ten years, the British would expand their dominion primarily through military conquest rather than trade relations.
The West African Frontier Force
In 1897, Colonel Lugard, who had already established and stabilised British colonial rule in Malawi and Uganda, was commissioned to set up an indigenous Nigerian force to protect British interests in the hinterland of the colony of Lagos and Nigeria against French attacks. In August 1897, Lugard organised the West African Frontier Force and commanded it until the end of December 1899. By September 1898, Britain and France had already settled their colonial disputes in the Fashoda Crisis and concluded the Entente cordiale in 1904, thus depriving the WAFF of its original purpose[103] (However, the WAFF was to play a crucial role in the liberation of East Africa from (fascist) Italian rule during the Second World War in 1941. Colonel Lugard would significantly determine Nigeria's development over the next 22 years.
First railway line
The first railway line in West and Central Africa - between Lagos and Abeokuta - was opened in Nigeria in 1898[104] (However, it was followed shortly afterwards by the British colony of Gold Coast/Ghana (1901), the German colonies of Cameroon (1901) and Togo (1905) and the French colonies of Dahomey (1906) and Ivory Coast (1907)). Forced labour was also (or mainly) used in the construction work.[105] The staff of the railway company soon organised themselves and organised Nigeria's first strike in 1904.[106]
Southern Nigeria (since 1900)
The Royal Niger Company sells its land
Ten years after the "Scramble for Africa" - in the 1890s - it became increasingly clear that colonial rule in Africa was not a profitable endeavour and that the exploration and development of the continent, which had originally been initiated by the private sector, could only be continued through state-military measures and/or taxpayers' money. The above-mentioned marginal utility theory had given way to the theory of "shrinking markets", a term coined by the economic theorist Werner Sombart. According to this theory, colonies were supposedly a necessary measure for industrialised countries to maintain sales and food supplies. The theory was adopted by both "left-wing" theorists such as Bukharin and Luxemburg ("exploitation" of the colonies) and "right-wing" thinkers such as Rosenberg and Hitler ("Lebensraum").[107][108] The RNC's concession was revoked in 1899,[109] and on 1 January 1900 it ceded its territories to the British government for the sum of £865,000. The ceded territory was merged with the small Niger Coast Protectorate, which had been under British control since 1884, to form the Southern Nigeria Protectorate,[110] and the remaining RNC territory of around 1.3 million square kilometres became the Northern Nigeria Protectorate. 1,000 British soldiers were stationed in the Protectorate of Southern Nigeria, 2,500 in the Protectorate of Northern Nigeria and 700 in Lagos. The RNC was taken over by Lever Brothers in 1920 and became part of the Unilever Group in 1929. In 1939, the latter still controlled 80 per cent of Nigerian exports, mainly cocoa, palm oil and rubber.[111]
The south-east
Due to the complex coastline in the Niger Delta, there were no closed dominions in south-east Nigeria until 1900, but rather a conglomerate of city-states that focussed on trade along the coast and inland along the Niger and Benue rivers. These city-states, which were united in the "Aro Confederacy", had a religious centre in Arochukwu, the "Juju Oracle". The form of decision-making in the city-states can be described as "pre-democratic". In this region, which later became sadly known as "Biafra", feudal rule was just as difficult to enforce as British colonial rule. (The later Biafra War of 1966 to 1970 was, among other things, a conflict between the democratic instincts of the south-eastern Igbo population and the authoritarian structures in the rest of Nigeria). The British defeated the Aro Confederacy in the Anglo-Aro War (1901-1902) and spread their influence along the coast to the south-east as far as German Cameroon. However, control of the Niger Delta remained an unsolved problem both for the British colonial rulers and later for independent Nigeria. Pirates, marauders, self-proclaimed freedom fighters and (since 1957) oil thieves still find enough nooks and crannies in the confusing landscape and under the jungle canopy to evade police action.
After 1902
In 1906, the crown colony of Lagos was incorporated into the protectorate of Southern Nigeria.
In Lekki, near Lagos, the Nigerian Bitumen Corporation under businessman John Simon Bergheim discovered crude oil during test drilling in 1908. However, engineers were unable to prevent large quantities of water from being extracted as well. Oil production could therefore not be made profitable without additional investment. Bergheim's fatal car accident in 1912 put an end to further exploration of Nigeria's oil reserves for the time being.[112]
In 1909, coal deposits were discovered and extracted in the south-east of Nigeria, in Enugu[113] Two years later, this region, the Nti Kingdom, was placed directly under British colonial administration.[114][115]
Despite the consecration of Samuel Ajayi Crowther as a bishop - or perhaps because of it - European and North American churches refused to accept dark-skinned clergymen, while the mainly Protestant missionary work in southern Nigeria was quite successful. This led to countless evangelistic and Pentecostal free churches, which are still omnipresent in the south today.[116]
Nigeria's first trade union, the Nigeria Civil Service Union, was formed in 1912,[117] but would not be recognised until 1938, until which time its members were subjected to harassment.
Northern Nigeria (since 1900)
In 1900, Colonel Lugard was appointed High Commissioner of the newly created Protectorate of Northern Nigeria. He read the proclamation at Mount Patti in Lokoja that established the protectorate on 1 January 1900,[118] but at this time the part of northern Nigeria that was actually under British control was still small.[103]
North-east
In 1893, Rabih az-Zubayr, a Sudanese warlord, conquered the Kingdom of Bornu. The British recognised Rabih as "Sultan of Borno" until the French killed Rabih at the Battle of Kousséri on 22 April 1900. The colonial powers of Great Britain, France and Germany divided up his territory, with the British receiving what is now north-east Nigeria. They formally restituted the Borno Empire under British rule before the conquest in 1893 and appointed a scion of the ruling family of the time, Abubakar Garbai, as "Shehu" (Sheikh).
Northwest
In 1902, the British advanced north-westwards into the Sokoto Caliphate. In 1903, victory at the Battle of Kano gave the British a logistical advantage in pacifying the heartland of the Sokoto Caliphate and parts of the former Borno Empire. On 13 March 1903, the last vizier of the caliphate surrendered. By 1906, resistance to British rule had ended,[119] and there would be no more war within Nigeria's borders for the next 60 years. When Lugard resigned as commissioner in 1906, the entire region of present-day Nigeria was administered under British supervision.[103]
Unification into "Crown Colony and Protectorate" 1914, Governor Lugard
In 1912, after an interlude in Hong Kong, Lugard returned as governor of the two Nigerian protectorates. He merged the two colonies into one.[103]
In the same year, Lugard, who found the inhabitants of Lagos rebellious, had a new seaport built in the south-east as a rival to Lagos and named it Port Harcourt after his superior in the Colonial Office. This seaport soon received a railway line to Enugu and shipped the coal mined there (from 1958 also crude oil) overseas.
Unification and yet separation
Lugard became the first governor of All Nigeria. The unification of Nigeria helped to give Nigeria common telegraphs, railways, customs and excise duties, a Supreme Court,[120] uniform time,[121] a common currency[122] and a common civil service.[123] Lugard thus introduced what was needed for the infrastructure of a modern state. However, the north and south remained as two separate countries with separate administrations.[124]
English was the official language in the south and Hausa in the north.[125]
The protectorate in the south financed itself with £1,933,235 in tax revenue (1912). The larger but underdeveloped Northern Protectorate collected £274,989 in the same year and had to be subsidised by the British to the tune of £250,000 annually.[125] (This economic structure basically exists to this day.)
Regional differences in access to modern education soon became pronounced. Some children of the southern elite went to Britain for higher education. The imbalance between North and South was also reflected in Nigeria's political life. For example, slavery was not banned in northern Nigeria until 1936, while it was abolished in other parts of Nigeria around 1885.[126] Northern Nigeria still had between 1 million and 2.5 million slaves around 1900.[127]
"Indirect Rule" - colonial rule while preserving social structures
Lugard was a master of efficient power structures. He was the inventor, theoretical pioneer and chief practitioner of "Indirect Rule", according to which the existing power structures, laws and traditions in colonies were left largely intact and integrated into the colonial system. (Indirect rule was practised by the British in protectorates and by the German colonial system, while the French, Belgians and Portuguese, for example, dismantled the pre-colonial structures and replaced them with direct colonial administration). In doing so, Lugard relied on the existing traditional power structures, or what he thought they were. The emirs of the north retained their hereditary titles and functions, dispensed justice according to Sharia law, had the police power to implement this law, collected taxes for the British and ultimately implemented British directives. In return, the British supported their power.[128] Thus, the feudal power structures in northern Nigeria were preserved and subsidised for decades.
The attempt to enforce this system in the south also met with varying degrees of success. In the Yoruba region of the south-west, the British were able to tie in with existing or formerly existing kingdoms and their borders. However, as there were no hierarchical or even feudal structures in the south-east through which the British could indirectly rule, they appointed "Warrant Chiefs" with powers to act as local representatives of the British administration among their people. However, the British did not realise that in some parts of Africa the concept of "chiefs" or "kings" was not known. Among the Igbo, for example, decisions were made through lengthy debates and general consensus. The new powers vested in the Warrant Chiefs and reinforced by the native court system led to an exercise of power and authority unprecedented in pre-colonial times. The Warrant Chiefs also used their power to amass wealth at the expense of their subjects. The Warrant Chiefs were corrupt, arrogant and accordingly hated.[129][130]
Racial approaches in the army
From the outset, British colonial rule utilised - and reinforced - the differences between the ethnic groups present in order to offer itself to each side as a power-preserving factor and to be able to control the oversized colony with relatively little military expenditure (4,200 British soldiers). In the south, education, economy and civilisational achievements dominated, while in the north the military, feudalism and Islamic traditions[131] were deliberately reinforced by the British. While officer positions were filled with British, enlisted men, non-commissioned officers and higher non-commissioned officer positions (sergeant majors) were exclusively filled with northern Nigerians, as these were regarded as "warrior peoples" in accordance with a popular doctrine practised in India since 1857 (e.g. Sikhs, Brahmins).[132] Nigeria thus remained divided in many respects into the northern and southern protectorates and the colony of Lagos.[133]
On Lugard, historian K. B. C. Onwubiko says: "His system of Indirect Rule, his hostility towards educated Nigerians in the South, and his system of education for the North which aimed at training only the sons of the chiefs and emirs as clerks and interpreters show him as one of Britain's arch-imperialists".[134]
First World War
In August 1914, a British-Nigerian military unit attacked Cameroon. After 18 months, the German Imperial Schutztruppe surrendered to a superior force of British, Nigerians, Belgians and French. Some German units were able to escape to the Spanish and thus neutral Rio Muni (today's Equatorial Guinea).
Time between the world wars
In the Treaty of Versailles, the German colony of Cameroon was divided up between the British and French as a League of Nations trust territory. In 1920, the western part of the former German colony of Cameroon was administratively annexed to British Nigeria as a League of Nations mandate territory under the name British Cameroons.[135]
Until the 1950s, contact between the colony of Nigeria and Great Britain was mainly maintained by mail ships. Once a month, a mail steamer of the Elder Dempster & Company from Liverpool docked in the capital Lagos/Apapa and in Calabar. These were alternately the MS Apapa and its sister ship, the MS Accra.[136] In addition to letters, parcels and newspapers, they also transported cargo and around 100 passengers and also made stops in Gambia, Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Gold Coast (Ghana)[137] In this way, colonial officials, officers of the colonial army, business travellers and globetrotters reached the West African colonies of the Commonwealth or their homes. The journey from Liverpool to Nigeria (Lagos/Apapa or Calabar) took about 14 days.
Governor Clifford, the Clifford Constitution
Lugard's successor (1919-1925), Sir Hugh Clifford, was an avowed opponent of Lugard's views and saw his role not in the efficient running of an apparatus of power, but in the development of the country. He intensified educational efforts in the south and repeatedly suggested to the Colonial Office in London that the power of the absolutist emirs ruling in the north should be limited - which was rejected. This further deepened the de facto division of the country into a northern, south-western and south-eastern part. In the north, the indirect rule aimed at preserving feudal rule continued to apply. In the south, an educated elite based on the European model emerged.[116] The railway company paid very well due to the activities of the well-organised railway workers' union, but also due to competing employers - who were happy to poach skilled workers. High school graduates could train as train drivers or technicians ("engineers") in six-year vocational school courses run by Nigerian Railways. During this training, the "apprentices" were paid and received an annual salary of £380 - £480 (as of 1935, in today's money value about £38 - 48,000, significantly more than the average Nigerian income today).[104] For the vocational students in Lagos, the railway company had specially provided a discarded but still functional 0-6-0 steam locomotive worth £4 million (in today's money value), which they could use to learn how it worked.[104]
In 1922, Clifford established the Legislative Council. The four elected members were from Lagos (3) and Calabar (1). The Legislative Council enacted laws for the colony and the protectorate of Southern Nigeria. It also approved the annual budget for the entire country. The four elected members were the first Africans to be elected to a parliamentary body in British West Africa. The Clifford Constitution accordingly led to the formation of political parties in Nigeria. Herbert Macaulay, a newspaper owner and grandson of Samuel Ajayi Crowther (see above), founded the first Nigerian political party - the Nigeria National Democratic Party - in 1923. It remained the strongest party in the elections until 1939.
1925 to 1929, "Women's War"
In the meantime, it had become clear that colonies were neither "profitable" in the sense of the marginal utility theory described above, nor were they the solution to the problem of shrinking markets. Instead, Nigeria continued to gobble up taxpayers' money despite investments totalling several billions (like most African colonies) and hardly benefited the economy of the mother country. The new governor Graeme Thomson therefore introduced harsh austerity measures in 1925, including massive redundancies and the introduction of direct taxation.
