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Eze (pronounced ) is an word which means . Such titles as , Ezeike and Obi, plus others, are used by the of as royal titles. is derived from the Igbo word Igwekala or Eluigwekala, "the sky or heaven above the sky is higher or bigger than land", implying that the Eze is a higher servant of the people. Obi usually refers to the centre building for receiving visitors within an Igbo leader's or man's homestead. When used as a title of respect for the Eze, Obi implies: "the one who sits in the throne house or heart of the Kingdom."

In Igbo tradition and culture, the Eze is normally an elective monarch advised by a council of chiefs or elders whom he appoints based on their good standing within the community. A popular saying in Igbo is "Igbo enwe eze", which translates to "the Igbo have no king." This popular saying does not, however, capture the complexity of Igbo as it has been explored in many centuries of , and research. In many ways, it is a comment on a cultural disregard for authority and nationhood as seen in the build-up and aftermath of the Biafran Civil War.

The had and still have ruling bodies of royal and political leaders in which an individual can be recognized by the entire society as primus inter pares, i.e., first among equals. This status is usually hereditary among the male lineage, since Igbo culture is . Women in Igbo cultures were known to develop parallel social hierarchies through which they both competed and collaborated with their counterpart male kingship and governing hierarchies. However, there was one woman Eze in colonial Nigeria, .


Kingship in Igboland
Scholars generally believe that Igbo kingship institutions developed from three sources. The first is indigenous and ancient priesthood, which traditionally combined and political duties of leaders in the village-based . Ezes were recognized in , , , , and : the most populous Igbo sub-group. In , Josaiah Ndubuisi Wachuku was Eze from ancestral, royal lineage.[1] , Ovoko, and Iheakpu-Awka are home to the Igbo-Eze communities. The King is variously referred to as Eze or Ezedike, depending on .

Secondly, the neighboring imposed certain conventions by colonizing certain parts of Nigeria. According to an opposite view, the Eze of Nri influenced the constitution of the Benin Oba's status. Differing points of view are focused particularly on the communities of Asaba, , and . According to some scholars who argue against what is known as the and Omenka Thesis on Origin, Igbo kings of these places trace the historical roots of their immediately to the Oba of Benin.

The third source of Igbo kingship is believed to be 19th and 20th century by the . Under a policy of , the colonial administration created "warrant chiefs," selecting recognised individuals to serve as administrators, rulers, judges and tax collectors. Native to their communities, warrant chiefs were usually selected from among those men who were most cooperative with the colonial administration. For this and a number of other reasons, Igbo populations often resented and sometimes overtly resisted the authority of warrant chiefs. An example of such resistance is the Igbo Women's War of 1929.

After gained its constitutional from Britain on Saturday 1 October 1960, many of those warrant chiefs tried to maintain their power by seeking to recast their political roles. Those with political influence and new-found wealth bought honorary Eze- sounding titles. They clamored to be among traditional rulers retained by government of independent Nigeria.

  • (2011). 9780253222480, Indiana University Press.
  • Agbasiere, J. (2000). Women in Igbo Life and Thought
  • Echeruo, Michael J. C. (1998), Igbo–English Dictionary
  • Ottenberg, Simon (2005). Igbo Life and Thought and Other Essays
  • Uchendu, Victor C. (1965). The Igbo of Southeast Nigeria


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