Traditional state in Kaduna State, Nigeria
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Amina, Queen of Zazzau (c.1533-1610) was a Hausa leader in the city-state Zazzau (now city of Zaria in Kaduna State in Nigeria). To mark and protect her new lands, Amina had her cities surrounded by earthen walls. These walls became commonplace until the British conquest of Zazzau in 1904. Many of them survive today, known as “ganuwar Amina” (Amina's walls). For Further Reading: Zaria | Historic Kingdom, Traditional Emirate, Nigeria | Britannica The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History Queen Amina of Zaria | African Feminist Forum This month, we’re talking about Architects. These women held fast to their visions for better futures, found potential in negative space, and built their creations from the ground up. History classes can get a bad rap, and sometimes for good reason. When we were students, we couldn’t help wondering... where were all the ladies at? Why were so many incredible stories missing from the typical curriculum? Enter, Womanica. On this Wonder Media Network podcast we explore the lives of inspiring women in history you may not know about, but definitely should. Every weekday, listeners explore the trials, tragedies, and triumphs of groundbreaking women throughout history who have dramatically shaped the world around us. In each 5 minute episode, we’ll dive into the story behind one woman listeners may or may not know–but definitely should. These diverse women from across space and time are grouped into easily accessible and engaging monthly themes like Educators, Villains, Indigenous Storytellers, Activists, and many more. Womanica is hosted by WMN co-founder and award-winning journalist Jenny Kaplan. The bite-sized episodes pack painstakingly researched content into fun, entertaining, and addictive daily adventures. Womanica was created by Liz Kaplan and Jenny Kaplan, executive produced by Jenny Kaplan, and produced by Grace Lynch, Maddy Foley, Brittany Martinez, Edie Allard, Carmen Borca-Carrillo, Taylor Williamson, Sara Schleede, Paloma Moreno Jimenez, Luci Jones, Abbey Delk, Adrien Behn, Alyia Yates, Vanessa Handy, Melia Agudelo, and Joia Putnoi. Special thanks to Shira Atkins. Original theme music composed by Miles Moran. Follow Wonder Media Network: Website Instagram Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Shirin Al'adunmu na wannan mako ya yada zango ne Masarautar Zazzau Suleja ta jihar Neja dake Najeriya domin shaida bikin murnar cika shekaru 30 na Sarkin Masarautar mai dimbin tarihi, Mallam Muhammadu Auwal Ibrahim, wanda ya kasance gwamnan jihar na farko na farar hula a jamhuriya ta biyu daga shekarar alif 979 zuwa alif 983.
Season 2 of the African Roots podcast is here! And we start off with two West African icons: Queen Amina of Zazzau and Queen Abla Pokou. Both women are nation builders of almost mythical proportions, so hosts Cai and Laila delve into why these two royals went on to drastically change their society's fate.
In this week's episode, we continue the series -PEOPLE YOU SHOULD KNOW BUT YOU DON'T BUT KNOW YOU KNOW, exploring the Legendary Queen Amina of Zazzou(modern day Zaria, Kaduna, Nigeria) We discuss the life and adventures of Queen Amina , How she rose to power and her Journey to be coming a LEGEND. If you enjoy this episode, share to everyone and anyone . Come drop your comments on our Twitter page @Mafejopamipod . Stay Jiggy and mind your Business as always
Join Aileen as she discusses two incredible women from African History! Empress Taytu of Ethiopia and Sarauniya Amina of Zazzau! Digressions include Disco, Drug Laws and Netflix #justiceforsheila Shout Outs @TravellingWakili– for all your vacay needs! The NairoBEERns Podcast #10: New Drug Laws!! SIM Registration!! Political Intolerance!! Sources Adam Holland, An ethical analysis of UK drug policy as an example of a criminal justice approach to drugs: a commentary on the short film Putting UK Drug Policy into Focus(2020) World Health Organization, Female genital mutilation (2022) Brunno Braga, Taytu Betul: The African Woman Who Defeated European Imperialism (2021) DW, Taytu Betul: Ethiopia's strategic empress Rejected Princess.com, Taytu Betul, The Bad Cop Empress of Ethiopia Anchi Hoh, Taytu Betul: The Cunning Empress of Ethiopia (2022) Raymond Jonas, The Battle of Adwa, African Victory in The Age of Empire (2011) Caroline Akello, The Achievement and Impacts of Queen Aminatu in African and Women History Ibrahim Lawal Ahmed, Amina of Zazzau: Netflix and ahistorical film-making, By Ibrahim Lawal Ahmed(2021) Jone Johnson Lewis, Amina, Queen of Zazzau (2019) African Feminist Forum, Queen Amina Of Zaria
