Yorùbá - History, Identity and the In-Between

Zack Shittu

Yorùbá — History, Identity & the In-Between is a narrative history podcast exploring the Yorùbá people of West Africa: their kingdoms, their wars, their philosophers, and the worlds they built before, during, and after colonialism. Hosted by Dr. Zack Shittu — technologist, photographer, and lifelong student of Yorùbá culture — each episode moves between the archive and the present day. From the rise and fall of the Oyo Empire to the invention of tradition under British rule, this podcast asks not just what happened, but what it means to know it now.

Episodes

  1. 1d ago

    The Secret Society That Could Remove a Yoruba King | The Ogboni Explained

    The Ogboni weren't just a secret society. They were a constitutional check on the king — and they could remove him.In this bonus episode of Yoruba History, Identity & the In-Between, we explore the Ogboni (also known as Òsùgbó among the Ijebu and Egba Yoruba) — the earth-veneration society that served as a third organ of Yoruba government alongside the king and the Oyo Mesi.We cover:– The Iledi: the sacred lodge built on the earth they governed– The Edan: paired brass figures that sealed verdicts no king could overturn– How the Ogboni could — and did — compel abdication through ritual sanction– Why women were constitutive members, not peripheral ones– The 1949 Abeokuta Women's revolt: how 10,000 women used this same accountability tradition outside the lodge to remove the Alake of EgbalandThis is not primitive governance. This is constitutional design.🎙️ Series: Yoruba History, Identity & the In-Between (YHIB) — Bonus Supplement📚 Covers Episodes 1–5🔔 Subscribe for documented Yoruba history:  @YorubaHistorych  🎧 Listen on podcast: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3JDmrs5fpaCheUrdaqMC6B?si=486A_8PlTdi9LMRjWkUC4A 📖 Support the research on Patreon: patreon.com/zackshittu 📷 Follow on Instagram: @zackshittu Chapters: 00:00 Hidden Elders of Power 00:57 Ogboni as Third Branch 01:27 Earth as Moral Witness 02:09 Edo Symbols and Oaths 02:40 Women in Ogboni Authority 03:10 The Power to Depose Kings 04:09 Colonial Tax Revolt in Egba 04:41 Abeokuta Women Remove the Alake 05:42 What Was Lost and Why It Matters 06:04 Closing and Call to Action References and Source notes: patreon.com/zackshittu

    7 min
  2. May 30

    Trade, Diplomacy, and Rivalry — How Competition Coexisted with Cooperation

    In 19th-century Yorubaland, rival kingdoms fought for sixteen years — and traded with each other the entire time. This is the story of how the Kiriji (Ekitiparapo) War reveals a system of rivalry that was brutal, sophisticated, and governed by rules we still haven't fully understood.Episode 5 of Yoruba History, Identity & the In-Between examines the most analytically demanding question of the season: how did a stateless network of competing Yoruba kingdoms manage sustained, high-stakes conflict without collapsing into total war — and what was actually lost when the British froze that system in place in 1893?We get into:— Why Ibadan and the Ekitiparapo coalition arranged trade routes specifically so they could keep fighting— How market women sustained commerce across active battle lines— The diplomatic machinery of envoys, oaths, neutral mediators, and proverbs-as-strategy— Why destroying a rival completely made no economic sense— How British intervention didn't end the rivalry — it froze itThis episode draws on Ajayi & Smith's Yoruba Warfare in the Nineteenth Century, Robert Smith's Kingdoms of the Yoruba and Warfare and Diplomacy in Pre-Colonial West Africa, A.G. Hopkins' An Economic History of West Africa, and Samuel Johnson's The History of the Yorubas — among others. Full source list below.⏱️ CHAPTERS00:00 Trading While at War02:27 Structured Rivalry Explained02:43 Episode Setup and Thesis04:53 Post Oyo Power Struggle05:57 Resistance to Ibadan07:01 War With Limits08:41 Why Trade Never Stops10:17 Border Markets and Women Traders11:41 War Economy and Captives12:50 Diplomacy Rituals and Envoys14:11 Mediators and Saving Face15:17 Proverbs as Negotiation Tools16:44 When Diplomacy Fails18:48 War Camps as Mobile Cities20:54 Firearms and Coastal Leverage21:50 British Entry Changes the Game22:56 The Paradox of Rivalry25:23 Pacification Freezes Competition26:41 1893 Peace Imposed27:56 What Was Lost With Peace29:16 Next Episode and Farewell🔔 SUBSCRIBE for the full Season 1 arc — each episode builds on the last:https://www.youtube.com/@UCXzeoFtjJIzeRgGLlclby5w 🎧 LISTEN on your podcast app — search "Yoruba History, Identity & the In-Between"✊🏾 SUPPORT THE SERIES on Patreon — early access, extended notes, bonus episodes (Samuel Ajayi Crowther, Lugard's The Dual Mandate), and the research conversations behind each episode:https://patreon.com/ZackShittu📩 THE IN-BETWEEN newsletter — companion essays on the gaps between myth and record in Yoruba history:https://withzackshittu.com/newsletter🌐 More work: https://withzackshittu.com💬 Drop a comment: Did British intervention free the Yoruba system, or freeze it before it could finish? I want your read.📌 SOURCESAjayi, J.F.A. & Smith, R. (1964). Yoruba Warfare in the Nineteenth Century. Cambridge University Press.Smith, R.S. (1988). Kingdoms of the Yoruba (3rd ed.). James Currey.Smith, R.S. (1989). Warfare and Diplomacy in Pre-Colonial West Africa (2nd ed.). James Currey.Hopkins, A.G. (1973). An Economic History of West Africa. Longman.Law, R. (1977). The Oyo Empire c.1600–c.1836. Clarendon Press.Johnson, S. (1921). The History of the Yorubas. CMS Bookshops.Sudarkasa, N. (1973). Where Women Work. University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology.Delano, I.O. (1966). Owe L'esin Oro: Yoruba Proverbs. Oxford University Press.#YorubaHistory #AfricanHistory #KirijiWar #Ibadan #PrecolonialAfrica

    32 min

About

Yorùbá — History, Identity & the In-Between is a narrative history podcast exploring the Yorùbá people of West Africa: their kingdoms, their wars, their philosophers, and the worlds they built before, during, and after colonialism. Hosted by Dr. Zack Shittu — technologist, photographer, and lifelong student of Yorùbá culture — each episode moves between the archive and the present day. From the rise and fall of the Oyo Empire to the invention of tradition under British rule, this podcast asks not just what happened, but what it means to know it now.