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The Scholarship of Jacob Egharevba of Benin*

Authors :
Usuanlele, Uyilawa
Falola, Toyin
Source :
History in Africa; 1994, Vol. 21 Issue: 1 p303-318, 16p
Publication Year :
1994

Abstract

Uwadiae Jacob Egharevba was born in 1893 to a descendant of Ohenmwen, the Iyaseof Benin Kingdom during the reign of Osemwende, ca. 1816 to ca. 1848, and Okunzuwa, a granddaughter of an Ibadan chief. Jacob's parents were long-distance traders, and he claimed to have traveled with them in the Benin and Yoruba regions until his father's death in 1902. The brief sojourn in the Yoruba country afforded him the opportunity of attending school for a year in 1899, at a time when there was no such facility in Benin because of the reluctance of the traditional elite to send their children to school. Jacob was impressed by the written word and became interested in education, although it was not until 1911 that he returned to school at Akure. He demonstrated brilliance, although his education here was terminated by relocation. On his return to Benin in 1914, he became a domestic help to Black Shaw, a senior European staff of the Public Works Department, while at the same time enrolling at St. Matthews C.M.S. school. In 1915 he converted to Christianity and, with the encouragement of Shaw and others, he was able to complete his primary education in 1916.Between 1916 and 1921, he worked in lowly paid jobs in Warri, Port Harcourt, and Okigwe. His failure to secure any lucrative government position pushed him to trading. His writing career began in 1921 when he drafted his now famous classic, Ekhere Vb'Itan Edo. Ironically, it was this successful book that exposed his writing inadequacies. To improve his skills, he enrolled in 1926 in a five-year correspondence course with the Institute of Rationalistic Press in London. In 1933 the C.M.S. published the Ekhere Vb'Itan, which attained an instant success. It was reprinted the following year and translated as A Short History of Benin.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03615413 and 15582744
Volume :
21
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
History in Africa
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs46221015
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2307/3171890