Congrats to Richard Enriquez, who won week 1 of #moxiemillion, by sharing the show to help it reach 1 million downloads this month! Cleopatra-schmeopatra! Hear the stories of three queens of Africa who should also be household names (though only two of them for good reasons). Links to all the research resources are on the website. 3:06 Moremi of Ife 10:54 Amanirena of Kush 23:00 Ranavalona I of Madagascar Hang out with your fellow Brainiacs. Reach out and touch Moxie on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Become a patron of the podcast arts! Patreon or Ko-Fi. Or buy the book and a shirt. Music: Kevin MacLeod, David Fesilyan, Dan Henig. Sponsors: What Was That Like, Sly Fox Trivia, Sambucol Want to start a podcast or need a better podcast host? Get up to TWO months hosting for free from Libsyn with coupon code "moxie." When King Karam of Zazzau, a Hausa city-state in what would become Nigeria, died in 1576, he successor has already been waiting to take the throne for 28 years. After being schooled in political and military matters and proving themselves a skilled warrior, they had been named ‘Magajiya' or heir apparent at age 16. King Kurama's favorite grandchild would eventually become Queen Aminatu. My name… History and folklore have a tendency to intertwine. This can happen especially when the history has been systematically eradicated. You'll hear me mention or notice on your own a lot of gaps and uncertainty in today's stories. The history of Africa is the least well-known or widespread of any continents. The cause for this is as sad as it is obvious. Europeans in Africa saw no great libraries or troves of history books, so they assumed the peoples of Africa had kept no history. In fact, their histories were kept orally, a system that worked out fine until some whitey, the blue-eyed devil, paddy-o, fay gray boy, honkey melon-farmers showed up and started kidnapping and killing people en masse. Victims of the Atlantic slave trade would be intentionally removed from their families and neighbords and mixed together with people from other communities. This meant a lack of common language, which was meant to stymie unrest and uprisings on New World plantations. It also meant that those who knew their history had no one else of their nation to pass it on to, as well as all the gaps created in the collective knowledge back home. But let's start well before Columbus “discovered” an island with half a million people living on it. In the 12th century, life was nice for the Yoruba people in what is modern Nigeria, ruled by the beautiful and benevolent Queen Moremi Ajasoro, wife of Oranmiyan, the King of Ife-Ife, and mother to Oluorogbo. But there was one small problem, and it's a big one. Their neighbors, the Igbo, literally Forest People, had a persistent habit of raiding their villages to loot, pillage, and kidnap people into slavery, either for their own use or to sell. This is *not the same as the Igbo ethnic group, and if my friend Phoenix is listening, did I say it right this time? The raiders were not only terrifying for their violence, but also their strange, alien-like appearance. So otherwordly were the Igbo that the Ife people thought they'd been sent by the gods as punishment. The Ifes offered sacrifices to the gods, but all for naught. The raids continued and the land was thrown into a state of panic. Not one to sit idly by while her people suffered, Moremi hatched a plan, but she was going to need help and a lot of it. She would allow herself to be taken prisoner by the Igbo so she could learn about them. But before she put herself in such a precarious position, Moremi went to the river Esimirin and begged the goddess who lived there to help her save her people. As the story goes, the river goddess said that she *would help, but only if Moremi would sacrifice that which was most precious and valuable to her. Moremi was a queen, to wit, rollin' in dough, so she didn't hesitate to agree. Whatever the river goddess wanted, surely she could spare it, and her people needed saving. During the next Igbo raid Moremi allowed herself to be captured. On account of her beauty, she was given to the King of the Igbos as a slave, but it was her keen intellect that allowed her to move up the ranks until she was made the anointed queen. No idea how long that took or how many more raids happened in the meantime. If you want to learn about a group of people, you need to infiltrate them and gain access to what they know. Moremi was not only among the Igbo, she was their queen. As spy-craft goes, that's S-tier work. This was how she learned that the terrifying appearance of the raiders that had tormented her people was battle dress made from raffia palm and other grasses. It made them look monster-y and demoralized their victims with pante-wetting terror, but if you know anything about dry grass and vegetation, you know that those costumes were extremely flammable. The Ife didn't need spears and weapons to protect themselves. All they needed was a bit of the old “How about a little fire, Scarecrow?” She probably picked up tactics and such-like as well, but nobody who's written about her seems bothered to have written that down. Same with her escape from the Igbo and return to Ife-Ife, which I'm sure was harrowing and adventuresome. Either way, she returned to her people and said “You know those supernatural beings who've been pillaging and kidnapping us? Yeah, they're just dudes and it turns out they're also covered in kindling.” During the next Igbo raid, the Ife armed themselves with torches rather than weapons and were finally able to repel the