Urhobo is an ethnic group found in Delta State, Nigeria. They are a unique group of people whose history is undocumented but has been passed on through oral traditions. It is believed that there’s almost an absence of European presence in the region as early Europeans were more concerned with Economic interest on Coastal Communities.
Oral tradition states that the Urhobo people originated from Edo state from where they moved from the end of Ogiso dynasty under separate leaders in different directions to found separate governmental organization. When some of these emigrants left Benin, they found in their destinations of Urhobo territory, some Edo-speaking settlers. Each of the 22 socio-political units was called a "clan" by earlier writers, especially by British Colonial Officers in their various intelligence/assessment reports. The word "Urhobo" is used to describe the Urhobo group.
Traditions among the Urhobos are replete with assertions of original dwellers and owners of their territory. These autonomous people were believed to be Urhobo, with no known history of migration from anywhere else. These traditions are without documentary or archaeological evidence. R.E. Bradbury refers to Hubbard's 1948 suggestion that 'the distinctive characteristics of the various Urhobo and Isoko tribes are a result of the super imposition of Ijaw, Ibo and later Edo immigration upon an aboriginal strata already speaking Edo-type dialects'.
While allowing for the absorption of immigrants and their language, as well as for the impact of routes and group sojourns on the history of the Urhobo, linguistic evidence provides a strong principle for integrating and validating other traditions of the Urhobo origin (Thomas, 1910), (Thalbot,1926 vol IV:80). The absence of archaeological prehistoric evidence give credibility to the above traditions of Urhobo origin. The structure of Urhobo ideas and language as well as their culture and other institutional forms imply historical links between them and their neighbours, particularly the Edo-speaking peoples, and other socio-linguistic groups in some yet undefined areas in the Sudan/Egypt
Professor Peter Palmer Ekeh, Founder of Urhobo Historical Society, later wrote in his book: Studies in Urhobo Culture, that "Urhobo is physically embedded in the Atlantic forest belt that stretches from Senegal in West Africa to Angola in central Africa. Historically, this region was the most pristine in all of Africa. Until the Portuguese burst into its territories in the late fifteenth century, its forest peoples cultivated their own forms of civilization, untouched by outside influences. This forest belt of western Africa was reached neither by ancient Christian influences, which had a large foothold in North Africa, nor by Islamic forces that came as far south as Hausaland by the eleventh century. While East Africa and even Central Africa were touched by Asian and Arab influences from across the Indian Ocean, as the amalgam of Swahili language bears out, no similar trans-Atlantic influences breached the forest belt until the Portuguese arrival in the late fifteenth century."
A large number of the Urhobo people reside in the South Western states of Delta and Bayelsa State in Nigeria also referred to as the Niger Delta. Many live in small and major cities in regions or local government areas in Ughelli, Warri, Ethiope, Okpe and Sapele. Some Urhobo major cities and towns include: Okparabe, Arhavwarien, Warri, Sapele, Abraka, Ughelli, Effurun, Aladja, Ovwian, Orerokpe, Amuekpe, Eku, Oghara, Evwreni, Agbarha-Otor, Agbarho, Okpara Inland, Egini, Kokori, Olomu, Kiagbodo, Isiokoro, Mosogar, Akpobome, Orhokpokpor, Jesse, Ogharaefe, Effurun-Otor, Ewu, Jeremi, Emadadja, Okwagbe, Ovu, Orogun, Owahwa, Otogor, Edjekota-Ogor, Ofone, Otor-Udu, Ekpan, Jeddo, Uwheru, Urhowhorun, etc.
The following are local government areas where Urhobo traditional homes are located in Delta State
Ethiope East
Ethiope West
Okpe
Sapele
Udu
Ughelli North
Ughelli South
Uwvie
Warri South
Patani
Sagbama (in Bayelsa State.)
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