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Erediauwa (22 June 1923 – April 2016) was the thirty-eighth Oba of Benin, traditional ruler of the Edo people in Benin City, Edo State, Nigeria. [1] Formerly known as Prince Solomon Akenzua, [ 2 ] Oba Erediauwa's full title was His Royal Majesty Omo n'Oba n'Edo Uku Akpolokpolo Erediauwa I .
Ewuare II (born 20 October 1953) was crowned the Oba of Benin on 20 October 2016. [2] He is the thirty-ninth Oba, [ 3 ] [ a ] a title created for the Head of State (Emperor) of the Benin Empire at some time between 1180 and 1300.
Akenzua II's ancestral altars, 1936. Ọmọ n'Ọba n'Ẹdo Uku Akpọlọkpọlọ, Akenzua II (7 January 1899 – 11 June 1978) was the thirty-seventh Oba of Benin reigning from 1933 until his death in 1978.
Oba Ewedo was victorious and established his palace at the site of the battle. Ewedo recognised Ogiamien III as a chief under his kingship. The battle and its aftermath have been reenacted in the coronation rituals of the subsequent Obas of Benin, as a symbol of the historical and traditional enmity between the Oba and the Ogiamien family.
Limited historical records provide insights into the early life of Ogbebo, who later became Oba Ogbebo of the Benin Empire. [1] [2] He was born into the royal lineage of the kingdom as the son of Oba Obanosa. [3] His journey to the throne is intricately linked to a complex familial and political struggle that would come to define his reign. [4] [5]
When the son of the current oba, the Edo word for "ruler", took over in 1933, Alonge became his court photographer, [4] documenting the final and elaborate traditional burial ceremony for Oba Akenzua's mother in 1935. [2] Alonge's talent was recognized early on by the British, and he was asked to take photographs for the colonial administrators ...
Osarhieme Osadolor is a Nigerian professor of history and International studies. [1] He is the author of the collection: Cradle of Ideas, A Compendium of Speeches and Writings of Omo N’Oba Erediauwa of Great Beni [2] and former dean of student affairs at the University of Benin. [3]
His publications include the "print documentary" A Benin Coronation: Oba Erediauwa (2011). [5] As described by the author: "The book's journalistic format has technically provided for 84 pages of photography featuring about 150 original photographs, accompanied by 72 pages of text; all about the Benin City Coronation ceremonies of Oba Erediauwa ...