invaders. [sfx cheer] One assumes the Igbo backed off after that. I mean, you didn't see Michael Jackson doing any more Pepsi commercials. [sfx unhappy crowd] “Too soon”? It was 1984. Now that her people were safe, it was time to repay the river goddess for her help, so Moremi assembled a flock of cattle and other livestock, as well as cowrie shells and other valuables, a veritable lifetime's fortune, which she was glad to give up now. But that wasn't what the goddess wanted, not even close. As anyone who's ever heard a fairy tale can probably guess, the goddess wanted something much more valuable, more precious than all the commodities even a queen had to offer. The river goddess demanded the life of Moremi's only son, Ela Oluorogbo. To go back on her word would be to tempt an even worse fate for the Ife, so Moremi had no choice but to sacrifice Ela Oluorogbo to the river. The Ifes wept to see this and vowed to their queen that they would all be her sons and daughters forever to repay and console her. To this day, the Yoruba people mourn with her and hold her in the highest esteem of any women in the Kingdom. According to sources, anyway. If, like my friend Phoenix, you have family from that region and no better, not only do I not mind being corrected, I appreciate and even enjoy it, because it means I learned something. You can always slide into my DM [soc med]. Queen Moremi is recognised by the Yoruba people because of this bravery and celebrated with the Edi Festival as well as with a 42ft/13m statue, popularly known as the "Queen Moremi Statue of Liberty," which is the tallest statue in Nigeria, and the fourth tallest in Africa. [segue] While the word “Nubian” is used broadly by many and incorrectly by most of those to refer to all things African or African-American, it refers to a specific region and its people. In what is today Sudan, south of Egypt along the Nile, was the kingdom of Kush. I'll wait while the stoners giggle. By the way, if you work in the cannabis or CBD industry, I'd love to talk to you about doing voiceovers for your business. My NPR voice, as we call it around the house, is just dripping with credibility. The Kushites' northern neighbors, the Egyptians, referred to Nubia as, “Ta-Seti” which means the “Land of Bows,” in honor of the Nubian hunters' and warriors' prowess as archers. Archery was not limited to men, an egalitarianism that gave rise to a number of women Nubian warriors and queens, the most famous of whom was Queen Amanirenas of Nubia, conqueror of the Romans. Since 1071 BC, the peoples of East Africa had established a small realm along the Nile River valley south of Egypt known as the Kingdom of Kush. Prior to their autonomy, the peoples of this region had been living under foreign occupation since around 1550 BC when they were absorbed by the Egyptian New Kingdom. It was during that period that they adopted many aspects of Egyptian culture. It was only during the catastrophic Bronze Age collapse that the Kushites were able to reassert their independence. By 754 BC, the Kushites actually managed to conquer their former overlords in the campaigns of King Piye and ruled them as the Pharaoh of the “Twenty-Fifth Dynasty.” they were eventually pushed out of Egypt by the Assyrians by 674 BC, but still maintained independent rule over the region of Nubia. For many centuries, this small autonomous kingdom had successfully coexisted alongside neighboring foreign dynasties that had been occupying the provincial territories of Egypt, such as the Achaemenid Persians and the Greeks of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. It was at the end of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, after the death of Cleopatra VII, the one we think of as Cleoptra, that things started to get a little hinky. When the Roman Empire rose in prominence and annexed the territories of the House of Ptolemy by 30 BC, the Prefect, or appointed provincial governor for Egypt, Cornelius Gallus, attempted to make further incursions into the territories south of Egypt and impose taxation on the Kushites. The Kushites said, collectively and officially, yeah, no. They launched counter-attack raids against Roman settlements in southern Egypt in 27 BC The armies were led by the ruling Kushite monarchs at the time King Teriteqas and Queen (or Candace, meaning great woman) Amanirenas. They began the campaign by launching [more] successful raids on Roman settlements Shortly after the war began, King Teriteqas was killed in battle, and was succeeded by his son Prince Akinidad, but Amanirenas was really in charge as queen regent. In 24 BC, the Kushites launched another round of invasions into Roman Egypt after the new Prefect of Egypt Aelius Gallus was ordered by Emperor Augustus to launch an expedition into the province of Arabia Felix (now part of modern-day Yemen) against the Arabic Kingdom of Saba. According to Strabo, the Kushites “sacked Aswan with an army of 30,000 men and destroyed imperial statues at the city of Philae.” The Greek historian Strabo refers to Amanirenas as the “fierce one-eyed queen Candace.” Oh yeah, did I forget to mention that? Sorry, buried the lede