The planned tax on women market traders, Graeme Thomson's undiplomatic manner and the unpopular Warrant Chief system (see above) led to the "Women's War" of 1929 among the Igbo. The women farmers destroyed ten native courts by December 1929, when the troops restored order in the region. In addition, the houses of chiefs and employees of the native courts were attacked, European factories looted, prisons attacked and prisoners released. The women demanded the removal of the Warrant Chiefs and their replacement by native clan chiefs appointed by the people and not by the British. 55 women were killed by the colonial troops. Nevertheless, the Women's War of 1929 led to fundamental reforms in the British colonial administration. The British abolished the system of "Warrant Chiefs" and reviewed the nature of colonial rule over the natives of Nigeria. Several colonial administrators condemned the prevailing administrative system and agreed to the call for urgent reforms based on the indigenous system. In place of the old Warrant Chief system, tribunals were introduced that took into account the indigenous system of government that had prevailed before colonial rule.[138][139]
1930 to 1939
In 1933, the Lagos Youth Movement - later the Nigerian Youth Movement - was founded[138] and took a more strident stance in favour of independence than the NNDP. In 1938, the NYM called for Nigeria to be granted British Dominion status, putting it on a par with Australia or Canada.[116] In 1937, it was joined by Nnamdi Azikiwe, who had been exiled from Ghana/Gold Coast for seditious activities and who became publisher and editor-in-chief of the West African Pilot and father of Nigerian popular journalism. In 1938, the NYM protested against the cocoa cartel, which kept the purchase prices from farmers artificially low.[111] In 1939, the NYM became the strongest party in the elections in Lagos and Calabar (no elections were held elsewhere).
In 1934, the Warrant Chiefs were abolished.[140]
In 1935, the railway network reached its maximum expansion after the last investment projects were completed. It comprised 2,851 km of track with a gauge of 106.7 cm ("Cape gauge") and 214 km with a gauge of 76.2 cm. This made the Nigerian railway network the longest and most complex in West and Central Africa. In 1916, a 550 m long railway bridge over the Niger River and in 1934 a bridge over the Benue River connected the regional railway networks.[104] 179 mainline and 54 shunting locomotives were in use in 1934. Two maintenance and repair workshops in Lagos and Enugu employed about 2,000 locals.[104] Rail transport was efficiently synchronised with maritime traffic. Travellers from mail steamers could board the "Boat Express" waiting right next to it at the port of Apapa in Lagos and reach Kano in the far north of Nigeria within 43 hours in sleeping and dining cars.[104]
In 1931, the influential Nigerian Union of Teachers was founded under its president O. R. Kuti (the father of Fela Kuti).[140] Nigeria's first industrial union, the railway workers' union, was also founded in 1931 by lathe operator Michael Imoudu.[141] In 1939, trade unions were permitted by decree by the colonial administration, but Imoudu was arrested in 1943. The railway workers' union was considered the most militant workers' union in Nigeria. Imoudu remained under house arrest until 1945.[142]
Governor Cameron standardised the administration of the Northern and Southern Provinces in the 1930s by introducing a native appellate court system, High Courts and Magistrate Courts.
Second World War
Sinking of both mail ships to Nigeria
On 26 July 1940, one of the two mail ships connecting Nigeria with the colonial power, the MS Accra, was sunk off Ireland by the U-34 submarine. 24 people died.
On 15 November 1940, the sister ship on the same route, the MS Apapa, was sunk by a German FW 200 Condor on its way home off Ireland. 26 people lost their lives.[143] An identical ship was given the same name and took over the same route service (see picture above).[144]
Operation Postmaster
In 1942, Nigeria played a role in "Operation Postmaster". In an adventurous manner, British special agents from Lagos captured Italian and German supply ships for submarines in the South Atlantic on the nearby but Spanish and therefore neutral island of Bioko and brought them to the home port of Lagos.[145] The incident - in which no shots were fired - almost led to Franco's Spain entering the war alongside the Third Reich and fascist Italy.
Rationing, price control, agricultural damage, education offensive
As early as 1939, the Nigeria Supply Board was set up to promote the production of rubber and palm oil, which were considered important for the war effort, at the expense of food production. The import of agricultural products was restricted.
From 1942, farmers were only allowed to sell rice, maize, beans etc. to government agencies and at a very low price under the "Pullen Scheme" so that the British Isles, which were cut off from the continent, could be supplied with food at low cost. However, this price control motivated farmers to either not sell their products at all or to sell them on the black market. Others may have resorted to growing unregulated, i.e. inedible, produce. Nigeria's agriculture, which had already suffered from the European purchasing cartels (especially Unilever) and the Great Depression, was once again hampered in its development.[146] In December 1942, consumer goods were rationed. (Rationing would last until 1948.)[147] The transport of rice from Abeokuta to nearby Lagos was criminalised.
As a "positive" effect of the Second World War, the colonial administration trained war-critical skilled labour such as technicians, electricians, nurses, carpenters and clerks on a large scale during this period. New harbours and - for the first time - airports were built.[148]
Nigeria regiments, advance in Ethiopia
Throughout the war, 45,000 Nigerian soldiers served in the British forces in Africa and South East Asia. Nigerian regiments formed the majority of the British Army's 81st and 82nd West African Divisions.[149] These divisions fought in Palestine, Morocco, Sicily and Burma. Nigerian soldiers also fought in India.
Three battalions of the Nigeria Regiment fought in the Ethiopian campaign against fascist Italy. On 26 March 1941, two motorised companies of the Nigeria Regiment advanced 930 km from Kenya to Daghabur within 10 days in Mussolini-controlled Ethiopia. On 26 March, the Nigeria Regiment captured Harar near Djibouti after an advance of 1,600 km in 32 days. At the time, this was the fastest military advance in world history.[150] The advance also divided the fascist sphere of control in East Africa. In their hasty retreat, the Italian forces also left behind important ammunition and food depots. Addis Ababa was conquered by the Allies on 6 April.[151] The Ethiopian campaign became the Allies' first major success against the Axis powers, not least due to the "Blitzkrieg" of the Nigeria regiment.[150] With East Africa (1.9 million km2), Italy lost an area in a few days that was larger than today's Poland, Belarus, Ukraine and the Baltic states combined (1.3 million km2).
Ideas from India on independence
Fighting for the Allies were 600,000 volunteers from Africa, who had been promised equal brotherhood in arms with their Caucasian fellow soldiers. Nevertheless, they received less pay than their European or Asian counterparts.[152] Corporal punishment (flogging) was also still a disciplinary punishment exclusively for black soldiers. In northern Nigeria, it is not necessarily possible to speak of "voluntary" recruits, as the local tribal chiefs were prescribed contingents of "volunteers" as part of the Indirect Rule. The absolutist rulers did not necessarily take into account the voluntary nature of the troops when providing them for service at the front. During the war, none of the commanding officers of the Nigerian Corps came from Nigeria. (The first Nigerian officers received their licences at the end of the war).
The Nigerian soldiers can hardly have been unaware of the contradiction between their reality and the propagated British interpretation of wanting to protect Africa from German and Italian colonisation.[152] In addition, the Nigerian troops had been fighting alongside their Indian comrades for several years and there was already a strong and media-effective independence movement against British colonial rule in their homeland under Mahatma Gandhi. (India became independent just 22 months after the Second World War.) The exchange of ideas with the Indians striving for independence almost certainly contributed to the fact that Nigerian soldiers returned home from Burma in January 1946[153] with completely new ideas about an independent Nigeria, but with less patience.
In his victory speech, the commander of the troops in Burma, Sir William Slim, did not mention the Nigerian "brothers in arms" at all.[154]
Post-war period, the road to independence
During the Second World War, the number of Nigerian trade union members had increased sixfold to 30,000.[116] A general strike by railway workers for higher wages and for the release of imprisoned trade unionists such as Michael Imoudu (see above) made it clear in 1945 that the previous colonial administration had to be replaced by a new, national form of government.[155][156]
Ethnically characterised party landscape
The British government introduced new constitutions for Nigeria in quick succession (1946, 1950, 1954 and 1957). The three regions were given extensive self-determination with their own parliaments and governments. These would set up a central government for customs matters, common foreign policy and defence. In this federation of just three federal states, the political process naturally became more of a conflict than a co-operation. Accordingly, the dominant political parties were organised along ethnic lines:
- the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC) represented the eponymous northern Nigerians, especially the Hausa, and was led by one of the highest nobles of the north, Ahmadu Bello,
- the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) represented the Igbo in the south-east after the death of Herbert Macaulay under the leadership of journalist Nnamdi Azikiwe, and
- the Action Group (AG) represented the Yoruba in the south-west and had Obafemi Awolowo as party leader.
In 1952, the regional parliaments were elected; for the Northern State, this was the first free election in its history. As expected, all three parties won a majority in their respective states and ethnic groups,[157] with Bello, Azikiwe and Awolowo becoming prime ministers of their respective states. The governments of the North, South-West and South-East each constitutionally sent three ministers to the central government in Lagos. Accordingly, state revenues were also distributed according to a population proportion determined in Nigeria's first census in 1953 (previously there had only been estimates).
The precarious balance only lasted with the British as the "tip of the scales", but for the nascent nation of Nigeria, without the British, it was only a preliminary stage that would last until one of the three ethnic groups no longer felt sufficiently represented in the federation. The main candidate for this was northern Nigeria and during the Kano riots of May 1953[159] secession was a distinct possibility. Many Hausa and Fulani favoured a separate, Muslim-majority state over the planned all-Nigeria. This was also due to the jurisprudence in the north. In the 1950s, civil and criminal law was still administered in northern Nigeria by emirs (i.e. by hereditary nobility, not by trained lawyers) in accordance with Sharia law. For northern Nigerians, it was hardly acceptable that this legal system should in future be given a higher instance in the form of the Supreme Court, in which non-Muslims and academically trained experts without a noble title would also be represented.
On the other hand, the south of Nigeria had co-financed the "poor" north in every fiscal year since 1914 (this has not changed until 2023) and even the most ardent advocates of a northern state did not dare to make the necessary tax increases palatable to their supporters. The funding dilemma initially delayed further endeavours for such a separate northern state and ultimately prevented it.
Discovery of oil in the south-east
In January 1956, the first oil field in Nigeria, the Olobiri Oilfield in the south-east of the country, was discovered.
The new Conservative government in the United Kingdom under Harold Macmillan had been advocating faster decolonisation in the British Empire since 10 January 1957, following the debacle in the Suez Crisis and in view of the high costs of the loss-making colonial system.
On 30 August 1957, the former transport minister Abubakar Tafawa Balewa became the first prime minister of Nigeria's (weak) central government.
Late farewell to racial ideas
From 1958 onwards, the Nigerian army no longer recruited men exclusively from the north, as before, but from all over the country. In the following years, this meant that officer candidates from the south predominantly occupied the numerous positions of the outgoing British officers, as they were generally higher educated. This clashed with the older officers and sergeant majors, who had been taught that their people (Hausa, Fulani, Kanuri) belonged to the "warrior peoples"[160] and that representatives of the southern ethnic groups Yoruba and Igbo were not entitled to the new positions[132] - This conflict was to trigger the Biafra War in 1966.[132]
The first all-Nigerian parliament was elected at the end of 1959. The parties, which saw themselves primarily as representatives of ethnic groups or regions, won according to their population strength. The Northern Peoples Congress won 148 of the 312 seats in the House of Representatives and formed a coalition with several minor parties to gain an absolute majority.[161]
On 1 October 1960, Nigeria was granted independence by an act of the British Parliament and admitted to the United Nations.
In order to keep the "Giant of Africa" under control and partly because of racial ideology,[132] the British colonial government treated the ethnic and social groups in the country very unequally for decades. In the north, absolutist-feudal systems, and until 1936 even slave-owning systems, had been supported financially and militarily, while in the south conditions had been created that at least did not appear too alien to the Europeans there. In addition, as in francophone countries, an upper class educated in the mother country had been brought up, which only looked down on other compatriots. In just a few years, this "development split" would undo all colonial investments and development efforts in the now independent Nigeria.
Independence, First Republic (1960/1963 - 1966)
On 1 October 1960, Nigeria gained full independence from the United Kingdom on the basis of a federal constitution, with three large states having a weak central government over them. NCNC Chairman Nnamdi Azikiwe replaced the colonial Governor-General James Wilson Robertson in November 1960[162] and Elizabeth II remained head of state for the time being.
The NPC and NCNC remained the governing parties, with the AG now in opposition. In this AG, the Yoruba party, there was a bitter power struggle between Obefemi Awolowo, who advocated a socialist course and sought to close ranks with the Soviet Union, and the conservative Prime Minister of the South West, Samuel Akíntọ́lá, who wanted to improve co-operation with the Northern Party (NPC). This internal party dispute became so heated that the central government under Balewa had to impose a state of emergency on the south-west in May 1962. Akíntọ́lá eventually founded a new party, the NNDP, which would win the disputed 1964 elections in an electoral alliance with the NPC. From then on, Akíntọ́lá was seen in his region as a vicarious agent of the backward and feudal north, which would cost him his life in 1966.
On 1 June 1961, Nigeria received the "North Cameroons", a Muslim-dominated strip of land on the border with Cameroon, following a referendum. The predominantly Christian inhabitants of the South Cameroons (bordering Biafra) decided against the Muslim-dominated and unstable Nigeria and in favour of belonging to Christian-dominated Cameroon. Both "Cameroons" were previously under UN administration; the Bakassi peninsula remained disputed.
Nigeria received a new constitution in 1963. Nigeria became a republic. The British system of government was retained. Abubakar Tafawa Balewa remained Prime Minister and British Queen's Governor Nnamdi Azikiwe became President.
