We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
The Igbo-Igala Borderland
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
30 June 1971

This ethno-historical survey of the northern Nsukka borderland examines particularly one method of African colonial control. When, in the late eighteenth century, the Igala conquered the indigenous Igbo, they gained and held social control through monopoly of certain religious positions. However, despite conscious effort to maintain Igala religious lineages, these gradually became Igbonized. In delineating this religious-social control, Professor Shelton describes extensively border conditions and the nature of Igbo life in the Nsukka area. He dwells particularly on the Igbo religious framework which includes well-disposed, beneficent spirits and more capricious and potentially more hostile outside spirits called alusi. The invading Igala installed their own men as priests, or attama, to the dangerous alusi, thereby becoming the sole mediators between these spirits and the Igbo. Since the attama also controlled most divination, which is employed to explain any unclear or mysterious phenomenon, there was no essential social activity the Igala attama could not influence.
Professor Shelton shows how the Igbo attempted to circumvent the alusi worship by emphasizing various aspects of familial worship (of the ancestors, the High God, Earth), but how this attempt failed because these essentially friendly beings did not require propitiation while it was demanded by the alusi. On the other hand, although the Igala attempted to keep the attama lineages Igala, these families gradually formed so many connections with Igbo families that they eventually Igbonized even though they retained a nominal Igala identification.
Professor Shelton's description of religious activity in the borderland is clear and original. He makes extensive use of material gathered in the field, particularly oral transmissions, and pays marked attention to linguistic clues for information. In extended descriptions of religious ceremonies, Professor Shelton provides evidence that the social control maneuvers of both the Igala and the Igbo are revealed in the content of their prayers.
An appendix gives important material concerning the origin of these borderland people and a glossary of Igbo terms provides diacritical marks to aid pronunciation of these words which have little standard orthography. The work is also supplemented with maps, charts, and photographs.
Introduction
One: Background: History & Social Structures
1. The Nsukka-Igala Borderland
The Igbo
The Umunri
The Igala
2. Onojo Ogboni, the Conquest of Nsukka, and Later Borderland History
3. Nsukka Igbo Temporal, Familial, and Spatial Organization
Time
The Family
The Household and Affinity
The Village and Village-Group
Two: Nsukka Religion
4. Sacred Precincts
5. Nsukka Family and Household Religion: Gods and Ancestors
Chi and the High God
Man and the Ancestors
Arua and Ancestral Force
6. Nsukka Village Religion: Alusi
Special Alusi in the Nsukka Borderland
Alusi Powers and Activities
Continuing Positive Functions of Alusi
Worship of Alusi
Three: Control and Adaptation
7. Forces of Social Control
Lineage Control Agents
Titled Persons
The Omabe Association
Attama and Diviner
8. Accommodation and Adaptation in the Nsukka Borderland
Changed Emphases in Igbo Religion
Problems and Adjustments in Family and Household
Igbonization
Conclusion
Appendix Supplementary Legendary Material
Bibliography
Glossary of Terms and Names Pronunciation Guide and Diacritical Marks
Index