by aare07
1.
Nigeria is home to seven percent (7%) of the total languages spoken on
earth. Taraba state alone has more languages than 30 African countries.
The importance of this fact is appreciated when one understands that
language is the “soul of culture” (as Ngugi wa Thiongo famously said).
It is language that births the proverbs, riddles, stories and other
aspects of culture that give us identity. UNESCO puts forward that the
world’s languages represents an extraordinary wealth of creativity.
Linguistic diversity correlates with cultural diversity. This means
Nigeria can look inwards and drive itself to become the greatest hub for
cultural tourism on earth, and consequently empower its citizens
tremendously in the process.
2. The Walls of Benin (800-1400AD),
in present day Edo State, are the longest ancient earthworks in the
world, and probably the largest man-made structure on earth. They
enclose 6500 square kilometers of community lands that connected about
500 communities. At over 16000km long, it was thought to be twice the
length of the Great Wall of China, until it was announced in 2012 (after
five years of meticulous measurement by Chinese surveyors) that the
Great Wall is about 21,000km long.
3. The Yoruba tribe has the
highest rate of twin births in the world. Igbo-Ora, a little town in Oyo
state, has been nicknamed Twin capital of the World because of its
unusually high rate of twins that is put as high as 158 twins per 1000
births. In a video I watched last year on YouTube presented by Titi (a
white lady who speaks Yoruba), and which was centred on twin births in
Igbo-Ora, one of the locals boasted that every family in the town has at
least one twin!
4. Sarki Muhammad Kanta The Great of Kebbi, was
the only ruler who resisted control by Songhai, West Africa’s greatest
empire at that time. He founded and ruled the Hausa city-state of Kebbi
around 1600 A.D and built Surame its capital, a planned city which was
almost impossible to penetrate during war. In fact UNESCO describes
Surame as “one of the wonders of human history, creativity and
ingenuity”, and probably the most massive stone-walled constructions in
West Africa. He is listed in Robin Walker’s 50 Greatest Africans.
5.
Africa’s oldest known boat is The Dufuna canoe which was discovered in
Dufuna village, Yobe state, by a Fulani Herdsman in May 1987, while he
dug a well. Various radio-carbon tests conducted in laboratories of
reputable universities in Europe and America indicate that the canoe is
over 8,000 years old, thus making it the oldest in Africa and 3rd oldest
in the world. The discovery of the canoe has completely changed
accepted theories of the history and sophistication of marine technology
in Africa.
6. Sungbo’s Eredo, a 160 km rampart equipped with
guard houses and moats, is reputed to be the largest single pre-colonial
monument (or ancient fortification if you like) in Africa. It is
located in present-day Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State and when it was built a
millennium ago, it required more earth to be moved during construction
than that used for building the Great Pyramid of Giza (one of the Seven
Wonders of The Ancient World). The most astonishing thing is that
Sungbo’s Eredo was the biggest city in the world (bigger than Rome and
Cairo) during the Middle Ages when it was built!
7. Sarki
Abdullah Burja of Kano (ruled 1438-1452 AD), the 18th ruler of Ancient
Kano, created the first Golden Age in Northern Nigeria and ushered in a
period of great prosperity. During his reign, Hausa became the biggest
indigenous language spoken in Africa after Swahili. He is on the list of
50
Greatest Africans in Robin Walker’s wonderful book, “When We Ruled”.
8. The Jos Plateau Indigobird, a small reddish-brown bird, is found nowhere else on the planet but Plateau state, Nigeria.
9. The Anambra waxbill, a small bird of many beautiful colours, is found only in Southern Nigeria and nowhere else on earth.
10.
The Niger Delta (which is the second largest delta on the planet), has
the highest concentration of monotypic fish families in the world, and
is
also home to sixty percent of Nigeria’s mangrove forests. You
should know too that Nigeria’s mangrove forests are the largest in
Africa and third largest on earth.
11. According to the World
Resources Institute, Nigeria is home to 4,715 different types of plant
species, and over 550 species of breeding birds and mammals, making it
one of the most ecologically vibrant places of the planet.
12.
Ile-Ife, in present day Osun State, was paved as early as 1000AD, with
decorations that originated from Ancient America suggesting there might
have been contact between the Yorubas and the Ancient Americans half a
millenium before Columbus ‘discovered’ America.
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