there. Amanirenas didn't lead her soldiers from the throne room, war room, or even a tent camp well behind the lines. She was in the vanguard, properly leading as leaders these days can't be asked to. Maybe if we required all the kings, presidents, prime ministers, dictators and their generals fight on the front lines with their sole heir beside them, things would be a little more chill up in this bish. Amanirenas lost her eye to a nameless Roman soldier and I'm ready and willing to assume she immediately slew him in a single epic, slow-motion swing of her short-sword. The Kushites had also met and engaged a Roman detachment outside the city of Syene. The battle was another astounding victory for the Kushites, but these successes would be short-lived That same year, in a battle at Dakka, Prince Akinidad fell, just as his father had, and the Kushites fell back, but took with them all of the riches and slaves they had acquired. The expedition of Aelius Gallus proved disastrous, as the movement of the army depended on a guide named Syllaeus, who deliberately misdirected them, costing them months of marching. When they finally reached the capital city of Ma'rib, Sabean, Gallus' siege lasted only a week before he was forced to withdraw due to a combination of disease, the harsh desert climate, and the over-extension of supply lines. That's basically the trifecta of reasons behind a larger army's retreat. The Roman navy did better, occupying and then destroying the port of Eudaemon, thus securing the naval merchant trade route to India through the Red Sea, which was no small yams. Having failed utterly at bringing the Kushite's to heel, Gallus lost his Prefect job to Publius Petronius, who then took his legions and marched directly into Kushite territory, looting and pillaging villages and towns before finally reaching the capital of Napata in 23 BC. The Kushites attempted to get their own back with a siege of Primis, but Petronius broke through. It was at this point that the Kushites sued for peace. You might be thinking that Rome had Kush on the back foot and this was a desperate surrender to save their skins. Well you can put that out of your mind right now. The Kushites *did send negotiators to Augustus in 21 BC and a peace treaty *was negotiated, but it was remarkably very favorable to the Kushites. Rome would pull its soldiers from the southern region called the Thirty-Mile Strip, including the city of Primis, and the Kushites were exempt from paying tribute. More importantly, they had managed to secure their autonomy and remain free from Roman occupation. When have you ever heard of Rome, or any conquering army, giving terms like that? That leads historians and armchair historians alike, myself included, to conclude that Rome was shaking in their sandals at the prospect of having to continue to fight Amanirena and her warriors on their home turf. It was worth giving up whole cities and forgoing tribute to stop being beaten by them. Although the Kushites had managed to retain their independence, Rome's monopoly on Mediterranean trade plus their newly established trade route to India, greatly diminished Kush's economic influence during the 1st and 2nd century CE. The rising Kingdom of Axum in Ethiopia managed to push the Kushites out of the Red Sea trade which led to even further decline that resulted in the Axumites invading the kingdom and sacking Meroë around 350 AD and that was pretty much that for the kingdom of Kush. But I've saved my favorite part of Amanirenas' story for last: the souvenir. When Kush troops moved through an area that had already been conquered by Rome, the warriors would destroy anything Roman that they found, chiefly buildings and statues. With Augustus being emperor, there were a lot of statues of him about and the Kushites said “get rekt, son” to every last one of them. The head of one bronze statue was taken back to Meroe, where it was discovered during an archeological dig in 1912, positioned directly below the feet of a Kushite monarch on a wall mural. Apart from the sick burn, the head was also significant for being the only head of a statue of Augustus ever found that still had the bright white inlays for the eyes, so when you look at it, link in the show notes, Augustus looks like he's permanently, perpetually surprised to have been beaten by a widowed queen with one eye. MIDROLL While I'd happily humor debate, especially over a pint and a basket of fries, I'll stake my position Queen Ranavalona I of Madagascar is the bloodiest queen in world history. People should think of her, not Lady MacBeth or Elizabeth Bathory, when they need an icon for ‘woman with blood on her hands.' From the start of her reign, she tortured and killed her rivals and presided over the untold suffering of her own people. In those 33 years, while also successfully repelling European attempts to dominate the country, her orders reduced the population of Madagascar by half, or *more. Born with a commoner with the name Rabodoandrianampoinimerina in 1778, Princess Ranavalona found upward mobility quickly when her father helped foil an assassination plot being assembled by the king's