Benin Dress Before Euros PDF
Benin Dress Before Euros PDF
Benin Dress Before Euros PDF
OJO
Textile design in Benin has a demonstrably long history that predates European
contact. The characteristic royal regalia of the Benin king testify definitely to
this, but the earliest physical evidence of the use of cloth or fabric in Benin comes
from Connah’s archaeological excavations of the Clerk Quarters site around Alaka
(the location of a former palace). The excavation yielded remains of mass burial,
bronze, jewellery, bead and fragment cloth (Connah 1975, p. 57—67).
Radiocarbon dating obtained for the site put its antiquity somewhere about the
middle of the thirteenth century. The laboratory analysis of the fabric suggested
that many of the fragments were spun from cotton fibres. There were also
indications that others were made of raffia (Connah 1975, p. 236; Ben-Amos 1978,
p. 49). The fabrics excavated were mainly plain weave and ‘several fragments
contained open lace intersection and long floats of yarn on the fabric surface
which were obviously part of a delicate design’ (Connah 1975, p. 236).
European reports upwards from the sixteenth century made frequent mention
of cotton growing and cloth weaving as a common preoccupation in the Benin
kingdom. Cloth was one of the major articles of international trade with the
Portuguese and Dutch up to Costa da Mina, as well as ‘overseas’ (Ben-Amos 1978,
p. 50). The cloth mentioned by the travellers and in ship records does not seem to
be the court cloth of today. Two types of cloth were clearly recognized and the
Dutch merchants identified them as Benin cloth — Mouponoquia (sic) and Ambasis
of four and three stripes respectively (Ryder 1977, p. 94). These were dyed either
a plain indigo blue or blue with white stripes. Accounts by travellers such as
Landolphe, Burton and Punch in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
described what they saw as court weaving.
Landolphe, who visited Benin in 1778, was the first to mention that special
kinds of cloth were woven within the palace for the use of the Oba and his court.
Burton similarly saw ‘fine cotton work open and decorated with red worsted — a
work confined to the ladies of the palace’ — and C. Punch described in a letter
what he called needlework tapestry that was ‘in pieces perhaps six feet long or
more with life sized figures worked with needle on the open work cotton
material. They were made by the king’s boys’ (cited in Ben-Amos 1978, p. 51).
BENIN DRESS IN CONTEMPORARY NIGERIA 159
A variety of colours were obtained from leaves and barks: red from cam
wood (ume), hues of black and green from a leaf mucuna flagellipes (akhu-ekpu),
and blue from indigo. As early as 1702, Nyendael noted, ‘The inhabitants are
very well skilled in making several sorts of dyes as green, blue, black, red
and yellow. The blue they prepare from indigo which grows here abundantly,
but the remaining colours are extracted from certain trees by friction and
decoction.’
According to Benin oral tradition, weaving as an art started in the pre-
monarchical era, i.e. before AD 1170. It is believed to have been organized into a
guild as far back as about 940 AD. The weavers of this time used raffia (isa) and
cotton (orru) as threading materials. Naturally, items made from these fibres
were used to cover up the body. The art of cloth making, just like several other
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forms of trade and craft in pre-colonial Benin, was highly organized in keeping
with the tradition of compulsory state service which required that all
professionals and craftsmen in various trades be members of specific guilds
(Agbontaen 1990). Accordingly, the weavers, the costume makers and the bead
workers, all had their respective guilds. Benin oral tradition further suggests that
a number of monarchs, starting with Oriagba of the Ogiso dynasty, but certainly
including Oba Ewedo c. 1255 AD and, still later, Oba Ohen c. 1334 AD, encouraged
at different historical periods the growth of the weavers’ guild in Benin
(Omoregie 1996).
