Isu people

Last updated
Isu
Isuama
Total population
3 million
Regions with significant populations
Nigeria
Languages
Isu language, English
Religion
Related ethnic groups
Aguata, Aguleri, Arochukwu, Awka, Bende, Edda, Egbema, Ekpeye, Enuani, Etche, Ezza, Ibeku, Idemili, Igbanke, Ika, Ikwerre, Isobo, Ikwo, Izzi, Mbaise, Mgbo, Ndoki, Ngwa, Nkanu, Nnewi, Nsukka, Onitsha, Ogbaru, Ogba, Ohafia, Ohuhu, Okigwe, Owerri, Ukwuani, Waawa

The Isu people are the second largest subgroup of the Igbo people of Nigeria. [1] Isuama, in which the purest Igbo is said to be spoken, is to be found the heart of the Igbo nationality; consequently it is quite reasonable to look among its people for the original fountain-head from which all the other clans have sprung. This inference too is supported not only by the purity of the language, but by this right of dispensing or rather of confer-ring royalty which is undoubtedly the prerogative of the Nri or N'shi people. In the pre-colonial era, the Igbo people were protected from external invasion by the dense forests of the region, which also had the effect of encouraging diversity. Thus as warriors the neighboring Oratta (Uratta) people (Owerri people) looked down on the Isu people, who were traders. [2]

Contents

Isuama is the name given to the south-central part of Igboland, which was a major source of slaves during the period of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. [3] The name has been carried across the Atlantic, where it is found in the name of Cuban society Carabali Isuama. [4] This name pays homage to the group's ancestry in the Isuama area of Igboland to the north of the Kalabari Ijaw people. [5] At one time the Isuama language was spoken in Cuba, but eventually it and other Cross River languages was displaced by the standard Abakua language called Brikamo. [6]

There are the Isu of Isu-Ikwu-atọ, in Abia State comprising Imenyi, Amawụ and Oguduasaa, each with its own towns and villages. Isuikwuatọ is a local government in Abia State with headquarters at Mbalanọ. Eze Ezo Ụkandų, the Enyi na Ọbịangwụ of Imenyi is the head of all the traditional rulers in Isuikwuatọ.

There's also Isuochi, in Nneocho local government of Abia Another Isu of note is Isu-Njaba in Imo State.

As of September 2010 the traditional ruler of Amandugba, in the north of Isu Local Government Area of Imo State was Eze Innocent Ikejiofor. That month he asked his kinsmen in the United States to support the reelection bid of Governor Ikedi Ohakim in the elections due in April 2011. [7] The Isuama people inhabits the Isu, Njaba, Nkwere, Orlu, Orsu, Oru East, Oru West, Ideato North, Ideato South, Nwangele Local Government Area of Imo State and Ihiala Local Government Area of Anambra State. The Nwangele local government communities holds the annual Igba-nta celebration, a tourist attraction. [8]

Largest settlements in Eastern Nigeria

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Isuikwuato is a local government area in Abia State in southeastern Nigeria. The name Isu-Ikwu-Ato translates from Igbo as 'three Isu families or lineage' and refers to the three lineages descended from the Isu people, in what is now a local government area. The three brothers are Imenyi who is the eldest, Oguduasaa, his younger brother from the same mother and Isuamawo the second oldest and first from the second wife. These three major clans which also harbour various communities in each of them make up the present day Isuikwuato. It has an estimated population of over 50,000 people. Isuikwuato has natural resources such as iron ore and kaolin. Oil lines flow through Isuikwuato and there have been cases of burst pipe which have had severe effects on the local economy and environment. The major cash crops are palm oil and cassava. The soil at Isuikwuato is loose and suffers from Erosion and this left some dangerous erosion sites in the area. They lack the needed government backing to build drainages around the area to guide the flow of water without further harming the already crying soil. Blessed with hills and highlands, the town will appreciate water infrastructures because water is an important but hard resource to get in Isuikwuato. Isuikwuato is also home to Abia State University Uturu.

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Isuochi is a community in Umunneochi local government area of Abia State. It borders Okigwe between Awgu hill and Achi in Enugu State, Owerre Ezukala in Anambra State. The population of Isuochi number around 45,000 people and cover approximately 3,962 square kilometres (1,530 sq mi) according to the 1990 Abia State Census Board. Isuochi has a lot of immigrant traders, farmers and workers.

References

  1. Olson 1996, pp. 245.
  2. Wehrs 2008, pp. 136.
  3. Nwokeji 2010, pp. 125.
  4. Bettelheim & Ortiz 2001, pp. 57.
  5. Taylor & Morales 1994, pp. 209.
  6. Miller 2009, pp. 102.
  7. Group in Diaspora...
  8. Culture & Festivals.

Sources

  • Bettelheim, Judith; Ortiz, Fernando (2001). Cuban festivals: a century of Afro-Cuban culture. Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN   1-55876-244-2.
  • Church Missionary Intelligencer. 1875.
  • "Culture & Festivals". Nwangele LGA. Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
  • "GROUP IN THE DIASPORA CANVASSES SUPPORT FOR OHAKIM". Imo State. 6 September 2010. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
  • Miller, Ivor (2009). Voice of the leopard: African secret societies and Cuba. Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN   978-1-934110-83-6.
  • Nwokeji, G. Ugo (2010). The Slave Trade and Culture in the Bight of Biafra: An African Society in the Atlantic World. Cambridge University Press. ISBN   978-0-521-88347-4.
  • Olson, James Stuart (1996). The peoples of Africa: an ethnohistorical dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN   0-313-27918-7.
  • Taylor, Diana; Morales, Juan Villegas (1994). Negotiating performance: gender, sexuality, and theatricality in Latin/o America. Duke University Press. ISBN   0-8223-1515-7.
  • Wehrs, Donald R. (2008). Pre-colonial Africa in colonial African narratives: from Ethiopia unbound to things fall apart, 1911-1958. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN   978-0-7546-6088-0.