uncle. As a reward, King Andrianampoinimerina (y'all should see these names) betrothed Ranavalona to his son and heir Prince Ra and declared that any child from this union would be first in the line of succession after Radama. Talk about a glow-up. Ranavalona wasn't the only wife, nor was she the favorite, though at least she was the first, and it probably didn't help their relationship when Radama became king and immediately executed all potential rivals, as was the custom, which included some of Ranavalona's relatives. When Radama died in 1828, possibly of syphilis, possibly of poison, having not managed to get one child from his dozen wives, according to local custom, the rightful heir was Rakotobe, the eldest son of Radama's eldest sister. Rakatobe was considered to be intelligent, as he was the first people to have studied at the first school established by the London mission, which also made him sympathetic to the ambitions and efforts of the European missionaries and businessmen who sought to establish themselves on the island. R was still a threat, though, as any child she bore would be the heir before Rakatobe, so she had to go. The military supported R and helped to secure her place on the throne. Rakatobe, his family, and supporters were put to death, the men with spears and the women starved in prison. R then ceremonially bathed in the blood of a ceremonial bull. For anyone who wants a sense of how the rest of this story is going to go, that sets the tone pretty accurately. At her coronation, she gave a warning to those who would seek to undermine her authority. “Never say ‘she is only a feeble and ignorant woman, how can she rule such a vast empire?' I will rule here to the good fortune of my people and the glory of my name, I will worship no gods, but those of my ancestors, the ocean shall be the boundary of my realm, and I will not cede the thickness of one hair of my realm.” So Rana woke up this morning and chose violence, huh? The late king had attempted to modernize the military by building modern forts and cribbing Napoleonic tactics. To achieve this, he'd signed treaties with the British and French for supplies and arms, as well as allowing Christian missions to be built. In turn, the European powers sought to establish dominance over the nation, which is information I will find under W for ‘Who could ever have foreseen that comma sarcastic.' From the very beginning of her reign, Rona walked that back,ending treaties with the British and restricting the activities of the missions, just little stuff like banning the teaching of Christianity in the missionary schools. Three years into her reign, King Charles the 10th of France ordered the invasion of Madagascar, but the malaria and political strife back home forced them to pack it in, a big check in Rana's win column. But just for good measure, she ordered the heads of the dead French soldiers to be placed on spikes along the beaches. The Queen soon turned her attention to her Christian subjects and a few European missionaries and traders who remained. If you were caught practicing Christianity. you could expect to be beaten and hundreds were arrested. Once imprisoned, they face torture and starvation, which beats being hung from a cliff and left to die of exposure in the tropical heat. Whatever horrific fate they chose for you, your family had to watch. Rana was not a nice lady, I really can't stress that enough. Though there were some Christians who kept themselves to themselves and managed to outlive her. If you were up on charges of treason, you'd face an ordeal by food. You'd be forced to eat three servings of chicken skin and a poisonous nute from the tangena tree. If you threw up all of the chicken, and just the chicken, you were free to go. But it you didn't vomit up all three pieces, you'd be executed, or probably dead from the poison, six of one. For every other crime, you'll be treated to a nice boiling, either water or oil, depending on the day, or, and here's a phrase, incremental dismemberment. Queen Rana, I should mention, also did away with trial by jury, because that was a European thing. Whilst the Queen was fiercely anti European,she was very much aware of her need to modernize. Madagascar needed industry of its own. In 1831, a French industrialist and adventurer named Jean Laborde presented himself to the queen after he found himself shipwrecked on Madagascar. Labardi was soon made the chief engineer to the court, and possibly father of Rana's son Rakoto, charged with building a giant factory to turn out cannons, weapons, soap, ceramics and cement, with the “help” of 20,000 enslaved laborers. Her military was paid by the kingdom, but not well, but they had a benefit to offset that – official permission to pillage, loot, and extract any value from her subjects. In 1845, new laws meant that all foreigners on the island would be forced to take part in the public work, many were able to leave Madagascar to avoid such servitude, but the people who lived there weren't so lucky. These works were usually performed by slaves or by those who hadn't paid their taxes and would find themselves in bondage for the