In 1964, a new House of Representatives was elected. The NPC and NNDP electoral alliance won 198 of the 312 seats[161] The Yoruba and Igbo (who generated the lion's share of tax revenue) now sat in opposition, while the Hausa/Fulani dominated politics and the lower ranks of the army up to the sergeant major ranks. Their northern state was larger than would have been suggested by the border between the three main ethnic groups or between the predominant denominations of Islam and Christianity. The "Federal State of the Northern Region" therefore included not only Muslim Hausa and Fulbe (for whom it was politically in favour, but who made up barely more than a quarter of the population), but also considerable minorities of Christians, followers of natural religions, Yoruba, Igbo and other minorities such as the Tiv. When the politically and militarily dominant northern state, which was chronically short of funds, wanted to impose a special tax on the predominantly Christian Tiv in the same year, riots broke out in the affected region. 4,000 people were killed.[163] One had to wonder how many lives would be lost if, for example, the much more numerous Igbo were to rise up and it was not about a special tax, but about the lucrative oil business in Igboland.
In the south-west, the unrest worsened in 1965 because the election results had apparently been falsified or were the result of intimidation and the government had halved the state-guaranteed producer prices for cocoa immediately after the election. There was arson and looting. Dozens of political opponents were tracked down in places like Ekiti or Ijebu-Ode (both not far from Lagos), doused with petrol and set on fire ("Operation Wetie"). Thugs controlled the streets. By the end of 1965, the south-west was in a state of complete anarchy.[164]
On 1 May 1965, Sir Christopher Welby-Everard, the Chief of the General Staff of Nigeria and the last British officer from colonial times, retired. He was succeeded by Johnson Agulyi-Ironsi, an experienced officer, former military attaché in London and commander of the UN protection force in the Congo in 1964.
Dictatorship and War
The January Coup, dictatorship Aguiyi-Ironsi (1966)
On 15 January 1966, six majors, including five Igbo, staged a coup (ethnicity was to be relevant to all the protagonists in the years to come). The officers were around 27 years old, had received their commission in Britain in 1959-61 with honours at Sandhurst and Aldershot and recognised, not without some justification, the backwardness and anarchy of the country they were returning to. The conspirators assassinated 22 leading politicians, ministers and military officers, including the head of government, Balewa, and the prime ministers of the North and South West, Bello and Akíntọ́lá.[132] Among the 22 victims was only one Igbo, although according to later statements, the coup plotters were not pursuing ethnic goals, but wanted to strike at the heart of a backward state dominated by the North.
Following the violent death of Prime Minister Balewa Parliamentary President Orizu, an Igbo, transferred government power to the army chief Agulyi-Ironsi, also an Igbo. With his first decree, he abolished the constitution and freedom of the press and dissolved parliament.[165] Remaining ministers were forced to resign, and from then on the head of state ruled by means of directives issued by his staff. Ironsi abolished the three federal states and made Nigeria a unitary state for the first time:[166] a country in which all laws, all taxes etc. applied equally everywhere, without regional variations. Nigeria was to be forced to progress by directive, so to speak. This was inevitably viewed badly in the backward north. In addition, the military government was reluctant to take action against Igbo involved in the coup.[167] Ironsi was Igbo himself and used the more highly educated Igbo in the north to implement the supposedly progressive decisions of the central government on the ground. For other ethnic groups, it must have seemed as if the Igbo wanted to take over the country.[116]
Another coup, dictatorship Gowon, Biafra (1966 - 1975)
However, the Nigerian army in 1966 did not consist predominantly of south-eastern majors with British Sandhurst training, but, as in Lugard's time, mainly of soldiers and sergeants from the north with very limited education. On 29 July 1966, soldiers staged a coup in Abeokuta in the south-west and murdered Agulyi-Ironsi, who was visiting nearby Ibadan. Pogroms against the Igbo broke out across the country,[166] with sources claiming 30,000 victims, mostly children.[168] In this situation, the coup plotters appointed Lieutenant Colonel Yakubu ("Jack") Gowon as the new military and state leader and reintroduced federalism. Gowon did not belong to any of the three predominant ethnic groups and was confronted with the task of keeping the three divergent parts of his country and ethnic groups together and putting an end to the pogroms. Under these circumstances, it seemed unlikely that Yakubu Gowon's rule would last comparatively long - nine years. However, one of the worst humanitarian disasters of modern times occurred during this period: the Biafra War.
In September 1966, the pogroms against the Igbo reached their peak. An estimated 1 million Igbo fled from all over the country to the south-east, where they believed they were safe.
In May 1967, the governor of the eastern region, Lieutenant Colonel Emeka Ojukwu, proclaimed it an independent state, the "Republic of Biafra."[169][170] Following this declaration of independence, the remaining Nigerian forces attacked Biafra at Garkem on 6 July 1967. Nigeria was ill-prepared for this situation due to the liquidation of leading officers during the previous coups. As a result, the Biafran forces were able to advance westwards to Benin City in August 1967. Biafra was besieged and cut off from trade without either side being able to make decisive military movements. It was not until December 1969 that Colonel Obasanjo advanced to Umuahia with 30,000 troops, splitting Biafra in two. This decided the war. The hostilities finally ended after 30 months in January 1970.[171]
The Biafra region, which had already had to cope with an unprecedented wave of refugees, was no longer able to feed its inhabitants due to the trade blockade. Estimates of the number of deaths caused by hunger and acts of war during the civil war range from one to three million.[172] Photographs of starving children in Biafra went around the world and characterised the image of post-colonial Africa.
The federal government was only able to defeat the insurgents in Biafra with great difficulty. The fact that they succeeded in the end was mainly due to the officers Murtala Muhammed and Olusegun Obasanjo, who themselves became dictators a few years later after Gowon's overthrow.
Gowon had increased the number of federal states in Nigeria to 12 in 1967. With this strategic move, he blocked the realistic opportunity for both the south-east and the north to establish their own state, won over the minorities (to which he himself belonged and which make up 30% of the Nigerian population) and, by skilfully drawing the borders of the federal states, deprived the Igbo of control over both the oil wells and the seaports.[116] This fundamentally changed the federal character of Nigeria, but it remained federal.
Nigeria joined OPEC in 1971. It experienced a dynamic economic boom during the 1974 oil crisis, which mainly triggered inflation, and was confronted with declining demand and mass unemployment in 1975.[116] During these years, the north also experienced the worst drought since 1914. Dictator Gowon's 1972 nationalisation decree[173] closed many sectors of the Nigerian economy to all foreign investment and banned foreign participation beyond a minority stake in several other areas. This decree proved detrimental to investment in the Nigerian economy.[174]
On 1 October 1974, in contradiction to earlier statements, Gowon declared that Nigeria was not ready for civilian rule until 1976, and he postponed the handover date indefinitely.
Under Gowon, perceived corruption increased, especially among military government officials. Although Gowon himself was never implicated in the corrupt practices, he was often accused of turning a blind eye to the activities of his associates and acquaintances.[175] Newspapers reported on bribery and nepotism. Theft and embezzlement in hospitals and orphanages outraged the Nigerian public.[116] Medicines imported by officials at full price, which had long expired, showed that those involved were also indifferent to human lives.
In addition, the formerly efficient administration became bloated and was overburdened even with simpler tasks. The mismanagement in Gowon's administration culminated in the infamous "cement armada" in the summer of 1975,[176] when the port of Lagos was overcrowded with hundreds of ships trying to unload cement. Representatives of the Nigerian government had signed contracts with 68 different international suppliers to deliver a total of 20 million tonnes of cement to Lagos in one year, even though the port could only take one million tonnes of cargo per year.[177] The poorly drafted cement contracts contained demurrage clauses that were very favourable to the suppliers, so that the bill would skyrocket as the ships waited in port to unload (or even as they waited in their home ports for permission to leave for Nigeria). The Nigerian government only realised the extent of its mistake when the port of Lagos became so congested that basic supplies could no longer be guaranteed. Their attempts to cancel the cement contracts and impose an emergency embargo on all incoming ships kept the country busy with litigation around the world for many years, including a 1983 U.S. Supreme Court decision.[178]
Due to the turmoil of the Second World War and Nigeria's looming independence, the infrastructure, e.g. the railway network, was no longer expanded and was no longer maintained after the outbreak of the Biafra War in 1966. Nigeria's railway system became increasingly dilapidated (this also applies to the railway networks of other West African countries after their independence). As a result, by the 1990s, Nigeria's railway system had deteriorated to the point where it was almost completely non-functional. Large sections of track were missing or unusable, locomotives and rolling stock were in an advanced state of disrepair, and the system could no longer provide reliable service. Expertise was lost, training institutions no longer received funding and ceased operations. (It was not until 2009 that Nigeria began to renovate and lay new tracks again for billions of euros with Chinese aid (see Nigerian Railway Corporation), but the country will still be operating barely more than the colonial line length in 2023).
Scandals and the obvious mismanagement caused dissatisfaction within the army. On 29 July 1975, when Gowon attended an OAU summit in Kampala, a group of officers led by Colonel Joe Nanven Garba announced his overthrow.[179]
Dictatorship Murtala Muhammed (1975-1976)
On 29 July 1975, General Yakubu Gowon was overthrown while attending the 12th summit of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) in Kampala, Uganda.[180]
Murtala Muhammed assumed power as the new military head of state.[181] He was considered brilliant and bold, but also unpredictable and impetuous.[182]
Murtala Muhammed also took control of the two largest newspapers in the country - Daily Times and New Nigerian; all media in Nigeria were now under state control. He also took control of the remaining state universities.[183]
In a short time, Murtala Muhammed's policies gained wide popular support and his determination made him a popular hero.[184] However, his highly popular but impulsive style of governance and often televised speeches with the frequent addition of "with immediate effect" also earned him criticism among the country's top officials.[185] His ad hoc declarations often left his officials unprepared, lacking details and lacking the financial resources to implement his ideas.
Shortly after taking power, Muhammed realised that state revenues were falling due to low oil production. Global demand for oil had collapsed, spare parts had become more expensive and labour costs had risen. As a result, the military government lacked the funds to fulfil the Nigerian development plan for 1975.[186]
Murtala Muhammed then carried out a dramatic downsizing of the bloated and inefficient civil service ("Operation Deadwood").[185] More than 10,000 government employees were dismissed without transitional benefits.[180] Numerous civil servants were tried for corruption and a military governor was executed for gross abuse of office[187] However, due to the drastic nature of the purge, accusations were made that personal scores were also settled in the process of streamlining the civil service.[188]
On 13 February 1976, Muhammed was driving to work in his unarmoured Mercedes-Benz 230.6, unaccompanied by bodyguards or the like. Shortly after 8 a.m., his car was driving slowly through the notorious Lagos traffic when a group of soldiers emerged from a neighbouring petrol station, ambushed the vehicle and murdered the unarmed Muhammed.[189] This was part of an attempted coup d'état by Lieutenant Colonel Dimka, who was executed on 15 May 1976 for treason.[190] Muhammed's successor was the Chief of Staff of the Supreme Headquarters, Olusegun Obasanjo, who had escaped assassination through a case of mistaken identity. The Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos is named after the still popular military ruler,[191] who is also (inaccurately) referred to as the "Nigerian Kennedy".[192]
Dictatorship Obasanjo (1976-1979)
Olusegun Obasanjo formed a triumvirate with two other generals and increased general repression. The most famous example is probably the raid on the home of musician Fela Kuti, during which female family members were raped and his mother was thrown out of a window, suffering fatal injuries.[193] Trade union activities were restricted. Dimka and 37 of his comrades-in-arms were executed.[194]
Obasanjo swiftly convened a committee to draft a new constitution, modelling it on the US system. Even before a result was achieved, Obasanjo increased the number of federal states to 19. The draft of the new constitution was very similar to today's Nigerian constitution and summarised the position of the head of state and the head of government. The powerful position of the president was balanced by two chambers.[194] The constitution was promulgated in September 1978. The five parties that ran their own presidential candidates in the 1979 election showed less vision than the above committee and focussed - as in the First Republic, but against Obasanjo's express wishes - primarily on representing ethnic groups. Despite the past 20 years and a survived civil war, the new party landscape was to a certain extent a copy of the old one:
- The NPN represented the Northern Nigerians and thus took over the legacy of the NPC,
- the NPP represented the South-East (like the NCNC mentioned above, again with Chairman Azikiwe) and
- the UPN represented the South West (like the AG mentioned above, again with Chairman Awolowo).
Accordingly, each party won by over 80 per cent in the state where it represented the majority of the population. The ethnic group that had the largest share of Nigeria's population - still Northern Nigerians - won the election with its party and provided the new president, Alhaji Shehu Shagari.[161] So before it had begun, the Second Republic was already suffering from the same problem as the First Republic: a party landscape that had been formed along ethnic lines rather than ideological or programmatic standpoints.
The Second Republic (1979-1983), President Shagari
On 1 October 1979, Shehu Shagari was sworn in as the first President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. As his party, the NPN, had barely more than 35% of the seats in the Senate and the House of Representatives, Shagari formed a coalition with the NPP, which had become the third strongest party in the parliamentary elections. This coalition had a slim majority in both chambers.
Shagari relied on large-scale industry and, in agriculture, on the "Green Revolution" that corresponded to the current state of science at the time: preference for large farms, intensive use of fertilisers and pesticides, use of machinery, drilling of deep groundwater, etc.[195] The Green Revolution is viewed rather critically today (2023).
