Jump to content

Ife

Ɛfi Wikipedia

Ife yɛ tete ha kuro kɛse bi a ɛwɔ Ɔman Nigeria anaafɔ atɔyɛ fa mu wɔ te saa ɔman yi wɔ afe 1000BC ne 500BC mu[1][2][3]

[sesa]

Ɛwɔ afe 900AD mu no, kuro no so bɛbaa mfasoɔ paa ɛsane adwinni suronko a na ɔdi wɔ West Africa mu[4]

Nnɛ brɛ yi mu dea yɛ bɛ hunu kuro no wɔ Osun State mu. Ife ɛwɔ Lagos atifi atoeɛ fam, wokan borɔfo kwansini bɛyɛ ahanu ne dunwɛtwe a[5]

nipa bɛyɛ 500,000 na ɛte kuro mu hɔ, ɛman nipa dodoɔ a ɛwɔ kuro mu hɔ nti ɛno na ɛyɛ kuro kɛsea paa ɛwɔ Osun State mu wɔ afe 2006 mu.[6]

Beaeɛ a Mmoa Firi

  1. Charles Spencer King (2008-10-16), Nature's Ancient Religion: Orisha Worship and Ifa (in English), Charles Spencer King, ISBN 978-1-4404-1733-7, retrieved 2025-04-03
  2. BBC World Service | The Story of Africa, retrieved 2025-04-03
  3. Dike-Ogu Egwuatu Chukwumerije, Dike-Ogu Chukwumerije (2008), The Revolution Has No Tribe: Contemporary Poetry on African History, Culture and Society (in English), Dikeogu Chukwumerije, ISBN 978-0-9557940-1-8, retrieved 2025-04-03
  4. Terence O. Ranger, T. O. Ranger, Isaria N. Kimambo (1976), The Historical Study of African Religion (in English), University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-03179-1, retrieved 2025-04-03{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. BBC News | Africa | Arrests after Nigerian cult killings, retrieved 2025-04-03
  6. Guardian Nigeria (2019-04-27), Ile-Ife, the city of culture (in American English), retrieved 2025-04-03