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Dating Problems at Igobo-Ukwu

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Babatunde Lawal
Affiliation:
University of Ife

Extract

This paper reviews the results of the recent excavations at Igbo-Ukwu, from which large quantities of copper and bronze objects, glass and stone beads as well as highly decorated pottery were recovered. Although four out of five radiocarbon dates fall in the middle of the ninth century a.d., while the fifth one falls in the middle of the fifteenth century, other dating evidence—like the presence of European-type manila and beads, and the preservation of highly perishable materials—such as textiles, thread and wood fragments—seem to suggest a much later date. Consequently, until some concrete evidence can be produced to support the ninth century date, we cannot jettison the fifteenth century date, which seems to be corroborated by the evidence of the manillas and beads.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1973

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References

1 Shaw, Thurstan, Igbo-Ukwu: An Account of Archaeological Discoveries in Eastern Nigeria (London, 1970), 2 vols.Google Scholar

2 See Shaw, T., ‘Radiocarbon Dating in Nigeria’, J. Hut. Soc. Nigeria, IV, 3 (1968), 460.Google Scholar

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16 Shaw (1970), 207.

17 Ibid. 207–9.

18 Ibid. 209.

19 Shaw (1970), 209.

20 Ibid. 261.

21 Shaw (1907), 207.

22 Ibid. 356, Appendix VII.

23 Ozanne, P., ‘The Diffusion of Smoking in West Africa’, Odu, A Journal of West African Studies (N.S.), 2 (1969), 2941Google Scholar and Shaw, T., ‘Smoking in Africa’, South African Archaeological Bulletin, XIX, 3 (1964), 75–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 Shaw 1970, 278.

26 See also, Jones, G. I., ‘Native and Trade Currencies in Southern Nigeria During the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries’, Africa, XXVIII 1958), 48;Google ScholarKirk-Green, A. H. M., ‘The Major Currencies in Nigerian History’,J. Hist. Soc. Nigeria, II, 1 (1960), 345–6.Google Scholar

27 Jones (1958), 48.

28 Shaw (1970), vol. II, plate 322.

29 For illustrations, see Nzekwu, O., ‘Iria Ceremony’, Nigeria, 63 (1959), 340–52.Google Scholar

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33 See Lawal, (1972), op. cit.Google Scholar

34 Northrup, D., ‘The Growth of Trade Among the Igbo before 1800’, J. Afr. Hist., XIII, 2 (1972), 217–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

35 Northrup (1972), 221.

36 Especially when Northrup neither connects Igbo-Ukwu with the trans-Saharan trade, nor gives the direction of this hypothetical long distance trade which ‘completed the final stages of its journey on the Niger River’. But while Professor Shaw suggests that much of the beads and textiles found at Igbo-Ukwu must havc been imported through the trans-Saharan trade, Northrup is inclined to think that a good majority of them were manufactured in or around Igbo-Ukwu for export to the coast and to as far afield as Benin (Ibid. 220–5). In exchange, Igbo-Ukwu would have received salt, which Professor Shaw suggests must have come from the Sahara.

37 Northrup (1972), 218.