The weaver’s guild was known as Owinnan’Ido. Quite understandably, all the
dressmaking guilds, which comprised the weavers, the costume makers and the
bead workers, were affiliated to the Iwebo, that is, the palace society that
looked after the Oba’s beads, regalia and wardrobe, including the maintenance
and production of artistic works and decorations in the palace. Okao was the title
of the head of the guild of male weavers, while the head of the female weavers
bore the title of Okasieto, but characteristically Okao took precedence over
Okasieto whenever the male and female weavers were gathered together (Dark
1973, p. 67). The guild of weavers lived on their own street, Owinna, just like the
brass casters, the wood carvers, and other groups of artisans and craftsmen. The
women in the guild were responsible for preparing the dyes and the carding and
spinning of the thread. There were two types of thread, cotton orru and ikhian.
Although early European travellers had noticed and documented a flourishing
cotton industry in Benin, it seems that cotton growing had virtually died out by
the beginning of the twentieth century and may be found only in the fringes of
the city. Bradbury in the 1950s, like Talbot before him in the 1920s, recorded that
cotton was being grown and woven only in certain areas to the north of Benin,
particularly among the Etsako and the Ishan peoples. The women from these
areas brought the raw cotton orru to the market in Benin for the senior male
members of the guild of weavers to purchase. Thereafter the women weavers
removed the seeds and spun it into thread (Ben-Amos 1978). Of the second type
of thread, ikhian, used by the Benin, we learn from Dark that it was ‘obtained
from the bark of bush which is soaked in water and shredded into fibre which is
then spun like cotton on spindle’ and that the ‘Oba was the only one who used
160 E. OKPOKUNU, K. A. AGBONTAEN-EGHAFONA & P. O. OJO
this thread to make his clothes; chiefs and the Oba’s retainers wore strands of it
around their necks on ritual occasions’ (Dark 1973, p. 67).
Traditional looms used by the guild members were of the vertical type
associated with women’s weaving in contemporary Nigeria. Ben-Amos (1978)
cited Landolphe to the effect that somewhere in the eighteenth century most
houses in Benin had a cotton-spinning machine for making cotton or straw rugs
(mats). The looms, the report went further, were not permanent, but constructed
anew each time an order was made. The construction of the loom, ido, was quite
simple. It consisted of two vertical posts with cross bars around which the warp
threads were wrapped. A heddle stick, erhan ido, raised the warp threads to
create a shed, and a beater, abokpo, was used to pack the weft, ihue, into place.
The warp thread was continuous, creating a solid colour background from the
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the aesthetics and sentiments it seeks to play up, all are oriented towards the
glorification of the personality of the Oba, the cautious dignity of chiefs and
nobles, and the resigned submissiveness of commoners and slaves. What this has
meant is that Benin may have a rich dress culture, but it is not available to just
anybody in the kingdom. The reasons are by far more fundamentally ritual and
political than economic, that is to say, what people can wear is prescribed and
regulated along the boundaries of social structure. It is this correspondence
between social structure and dressing that we now proceed to summarize.
The social hierarchy of the Benin Kingdom is structured according to political
power, gender and generation. At the apex of the social pyramid is the Oba. His
people jealously guard the primacy of his personality as a cultural object, and his
moods, emotions and caprices take precedence over everything else on earth and
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above the earth. He owns and disposes of everything, including the lives of
others. He is the icon of the collective pride and prestige of his people, a man on
whom enormous social capital is invested or squandered. His epithets in the
naming tradition parallel the revered attributes of the Supreme Being. His people
wish him everlasting life. Side by side with this is the Oba’s immediate social
extension, that is to say, the members of his household. These are the queens
(iloi), the princes (Okoro) and princesses (uvbi) who, though having no
institutionally prescribed political roles, constitute no doubt the pampered
beneficiaries of royalty, its immunities, its powers, its so many privileges. Next in
rank in the social hierarchy are the chiefs and nobles of various grades and
statuses. The rest of the population is comprised of the commoners and slaves.
Among the common citizenry there is a further social differentiation between
male and female with the former taking precedence over the latter. Thus, while a
man can hope to become a chief, no Benin woman has ever been a chief in all
recorded history; the women who played incidental political roles in the history
of Benin were for the most part queens and princesses, meaning those women
attached by birth or marriage to the personality of the Oba.
