{{Orphan|date=January 2026}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Dahomey raids on Yoruba
| conflict = Dahomey raids on Yoruba
| Conquest of the [[Kingdom of Kétou]] by [[Kingdom of Dahomey|Dahomey]] in 1886
| Conquest of the [[Kingdom of Kétou]] by [[Kingdom of Dahomey|Dahomey]] in 1886
| Failed Dahomey attacks repelled by [[Abeokuta]] and [[Egba people|Egba forces]]
| Failed Dahomey attacks repelled by [[Abeokuta]] and [[Egba people|Egba forces]]
| [[Yoruba]] [[Kingdom of Savé
| [[Yoruba]] [[Kingdom of Savé
]] conquered in 1885
}}
}}
| image = Kingdom of Dahomey. King Behanzin.jpg
| image = Kingdom of Dahomey. King Behanzin.jpg
| Dahomey raids on Yoruba | |
|---|---|
From the early 18th century until the 1820s, the Kingdom of Dahomey, located in the present day Republic of Benin, was a tributary state of the Oyo Empire, paying slaves, cloth, and cowries in return for peace following repeated Oyo military pressure. Under King Ghezo,[1] Dahomey refused to continue its tribute and sought independence and expanded influence. Ghezo defeated Oyo forces at the Battle of Paouingnan in 1823, ending Dahomey’s vassalage which allowed Dahomey to pursue more aggressive campaigns eastward into former Oyo spheres of influence.[2]
Expansion and slave raiding into Yoruba lands
[edit]
Following its independence from Oyo dominance, Dahomey’s military campaigns increasingly targeted neighboring Yoruba-speaking polities for captives to fuel both the Atlantic slave trade and the kingdom’s internal labor demands. Areas on Dahomey’s eastern and northeastern frontiers became frequent targets of military raids. Attached to these raids was the capture of civilians who were sold to European slavers at coastal ports such as Whydah (Ouidah), contributing to the dispersal of Yorubas across the Americas.[3]
Kétou (Ketu) was a historic Yoruba kingdom on the present-day border of Nigeria and Benin. Historically culturally and linguistically linked to the Oyo polity, Kétou maintained itself as a distinct Yoruba entity into the 19th century. As Dahomey expanded after Paouingnan, Kétou was conquered by Dahomey in 1886,[4] with its king killed and many citizens captured and enslaved and taken to Dahomey’s capital, Abomey. The French later restored Kétou under colonial control after the Second Franco-Dahomean War. Widespread raiding and capture of Kétou inhabitants during the period of Dahomean expansion[5] eastward, which accounts for Ketu’s prominence in Afro-Brazilian Yoruba religious traditions such as the Ketu nation of Candomblé,[6] where many enslaved Africans were identified as Ketu before and beyond the formal conquest.[7]
Kingdom of Save(Spelled Ṣábẹ̀ẹ́ in Yoruba) was a historic Yoruba kingdom, during the 19th century, attacks from the Kingdom of Dahomey intensified, leading to the destruction of the capital, Ile-Savè, in 1848 and again in 1855. A final Dahomean assault in 1885 ended Savè’s independence[8], after which a Dahomey-aligned king was installed by Glélé, and in 1894 Savè accepted the protectorate of the colony of Dahomey without regaining autonomy[9].
