Biographies & Cultural Icons of Nigeria

Obadele Thompson & Marion Jones: Journey

In the late twentieth century, the Caribbean emerged as a force on the global athletics stage. Among its most remarkable figures was Obadele Thompson...

Fuji Pioneers: How Sikiru Ayinde Barrister and Abass Akande Obesere Redefined Yoruba Music

Fuji music is one of Nigeria’s most distinctive indigenous genres. It developed in the late 1960s from Wéré (or Ajísàrí), Islamic devotional chants performed...

Ben Enwonwu’s Royal Bronze: How a 1956 Commission Reframed Nigerian Modernism and Monarchy

Ben Enwonwu’s portrait of Queen Elizabeth II occupies a rare intersection of diplomacy and artistic innovation. Commissioned in connection with the Queen’s 1956 visit...

A Crown of Continuity: The Shehu of Borno and the Legacy of the Throne

The Shehu of Borno stands today as one of Africa’s longest-surviving traditional monarchies, tracing its lineage directly to the Kanem–Bornu Empire, which flourished from...

Pastor Bolu Adubi: Faith and Legacy

Pastor (Mrs) Boluwagbe “Bolu” Adubi (née Adeboye) holds a unique place in the history of Nigerian Pentecostalism. As the only daughter of Pastor Enoch...

Recasting Benin’s Bronze Legacy

The bronze-casting tradition of Benin City is one of Africa’s longest-surviving artistic lineages. For over six centuries, the royal guild of bronze casters, Igun...

Tinubu’s Reforms and 2001 Politics

In February 2001, Nigeria was still adapting to democratic rule after more than fifteen years of near-continuous military governance. The 1999 transition had brought...

Triumph in Stone: The Sculpture of Aisha Yesufu by Emmanuel Omoregie

In 2021, a final-year student from the Department of Fine and Applied Arts at the University of Benin, Benin City, named Emmanuel Omoregie, completed...

Dr Obadiah Johnson: The Lagos Physician Who Saved The History of the Yorubas

In the annals of African intellectual history, few stories blend tragedy, scholarship, and perseverance as poignantly as that of The History of the Yorubas....

Louise Little: Mother of Malcolm X

Louise Helen Norton Little (née Langdon) stands as a pivotal yet often under-recognized figure in the global history of the African diaspora and Black...