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On the Methodology of Chronology: The Igala Core Dating Progression

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2014

R.A. Sargent*
Affiliation:
Dalhousie University

Extract

Precolonial African historiography has been plagued by historical reconstructions which remain in the realm of legend because events are suspended in almost timeless relativity. This kind of reconstruction seems to erect barriers which hinder or prevent synchronization with neighboring societies and regional events. Isolated from comparative material by the lack of even a relative chronology, coupled with the difficulty of incorporating undated evidence into the mainstream of regional historiography, suggests that the basis of history has not been provided. However, if we adopt the perspective that chronology distinguishes history from legend, the onus falls directly on every historian to provide a reasonably accurate relative dating progression through which the correlation and synchronization of regional data can be assessed. Development of this objective will eventually provide the basis of regional history, social history, and a realistic reappraisal of precolonial historiography. The following discussion, therefore, endeavors to present a methodology of chronological development for a particular case study, and suggests means whereby a relative yet reliable dating progression might be determined.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1984

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References

Notes

1. The Igala core chronology has been based upon the Idah regnal list. Refer to Chart I.

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36. I.H.T. No. 36, Ahinu Ade, Ayagba, 18 February 1977; also Bradbury, R.E., Benin Studies (Oxford, 1973), 36.Google Scholar

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39. Sargent, “Benue Basin Chronology;” J.B. Webster, “Periodi-zation in African History, c. 1050–1850,” Benue Valley Project Paper No. 34, refers to a continental drought in the generation ca. 1710–1730.

40. In the Kano Chronicle, translated by Palmer, H.R. and reproduced in Burdon, J.A., Northern Nigeria (London, 1909), 2144.Google Scholar

41. From a reconstruction of the Bornu kinglist by Erim, E.O. and based on Palmer, H.R., Bornu, Sahara and Sudan (London, 1936)Google Scholar, and Cohen, R., “The Bornu King Lists,” Boston University Papers on Africa, II (Boston, 1966), 3983.Google Scholar

42. Nicholson, S., “Climatic Variations in the Sahel and Other African Regions During the Past Five Centuries,” Journal of Arid Environments, 1 (1978), 324.Google Scholar

43. I.H.T. No. 199.

44. Refer to the Kwararafa regnal list reproduced in Sargent, “Benue Basin Chronology,” where the reign of Adi Matswen in ca. 1780–1810 was identified as a period of famine and drought.

45. Kano Chronicle, in Burdon, , Northern Nigeria, 41.Google Scholar Webster calls the drought ca. 1780–1810, the Chadic-Mahlatule and claims it affected Chad; refer to “Drought and Periodization.”

46. The Bornu kinglist shows plague and an eclipse reference during the reign of Mai Ahmed (1798–1808). According to Gray, R., “Eclipse Maps,” JAH, 6 (1965), 260CrossRefGoogle Scholar, there was an eclipse directly overhead in Borno at approximately midday on 19 November 1807.

47. Nicholson, “Climatic Variations.”

48. Henige, , “Oral Tradition and Chronology,” 388.Google Scholar

49. Refer to Boston, The Igala Kingdom, which provides a fairly detailed examination of the third dynastic period in Igala history, and Clifford, M., “A Nigerian Chiefdom,” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 66 (1936), 393435.Google Scholar A number of graduating essays have been written on Igala history, including Abuka, J., “The Decline of the Igala Kingdom, 1832–1960,” Essay, Graduating (Department of History, University of Jos, July 1982).Google Scholar

50. The majority of these researchers were involved in the Benue Valley History Project of 1974 and 1976, which was generously funded by the Canada Council. The team concept for precolonial research in the Benue Valley facilitated the development of the regional concept for Benue Valley history, and assisted in the correlation of intersocietal synchronistic data. The contributions from many of these and other historicans can be found in the Benue Valley Collection either at the Centre for African Studies, Dalhousie University, or in the Killam Library, Special Collections, Dalhousie University.