- Abiodun
Abiodun (reigned c.
1770 –1789 ) was an eighteenth-centuryalaafin , or ruler of theOyo people in what is nowNigeria . Coming to the throne shortly after the Oyo subjugation of neighboringDahomey , Abiodun soon found himself embroiled in a civil war over the goals of the newly wealthy state. BashorunGaha had used his power to pervert the constitutional terms of abdication in a bid to limit the powers of the Alaafin and gain more political power for himself. During Gaha's power play, he had succeeded in removing three kings before Abiodun curtailed his excesses and had him burned. In terms of trade, while Abiodun favored economic expansion for its own sake, his opponents favored using the wealth from Dahomey's tribute to finance further military expansion. Abiodun soon proved victorious and pursued a policy of peaceful trade with theEurope an merchants of the coast. This course significantly weakened the army, leaving his successor,Awole , facing a number of local revolts.Abiodun's reign is generally remembered as a time of peace and prosperity for the Oyo, though Nigerian playwright
Femi Òsófisan portrays him as a despot in his play "The Chattering and the Song" (1973).External links
* [http://search.eb.com/Blackhistory/article.do?nKeyValue=57852 Oyo empire]
* [http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP1300sa.html The dictating currents and the questioning of tyranny in Africa: an intertextual study of Fémi Osófisan's Yungba-Yungba and the dance contest]
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