Key informant interviews confirm a clear correspondence between the
matrices of ranks and statuses we have just described in the kingdom and the
prescribed dress outfits for each category. Accordingly three broad patterns of
dresses can be identified, namely, the palace costumes, the costumes of the
chiefs and nobles, and the commoners’ apparels. Included in the palace costumes
are all forms of dress associated with the Oba and the members of his household.
The most spectacular outfit of the Oba perhaps is his ceremonial regalia, akpa,
a heavy net shirt of beads with every knot finished with a large coral bead, and
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weighing in all about twenty pounds. Together with this, he wears a round belt of
coral (ukugbalila), a closely meshed high coral with collar (odigba), a closely
meshed coral crown with beaded cone (erhu- ede), a beaded headband (udaha),
numerous rolls of beads not rising over the chin, and many strings of beads so
tightly strung that the large pieces stand out from his neck in circles about a foot
in diameter. Bracelets encase the arms from wrists to elbows, and anklets cover
the legs from ankles almost to the calves. These anklets, sometimes made of
coral, were mostly of ivory. Normally, the Oba would have his feet painted with
kaolin, a strictly ritual symbol signifying prosperity and purity rather than body
adornment. Sometimes, he wears sandals all covered with beads.
All women in the palace were grouped into three distinct categories, namely,
the existing wives (iloi) who have given birth, new wives (iloi) who are yet to
have children, and the maids who, though regarded as iloi, were not wives and
did not visit the Oba’s bedchamber. This category of iloi was carefully
differentiated from the others by a distinct hair-do known as okuku.
The routine wear of the king’s wives consisted of simple and unsophisticated
dresses, that is to say, wrappers covering their bodies from the chest the ankles.
There were special costumes for occasional outings. These were usually made
from hand-woven fabrics, and sometimes adorned with motifs made from bronze
in a rhythmic form. Such motifs as the tiger, the leopard or the king’s image were
sometimes woven on to the fabric not only to serve as decorative elements on the
dresses but also to symbolize the strength of their husband — the Oba. This outfit
is their typical costume on ceremonial days and it is strictly forbidden to all other
women in the entire kingdom. No iloi is expected to be seen outside without
adorning her exposed parts with various kinds of coral beads. They sometimes
decorate their hairdo with beads, especially on occasions such as the Igue
festival. This makes them distinct from the wives of commoners. The Oba’s wives
and mother were also profusely decorated with beads from their heads to their
feet.
Also part of the palace costumes were some minor decorative items for the
Oba’s children, which made them different from children outside the royal house.
Up to as recently as the latter part of 1930, it was taboo for a princess to use
earrings because girls outside the royal family used them. The use of enormous
BENIN DRESS IN CONTEMPORARY NIGERIA 163
brass coils as ankles was exclusively reserved for the princesses. When a teenage
princess attained the age of puberty she became entitled to a special form of
okuku hairstyle. Although this was primarily decorative in purpose, it was also a
symbol of maturity, an indirect but eloquent way of announcing the presence of a
possible wife for the noblemen of the court. Because the male sex was believed
to be stronger than the female, the princes were decorated with tribal marks.
Their costume comprised of a white satin cloth, simply tied around the waist but
extending downwards to the ankles. The exposed torso, the belly in particular,
was decorated with the body scarification known as iwu.
Next in rank to the Oba and the members of the royal family are the chiefs and
noble men. The chiefs are easily recognized by their imposing costumes and
regalia. Two costumes that seem to be more distinctive and more generally
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characteristic of the nobility were the eyon and iyeruan. According to Benin
traditions no chief may appear in the Oba’s presence or even within the palace
without the eyon. It is the commonest of the chiefs’ costumes. In the same way, a
chief does not appear on festive occasions without the more impressive costume
called iyeruan. The eyon and iyeruan are identical in style except that iyeruan is
more elegant in its outward extensions. Moreover, unlike the eyon which is made
with white fabric, the iyeruan can be made of any colour but white. In addition to
the eyon and the iyeruan is the far more prestigious costume, ehan-egbehia,
which is reserved for chiefs who have acquired the highest chieftaincy rank and
are the Oba’s favourites.
