Книга Keeper or Traitor? Imariabe Osayande

Keeper or Traitor?

Agho Obaseki, Oba Ovonramwen, and the Evidence Behind Benin's Oldest Charge of Betrayal, 1897-1920

Автор: Imariabe Osayande
Език: Английски език
Корици: С меки корици
Издател: Staten House
Наличност: Очаква се зареждане
Издание 07. 07. 2026
17.91 35.02 лв
A Charge Older Than Nigeria ItselfFor more than a century, one name in Benin history has carried a s...

Информация за книгата

Автор
Език
Английски език
Корици
Книга - С меки корици
Издадена
2026
страници
92
EAN
9798905149832
Enbook ID
53233091
Издател
Теглоt
137
Размери
152 x 229 x 5

Пълно описание

A Charge Older Than Nigeria Itself
For more than a century, one name in Benin history has carried a single verdict: traitor. When British forces burned Benin City in 1897 and sent Oba Ovonramwen into exile, Chief Agho Obaseki rose to run the kingdom under the new rulers. Was that betrayal, an attempt to seize the throne, or survival under occupation? Most accounts only ever argue one side.

What This Book Helps You Understand
Keeper or Traitor weighs the evidence instead of choosing a side. It reconstructs the years from 1888 to 1920 in plain language: the kingdom Ovonramwen inherited, the massacre and the punitive expedition, the trial and the exile, the long interregnum, the disputed Iyase title, and the question of whether Agho ever reached for the crown. Each major claim is graded as Verified, Supported, Plausible, or Contradicted, so you can see exactly what the record supports and where it runs out.

What Makes This Book Different
Rather than repeat a popular legend or a family defense, this book applies a clear evidence-grading method to every part of the charge. It draws on the leading scholarship, the colonial record, Benin court tradition, and family testimony, reads each source for its interests, and separates what can be proven from what cannot. A closing chapter examines how the betrayal charge is still used today, without turning history into a weapon against living people. The result is an accessible, fair account of a story usually told only in anger.

Who This Book Is For
This book is for readers who want a clear, sourced history of Benin and the 1897 British conquest; who are curious about Oba Ovonramwen, the interregnum, and the restoration of the monarchy; who follow Edo and Nigerian history and want the background behind a famous dispute; who value evidence-based writing over one-sided storytelling; and who enjoy narrative histories of West Africa and the colonial period.

A Clearer Way to Judge an Old Story
For readers who want to understand the fall of Benin and the truth behind its oldest charge of betrayal with clarity and confidence, this book offers a structured, evidence-first place to begin.