remainder of their lives. That may not be too long, when you consider how many people they literally worked to death, tens of thousands. Per year. To make sure there would always be enough expendable labor in Madagascar, Queen Rana abolished the export of enslaved people. Importing them, still A-ok. The public works were bad enough, but the enslaved could never have imagined the horror that would come with the 1845 buffalo hunt. Have you ever heard of the extravagant boar or deer hunting expeditions/parties of ye olde times and thought they sounded completely extra and nuts? They look like a carpool to the grocery store in comparison. The Queen ordered the royal court to embark on a buffalo hunt through the malaria infested swamps and jungles. In order to allow the royal party to travel more comfortably, some 20,000 forced laborers were sent into the jungles to build a road. Not a road to one place or between two places, a road that existed solely for this trip. An estimated 10,000 enslaved men, women and children died due to disease and the harsh conditions. Mosquitos and bacteria have no care for rank and many of their 50,000 strong hunting party would die in the jungles. I mean, it was still *mainly servants and slaves dying. who died by the end of the hunting trip. And how many innocent buffalo got wiped out in this boondogle debacle? [sfx paper rustling] Let me check. In round figures, zero. [in different languages] 1000s died on a buffalo hunt that killed no buffalo, all because the Queen wanted to go on a buffalo hunt. It is not surprising that many within the Queen's Own court were eager to dispose of her, but the closest anyone got was when her Son Rakoto gave French businessman Joseph-François Lambert exclusive rights to the lumber, minerals, lumber and unused land on the 4th largest island in the world. All Lambert had to do on his end was get rid of the Queen and make room for Prince Rakoto to become King Radama II. Lambert attempted to obtain support from the French and British governments, to no avail. In 1855, the Prince wrote in secret to Napoleon III of France, but Boni III left him on read. It was not until 1857 that the coup was actually attempted and you might surmise by my use of the word “attempted” that it did not work. Queen Rana responded by expelling all Europeans from Madagascar and seizing all of their assets. With their oppressors gone, the enslaved worked in the factories burned those mothers down. The prince faced no consequences and his actions were downplayed, as though he had been led astray by smooth-talking Europeans eager to exploit their country. Speaking of no consequences, Queen Ranavalona I died peacefully in her sleep at the impressive-even-today age of 83. While she was one of the few African rulers to keep Europe at bay, but more than half million suffered and died during her 33 year rule. Per her orders, the country entered into the official mourning period. The bloodiest queen in history was dead, but she wasn't off-brand. 12,000 zebu cattle were slaughtered, though the meat was distributed to the people; and during the burial, a stray spark ignited a barrel of gunpowder destined for use in the ceremony, which caused an explosion and fire that destroyed many of the surrounding buildings and killed many people. And that's… The Hausa Queen Amina reigned spectacularly for 34 years, winning wars, enlarging her territory, introducing kola nut cultivation and metal armor, and making sure her traders had safe passage throughout the Sahara region. Today, she is remembered not only for her bravery, but also for building fortification walls called “ganuwar Amina” around her cities. Remember…Thanks.. Sources: https://www.pulse.ng/bi/lifestyle/7-most-powerful-african-queens-in-history-you-need-to-know/dwhncf5 https://www.rejectedprincesses.com/princesses/amanirenas https://artsandculture.google.com/story/queen-amanirenas-the-story-of-the-white-nile-nubi-archeress/bALSN3WTK_YEJA https://wonderopolis.org/wonder/Who-Was-the-One-Eyed-Queen-Who-Defeated-Caesar https://face2faceafrica.com/article/amanirenas-the-brave-one-eyed-african-queen-who-led-an-army-against-the-romans-in-24bc https://historyofyesterday.com/madagascars-mad-queen-that-you-ve-never-heard-of-25e27ebe121d https://www.madamagazine.com/en/die-schreckensherrschaft-ranavalonas-i/ https://oldnaija.com/2019/11/06/moremi-ajasoro-history-of-the-brave-queen-of-ile-ife/ https://www.pulse.ng/lifestyle/food-travel/queen-moremi-did-you-know-about-the-courageous-legend-whose-statue-is-the-tallest-in/hr4llg4 https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/hausa-queen-amina-51267.php TikTok: https://africanpoems.net/modern-poetry-in-oral-manner/moremi-ajasoro/
In the 16th century, Amina was a queen of Zazzau in present-day Nigeria, and she expanded her kingdom more than any ruler before or after her! She never took a husband, but satisfied her needs with more... disposable lovers. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Shirin al'adunmu na gado tare da Garba Aliyu Zaria ya yi duba kan yadda Sarkin Zazzau Ambasada Ahmad Nuhu Bamalli ke cika shekara guda cur akan mulkin masarautar ta Zaria.
