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ILLORIN , a province ofSee also: British West See also: Africa in the See also: protectorate of See also: Nigeria
.
It has an See also: area of 6300 m., with an estimated population of about 250,000
.
Its inhabitants are of various tribes, among which the Yoruba now predominate
.
There are two minor emirates, Shonga and Lafiagi in this province, and a number of semi-See also: independent towns of which the chief are Awton, Ajassa, See also: Offa and Patiji
.
Under British administration the province is divided into three divisions, Illorin (central), Offa (See also: southern) and Patiji (See also: northern)
.
The province is See also: rich in agricultural and sylvan products
.
Among the former are See also: tobacco, See also: cotton, See also: rice, peppers, ground-nuts and kolas
.
The latter include See also: great quantities of See also: rhea as well as palm-oil and See also: rubber
.
The capital is a See also: town of the same name as the province
.
It is 16o m. in a See also: direct See also: line N.N.E. of See also: Lagos, and 50 M
.
S.S.W. of Jebba, a See also: port on the See also: Niger, being connected with both places by railway
.
The town is surrounded by a mud See also: wall partly in ruins, which has a circuit of some to m
.
Illorin is a great trading centre, See also: Hausa caravans bringing goods from central Africa, and merchandise from the coasts of the Mediterranean, which is distributed from Illorin to See also: Dahomey, See also: Benin and the Lagos hinterland, while from the See also: Guinea See also: coast the See also: trade is in the hands of the Yoruba and comes chiefly through Lagos
.
A variety of manufactures are carried on, including the making of See also: leather goods, carved wooden vessels, finely plaited mats, embroidered See also: work, shoes of yellow and red leather and pottery of various kinds
.
Before the establishment of British administration traders from the See also: south, with a few selected exceptions, were prohibited from entering the city
.
Illorin middlemen trans-acted all business between the traders from the See also: north, who were not allowed to pass to the south, and those from the south
.
Since the establishment of British authority the town has been thrown open, crowds of See also: petty traders from Lagos have flocked into Illorin, and between 4000 and 5000 trade licences are issued yearly
.
The British See also: resident estimated in 1904 that at least 3000 'loads of British cotton goods, which he valued at £5 a load, were imported
.
The population of the town is estimated at from 6o,000 to 70,000
.
The chief buildings are the palace of the emir and the houses of the baloguns (war chiefs)
.
From the centre of the town roads radiate like spokes of a See also: wheel to the various See also: gates
.
Baobabs and other shade trees are numerous
.
There are a number of mosques in the town, and the Mahommedans are the dominant power, but the Yoruba, who constitute the bulk of the See also: people, are pagans
.
The town of Illorin was founded, towards the close of the 18th century, by Yoruba, and See also: rose to be the capital of one of the Yoruba kingdoms
.
About 1825 the See also: kingdom, which had come under See also: Mahommedan influence, ceased its connexion with the Yoruba states and became an emirate of the See also: Sokoto See also: empire
.
The See also: Fula, however, maintained the Yoruba See also: system of See also: government, which places the chief power in a council of elders
.
In 1897 Illorin was occupied by the forces of the Royal Niger See also: Company, and the emir placed himself " entirely under the See also: protection and power of the company." After the See also: assumption of authority by the British government in 190o, Illorin was organized for administration on the same system as the See also: remainder of northern Nigeria
.
The emir took the See also: oath of allegiance to the See also: sovereign of Great Britain
.
A resident was placed at his See also: court
.
Courts of See also: justice have been established and British garrisons quartered at various places in the province
.
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