Laying of the foundation stone for the Ajaokuta steelworks
In 1980, Shagari laid the foundation stone for the Ajaokuta steelworks, which was to be built by a Soviet state-owned company near the Niger River and the Itakpe ore mine. By 1991, 98% of the steelworks, which was to be built to Soviet standards, i.e. on a very large scale, had been constructed. However, by 1991 the Soviet Union had dissolved, world demand for steel had changed unfavourably and technology had developed further. The steelworks was not completed and had still not started operations in 1994 - which, according to Russian Wikipedia articles on the subject, was entirely due to Nigeria. Ajaokuta was seen as a prime example of failed development aid in West Africa.[196] However, by 2017, 40 of the 43 plants were gradually able to start operations. In 2023, Ajaokuta Steel produced around one sixth of the amount of steel produced by the UK.[197] Three other Shagari-era steel plants in Jos, Oshogbo and Katsina appear to no longer be active.
Construction of social housing
Shagari began the construction of 200,000 social housing units across the country, of which 25,000 were completed during his term of office.[198] A 2017 study by Nnamdi Azikiwe University in Awka criticised the lack of planning (the completed flats were not connected to water, electricity, sewerage or transport or were located in an area with no demand for new flats). The new flats were often never occupied, were not managed and soon fell into disrepair.[198] Shagari's successors did not pursue the completion of the remaining flats, which also fell into disrepair.
Deportation of West African immigrants
In January 1983, Shagari decided to deport West African immigrants under the slogan "Ghana must go!" in the face of an economic slump. An estimated 2 million Ghanaians had to leave the country suddenly and with malice, leaving most of their belongings behind. Provisional bags and suitcases became the symbol of the forced exodus (they are still called "Ghana bags" today). It is not without a certain irony that social and economic development in Ghana after 1983 was to be much more favourable than in Nigeria and that Nigerians, for their part, would look for work and income in Ghana.
Economic isolationism
Shagari reacted to falling oil prices and the resulting economic downturn by restricting import licences and increasing customs duties. He rejected cooperation with the International Monetary Fund[165].[199]
Education, women's emancipation, environmental issues
Under Shagari, the education system in Nigeria improved. For example, a number of universities were founded. He also promoted the inclusion of women in political life. He filled many offices with women.
Re-election
Similar to the First Republic, the Northern Party won an absolute majority in parliament after a few years in government and no longer needed coalition partners.
Shagari's fight against corruption, General Buhari
Although Shehu Shagari is cleared of personal involvement in corrupt practices, the Second Republic was plagued by allegations of corruption, including allegations of electoral fraud in the 1983 elections.[200] In his second term, Shagari made attempts to curb corruption through the new Ministry of National Guidance under Yusuf Maitama Sule, which was created solely for this purpose. A new programme called Ethical Revolution was introduced, one of whose initiatives was the famous "war against indiscipline" launched under General Muhammadu Buhari. The ministry was only in office for three months before a coup d'état in 1983 made Buhari the sole ruler.
Buhari (1983-1985) and Babangida (1985-1992), two unequal dictators
The military coup on 31 December 1983 was coordinated by leading officers of the Nigerian military and led to the overthrow of the government and the installation of Major General Muhammadu Buhari as head of state. The inauguration of Muhammadu Buhari was generally seen as a positive development[201] Buhari promised reforms, but his government performed little better than that of his predecessor. General Buhari was overthrown in 1985 by a military coup led by General Ibrahim Babangida.[202] Buhari would be elected president 30 years later, in the Fourth Republic and now democratically purged.
Babangida was more far-sighted than Nigeria's previous military leaders,[203] loosening state control over the press and releasing a number of prisoners. However, he faced the same economic problems that Buhari had faced and the same discontent in the country.[204]
Babangida soon gained a reputation as a clever politician. He asked the Nigerian people whether their country should accept a financial aid package worth billions from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). When, as he had expected, the Nigerian people refused to accept the package, Babangida suspended talks with the IMF. He then offered Nigerians his own economic recovery programme - which included many of the harsh measures proposed by the IMF - and convinced Nigerians to accept it.[203] As a result of this programme, Nigeria received loans from banks and gained economic credibility in Western countries.[203]
According to Forbes, shortly before the Second Gulf War, Babangida diverted twelve billion US dollars in unplanned income ("oil windfall") into his own pocket (the oil price jumped from 15 to 41.15 USD/barrel within weeks in 1990 and then plummeted to the old value).[204][205] However, these funds could never be found.[206] Nevertheless, the additional profit of USD 12 billion calculated by Forbes could only have been realised if Nigeria had sold the entire annual production volume of 630 million barrels on the world market exactly on 27 September 1990 at the annual high price of 41 USD/barrel - 19 more than the officially stated annual average of 22 USD/barrel (630 million barrels × 19 USD/barrel = 11.97 billion USD).[207] This is unlikely given the sluggishness of the state oil company NNPC and the lack of ex post information for those involved. Babangida commented in 2022 on the above allegations that he and his associates were "saints."[208] This account should be evaluated as cautiously as Forbes' calculation.
In December 1991, the centrally located Abuja became the capital.
The Babangida regime ensured the establishment of a state security apparatus; it survived two coup attempts. General Mamman Vatsa and Major Gideon Orkar were executed, and the critical journalist Dele Giwa was murdered.[209] In 1989, Babangida promised the transition to the Third Nigerian Republic. Babangida survived the 1990 coup attempt and postponed the promised return to democracy until 1992.[210]
Babangida's intelligence cannot be denied and his foreign and economic policies benefited Nigeria. The security apparatus and secret service he set up may be understandable in view of the fate of military ruler Murtala Mohammed - who was shot unarmed and without bodyguards in an unarmoured limousine in 1976 - but it went beyond the vital protection of the president and did not shy away from political murder. Babangida thus created the instruments with which his successor Abacha led Nigeria into its darkest epoch after the civil war.
The Abortive Third Republic
Head of State Babangida promised to return the country to civilian rule by 1990 which was later extended until January 1993. In early 1989, a constituent assembly completed a constitution and in the spring of 1989 political activity was again permitted. In October 1989, the government established two parties, the National Republican Convention (NRC) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP); other parties were not allowed to register.
In April 1990, mid-level officers attempted unsuccessfully to overthrow the government and 69 accused plotters were executed after secret trials before military tribunals. In December 1990, the first stage of partisan elections was held at the local government level. Despite the low turnout, there was no violence and both parties demonstrated strength in all regions of the country, with the SDP winning control of a majority of local government councils.
In December 1991, state legislative elections were held and Babangida decreed that previously banned politicians could contest in primaries scheduled for August. These were cancelled due to fraud and subsequent primaries scheduled for September also were cancelled. All announced candidates were disqualified from standing for president once a new election format was selected. The presidential election was finally held on 12 June 1993, with the inauguration of the new president scheduled to take place 27 August 1993, the eighth anniversary of President Babangida's coming to power.
In the historic 12 June 1993 presidential elections, which most observers deemed to be Nigeria's fairest, early returns indicated that wealthy Yoruba businessman M. K. O. Abiola won a decisive victory. However, on 23 June, Babangida, using several pending lawsuits as a pretence, annulled the election, throwing Nigeria into turmoil. More than 100 were killed in riots before Babangida agreed to hand power to an interim government on 26 August 1993. He later attempted to renege on this decision, but without popular and military support, he was forced to hand over to Ernest Shonekan, a prominent nonpartisan businessman. Shonekan was to rule until elections scheduled for February 1994. Although he had led Babangida's Transitional Council since 1993, Shonekan was unable to reverse Nigeria's economic problems or to defuse lingering political tension.
Dictatorship Abacha (1993-1998)
Shonekan's transitional government, the shortest in the country's political history, was overthrown in 1993 by a coup d'état led by General Sani Abacha. This was the seventh Nigerian coup d'état in less than 30 years and also (as of 2023) the last military coup in the country.
Absolute power, reign of terror
Unlike previous military dictators in Nigeria such as Gowon, Murtala, Obasanjo or Buhari, Abacha can only be described as a reign of terror.
After dissolving the government and parliament in November 1993, he also made himself chief justice in September 1994[211] and thus gained absolute power.[212] Abacha put together a personal security force of 3,000 men trained in North Korea. Nigerian police forces were retrained on a large scale. The state ruthlessly cracked down on perceived political opponents.[213]
In 1995, the writer and civil rights activist Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other defendants (the Ogoni Nine) were executed in Port Harcourt after a spectacular show trial that sparked violent international protests. Nigeria was expelled from the Commonwealth of Nations with immediate effect.[214] The winner of the 1993 presidential election, Moshood Abiola, was arrested and died in unexplained circumstances, in any case due to lack of medical care after four years in prison.[215] Former army chief of staff Shehu Musa Yar'Adua was also arrested - he also died in prison.[216] Former military ruler Olusegun Obasanjo was also arrested for treason and accused of planning a coup d'état together with General Oladipo Diya. The Nobel Prize winner Wole Soyinka was charged in absentia with high treason. Even the fatal plane crash of Sani Abacha's eldest son Ibrahim on 17 January 1996 and the subsequent assassinations of relatives of the 14 other accident victims were allegedly carried out on the dictator's orders; these rumours were strengthened by the fact that Abacha did not release the 15 bodies.[217]
Descent into a narco-state
During his five years in office, Abacha's lack of co-operation in anti-narcotics operations led to the repeated revocation of US certification to combat drugs under Section 481 of the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA). This officially made Nigeria a narco-state. The US voted against Nigeria in six multilateral development banks and refused to provide any assistance to Nigeria under the FAA and the Arms Control Export Act. Direct flights from the US to Nigeria remained banned due to security concerns.[218]
Embezzlement of state funds, the "Abacha loot"
Under Abacha, the misappropriation of public funds reached epic proportions and is known as the "Abacha loot."[219] Abacha's National Security Adviser, Alhaji Ismaila Gwarzo, submitted fake funding requests for national security, which Abacha approved. The funds were usually sent in cash or travellers cheques from the Central Bank of Nigeria to Gwarzo, who brought them to Abacha's house. An estimated $1.4 billion in cash was handed over in this way.[220][221]
In a list of the ten most self-enriching heads of state,[222] Abacha and his family rank fourth. They are alleged to have embezzled between 1 and 5 billion dollars.[223]
On 7 August 2014, the US Department of Justice announced that $480 million had been seized from the Nigerian government, the largest amount in the country's history.[224] Jersey's Civil Asset Recovery Fund discovered more than $267 million in funds allegedly laundered through the US banking system and deposited into an account in Jersey (£210 million). The US Department of Justice, the Jersey courts and the Nigerian government made a civil forfeiture of the funds, which will be divided between these countries.[225][226]
Democratisation and federalism in 1998
Abacha died of heart failure on 8 June 1998 and was replaced by General Abdulsalami Abubakar. The military Provisional Ruling Council (PRC) under Abubakar commuted the sentences of those accused in the alleged coup during the Abacha regime and released almost all known civilian political detainees. Pending the promulgation of the constitution written in 1995, the government observed some provisions of the 1979 and 1989 constitutions. Neither Abacha nor Abubakar lifted the decree suspending the 1979 constitution, and the 1989 constitution was not implemented. The judiciary system continued to be hampered by corruption and lack of resources after Abacha's death. In an attempt to alleviate such problems Abubakar's government implemented a civil service pay raise and other reforms.
In August 1998, Abubakar appointed the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to conduct elections for local government councils, state legislatures and governors, the national assembly, and president. The NEC successfully held elections on 5 December 1998, 9 January 1999, 20 February, and 27 February 1999, respectively. For local elections, nine parties were granted provisional registration with three fulfilling the requirements to contest the following elections. These parties were the People's Democratic Party (PDP), the All People's Party (APP), and the predominantly Yoruba Alliance for Democracy (AD). The former military head of state Olusegun Obasanjo, freed from prison by Abubakar, ran as a civilian candidate and won the presidential election. The PRC promulgated a new constitution based largely on the suspended 1979 constitution, before the 29 May 1999 inauguration of the new civilian president. The constitution includes provisions for a bicameral legislature, the National Assembly consisting of a 360-member House of Representatives and a 109-member Senate.
Fourth Republic
Presidency Obasanjo (1999 - 2007)
The emergence of democracy in Nigeria in May 1999 ended 39 years of coups, countercoups and short-lived democracies. Olusegun Obasanjo inherited a country suffering economic stagnation and the deterioration of most democratic institutions. Obasanjo had an adventurous life that also reflected the first 40 years of independent Nigeria: During the civil war, he was a colonel and organised the decisive strike against the Republic of Biafra, as Chief of Staff he escaped an attempt on his life through mistaken identity and was subsequently, between 1977 and 1979, military ruler (without having aspired to this), led Nigeria back to democracy, served time in prison under Abacha and during this time awaited his execution for alleged high treason.[194]
First term in office
Securing power
In the first months of his presidency, Obasanjo retired some 200 military officers, including all 93 who held political office, making a coup by senior officers less likely.[227] He also moved the Ministry of Defence from Lagos to Abuja and ensured that it was placed under more direct government control.
Active foreign policy
The IV. Republic was able to repair the damage caused by the Abacha dictatorship through an active foreign policy. In October 2001, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, South African President Thabo Mbeki and Algerian President Abd al-Aziz Bouteflika established the New Partnership for Africa's Development, or NEPAD, which aims to strengthen Africa's growth, development and participation in the global economy.[228] During Obasanjo's first term in office, Nigerians' freedoms increased; freedom of the press allowed for the first time to criticise the president again.[227]
Communal violence
Communal violence has plagued the Obasanjo government since its inception. In May 1999, violence erupted in Kaduna State over the succession of an Emir resulting in more than 100 deaths. In November 1999, the army destroyed the town of Odi, Bayelsa State and killed scores of civilians in retaliation for the murder of 12 policemen by a local gang. In Kaduna in February–May 2000, over 1,000 people died in rioting over the introduction of criminal Shar'ia in the State. Hundreds of ethnic Hausa were killed in reprisal attacks in south-eastern Nigeria. In September 2001, over 2,000 people were killed in inter-religious rioting in Jos. In October 2001, hundreds were killed and thousands displaced in communal violence that spread across the states of Benue, Taraba, and Nasarawa. On 1 October 2001, Obasanjo announced the formation of a National Security Commission to address the issue of communal violence. Obasanjo was reelected in 2003.
