Yoruba people have existed and conducted their affairs based on a concept of time long before their encounter with the West. Though considered unlettered due to absence of early written record, they have observed the passing of time with accuracy as it is all recorded in their oral history that guides their daily life. The adoption of the Gregorian calendar by eighteenth century due to the contact with the west was further implemented by colonization. This led to the indigenization of the Gregorian calendar to the detriment of the cultural understanding of the concept of time. With the progression of technology and the digital world, searches done online reveals the indigenized Gregorian calendar as opposed to the original four-day Yoruba w...
The traditional chronology of Besermians is a constantly developing and transforming system subject ...
Historians of sub-Saharan African societies rarely pay much attention to such issues as the percepti...
This paper presents findings on the Space-Time Variation in the Perception and Patronage of Traditio...
In this paper, the researcher has studied the Igbo idea of lunar time which is reckoned by events an...
The article describes the African concept of time. The African concept of time is one that has never...
This study aimed at revealing the technologies involved and functions of indigenous calendar systems...
In 1956, the defunct western region government launched the Yoruba Historical Research Scheme. The m...
Culture is simply everything that embraces our mode of live. An accumulated culture is an invented c...
The Yoruba world is the totality of the tripartite connection of the worlds of the dead, the living,...
The kónkóló timeline is ubiquitous in most Yoruba musical practices; serving as the background rh...
Currently on display in the periodicals section on the 3rd floor, the FAL is proud to present a ce...
Currently on display in the periodicals section on the 3rd floor, the FAL is proud to present a ce...
In the lives of the Yoruba, a major ethnic group in Western Nigeria, the market remains central. Asa...
Muller Jean-Claude. J. K. Olupona, Kingship, Religion, and Rituals in a Nigerian Community. A Phenom...
ABSTRACT Culture is simply everything that embraces our mode of live. An accumulated culture is an ...
The traditional chronology of Besermians is a constantly developing and transforming system subject ...
Historians of sub-Saharan African societies rarely pay much attention to such issues as the percepti...
This paper presents findings on the Space-Time Variation in the Perception and Patronage of Traditio...
In this paper, the researcher has studied the Igbo idea of lunar time which is reckoned by events an...
The article describes the African concept of time. The African concept of time is one that has never...
This study aimed at revealing the technologies involved and functions of indigenous calendar systems...
In 1956, the defunct western region government launched the Yoruba Historical Research Scheme. The m...
Culture is simply everything that embraces our mode of live. An accumulated culture is an invented c...
The Yoruba world is the totality of the tripartite connection of the worlds of the dead, the living,...
The kónkóló timeline is ubiquitous in most Yoruba musical practices; serving as the background rh...
Currently on display in the periodicals section on the 3rd floor, the FAL is proud to present a ce...
Currently on display in the periodicals section on the 3rd floor, the FAL is proud to present a ce...
In the lives of the Yoruba, a major ethnic group in Western Nigeria, the market remains central. Asa...
Muller Jean-Claude. J. K. Olupona, Kingship, Religion, and Rituals in a Nigerian Community. A Phenom...
ABSTRACT Culture is simply everything that embraces our mode of live. An accumulated culture is an ...
The traditional chronology of Besermians is a constantly developing and transforming system subject ...
Historians of sub-Saharan African societies rarely pay much attention to such issues as the percepti...
This paper presents findings on the Space-Time Variation in the Perception and Patronage of Traditio...