Beads constituted an important part of the chiefs’ outfits. The chiefs profusely
made use of necklaces of coral beads generally threaded with rope so that they
tapered down beyond the navel. Some, however, were threaded with wire to
achieve the rigid round necklace. Of course in this as in other matters there are
chiefs and there are chiefs; the number of coral necklaces worn by an attendant
of the king denoted his status. The more distinguished, the more favoured, the
more politically successful obviously had more to wear than others. The king
controlled and dispensed the use of beads in the kingdom. The guilds that
produced them did not produce them for a general market where any chief or
some unusually ambitious commoner could buy them. Rather, they were strictly
articles of the king’s patronage. Once a year, during the festival of the Oba
revealing himself to his people through the major streets of the city, he
personally conferred upon his officials the honour of beads, which was likened to
receiving a British knighthood (de Negri 1964, p. 212). No chief may appear
before the Oba without his necklace made of coral beads. Losing a coral bead was
once punishable by death (de Negri 1964, p. 212; Egharevba 1949, p. 90). The
chiefs are allowed the use of corals especially for decorative items like the
necklace, and they may also have their cloths adorned with beads.
At the base of the hierarchical structure were the ordinary citizens of Benin.
They were the Oba’s subjects or slaves; they lived for the Oba, worked for the
Oba and prayed for the Oba. In the traditional life of Benin, everything was done
for the glorification of the Oba. The costume of commoners was simple and most
elementary, and even in their ceremonial lives the costumes were quite modest. The
164 E. OKPOKUNU, K. A. AGBONTAEN-EGHAFONA & P. O. OJO
itobi, a simple derivation from a combination of the traditional loin cloth, and
inner skirt for women, ebuluku, were the routine outfits in their domestic life.
Ebuluku, in its classical form, is made from a short wrapper less than half a yard long,
which was then wrapped around the middle of the body and held in place with a rope.
The rest of the body remained bare without any ornamentation. Their attire for
public appearances and on ceremonial occasions was relatively more elaborate
compared to the itobi. It consisted of an extremely long wrapper that loosely and
leisurely flows from the left shoulder down beyond the ankle and almost covering
the entire toes. It is then spread open behind the body passing beneath the right
armpit and in two skilful almost simultaneous movements, thrown towards the
left above the shoulder. This gives little freedom to the left arm, which only moves
when the wearer proudly re-adjusts his costume.
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In more general terms, however, the use of wrappers seems to have been a
widespread basic fashion throughout the entire population. Traditionally, for the
male, the chiefs and nobles as well as commoners tied their wrappers below the
waist leaving their chest bare to reveal the tribal marks. In a similar way all
mature females, be they of the royal household or commoners, tied their
wrappers to cover their bodies from the breasts down to the ankles.
Iwu, a particular form of body scarification, is a significant element in the
Benin ethnography of self-presentation. It was once a highly valued fashion and a
source of pride among the women folk. A woman preparing to leave her father’s
house for her husband’s place normally had to wear her unique family iwu. The
scarification was mostly displayed in the exposed part of the belly and chest.
Furthermore, the iwu scarification, which was elegantly decorative in character,
was to fulfil another social function at a latter date, namely, the identification of
kinsfolk, slaves or freeborn. Thus during the slave era, they became the
identification mark of large family units in Benin City. It was believed that this
would facilitate recognition of such sons and daughters should the possibility of
reclaiming them occur.
As for children, those who worked in the palace or lived there went about
naked and free except with a string of agate beads and anklet of brass. Even this
was more a matter of social control than anything else for, as we learn from de
Negri, ‘Clothes were at one time forbidden on children until the king bestowed
upon them a cloth’ (1964, p. 216). Thus, nudity was regarded more or less as a
kind of fashion for younger children until they attained the age of adolescence,
and this was still the case even up to the beginning of the twentieth century. That
the practice continues today, however, is a matter of poverty rather than any
cherished aesthetic values.