Second term in office
Obasanjo was re-elected in 2003 in a tumultuous election with violent ethnic and religious undertones.[229]
In his second term, Obasanjo ensured the expansion of the Nigerian police force.[227]
In October 2005, the Obasanjo government repaid all its debts (in exchange for a reduction) under the Paris Club.[230]
Dispute over the Bakassi Peninsula
Obasanjo was also faced with resolving an ongoing border dispute with neighbouring Cameroon over the ownership of the Bakassi Peninsula, an oil-rich area with close cultural ties to both countries. According to a 2002 ruling by the International Court of Justice, the region was recognised as belonging to Cameroon. Despite domestic protests, Obasanjo followed the court's decision in 2006, renounced his claims to the peninsula and withdrew his troops.[231]
On 12 June 2006, Obasanjo signed the Greentree Agreement with Cameroonian President Paul Biya, which formally ended the border dispute over the Bakassi Peninsula.[232] Even when the Nigerian Senate passed a resolution declaring the withdrawal of Nigerian troops from the Bakassi Peninsula illegal, Obasanjo gave the order to proceed with it as planned.[233] On 14 August 2008, the peninsula was fully handed over to Cameroon.[231]
Conflict in the Niger Delta
Demonstrations against the government's oil policy and high petrol prices had been on the agenda in Nigeria for some time. The inhabitants of the Niger Delta also protested against the activities of the oil companies in their area, which they felt were exploiting the country and giving back too little of their profits. The protests turned into coordinated militant actions in 2006: Oil company employees were kidnapped and refineries and pipelines were damaged. Rebels tried to disrupt oil production and thus cause economic damage to the companies. The most active of these militant groups was the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND). The movement announced a unilateral ceasefire in 2008 and accepted an amnesty programme proposed by the government in 2009.[231]
Ethnic violence over control of the oil-producing Niger Delta region and an insurgency in the north-east continued. Conflicts between Muslims and Christians in Plateau state prompted Obasanjo to declare a state of emergency in May 2004, suspend the state government and install a six-month military government.[227] Obasanjo was able to largely repair the diplomatic damage caused by the Abacha dictatorship through an active foreign policy (for example, by rejoining the Commonwealth).
Plans for a third term in office
Obasanjo tried to amend the constitution to allow him a third term in office - a process that often heralds the transition to another dictatorship in other African countries in the region. This led to tensions with the parliament and with Vice President Atiku Abubakar. An autobiography by Condoleezza Rice claims that the then US President George W. Bush ultimately convinced Obasanjo to abandon these plans.[234] Today (2023), Obasanjo comments on Nigerian politics in an idiosyncratic way.
Conclusion
Although the elections that brought Obasanjo to power and allowed him to run for a second term were condemned as unfree and unfair,[235] Nigeria made significant progress in democratisation. The fact that parliament was able to successfully deny the president a third term despite his influence on the army and security forces is evidence of the strengthened parliamentarianism in Nigeria after 2000.
The federalist structure of the 1999 constitution with 37 federal states of roughly equal size, a Senate with three senators from each state, as well as a blocking minority of at least 13 states in the presidential election must be considered a stroke of luck in view of the numerous ethnic groups and the religious division of the country. Since then, every presidential candidate has emphasised in their own interest that they represent not only their own ethnic group/religion, but all Nigerians.[236] Nigerian parties now differentiate themselves primarily in terms of their programmes and no longer according to ethnic affiliations.
Presidency Yar'Adua (2007 - 2010)
As Obasanjo was no longer allowed to run in the 2007 presidential election, Umaru Yar'Adua entered the race as the Muslim candidate for the PDP. Umaru Yar'Adua was the brother of Obasanjo's deputy during his time as military dictator.
Umaru Yar'Adua won with a clear majority and was sworn in as the new president on 29 May 2007. International observers strongly condemned the election, which was marred by irregularities and vote rigging.[231] The international community, which had observed the Nigerian elections to promote a free and fair process, condemned these elections as seriously flawed.[237] Outgoing President Olusegun Obasanjo acknowledged fraud and other "shortcomings" in the elections, but stated that the result was in line with the opinion polls. In a nationally televised address in 2007, he added that if Nigerians did not like the victory of his hand-picked successor, they had the option of voting again in four years' time.[238] However, Yar'Adua's health would soon render this option moot.
In 2009, Yar'Adua's term of office saw the out-of-court settlement of lawsuits under the US Alien Tort Statute against Royal Dutch Shell and Brian Anderson, the head of Shell's Nigerian subsidiary. Shell continues to deny liability.[239]
Presidency Jonathan (2010 - 2015)
Yar'Adua died on 5 May 2010. 3 months earlier, Vice President Goodluck Jonathan had already been sworn in as the successor to Yar'Adua, who was seriously ill and receiving treatment abroad.[240]
For the remainder of his term in office, his priorities were to solve the country's energy problems and to continue peace negotiations with the rebels in the Niger Delta.[241]
Jonathan emerged victorious from the presidential elections. Second place went to former general and head of state Muhammadu Buhari, who received 32 per cent of the vote. The international media reported that the elections went smoothly, unlike previous elections.[242]
Successes against Ebola and in the entertainment industry
Jonathan's time in office saw the successful fight against Ebola and an economic recovery that made Nigeria the leading economic power in Africa.[243] The Jonathan administration's film promotion for high-quality productions created its own commercially successful film industry ("Nollywood"), which can only be compared to the USA and India ("Bollywood").[244]
Fight against Boko Haram
On the debit side of the balance sheet, on the other hand, is the wave of terror by Boko Haram, which kidnapped 200 schoolgirls in Chibok in 2014 and highlighted the impotence of the Nigerian state (around 100 of the girls are still missing in 2022).
Jonathan, who was criticised during the 2014 election campaign for not having done enough to combat Boko Haram, asked the neighbouring countries of Benin, Cameroon, Chad and Niger for support. A regional army was set up with troops from Nigeria and the aforementioned countries and an offensive was launched against the terrorists. The fight against Boko Haram made significant progress, with armed forces recapturing large areas previously held by the terrorist group.[245]
Draconian law against queer people
The Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act, signed by Jonathan in 2014, is one of the most repressive, draconian laws in the world against LGBT people and those who may be considered by the Nigerian judiciary as their "sponsors".[246]
Embezzlement of state funds, deselection
Above all, however, Jonathan's time in office is characterised by embezzlement in office - the misappropriation of state funds. The Nigerian state is said to have lost 20 billion US dollars as a result.[247] The high level of corruption was a decisive factor in the 2015 presidential election, from which opposition candidate Muhammadu Buhari emerged victorious. The elections were originally scheduled for mid-February, but were then postponed by the Nigerian electoral commission by six weeks, as the level of violence emanating from Boko Haram at the time was an obstacle to the elections in the north-east.
Jonathan's ouster is (as of 2023) the only case in the IV Republic in which Nigerian voters refused to re-elect an incumbent president. Jonathan's party, the PDP, lost power after 16 years in power. At least it can be said of Jonathan that he conceded his electoral defeat without complaint.[248][249]
Presidency Buhari (2015 - 2023)
Since the Second Republic, Buhari has been seen as the clean man of Nigerian politics, as frugal, but also as a representative of northern interests. His party, the "All Progressives", was only formed shortly before his election in 2015 from a merger of four opposition parties. The election, in which the then 72-year-old Buhari won on his fourth attempt, was described by observers as fair. In 2019, Buhari was elected for a second and final term in office[250] and the Progressives remain the ruling party to this day (October 2023). During Buhari's two terms in office, they were able to gradually increase the number of deputies, senators and governors. The Buhari era (as of January 2023) is characterised by a dynamic structural policy, economic diversification, successes against Boko Haram and a decreasing perception of corruption, but also by a rapid increase in armed crime and police attacks. While the Covid-19 pandemic played no role in the young Nigerian population from 2020, in 2022 Nigeria, as the world's largest wheat importer, was hit particularly hard by the wheat shortage caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the resulting rise in bread prices.
Anti-corruption measures
One of Buhari's anti-corruption measures promised in the 2015 election was the suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Walter Onnoghen. Investigations by the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB, a kind of ethics council) and complaints by a citizens' initiative had revealed that Onnoghen held secret accounts[251] and did not declare incoming income.[252] After Onnoghen failed to appear on two CCB summonses in January 2019,[253] he was suspended by Buhari. Onnoghen avoided impeachment by the Nigerian Senate (similar to the German Federal Council) by resigning. In December 2019, the Attorney General, Mohammed Bello Adoke, was convicted of corruption in absentia and later extradited from neighbouring Niger.[254] In July 2020 - not without irony - the Chairman of the Commission of Inquiry against Corruption EFCC, Ibrahim Magu, was arrested for corruption.[255] In December 2020, he was followed by the Chairman of the Pension Taskforce, Abdulrasheed Maina, and a senator[256] - Since corruption takes place in secret and is an emotionally charged issue, an objective assessment is difficult. However, unlike in the 2015 election, Nigerians no longer see corruption as the most important political issue in the 2022 polls, but place it behind "fighting crime", "economy" and "power supply".[257] This improvement is not reflected in the Corruption Perception Index (CPI) - instead, this assessment of Nigeria by 11 international NGOs has worsened by several points since 2015.
Infrastructure policy with Chinese help
The Buhari administration has renovated and rebuilt roads, harbours, bridges and railways like no previous government. The construction and profitable operation of the Lagos-Ibadan standard gauge railway since May 2021 as well as the Second Niger Bridge near Onitsha and the Lekki Super Post-Panamax container port, both of which were completed in December 2022, deserve special mention. The Buhari administration has been able to attract or set up processing industries for commodities such as crude oil and rice (e.g. Dangote refinery, Imota rice mill). Major Nigerian entrepreneurs such as Aliko Dangote (cement), Innocent Chukwuma (Innoson, vehicle manufacturing) and Stella Chinyelu Okoli (Emzor Pharma) no longer take their assets abroad, but invest them at home. - Initially, most of the structural improvements were financed and implemented as PPP projects as part of the People's Republic of China's increased involvement in Africa[258] via the state-owned companies CCECC and CHEC,[259] while Western countries hardly participated in such projects.[260] However, when the Nigerian-Chinese negotiations on further projects failed in 2021,[261] Construction Minister Fashola was able to arrange financing for two new rail projects in a short time via the British Standard Chartered Bank.[262] Nigeria is the only sub-Saharan country that operates more kilometres of rail track in 2023 than in colonial times, and one of the few countries in the world that is expanding its rail network every year instead of closing tracks.
Successes against Boko Haram
Buhari's strategy against Boko Haram was effective despite some setbacks. The terrorist militia was driven out of the most important cities in the afflicted north as early as 2016 (see chapter "Boko Haram"). The situation eased at the beginning of 2022, when Boko Haram, whose militias had terrorised Nigeria's north for years and devastated entire regions, was largely disbanded. 40,000 Boko Haram fighters surrendered.[263] However, the splinter group ISWAP remains active. In addition, Nigeria has been hit by a wave of crime and rampant police violence since 2019.
Despite the political stability, the security situation in Nigeria was considered inadequate. 68% of Nigerians felt "not safe" in their country according to a survey by the NOI-Polls opinion research institute in May 2022. 77% do not know a helpline number for emergencies.[264]
According to the above survey, Nigerians fear being robbed (24%) or kidnapped (also 24%), falling victim to armed bandits or being robbed (both 8%) or being harmed in the herdsmen-farmers conflict (also 8%).[264] This is followed by "ritual murders" (4%) and "Boko Haram" (3.5%).
Militant groups in the Niger Delta
The Buhari administration was able to temporarily appease militant groups in the Niger Delta through "guard contracts" and the associated payments. Critics see this as a modern-day indulgence trade or the subsidisation of criminals. See the relevant chapter.
Foreign policy
In November 2022, the US State Department removed Nigeria (and India) from the list of "rogue states" (Countries of Particular Concern).[265] This was done against the protest of the Christian-conservative US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) with reference to attacks by criminals against Christian missionaries[266] in the Islamic north of Nigeria. Nigeria was placed on the aforementioned list in 2018 by then President Trump and his Secretary of State Tillerson with a choice of words that cannot be quoted here.[267]
Since 2023
The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Bola Tinubu, won the February 2023 presidential election to succeed Muhammadu Buhari as the next president of Nigeria. However, the opposition had accusations of electoral fraud in polls.[268] On 29 May 2023, Bola Tinubu was sworn in as Nigeria’s president to succeed Buhari.[269]
See also
References
- ↑ Editorial Team (2018-12-12). "The Nri Kingdom (900AD - Present): Rule by theocracy". Think Africa. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
- ↑ "The kingdom of Benin". BBC Bitesize. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
- ↑ "Kingdom of Oyo (ca. 1500-1837) •". 2009-06-16. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
- ↑ "Table content, Nigeria". country studies. 20 August 2001.
- ↑ "Historic regions from 5th century BC to 20th century". History World. 29 May 2011. Archived from the original on 3 October 2021. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
- ↑ "A short Nigerian history". Study country. 25 May 2010.
- ↑ "About the Country Nigeria The History". Nigeria Government Federal Website. 1 October 2006. Archived from the original on 30 May 2019. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
- ↑ Ryder, A. F. C. "MISSIONARY ACTIVITY IN THE KINGDOM OF WARRI TO THE EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, vol. 2, no. 1, 1960, pp. 1–26. JSTOR 41970817. Accessed 4 July 2023.
