A CONCISE HISTORY OF THE KALABARI KINGDOM (PART 1)
Elem Kalabari (means
Old Shipping)
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Ijaw States, including Kalabari |
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Coordinates: 4°34′6″N 6°58′34″ECoordinates: 4°34′6″N 6°58′34″E
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Country
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Nigeria
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Government
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• Amanyanabo
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Amachree XI
(Theophilus J.T. Princewill)
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The Kalabari Kingdom, also
called Elem Kalabari (New Shipping Port), or New
Calabar by the Europeans, is the independent traditional Kingdom State
of the Kalabari people,
an Ijaw ethnic group, in the Niger River Delta. It is recognized as a traditional
state in what is now Rivers State, Nigeria.
The Kingdom was founded by the great
Amachree I, forefather of the Amachree dynasty, which is now headed by the
Princewill family.
The Kingdom is ruled and controlled by King
Amachree XI (Professor Theophilus Princewill CFR), along with his Council of
Chiefs, most of whom, are royal princes. Together, they make up the traditional
Kalabari government, similar to a royal court.
According to one tradition, the Kalabari
people originally came from Calabar (called
"Old Calabar" by the Europeans), a site further to the east occupied
by Efik people. This may have been a 19th-century
invention. The Efik themselves say the name "Calabar" was given to
their town by the Europeans. Other traditions say Kalabari was founded by
Ijo settlers from Amafo, on the west bank of the New Calabar River, and that they were joined
there by settlers from other communities. The people occupied a series of
islands among the mangrove swamps of the delta, where they engaged in fishing
and trading. They would take the produce of the delta region up the New
Calabar and Imo rivers, and exchange them for food and goods of the hinterland. In
the 15th century, the early European traders noted that they alone of the delta
people refused to trade on credit.
The people of Elem Kalabari originally
worshipped the goddess Owemenakaso (or Awamenakaso, Akaso), the mother of all
the deities of the Kalabari clan, even when individual settlements had their
own local gods and goddesses. She opposed war and bloodshed, and the Kalabari
later claimed she was the sister of the British goddess Brittana, who ruled the
seas. Among their neighbors, because of their civilized and generally peaceful
behavior the Kalabari were called "Englishmen".
History
Mask, Kalabari Ijo
peoples, Nigeria, Early 20th century, Wood, pigment (National Museum of African
Art)
A ruler named King Owerri Daba was said to
have brought the slave trade to Kalabari and Bonny, and to have founded the
houses of Duke Monmouth and Duke Africa. This happened some time before 1699,
since James Barbot records giving presents to Duke Monmouth of Kalabari in that
year. Kalabari became an entrepôt of the Atlantic slave trade,
mainly selling slaves purchased from Igboland, further to the north.
Amachree I, who died around 1800, was the
founder of the dynasty that bears his name. Most of the major trading houses
expanded during his reign. In the 19th century, the Kalabari Kingdom was
in the center of a power struggle in the east of the delta. Elem Kalabari
fought against the Nembe Kingdom to
the west, the Kingdom of Bonny to
the southeast and Okrika to the
northeast.[4] The main rival was Okrika,
which had the potential to block Kalabari's access to the interior. The
Kalabari brought their goods down to Elem Ifoko, at the mouth of the New
Calabar river, but refused to go the seven more miles to Bonny for the
convenience of the European traders.
In July 1863, the feud with the Nembe
people of Brass flared up,
with the Nembe the decisive victors. By December 1865 the Okrika had started
ambushing Kalabari trading canoes, and Bonny was threatening to join in since
Kalabari was blocking their passage through Kalabari territory. The British
consul had to intervene to prevent further hostilities. When Jubo Jubogha ("Ja-Ja") moved
from Bonny in 1869 and established the separate state of Opobo,
he became an ally of Kalabari. Bonny now began a more serious push into
Kalabari territory to recover from loss of trade to Opobo. In 1873 a perpetual
treaty of peace was signed between Kalabari and Bonny on the same day that a
treaty was signed between two rival factions within Kalabari.
Neither of these treaties was observed. In
July 1882 the British consul had to intervene again in the struggle with Bonny. From
1882 to 1884 two factions of the royal family continued to struggle for
control. The Amakiri faction succeeeded, while the Barboy or Will Braide group
moved to the new settlement of Bakana. Soon after, the victors also evacuated
Elem Kalabari, moving to the new capital of Buguma and to Abonnema, both further inland. The
European traders followed them, now going up the Sombreiro River to Abonnema.
The government of Kalabari had now become a council of powerful chiefs and
royal princes headed and overseen by the King.[1]
Rulers
Following were the later independent rulers
of Kalabari.
Start
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End
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Ruler
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1770
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1790
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Amachree I
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1790
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Amachree II
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April 1863
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Amachree III
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April 1863
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1900
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Amachree IV (Abbe Princewill)
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Rulers after the kingdom became part of the
British protectorate, then the independent Federation of Nigeria:
Start
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End
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Ruler
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1900
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1918
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Amachree V (Charlie Keini)
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1919
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1927
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Amachree VI (Willie Keini)
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1927
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1960
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Amachree VII (Obenibo J.T. Princewill)
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1960
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1973
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Amachree VIII (Frederick Princewill) (b. 1906 – d. 1973)
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1973
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1975
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Amachree IX (Cottone Keini)
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1975
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7 June 1998
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Amachree X (Abbiye Suku) (d. 1998)
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7 Jun 1998
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2002
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Vacant
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2002
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Amachree XI (Theophilus J.T. Princewill) (b. 1930)
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References
1.
I. Jones (2001). The trading states of the oil rivers: a study of
political development in Eastern Nigeria. James Currey. p. 15ff. ISBN 0-85255-918-6.
2.
Jasleen Dhamija (2004). Asian embroidery. Abhinav Publications.
p. 237. ISBN 81-7017-450-3.
Retrieved 16 October 2010.
3.
Mogens Herman Hansen, Københavns
universitet. Polis centret (2000). A comparative study of thirty city-state cultures: an
investigation. Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab. p. 539. ISBN 87-7876-177-8.
Retrieved 16 October 2010.
4.
J. F. Ade Ajayi (1989). Africa in the nineteenth century until the 1880s.
University of California Press. p. 733ff. ISBN 0-520-03917-3.
Retrieved 16 October 2010.
5.
Mark R. Lipschutz, R. Kent
Rasmussen (1989). Dictionary of African historical biography.
University of California Press. p. 15. ISBN 0-520-06611-1.
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