Hauwa Kabir ta tattauna da jarumar Kannywood, Saratu Abubakar Zazzau a kan daukakar da ta samu a fagen fina - finai bayan shekaru 21 a cikin masana'antar, da dai sauran abubuwa a cikin shirin 'Dandalin Fasahar Fina- Finai.
Dedicamos este programa especial a algumas personagens marcantes da história africana e da luta pela independência dos países africanos. Nesta série da DW África, de nome "Raízes Africanas” e financiada pela Fundação Gerda Henkel, lembramos hoje a Rainha Amina de Zazzau, Bibi Titi Mohamed do Tanganica, William Tubman da Libéria e Wangari Maathai do Quénia.
Dan sarautar Zazzau da ya zama kwararren Injiniya a Amurka. Kafin ya kai ga nasara, Adamu ya sha gwagwarmaya a Najeriya a kokarin samun kyakkyawar rayuwa. To sai dai hakan ya zo masa da kalubalen rashin mahaifi tun yana dan karami wanda hakan ce sanadin kakarsu ya raine ahi tare da ‘yan uwansa. Bayan gama sakandare bai sami zuwa jami’a ba saboda wasu dalilai. Daga bisani kuma ya sami sanadin da ya fitar da shi daga Najeriya zuwa Amurka inda a halin yanzu yake zaune a matsayin kwararren Injiniya. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/madubinkabara/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/madubinkabara/support
A cikin shirin 'Al'adunmu na Gado', Mohamman Salissou Hamissou ya kawo mana ci gaban shirin makon da ya wuce a kan nadin sarkin Zazzau, Alhaji Ahmed Nuhu Bamalli.
Shirin ya yi nazari kan masarautar Zazzau da ke garin Zariya a jihar Kadunan Najeriya. Masarautar ta Zazzau dai na daga cikin masarautu masu dimbin tarihi a kasar Hausa.
Shirin Lafiya Jari ce tare da Salissou Hamissou a wannan makon, kacokan ya mayar da hankali kan yadda bikin nadin sarautar Ambasada Ahmed Nuhu Bamalli ya gudana a matsayin sarkin Zazzau na 19.
RFI
Shirin Al'adunmu na Gado na wannan makon tare da Abdoulkarim Ibrahim Shikal ya yi dubi ne game da rasuwar marigayi mai martaba Sarkin Zazzau Alhaji Shehu Idris wanda ya yi ban-kwana da duniya a karshen da ya gabata yana da shekaru 84.
Shirin Al'adunmu na gargajiya a wannan makon yayi tattaki ne zuwa masarautar Zazzau, inda aka yi bikin murnar cika shekaru 45 bisa karagar mulkin masarautar da Mai Martaba Sarkin na Zazzau Alh. Dr Shehu Idris yayi.
Amina was a Hausa warrior queen of the city-state Zazzau (present-day city of Zaria in Kaduna State), in what is now in the north-west region of Nigeria. She ruled in the mid-sixteenth century and had one of the most successful leaderships in history.
A profile of Queen Amina, a Hausa princess who later became the warrior Queen of Zazzau an area in present-day Nigeria. Show notes are available at http://noirehistoir.com/blog/queen-amina.