- ↑ "Songhai | World Civilization". courses.lumenlearning.com. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
- ↑ "Historical Legacies | Religious Literacy Project". Archived from the original on 2020-04-17. Retrieved 2019-08-25.
- ↑ "The Transatlantic Slave Trade". rlp.hds.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on 2020-06-10. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
- ↑ "The Transatlantic Slave Trade | Religious Literacy Project". Archived from the original on 2020-06-10. Retrieved 2019-08-25.
- ↑ Chioma, Unini (2020-02-01). "When I Remember Nigeria, I Remember Democracy! By Hameed Ajibola Jimoh Esq". TheNigeriaLawyer. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
- ↑ "Nigerian Diaspora and Remittances: Transparency and market development". Nigerian Diaspora and Remittances: Transparency and market development. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
- ↑ Obasanjo, Olusegun (1980). My Command: an account of the Nigeria Civil War 1967–1970. Ibadan: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd. pp. 12–13. ISBN 0435902490.
- ↑ Scerri, Eleanor (October 26, 2017). "The Stone Age Archaeology of West Africa" (PDF). Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History. Oxford University Press. pp. 1, 31. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.137. ISBN 978-0-19-027773-4. S2CID 133758803.
- ↑ Niang, Khady; et al. (2020). "The Middle Stone Age occupations of Tiémassas, coastal West Africa, between 62 and 25 thousand years ago". Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 34: 102658. Bibcode:2020JArSR..34j2658N. doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2020.102658. ISSN 2352-409X. OCLC 8709222767. S2CID 228826414.
- ↑ MacDonald, K.C. (April 2011). "Betwixt Tichitt and the IND: the pottery of the Faita Facies, Tichitt Tradition". Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa. 46: 49, 51, 54, 56–57, 59–60. doi:10.1080/0067270X.2011.553485. ISSN 0067-270X. OCLC 4839360348. S2CID 161938622.
- ↑ Scerri, Eleanor M. L. (2021). "Continuity of the Middle Stone Age into the Holocene". Scientific Reports. 11 (1): 70. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-79418-4. OCLC 8878081728. PMC 7801626. PMID 33431997. S2CID 231583475.
- ↑ Bergström, Anders; et al. (2021). "Origins of modern human ancestry" (PDF). Nature. 590 (7845): 232. Bibcode:2021Natur.590..229B. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-03244-5. ISSN 0028-0836. OCLC 8911705938. PMID 33568824. S2CID 231883210.
- ↑ Schlebusch, Carina M.; Jakobsson, Mattias (2018). "Tales of Human Migration, Admixture, and Selection in Africa". Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics. 19: 407. doi:10.1146/annurev-genom-083117-021759. ISSN 1527-8204. OCLC 7824108813. PMID 29727585. S2CID 19155657.
- 1 2 MacDonald, Kevin C. (Sep 2, 2003). "Archaeology, language and the peopling of West Africa: a consideration of the evidence". Archaeology and Language II: Archaeological Data and Linguistic Hypotheses. Routledge. pp. 39–40, 43–44, 48–49. doi:10.4324/9780203202913-11. ISBN 9780203202913. OCLC 815644445. S2CID 163304839.
- ↑ Van Beek, Walter E.A.; Banga, Pieteke M. (Mar 11, 2002). "The Dogon and their trees". Bush Base, Forest Farm: Culture, Environment, and Development. Routledge. p. 66. doi:10.4324/9780203036129-10. ISBN 9781134919567. OCLC 252799202. S2CID 126989016.
- 1 2 Breunig, Peter; Neumann, Katharina; Van Neer, Wim (1996). "New research on the Holocene settlement and environment of the Chad Basin in Nigeria". African Archaeological Review. 13 (2): 116–117. doi:10.1007/BF01956304. JSTOR 25130590. S2CID 162196033.
- ↑ Richard Trillo (16 June 2008). "Nigeria Part 3:14.5 the north and northeast Maiduguri". The Rough Guide to West Africa. Rough Guides. pp. Unnumbered. ISBN 978-1-4053-8070-6.
- ↑ Eze–Uzomaka, Pamela. "Iron and its influence on the prehistoric site of Lejja". Academia.edu. University of Nigeria,Nsukka, Nigeria. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
- 1 2 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.
- 1 2 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 9783937248462.
- 1 2 Champion, Louis; et al. (15 December 2022). "A question of rite—pearl millet consumption at Nok culture sites, Nigeria (second/first millennium BC)". Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 32 (3): 263–283. doi:10.1007/s00334-022-00902-0. S2CID 254761854.
- 1 2 Ehret, Christopher (2023). "African Firsts in the History of Technology". Ancient Africa: A Global History, to 300 CE. Princeton University Press. p. 19. doi:10.2307/j.ctv34kc6ng.5. ISBN 9780691244105. JSTOR j.ctv34kc6ng.5. OCLC 1330712064.
- ↑ Bandama, Foreman; Babalola, Abidemi Babatunde (13 September 2023). "Science, Not Black Magic: Metal and Glass Production in Africa". African Archaeological Review. 40 (3): 531–543. doi:10.1007/s10437-023-09545-6. ISSN 0263-0338. OCLC 10004759980. S2CID 261858183.
- 1 2 Champion, Louis; et al. (15 December 2022). "A question of rite—pearl millet consumption at Nok culture sites, Nigeria (second/first millennium BC)". Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 32 (3): 263–283. doi:10.1007/s00334-022-00902-0. S2CID 254761854.
- ↑ Sun, Z. J.; et al. (2017). "Instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) of Nok sculptures in I. P. Stanback Museum". Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry. 313: 85–92. doi:10.1007/s10967-017-5297-8. ISSN 0236-5731. OCLC 7062772522. S2CID 98924415.
- ↑ Breunig, Peter (2022). "Prehistoric Developments In Nigeria". In Falola, Toyin; Heaton, Matthew M (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Nigerian History. Oxford University Press. pp. 123–124. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190050092.013.5. ISBN 978-0-19-005009-2. OCLC 1267402325. S2CID 249072850.
- 1 2 Franke, Gabriele; et al. (2020). "Pits, pots and plants at Pangwari: Deciphering the nature of a Nok Culture site". Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa. 55 (2): 129–188. doi:10.1080/0067270X.2020.1757902. ISSN 0067-270X. OCLC 8617747912. S2CID 219470059.
- 1 2 Männel, Tanja M.; Breunig, Peter (12 Jan 2016). "The Nok Terracotta Sculptures of Pangwari". Journal of African Archaeology. 14 (3): 321. doi:10.3213/2191-5784-10300 (inactive 1 August 2023). ISSN 1612-1651. JSTOR 44295244. OCLC 8512545149. S2CID 164688675.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of August 2023 (link) - ↑ Ramsamy, Edward; Elliott, Carolyn M.; Seybolt, Peter J. (January 5, 2012). "Part I: Prehistory To 1400". Cultural Sociology of the Middle East, Asia, and Africa: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publications. p. 8. doi:10.4135/9781452218458. hdl:10125/32822. ISBN 978-1-4129-8176-7. OCLC 809773339. S2CID 158838141.
- ↑ Lamp, Frederick John (2011). "Ancient Terracotta Figures from Northern Nigeria". Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin: 55. ISSN 0084-3539. JSTOR 41421509. OCLC 9972665249.
- ↑ Shillington, Kevin (2005). History of Africa (2nd ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. p. 39. ISBN 9780333599570.
- ↑ Buckley, Emma (2013). A Companion to the Neronian Age (1 ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey, Vereinigte Staaten: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1444332728.
- 1 2 Roth, Jonathan 2002. The Roman Army in Tripolitana and Gold Trade with Sub-Saharan Africa. APA Annual Convention. New Orleans.
- ↑ John Coleman De Graft-Johnson, "African Glory: The Story of Vanished Negro Civilizations", p. 26
- ↑ Agisymba and Maternus
- ↑ Susan Raven, Susan, Rome in Africa, 3rd ed. London, 1993
- ↑ Pliny the Elder. "Naturalis Historia", V, 5.36
- ↑ Walker, Eric Anderson (1963). The Cambridge History of the British Empire. CUP Archive. p. 69.
- ↑ Bradbury, R.E. (1975). The Benin kingdom.
- ↑ Ira M. Lapidus, A History of Islamic Societies, Cambridge, 1988.
- 1 2 Falola, Toyin; Heaton, Matthew M. (2008-04-24). A History of Nigeria. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-47203-6.
- 1 2 "Kanem-Bornu | historical empire, Africa | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-07-10.
- ↑ Baba, Nasir Mohammed (2011-08-01). "Islamic Schools, the Ulama, and the State in the Educational Development of Northern Nigeria". Bulletin de l'APAD (33). doi:10.4000/apad.4092. ISSN 1950-6929. S2CID 54033457.
- 1 2 3 "Bayajidda HAUSA Historical Legend Myth or Reality". CSAN Niger (in French). 2020-01-10. Retrieved 2022-02-09.
- ↑ "Hausa People". www.zyama.com. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
- ↑ Paul, Staudinger (1990). In the heart of the Hausa states. Ohio University.
- ↑ Hogben/Kirk-Greene, Emirates, 82-88; Lange, Kingdoms, 216-221, 554 n. 25.
- ↑ Smith, Daura, 419-421.
- ↑ British Museum. "Object: The Ife Head". British Museum. Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
- ↑ George, J.O. (1895). Historical Notes on the Yoruba country.
- ↑ Akintoye, S.A (1971). Revolution and power politics in yorubaland 1840 -1893.
- ↑ "Olorun | Yoruba god". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
- ↑ "Orisha | deity". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
- ↑ Ajisafe, A.K. (1924). History of Abeokuta.
- ↑ Griswold, Wendy (2000). Bearing Witness: Readers, Writers, and the Novel in Nigeria. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press. p. XV. ISBN 0-691-05829-6.
- 1 2 Isichei, Elizabeth Allo (1997). A History of African Societies to 1870. Cambridge University Press Cambridge, UK. p. 512. ISBN 0-521-45599-5.
- 1 2 3 Uzukwu, E. Elochukwu (1997). Worship as Body Language. Liturgical Press. p. 93. ISBN 0-8146-6151-3.
- ↑ Hrbek, Ivan; Fāsī, Muḥammad (1988). Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century. London: Unesco. p. 254. ISBN 92-3-101709-8.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - 1 2 Lovejoy, Paul (2000). Identity in the Shadow of Slavery. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 62. ISBN 0-8264-4725-2.
- ↑ Onwuejeogwu, M. Angulu (1981). Igbo Civilization: Nri Kingdom & Hegemony. Ethnographica. ISBN 0-905788-08-7.
- ↑ Chambers, Douglas B. (2005). Murder at Montpelier: Igbo Africans in Virginia (illustrated ed.). University Press of Mississippi. p. 33. ISBN 1-57806-706-5.
- ↑ Isichei (1997). A History of African Societies to 1870. Cambridge University Press. p. 246. ISBN 9780521455992. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
- ↑ FORDE, D, JONES, G.I. (1962). The Ibo and Ibibio - speaking people of south - eastern Nigeria.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - 1 2 Hodder, Ian (1987). The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings (illustrated ed.). CUP Archive. p. 72. ISBN 0-521-32924-8.
- 1 2 Nyang, Sulayman; Olupona, Jacob K. (1995). Religious Plurality in Africa: Essays in Honour of John S. Mbiti. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. p. 118. ISBN 3-11-014789-0.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ Nwauwa, Apollos O. (1995). "The Evolution of the Aro Confederacy in Southeastern Nigeria, 1690-1720. A Theoretical Synthesis of State Formation Process in Africa". Anthropos. 90 (4/6): 353–364. ISSN 0257-9774. JSTOR 40463184.
- ↑ Forde. D., Jones, G.I (1962). The Ibo and Ibibio - speaking people of south - eastern Nigeria.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ Northrup, David (1972). "The Growth of Trade among the Igbo before 1800". The Journal of African History. 13 (2): 217–236. doi:10.1017/S0021853700011439. ISSN 0021-8537. JSTOR 180852. S2CID 159490665.
- ↑ Arthur Glyn Leonard (2009). The Lower Niger and Its Tribes. BiblioBazaar, LLC. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-1-113-81057-1.
- ↑ "The Middle Passage". National Great Blacks in Wax Museum. Archived from the original on 2010-10-23. Retrieved 2010-09-02.
- ↑ Chambers, Douglas B. (2005). Murder at Montpelier: Igbo Africans in Virginia (illustrated ed.). Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 22. ISBN 1-57806-706-5.
- ↑ Sparks, Randy J. (2004). The Two Princes of Calabar: An Eighteenth-century Atlantic Odyssey. Harvard University Press. p. 39. ISBN 0-674-01312-3.
- ↑ Marshall, John (1835). . Royal Naval Biography. Vol. 4, part 2. London: Longman and company. p. 129. .
- 1 2 Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 962.
- ↑ "History of Calabar". The African Executive. Archived from the original on 2011-07-07. Retrieved 2010-09-02.
- ↑ "Benin Bronzes | British Museum". www.britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
- 1 2 3 Gordon, April A. (2003). Nigeria's Diverse Peoples: A Reference Sourcebook. ABC-CLIO. pp. 44–54. ISBN 1-57607-682-2.
- 1 2 Falola, Toyin (2009). Historical Dictionary of Nigeria. Scarecrow Press. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-8108-6316-3.
- ↑ Falola, Toyin (2012). Environment and Economics in Nigeria. Routledge. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-136-66247-8.
