Igodomigodo

Igodomigodo is the historical first name of the now Benin Empire, as called by its own inhabitants (nowadays known as the Edo people of Nigeria).

According to oral history of the Edo, Igodomigodo[1] was the name of the kingdom as given by Igodo, the first ogiso (King). The ogiso era, started by Igodo, would be the first dynasty of what would later be known as the Benin Empire (which itself existed from around 1180 until 1897 in the area of the present-day Federal Republic of Nigeria (and remarkably not in the area of the unrelated, current Republic of Benin).

The ogiso era would be replaced by the oba era, and the name of the kingdom would be changed from Igodomigodo to Edo by Oba Eweka I (see Oba of Benin).[2]

Replacing the era of the ogiso, the oba dynasty was founded by Eweka I, the first Oba (and child of Oranmiyan). Eweka I renamed his empire Edo, and its people have been since then called Edo people (or ovi-edo, which means "child(ren) of Edo").

The current Oba, Ewuare II, is the 39th Oba and 89th ruler of the dynasty ultimately started by Igodo of Igodomigodo.

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