Nigeria is a country where women take leading roles in business, media and the arts yet for many, feminism is a filthy word. The country recently went to the polls and out of a list of 73 presidential candidates just eight of them were women. One of them, Eunice Atuejide sparked a fierce debate when she announced, “I am not a feminist”. She went on to say, “And who is a feminist? So what is Nigerian feminism? This is a country that has a history of legendary women, from the warrior Queen Amina of Zazzau to the 1929 ‘Women's War' where thousands of women came out in protest against British tax collections. Yet according to a recent UNICEF report, one in four girls in the country have experienced sexual violence, while 23% of women between the ages of 18 and 24 have experienced physical or sexual violence in the home. The Conversation has come to Lagos to meet a panel of successful and outspoken women, each leaders in their field, to challenge pre-conceptions and break some myths about what it means to be a woman in Nigeria. They discuss the highs and lows of their experiences with an audience of some of the sharpest young minds of the future, students from the University of Lagos. Fatima Zahra Umar is a lawyer, writer and gender activist behind the popular blog #DivorceDiaries. Ijeoma Umebinyuo is described as one of the top ten contemporary poets from Sub-Saharan Africa. Ijeoma says "I am always sharpening the blade of my pen". Bisola Aiyeola is a Nollywood actress, singer and Reality TV star. Oluwaseun Osowobi is the founder and Executive Director of 'The Stand to End Rape Initiative'. She is also 2019's Commonwealth Young Person of the Year for her role in fighting gender based violence. There is also a special ‘anonymous' guest appearance by storyteller, blogger and cultural commentator ‘Diary of a Naija Girl'. Presented by Kim Chakanetsa and produced by Andrea Kennedy. Image (L-R): Fatima Zahra Umar (Credit: Ami Mansur), Oluwaseun Ayodeji Osowobi (Credit: Oluwaseun Ayodeji Osowobi), Ijeoma Umebinyuo (Credit: Ijeoma Umebinyuo), Bisola Aiyeola (Credit: TMPL)
Kokarin farfado da al'adun gargajiya a Zazzau.
- Surviving R. Kelly - Punisher season 2 trailer - LITTLE trailer - Aquaman at the box office - Bungie splitting with ActiVision - Netlfix tracking log-ins DISCUSSION: Black Mirror: Bandersnatch and author, Jem Emuakpor, discusses her novel Queen of Zazzau www.negrojusticeleague.com www.facebook.com/negrojusticeleague www.twitter.com/blacknerdcast www.twitch.tv/blacknerdcast
The Appalachian region consists of an area from Southern New York down through Mississippi. It is often characterized solely by poor, white Southerners from the mountains. However, that is most certainly not the case and to shine a light on this a poets collective was formed at the University of Kentucky. This collective works to make the invisible visible. Affrilachian Poets is the name of that collective and guest Joy Priest is a member. On this episode Priest talks about the history of the Affrilachian Poets, when she became involved with the group and about her work as a poet. Priest also addresses the importance of having a collective like the Affrilachian Poets in the American South. She gives insights into her experience as a woman of color with ancestral origins in Alabama, her childhood in Louisville, Kentucky, living outside of the American South and now residing in South Carolina. This week’s Listen Here isn’t a promo, but rather a podcast mentioned by Priest. It is Gimlet Media’s Uncivil. The Who’s that lady (from history)? is Queen Amina of Zazzau. Resources: – Affrilachain Poets – Twitter: @Dalai_Mama_ @Affrilachia
In This Episode: Still, in the spirit of celebrating Black History Month, we are going to take you on a journey through the life of one of the greatest and most courageous African Queen's to walk this earth, Queen Amina of Zazzau. This month, we are celebrating the history of the times before slavery, the Black History we should never forget to celebrate. Mentioned In This Episode: 1. Queen Amina: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amina 2. Zazzau (Zaria): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zazzau 3. Queen Bakwa: http://www.whenweruled.com/?p=84 4. Turunku: http://allafrica.com/stories/200607170777.html 5. Amina Walls: http://digest.bellafricana.com/tourist-attractions-in-nigeria-part-2/ Connect: Email: excusemyafrican@gmail.com Website: http://www.excusemyafrican.com/ Stella Damasus Blog: http://www.stelladamasusblog.com Stella Damasus Website : https://www.stelladamasus.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/excusemyafrican Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realexcusemyafrican/ Face --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/excusemyafrican/support