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Nigeria is a very ethnically diverse country with 371 ethnic groups, the largest of which are the Hausa, Yoruba and the Igbo. [1] Nigeria has one official language which is English, as a result of the British colonial rule over the nation.
The ethnic groups of Africa number in the thousands, with each ethnicity generally having their own language (or dialect of a language) and culture. The ethnolinguistic groups include various Afroasiatic , Khoisan , Niger-Congo , and Nilo-Saharan populations.
Name Producer Franchise / Sequel Total Estimation (in number and words) 1 Ayo Makun: Ayo Makun A Trip, Merry Men: ₦7,180,609,915 (₦7 Billion+) 2 Funke Akindele: Funke Akindele Omo Ghetto,Jenifa: ₦5,205,119,676 (₦5 Billion+) 3 Mosunmola Abudu: Mosunmola Abudu The Wedding Party, Chief Daddy: ₦4,127,571,764 (₦4 Billion+) 4 Omoni Oboli ...
Akinwunmi Isola (1939-2018), Nigerian playwright, novelist, actor, dramatist, culture activist and scholar; Bakare Gbadamosi (b. 1930), Yoruba poet, anthropologist and short story writer from Nigeria; Daniel O. Fagunwa (1903-1963), Nigerian Yoruba author who pioneered the Yoruba language novel; Duro Ladipo (1926-1978), Yoruba dramatist; Isaac ...
[a] However, as scholars have outlined, the few cultural similarities between the Creole and Oku people are because there are some Yoruba cultural retentions from the christianized Yoruba Liberated Africans (who are one ethnic group among the many diverse ethnic ancestors of the Creoles) found among the Creoles and because the cultural ...
Adire(tie and dye) is the name given to indigo dyed cloth produced by Yoruba women of south western Nigeria using a variety of resist dye techniques. Adire translates as tie and dye, and the earliest cloths were probably simple tied designs on locally-woven hand-spun cotton cloth much like those still produced in Mali.
Elesin Oba, The King's Horseman is a 2022 Yoruba-language Nigerian historical drama film directed by Biyi Bandele and distributed by Netflix, based on Wole Soyinka's Death and the King's Horseman, a stage play he wrote while in Cambridge, where he was a fellow student at Churchill College during his political exile from Nigeria, [1] and it is based on a real incident that took place in ...
The word Nagos refers to all Brazilian Yoruba people, their African descendants, Yoruba myth, ritual, and cosmological patterns. Nagos derives from the word anago, a term Fon-speaking people used to describe Yoruba-speaking people from the kingdom of Ketu, [1] Toward the end of the slave trade in the 1880s [when?], the Nagos stood out as the African group most often shipped to Brazil.