Egba leadership and resistance
[edit]
Sodeke was the commander-in-chief of the Egba army during the critical period of Dahomey incursions.[10] He organized Egba defenses and mobilized the population, becoming a key leader in the resistance against Dahomean attacks and in securing Abeokuta’s autonomy. Oshodi was an Egba war chief noted for leading Egba forces in several engagements against Dahomey, including battles at Oke-Adan and Imoshe. His military leadership helped slow Dahomey advances and protect Egba communities.[11] After the death of Sodeke, his son Shodeke succeeded him as Egba commander-in-chief and led Egba forces in the final phase of the conflict, including the Battle of Ikirun. His leadership helped conclude the Egba–Dahomey wars with sustained Egba resistance. Madam Efunroye Tinubu was a prominent Egba trader and political figure who provided crucial financial and material support to Egba defenses against Dahomey.[12] Tinubu used her connections with coastal British merchants and political leaders to help acquire firearms and negotiate for assistance, strengthening Abeokuta’s resistance and symbolizing Yoruba unity against Dahomey military pressure.[13]
Yoruba Diaspora and memory
[edit]
British naval blockades and anti-slave trade pressure after the 1840s further weakened Dahomey’s economic base, forcing a transition toward palm oil exports and a decline in slave raids. Egba and allied Yoruba communities maintained autonomy[11] and expanded political influence in the region. Raids on Kétou and other Yoruba polities contributed to the diasporic Yoruba presence in the Americas, particularly in Brazil and Cuba, where descendants identify with historical Yoruba kingdoms.[14] The history of Kétou’s conquest and the capture of its inhabitants is reflected in cultural memory and religious traditions such as the Ketu nation of Candomblé.[6] Alaba Ida was a notable Kétou royal who was captured and enslaved during Dahomey’s 1886 conquest, remembered for her connection to the kingdom’s royal lineage and as a symbol of the Yoruba people displaced by the slave trade.[15]
- ^ “Benin – Precolonial, Colonial, Independence | Britannica”. Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on 2026-01-14. Retrieved 2026-01-17.
- ^ brill.com https://brill.com/view/journals/jgs/4/2/article-p127_2.xml?language=en&srsltid=AfmBOopQn4ybW8eXBEPCHvKe60enl1KVP0WPMDxOgg8_lKvlFZk6QmMh. Retrieved 2026-01-17.
- ^ Thornton, John Kelly (1999). Warfare in Atlantic Africa, 1500-1800. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-1-85728-392-1.
- ^ “Benin traditional polities”. rulers.org. Retrieved 2026-01-17.
- ^ Fuglestad, Finn (August 2018). “The Long Goodbye”. academic.oup.com.
- ^ a b Castillo, Lisa (May 2021). “The “Ketu Nation” of Brazilian Candomblé in Historical Context”. researchgate.net.
- ^ Castillo, Lisa Earl (June 2021). “The “Ketu Nation” of Brazilian Candomblé in Historical Context”. History in Africa. 48: 237–277. doi:10.1017/hia.2021.1. ISSN 0361-5413.
- ^ “African Kingdoms: An Encyclopedia of Empires and Civilizations 1610695801, 9781610695800”. dokumen.pub. Retrieved 2026-01-27.
- ^ Palau-Marti, Montserrat (1968). “Notes sur les noms et les lignages chez les Ṣabẹ́ (République du Dahomey)”. Journal des Africanistes. 38 (1): 59–88. doi:10.3406/jafr.1968.1430.
- ^ Harunah, H.B. (1983). “Sodeke: Hero and Statesman of the Egba”. Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 12 (1/2): 109–131. ISSN 0018-2540. JSTOR 41971356.
- ^ a b https://www.ifejournalofhistory.com.ng/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Davies-The-Rise-and-Fall-20131.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ Wycliff, Samuel (2025-12-29). “Women in precolonial Nigerian warfare”. African Identities: 1–18. doi:10.1080/14725843.2025.2609891. ISSN 1472-5843.
- ^ Muse-Ajumobi, Basirat; Akinyoade, Demola (2025-09-22). “Yoruba Women and Pre-colonial Warfare in Pre-colonial Yorubaland”. Ondo Journal of Arts (Oja). 1 (1): 459–483. ISSN 1597-104X.
- ^ “The Yoruba diaspora in the Atlantic world / edited by Toyin Falola and Matt D. Childs | Smithsonian Institution”. www.si.edu. Retrieved 2026-01-17.
- ^ “Mother Is Gold, Father Is Glass: Gender and Colonialism in a Yoruba Town – PDF Free Download”. epdf.pub. Retrieved 2026-01-17.