- ↑ Shillington, Kevin (2005). Encyclopedia of African history. Fitzroy Dearborn. p. 1401. ISBN 1-57958-245-1.
- ↑ Abba, Idris Adam. "Re-inventing Islamic Civilization in the Sudanic Belt: The Role of Sheikh Usman Dan Fodio". Journal of Modern Education. 4 (6): 457–465.
- ↑ Dike, K. Onwuka. "Origins of the Niger Mission 1841-1891". Anglican History. Ibadan University Press. 1962.
- ↑ Ross, Andrew C. (2006). David Livingstone: Mission and Empire. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1-85285-565-9.
- ↑ Archives, The National. "The National Archives - Homepage". The National Archives. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Lagos Colony". www.britishempire.co.uk. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
- 1 2 Smith, Robert Sydney (1978). The Lagos Consulate, 1851-1861. University of Michigan. Macmillan. p. 188. ISBN 0-333-24053-7.
- ↑ Elebute, Adeyemo (2013). The life of James Pinson Labulo Davies: a colossus of Victorian Lagos. Prestige, Yaba, Lagos. ISBN 978-978-52057-6-3.
- ↑ Peterson, Derek R. (2010). Abolitionism and imperialism in Britain, Africa, and the Atlantic. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-8214-1902-1.
- ↑ McPhee, Allan (1926). The Economic Revolution in British West Africa. Taylor & Francis Ltd., London. p. 348. ISBN 0-7146-2766-6.
- ↑ Geary, Sir William Nevill Montgomerie (2014). Nigeria under British rule (1927). Routledge, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England, UK. p. 323. ISBN 978-0-415-76067-6.
- ↑ Máthé-Shires, László. Shillington, K. (ed.). "Lagos Colony and Oil Rivers Protectorate". Encyclopedia of African History. Routledge, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England, UK. 3: 791–792. ISBN 1-57958-245-1.
- 1 2 Igbafe, Philip A. "Slavery and Emancipation in Benin, 1897-1945". The Journal of African History. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England. 16 (3): 385–429.
- 1 2 Boisragon, Alan Maxwell (1897). "The Benin massacre". library.si.edu. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
- ↑ "The man who returned his grandfather's looted art". BBC News. 2015-02-26. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
- 1 2 3 4 Chisholm, Hugh. "Lugard, Sir Frederick John Dealtry". Encyclopædia Britannica. Cambridge University Press. 17 (11): 115–116.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Nigeria & Sierra Leone - Railway Wonders of the World". railwaywondersoftheworld.com. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
- ↑ Falola, Toyin (2005). "Nigerian History, Politics and Affairs". The Collected Essays of Adiele Afigbo. Africa World Press: 191. ISBN 1-59221-324-3.
- ↑ Oyemakinde, Wale (1974). "Railway construction and operation in Nigeria 1895-1911: Labour problems and socio-economic impact". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 7 (2): 303–324. JSTOR 41857015.
- ↑ Zitelmann, Rainer (2021-06-21). "Why Hitler Wanted to Conquer New 'Lebensraum in the East'". The National Interest. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
- ↑ Why they don't tell you about Hitler's "Shrinking Markets" problem, retrieved 2023-12-02
- ↑ Falola, Toyin (2008). A History of Nigeria. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-521-68157-5.
- ↑ Chisholm, Hugh. "Goldie, Sir George Dashwood Taubman". Encyclopædia Britannica. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 11 (12): 211–212.
- 1 2 New Generational Nationalists: BASIC NIGERIAN HISTORY #32, retrieved 2023-12-02
- ↑ Steyn, Phia (2009). "Oil exploration in colonial Nigeria". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. Routledge. 37 (2): 249–274. doi:10.1080/03086530903010376. hdl:1893/2735. ISSN 0308-6534. S2CID 159545684.
- ↑ "HISTORY: The History of Coal in Nigeria | Heinrich Böll Stiftung | Abuja office - Nigeria". ng.boell.org. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ Juang, Richard M. (2008). Africa and the Americas: culture, politics, and history: a multidisciplinary encyclopedia (2nd ed.). ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, CA, USA. p. 597. ISBN 978-1-85109-441-7.
- ↑ Hrbek, Ivan (1992). Africa from the seventh to the eleventh Century. James Currey Publishers, Melton, Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK. p. 254. ISBN 0-85255-093-6.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Chapin Metz, Helen (1992). Nigeria: A Country Study (5th ed.). United States Govt Printing Office, Washington, USA. pp. 39 ff. ISBN 978-0-8444-0738-8.
- ↑ "The Story of Trade Unionism – Trade Union Congress of Nigeria". Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ "The Transfer of Nigeria to the Crown". The Times (36060): 7. 1900-02-08.
- ↑ "Nigeria - Colonial History, Economy, People | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ Kasunmu, Alfred B. (1977). The Supreme Court of Nigeria, 1956-1970. Heinemann Educational Books. ISBN 978-129-289-X.
- ↑ Ukem, E .O. (2005). "Investigation of the receivability of VLF standard time and frequency signals in Zaria, Nigeria". Nigerian Journal of Physics. Department of Physics, University of Calabar. ISSN 1595-0611.
- ↑ Emecheta, Buchi (1982). Naira power. Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-33637-2.
- ↑ Norton Cook, Arthur (1943). "VI. Amalgamation and Unification". British Enterprise in Nigeria. University of Pennsylvania Press: 190–211. ISBN 1-5128-1530-6.
- ↑ "Amalgamated Nigeria, 1914 till Date". Nigeria Under British Rule. Routledge: 254–283. 1927.
- 1 2 Solidifying Control: BASIC NIGERIAN HISTORY #25, retrieved 2023-12-03
- ↑ Afigbo, A. E. (2006). The abolition of the slave trade in southeastern Nigeria, 1885-1950. University of Rochester Press, Rochester, NY. ISBN 1-58046-668-0.
- ↑ Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E. (2017). A History of World Societies. Vol. 2nd (11 ed.). Bedford/St. Martin's. ISBN 978-1-319-05930-9.
- ↑ Lovejoy, Paul E. (1993). Slow Death for Slavery: The Course of Abolition in Northern Nigeria, 1897-1936. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521447027.
- ↑ "Warrant Chiefs, Africa | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ Afigbo, A. E. (1979). The Warrant Chiefs : indirect rule in South eastern Nigeria, 1891-1929. Longman Publishers; London. ISBN 0-582-64664-2.
- ↑ Lange, Matthew (2009). "Comparing British Colonialism". Lineages of Despotism and Development. University of Chicago Press: 169–192. ISBN 978-0-226-47068-9.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Pradeep Barua: The Military Effectiveness of Post-colonial States". History of Warfare. Leiden: Brill. 88: 21. 2013. ISBN 978-90-04-24324-8.
- ↑ Falola, Toyin (2008). A History of Nigeria. Cambridge University Press. pp. 85–109. ISBN 978-0-521-68157-5.
- ↑ Lugard, Frederick. History of West Africa, Book Two, 1800-Present Day. Jurong, Singapore: K.B.C Onwubiko. p. 272.
- ↑ "British Cameroons Mandate". www.britishempire.co.uk. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ "Elder Dempster Line - Page 1 - Ocean Liner Postcards". www.simplonpc.co.uk. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ Davies, Peter N. (2000). The Trade Makers: Elder Dempster in West Africa, 1852-1972, 1973-1989 (2nd ed.). Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, UK. pp. 19–36. ISBN 978-0-9681288-9-3.
- 1 2 Adebayo, Waidi (2018-05-27). "Constitutional and Political Development in Nigeria (Part III): The Period (1925-1943)". Nigerian History. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ Archives, The National (2023-03-30). "The National Archives - Ogu Umunwanyi, Ekong Iban, Women's War: A story of protest by Nigerian women". The National Archives blog. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- 1 2 Cameron in Nigeria: BASIC NIGERIAN HISTORY #31, retrieved 2023-12-03
- ↑ Cohen, Robin (1970). "Nigeria's Labour Leader Number 1: Notes for a Biographical Study of M. A.O. Imoudu". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. Historical Society of Nigeria. 5th (2nd): 303. JSTOR 41856848.
- ↑ "Biography of Pa. Michael Imoudu – MINILS". Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ "MV Apapa (II) [+1940]". www.wrecksite.eu.
- ↑ "Seekrieg 1940, November". www.wlb-stuttgart.de. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ Churchill's Greatest Gamble - How Britain Went All or Nothing on Their SOE Experiment, retrieved 2023-12-03
- ↑ Oyemakinde, Wale. "The Pullen Marketing Scheme: a Trial in Food Price Control in Nigeria, 1941 - 1947". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 6th (4th): 413–423.
- ↑ Byfield, Judith A. (2015). Africa and World War II. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. pp. 149–160. ISBN 978-1-107-63022-2.
- ↑ World War II: BASIC NIGERIAN HISTORY #33, retrieved 2023-12-03
- ↑ "Nigeria: World War II". World history. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- 1 2 081 - Nigerians Chasing Italians Like Cheetahs Hunt a Bull - WW2 - March 14, 1941, retrieved 2023-12-03, (around 7:15)
- ↑ "Forgotten Fights: The Battle of Amba Alagi 1941 by Author Andrew Stewart, PhD". The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. 2020-05-17. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- 1 2 African Opinion in the War, Minor Axis Partners, and Foreign Ships in the British Navy - OOTF 30, retrieved 2023-12-03
- ↑ "From the archives" (PDF). NPA News. 5th (52nd).
- ↑ akande, segun (2018-01-12). "Learn about the 45,000 Nigerians who fought against the Japanese". Pulse Nigeria. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
- ↑ Oyemakinde, Wale (1975). "The Nigerian General Strike of 1945". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 7th (4th): 693–710. ISSN 0018-2540. JSTOR 41971222.
- ↑ Lindsay, Lisa A. (1999). "Domesticity and Difference: Male Breadwinners, Working Women, and Colonial Citizenship in the 1945 Nigerian General Strike". The American Historical Review. 104th (3rd): 783–812. doi:10.2307/2650988. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 2650988. PMID 19291892.
- ↑ Schicho, Walter (2001). Handbuch Afrika, in 3 Bdn., Bd.2, Westafrika und die Inseln im Atlantik (in German). Brandes & Apsel. p. 82. ISBN 978-3860991213.
- ↑ Serra, Gerardo (2021). "Contested Numbers: Census Controversies and the Press in 1960s Nigeria". The Journal of African History. 62nd (2nd): 235–253. doi:10.1017/S0021853721000438. ISSN 0021-8537.
- ↑ Albert, Isaac Olawale (1994). "Violence in metropolitan Kano: A Historical Perspective". Urban Violence in Africa. Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Oyo, Nigeria.
- ↑ "Martial Races | EHNE". ehne.fr. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- 1 2 3 "Elections in Nigeria". africanelections.tripod.com. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Udofia, O. E. (1981). "Nigerian Political Parties: Their Role in Modernizing the Political System, 1920–1966". Journal of Black Studies. Sage Publications, Inc. 11 (4): 435–447. doi:10.1177/002193478101100404. S2CID 143073983.
- ↑ "FB Sozialwissenschaften : Institut für Politische Wissenschaft : Arbeits- und Forschungsstellen : Arbeitsgemeinschaft Kriegsursachenforschung : Kriege-Archiv : ... Afrika : 184 Nigeria (Tiv-Aufstand)" (in German). 2004-09-21. Archived from the original on 2004-09-21. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ↑ Akinbode, Ayomide (2019-09-13). "How Operation Wetie led to the 1966 Nigerian Coup D'état". Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ "Nigeria | History, Population, Flag, Map, Languages, Capital, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2023-12-04. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- 1 2 John de St. Jorre, The Nigerian Civil War, pp. 58-59.
- ↑ Meredith (2005), The Fate of Africa, p. 201.
- ↑ Moses, A. Dirk (2018). Postcolonial Conflict and the Question of Genocide The Nigeria-Biafra War, 1967–1970. Routledge. p. 173. ISBN 978-0-415-34758-7.
- ↑ "Reopening Nigeria's civil war wounds". 2007-05-30. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Fury Childs Daly, Samuel (2020). A History of the Republic of Biafra: Law, Crime, and the Nigerian Civil War. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-84076-7.
- ↑ Biafra-Nigeria 1967–1969 Political Affairs (PDF). LexisNexis. 2006. ISBN 0-88692-756-0.
- ↑ "Nigeria - Civil War". countrystudies.us. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Darnton, John (1976-10-30). "Nigeria's 'Indigenization' Policy Under Fire". New York Times.
- ↑ Ogbuagu, Chibuzo S. A. (1983). "The Nigerian Indigenization Policy: Nationalism or Pragmatism?". African Affairs. Royal African Society. 82 (327): 241–266. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a097509.
- ↑ "Nigeria - The Gowon Regime". countrystudies.us. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ "Legacies of the Cement Armada". The Historical Association. 2021-08-20. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ "National American Corp. v. Federal Republic of Nigeria and Central Bank of Nigeria, 597 F.2d 314 – CourtListener.com". CourtListener. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ "Verlinden B.V. v. Central Bank of Nigeria, 461 U.S. 480 (1983)". Justia Law. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Kasuka, Bridgette (2013). Prominent African Leaders Since Independence. New Africa Press. ISBN 978-9987-16-026-6.
- 1 2 Iliffe, John (2011). Obasanjo, Nigeria and the World. James Currey. pp. 43–90. ISBN 978-1-84701-027-8.
- ↑ Obotetukudo, Solomon (2011). The Inaugural Addresses and Ascension Speeches of Nigerian Elected and Non-elected presidents and prime ministers from 1960-2010. University Press of America. pp. 66–68. ISBN 978-0-7618-5274-2.
