Online Encyclopedia

YOLA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 921 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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YOLA  , once a native

state of West Africa, forming
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part of the Fula emirate of
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Adamawa, now a province in the
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British
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protectorate of
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Nigeria . The province, which has an
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area of 16,000 sq. m., occupies the S.E. of the protectorate and both banks of the upper
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Benue . It is bounded S. and E. by the German colony of Cameroon, N. by the British province of
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Bornu, and W. by the British provinces of
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Bauchi and Multi . It has an estimated population of 300,000 . The capital is Yola, a
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town founded by the Fula conqueror Adama about the
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middle of the 19th century . It was the capital of the emirate of Adamawa, the greater part of which is now a German protectorate . The town is situated in 9° 12' N., 12° 40' E. and is built on the
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left or S.
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bank of the Benue, 48o rn. by
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river from
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Lokoja . It can be reached by shallow draught steamers when the river is in flood . The Niger
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Company had trading relations with Yola before the establishment of British administration in
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Northern Nigeria . In 1901 the reigning emir, a son of Adama, forced them to evacuate their station, and, all attempts to establish friendly relations proving unavailing, the British government despatched an expedition from Lokoja in August 1901 . The emir was deposed and a new emir installed in his place . The hostility of certain pagan tribes had to be over-come by British expeditions in
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January and
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April of 1902 .

By 1903 the province was brought fairly under administrative

control, and divided into three administrative divisions—the N.W. with a station at Gazi, the N.E. and the S. with Yola for its station . The new emir proved friendly and loyal, but though appointed in 1901 was not formally installed till
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October 1904, when he took the customary oath of allegiance to the British
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crown and accepted all the conditions with regard to the suppression of
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slavery, &c . The slave markets were immediately closed as a result of British occupation, and any slave-trading which is still done is smuggled . In 1903 an exploring expedition was sent up the Gongola, one of the
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principal rivers of the Yola province, and as a result the navigability of the river for steam launches as far as Gombe at high
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water was demonstrated . An important means of communication with the province of Bornu was thus established, and a rich agricultural
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district opened to development . The Gongola valley was in ancient times extensively cultivated, and the population are readily returning to the
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land . Cotton, rice and
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tobacco are among the heavy crops (see NIGERIA, ADAMAWA) .

End of Article: YOLA
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