{"id":6732,"date":"2022-07-23T12:14:30","date_gmt":"2022-07-23T12:14:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/naijabiography.com\/?post_type=history-culture&p=6732"},"modified":"2022-07-23T12:14:33","modified_gmt":"2022-07-23T12:14:33","slug":"the-history-of-ilesha-oriki-ijesha","status":"publish","type":"history-culture","link":"https:\/\/naijabiography.com\/history-culture\/the-history-of-ilesha-oriki-ijesha\/","title":{"rendered":"The History of Ilesha- Oriki Ijesha"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
When you ask any Ijesha <\/strong>man or woman about their hometown (Ilesha), they are always quick to respond with a blush and an expression of self-affirmation that \u201cIlesha is the hometown of Jesus and, in fact, the only language Jesus understands is Ijesha.\u201d<\/strong> To them, anyone who is not from Ilesha will find it difficult to enter heaven. <\/p>\n\n\n\n The Yorubas of West Africa are divided into the Ijesha sub-ethnicity, which is spelt as “Ijesh\u00e0”<\/strong> in Yoruba<\/a>. The name of the kingdom there is Ilesha, which is ruled by an oba locally known as the \u201cOwa Obokun Adimula.\u201d<\/strong> Ilesha is the main town and the historical-cultural capital of the Ijesha people.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The term “Ij\u00e8s\u00e0<\/strong>” is derived from the expression “ij\u00e8 oos\u00e0,”<\/strong> which means “meal of the gods.”<\/strong> This moniker was chosen because local adversaries frequently raided Ijesha communities only in search of humans to offer to the orisha. It’s possible that the Ijesha gave up some of their territories to their neighbours during the many battles and wars in the 18th century<\/strong> and centuries before. It is rumoured that the inhabitants of Oke-Ako, Irele, and Omuo-Oke<\/strong> speak a dialect related to Ijesha.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Ilesha is found in the Yoruba Hills<\/strong> at the junction of three highways leading to Ile-Ife<\/a>, Oshogbo<\/a>, and Akure. One of Yorubaland’s earliest towns, Ilesha, was allegedly established by an \u201cOwa<\/strong>\u201d (king)<\/strong> who was one of Oduduwa’s 16 sons<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Ilesha served as a key military hub during the battles against Ibadan in the Yoruba civil wars of the 19th century,<\/strong> and the town honours Ogedengbe, an Ileshan warrior-leader<\/strong> who passed away in 1910<\/strong>, with a plaque.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In this piece, Naijabiography explores the history of the Ilesha people, their cultural heritage, and why they are called \u201cIlesha.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n