- ↑ "Inside America's damning verdict on Murtala Muhammed, Obasanjo after 1975 coup". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Ndujihe, Ndujihe (2016-02-12). "Murtala Muhammed's 198 days of action".
- ↑ Clapham, Christopher (1985). Third World Politics: An Introduction. Routledge. ISBN 0-7099-0757-5.
- 1 2 "Nigeria: The story of Murtala Muhammed who ruled 'with immediate effect'". The Africa Report.com. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Jolly, Janica L. W. (1975). "The Mineral Industry of Nigeria". Minerals Yearbook. 3.
- ↑ "Nigeria - The Regime of Murtala Muhammad". countrystudies.us. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Nigerian Heroes. Federal Department of Information. 1982. OCLC 18561384.
- ↑ Siollun, Max (2009). Oil, Politics and Violence: Nigeria's Military Coup Culture (1966-1976). Algora Publishing. p. 193. ISBN 978-0-87586-708-3.
- ↑ "How Dimka, co-plotters were tried, executed for treason | National Mirror". 2014-05-04. Archived from the original on 2014-05-04. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ "MMIA, Lagos". FAAN. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
- ↑ Darnton, John (1976-07-04). "Nigerians Eulogizing Slain Chief". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ↑ Grass, Randall F. (1986). "Fela Anikulapo-Kuti: The Art of an Afrobeat Rebel". The Drama Review. Spring Publications, Washington, USA. 30 (1): 131–148. doi:10.2307/1145717. JSTOR 1145717.
- 1 2 3 Iliffe, John (2011). Obasanjo, Nigeria and the World. Boydell & Brewer, Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK. ISBN 978-1-84701-027-8.
- ↑ "HISTORY OF AGRICULTURE IN NIGERIA - Agriculture Nigeria". 2013-09-23. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ "Ajaokuta: How Nigeria's largest industrial project failed". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ "Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited". Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- 1 2 Maduabuchi Irouke, Vitalis (2017). "An Evaluation of Shagari Housing Programme: A Case Study of three Towns: Abakaliki in Ebonyi State; Lokoja in Kogi State; Mbano in Imo State, Nigeria". IIARD International Journal of Geography and Environmental Management. 3 (3): 58–67. ISSN 2504-8821.
- ↑ Othman, Shehu (1984). "Classes, Crises and Coup: The Demise of Shagari's Regime". African Affairs. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. 83 (333): 441–461. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a097643.
- ↑ "Corruption in Nigeria: can it be ended in land of greased palms?". Christian Science Monitor. 1983-12-05. ISSN 0882-7729.
- ↑ "Nigeria, Military Faces Daunting Challenges". AP Press International. 1984.
- ↑ "Nigeria stays calm as leader toppled in bloodless coup". The Globe and Mail. 1985.
- 1 2 3 "Babangida, Ibrahim 1941– | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- 1 2 "Ibrahim Babangida | Nigerian Military Leader & Head of State | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ Diamond, Larry (1997). Transition without End: Nigerian Politics and Civil Society Under Babangida. Vantage Publishers, London, UK. ISBN 978-2458-54-6.
- ↑ punchng (2016-08-22). "IBB must face probe over $12.4bn oil windfall, says SERAP". Punch Newspapers. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ Petroleum Statistics 1961 - 2014 (PDF).
- ↑ Akinyemi, Bioluwatife (2022-01-17). "Corruption: We were saints compared to today's politicians ― IBB". Tribune Online. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ Nigeria, Guardian (2020-10-19). "Remembering Dele Giwa, Nigeria's hero of journalism 34 years after". The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ Siollun, Max (2018). Civil Military Affairs and Military Culture in Post-Transition Nigeria. pp. 273–287. ISBN 978-0-19-880430-7.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
ignored (help) - ↑ Gros, Jean-Germa (1998). Democratization in Late Twentieth-Century Africa: Coping with Uncertainty. Praeger. ISBN 0-313-30793-8.
- ↑ "Nigerian Military Ruler Assumes Absolute Power". The New York Times. 1994-09-07. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ↑ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | Nigeria: Bombing incidents at Lagos airport between June 1996 and November 1997, including identity of persons injured, reaction of authorities and outcome of investigations or prosecutions". Refworld. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ Arnold, Guy (2018). Africa: A Modern History (2nd ed.). Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1-78649-036-0.
- ↑ "7/11/98: Nigeria: Autopsy Results-Chief M.K.O. Abiola". 1997-2001.state.gov. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ "Abacha Coup: How Obasanjo, Yar'Adua were framed". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ Peter, Ola (2018-03-19). "How Abacha's Eldest Son, Ibrahim died with Dangote's Brother, Bello in a Presidential Jet Crash; Scandals Unveiled". WITHIN NIGERIA. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | Human Rights Watch World Report 1999 - Nigeria". Refworld. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ "Sani Abacha - the hunt for the billions stolen by Nigeria's ex-leader". BBC News. 2021-01-28.
- ↑ Olson, Elizabeth (2000-01-26). "Swiss Freeze A Dictator's Giant Cache". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ↑ Lewis, Peter (17 April 2007). Growing Apart: Oil, Politics, and Economic Change in Indonesia and Nigeria. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-06980-4.
- ↑ "Global Corruption Report 2004: Political Corruption - Publications". Transparency.org. 2004-03-25. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ "Late Nigerian Dictator Looted Nearly $500 Million, Swiss Say". The New York Times. 2004-08-19. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ↑ "Office of Public Affairs | U.S. Forfeits Over $480 Million Stolen by Former Nigerian Dictator in Largest Forfeiture Ever Obtained Through a Kleptocracy Action | United States Department of Justice". www.justice.gov. 2014-08-28. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
- ↑ "Nigerian Lawyer: Abacha accounts apparently in Switzerland, Luxembourg, France, and Germany". AP Press. 2000-01-10.
- ↑ "Former Nigerian dictator's £210m seized from Jersey account". BBC News. 2019-06-04.
- 1 2 3 4 Iliffe, John (2011). Obasanjo, Nigeria and the World. James Currey. pp. 175–195. ISBN 978-1-84701-027-8.
- ↑ "NEPAD Home | AUDA-NEPAD". www.nepad.org. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
- ↑ . 2015-01-28 https://web.archive.org/web/20150128143355/http://www.nigerianstat.gov.ng/pages/download/253. Archived from the original on 2015-01-28. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ↑ Callaghy, Thomas M. "Anatomy of a 2005 Debt Deal: Nigeria and the Paris Club" (PDF).
- 1 2 3 4 "Nigeria - Military Regimes, 1983-99 | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
- ↑ "AGREEMENT TRANSFERRING AUTHORITY OVER BAKASSI PENINSULA FROM NIGERIA TO CAMEROON 'TRIUMPH FOR THE RULE OF LAW', SECRETARY-GENERAL SAYS IN MESSAGE FOR CEREMONY | UN Press". press.un.org. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
- ↑ "Nigeria to appeal Bakassi delay". 2008-08-01. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
- ↑ Uzoatu, Uzor Maxim (2022-03-02). "How To Kill A Third Term". iNigerian.com. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
- ↑ "Nigeria's 2003 Elections". Human Rights Watch. 2004-06-01.
- ↑ ACMC, Edeh Samuel Chukwuemeka (2020-07-17). "7 Reasons for Federalism in Nigeria: Why Nigeria Adopted Federal System". Bscholarly. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
- ↑ (PDF) https://web.archive.org/web/20080216032839/http://www.eueom-ng.org/Files/final_report.pdf. Archived from the original on 2008-02-16. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help)CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ↑ McGreal, Chris (2007-04-23). "Ruling party named winner in disputed Nigerian election". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Wiwa et al v. Royal Dutch Petroleum et al". Center for Constitutional Rights. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Nigeria swears in new president". 2010-05-06. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Nigeria - Military Regimes, 1983-99 | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ Nossiter, Adam. "Nigerians Vote in Presidential Election". New York Times.
- ↑ "The Economics of President Goodluck Jonathan's Administration".
- ↑ "Departure of Nigeria's 'Red Carpet' President Worries Nollywood". Voice of America. 2015-04-22. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Nigeria - Military Regimes, 1983-99 | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ Foundation, Peter Tatchell (2012-12-05). "Nigeria pushes "Jail the Gays" bill". Peter Tatchell Foundation. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ Udo, Bassey (2015-05-14). "Missing $20 bn: Sanusi faults Alison-Madueke, says audit report proves at least $18.5bn lost". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Nigeria election: Muhammadu Buhari wins presidency". BBC News. 2015-03-31. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Anyaoku Praises Jonathan For Conceding Defeat". 2015-03-31.
- ↑ AfricaNews (2019-02-27). "Buhari beats Atiku to secure re-election as Nigeria president". Africanews. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "EXCLUSIVE: The full corruption charges against Chief Justice Walter Onnoghen". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Onnoghen: The Allegations, The Politics And The Unfolding Drama".
- ↑ Adanikin, Olugbenga. "Breaking: Again, CJN shuns tribunal as CCT commences hearing".
- ↑ "Former Nigerian attorney general arrested, to face corruption charges - Xinhua | English.news.cn". 2020-04-28. Archived from the original on 2020-04-28. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Security agents arrest EFCC chairman Ibrahim Magu". 2020-07-12. Archived from the original on 2020-07-12. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ↑ "Former Pension Reform Taskforce chairman Abdulrasheed Maina collapse for court". BBC News Pidgin. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Key issues that will shape Nigeria's 2023 elections – Report". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ Mead, Nick Van (2018-07-31). "China in Africa: win-win development, or a new colonialism?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Chinese builder completes US$1.5 billion port in Nigeria". South China Morning Post. 2022-11-06. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "French devt agency commits $2bn to support projects in Nigeria". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Nigerian govt ditches China, seeks $14.4 billion rail loan from Standard Chartered". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ Erezi, Dennis (2022-02-03). "Nigeria turns to Standard Chartered Bank for funding of rail projects". The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Over 40,000 terrorists surrender to troops – DHQ". www.premiumtimesng.com. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- 1 2 NOIPolls (2022-05-27). "7 In 10 Nigerians find "state of security" dreadful". NOIPolls. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ Hansler, Kylie Atwood,Jennifer (2022-12-02). "State Department adds Russian mercenary firm Wagner Group to entities of concern under International Religious Freedom Act | CNN Politics". CNN. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ Amaechi, Ikechukwu (2022-07-21). "Murder of Catholic Priests: Nigerian State is complicit".
- ↑ "Trump referred to Haiti and African nations as 'shithole' countries". NBC News. 2018-01-12. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ↑ "Who is Bola Tinubu, Nigeria's president-elect?". www.aljazeera.com.
- ↑ "Bola Tinubu sworn in as Nigeria's president, succeeds Buhari". www.aljazeera.com.
Further reading
- Abegunrin, Olayiwola. Nigerian Foreign Policy under Military Rule, 1966–1999 (2003) online Archived 2020-11-24 at the Wayback Machine
- Akinola, Anthony A. Party Coalitions in Nigeria: History, Trends and Prospects (Safari Books Ltd., 2014).
- Burns, Alan C. History of Nigeria (3rd ed. London, 1942) online free.
- Daly, Samuel Fury Childs. A History of the Republic of Biafra: Law, Crime, and the Nigerian Civil War, (Cambridge University Press, 2020) online review
- Dibua, Jeremiah I. Modernization and the crisis of development in Africa: the Nigerian experience (Routledge, 2017).
- Dike, K. Onwuka. Trade and Politics in the Niger Delta, 1830-1885: An Introduction to the Economic and Political History of Nigeria (1956) online Archived 2020-11-27 at the Wayback Machine
- Eghosa Osaghae, E. Crippled Giant: Nigeria since Independence. (1998).
- Ekundare, R. Olufemi. An Economic History of Nigeria, 1860–1960 (1973).
- Fafunwa, A. Babs. History of education in Nigeria (1974) excerpt.
- Falola, Toyin, and Matthew M. Heaton. A History of Nigeria (2008) online Archived 2020-11-26 at the Wayback Machine
- Falola, Toyin, Ann Genova, and Matthew M. Heaton. Historical dictionary of Nigeria (Rowman & Littlefield, 2018) online.
- Falola, Toyin; and Adam Paddock. Environment and Economics in Nigeria (2012).
- Forrest, Tom. Politics and Economic Development in Nigeria (1995) online Archived 2019-11-09 at the Wayback Machine
- Hatch, John. Nigeria: A History (1971)
- Hodgkin, T. ed. Nigerian Perspectives: An Historical Anthology (1960).
- Metz, Helen Chapin, ed. Nigeria: a country study (U.S. Library of Congress. Federal Research Division, 1992) online free, comprehensive historical and current coverage; not copyright.
- Odeyemi, Jacob Oluwole. "A political history of Nigeria and the crisis of ethnicity in nation-building." International Journal of Developing Societies 3.1 (2014): 1–12. Online
- Ogbeidi, Michael M. "Political leadership and corruption in Nigeria since 1960: A socio-economic analysis." Journal of Nigeria Studies 1.2 (2012). Online
- Omu, Fred I. Press and politics in Nigeria, 1880–1937 (1978)
- Rozario, S. I. Francis. Nigerian Christianity and the Society of African Missions (2012).
- Shillington, Kevin. Encyclopedia of African History. (U of Michigan Press, 2005) p. 1401.
- Thurston, Alexander. Boko Haram: the history of an African jihadist movement (Princeton UP, 2017).
Primary sources
- Hodgkin, Thomas, ed. Nigerian Perspectives: An Historical Anthology (Oxford University Press, 1960) online Archived 2020-11-27 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- Le Roy, Alexandre (1911). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
- BBC Timeline: Nigeria - Chronology of key events
- - Offers a view of one of the main sources of income for the country. Archived 2005-06-03 at the Wayback Machine