Mobee Royal Family Slave Relics Museum

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Mobee Royal Family Slave Relics Museum
Mobee Slave Relics Museum.jpg
Exterior of the museum
Location Badagry, Nigeria
TypeSlave Museum
OwnerMobee Royal Family

The Mobee Royal Family Slave Relics Museum is a museum located in Badagry, Lagos State, Nigeria. Dedicated to relics of the slave trade, it is a privately-owned museum operated by descendants of the traditional rulers of Badagry. [1]

Inside the museum Inside Mobee Royal Family Slave Relics Museum Badagry.jpg
Inside the museum
18th century cannons outside the museum Photo of relics cannon Guns at the badagry slave trade museum.jpg
18th century cannons outside the museum

The museum has manacles used by slave traders to shackle enslaved people, including those used to bind together the legs of two slaves to slow their movement. There is also a branding tool from the late 18th century which belonged to the slave merchant Sunbu Mobee, whose grave is located inside the museum. It was reportedly used to brand the name of the slave merchant onto the skin of enslaved people, and to pierce their lips to prevent them from eating while working in the fields. Other items include a ring-shaped tool which was used to punish enslaved people by being forced over a broken wrist and used to suspend them off the ground from a tree. Outside the museum are two 18th century canons, which could reportedly be exchanged for up to 100 slaves each. [2] [3]

See also

References

  1. Okocha, Samuel (9 April 2022). "Badagry Museum, a sobering reminder of Nigeria's long slave trade history". rfi.fr. Radio France Internationale . Retrieved 26 September 2025.
  2. Olofinlua, Temitayo (1 December 2017). "History of Atlantic Slave Trade Chronicled By Museums, Monuments in Badagry, Nigeria". globalpressjournal.com. Global Press Journal . Retrieved 26 September 2025.
  3. "Artifacts of the slave trade". reuters.com. Reuters. 26 July 2019. Retrieved 26 September 2025.