Jump to content

History of Lagos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aerial view of Lagos in 1929

Lagos is the largest city of the West-African country of Nigeria, and its former capital; it is the largest city in Africa in terms of population with about 15.3 million people.[1] It is also the 4th largest economy in Africa.[2]

Historical names

[edit]

Lagos means "lakes" in Portuguese, the language of the first Europeans to arrive at the land already inhabited by the Edo people of the great Benin Kingdom. The area which was under the administration of the Benin Kingdom was initially known as "Eko".[3][4] The Portuguese would refer to it as "Onim" and later "Lagos".[4]

To differentiate the modern settlement from the older kingdom in the area, the name "Onim" has been applied to the latter by some historians such as Toby Green.[5]

Beginnings

[edit]

Lagos was originally inhabited by the Edo people subgroup of the Kingdom of Benin since time immemorial.[6][7][8][9] The Awori moved to an island now called Iddo and then to the larger Lagos Island.[10] Their ruler Olofin divided the island among his ten sons.[11] One of them, Aromire, planted pepper on the nearby island of Lagos. The palace of the Oba (king) of the Yoruba, Iga Idunganran, which was later built on this site, is therefore literally translated as "pepper farm palace".[12]

During a dispute between Olofin and a wealthy woman named Aina, the Oba of Benin tried to mediate in these affairs of Iddo Island. The Oba sent envoys to comply with Aina's request to investigate the dispute. The men, who arrived in a canoe, believed the fishing paraphernalia on the shore to be signs of readiness for war from a distance. When they returned to the Oba, they told him of their findings and he sent them back to the battle with military support, accepting a challenge. Aseru, a war chief who was part of these reinforcements, stayed behind on the island of Iddo after the defeat and capture of Olofin. He went on to war against other neighbouring towns and got as far as Iseri, where he eventually died. A certain Asipa then brought his body back to Benin. For his deed, the Oba rewarded him by appointing him ruler of Iddo Island. Asipa was also given the royal drum (Gbedu), which is beaten by the Obas of Lagos to this day. His son Ado became the first king of Lagos and his lineage continues the line of the Obas of Lagos to this day.[13]

Arrival of Europeans

[edit]
Map of West Africa by Herman Moll, 1727

In 1472, Portuguese explorers arrived, and began to trade,[4] eventually followed by other Europeans.[14] Lagos (Portuguese for "lakes") was a name given to the settlement by the Portuguese. Throughout history, it was home to a number of warring ethnic Yoruba groups who had settled in the area. Following its early settlement by the Awori nobility, the state first came to the attention of the Portuguese in the 15th century.[15]

Portuguese explorer Rui de Sequeira visited the area in 1472, naming the area around the city Lago de Curamo, which means Lake of Curamo.[16] It's also probable that the city was named after the homonymous coastal town of Lagos, Portugal, in the Algarve region, where sailors and settlers would have departed.[17][18][19][20]

The area fell under the domain of Benin in the 16th century.[4] By 1600, it served as a frontier town, and Benin limited its local presence to soldiers led by four military commanders. This military presence as well as the exchange with European traders resulted in economic growth, as locals would travel along the coast and from further inland to Lagos Island for trade;[14] at this point, clothes were the main item sold at and exported from the island as well as Benin as a whole.[21]

In the 17th century, the trade with the Portuguese also began to increase, as Onim became a center of the Atlantic slave trade. The local obas (kings) developed good relations with the Portuguese.[4]

By the early 19th century, it was a small kingdom and a tributary to the Oyo Empire.[22] Like many West African states, Onim developed strong diplomatic as well as economic links to South America. It sent embassies to the Portuguese colony of Brazil,[23] and became one of the first countries to recognize the independence of Brazil in 1823.[22] Meanwhile, the Oyo Empire had begun to collapse. This allowed Lagos to assume the leading economic position regionally, becoming the most important market in the Yoruba territories as well as growing substantially.[24]

Newspaper illustration from 1852, showing the reduction of Lagos by British forces.

British influence

[edit]

In Britain's early 19th-century fight against the transatlantic slave trade, its West Africa Squadron or Preventative Squadron as it was also known, continued to pursue Portuguese, American, French, and Cuban slave ships and to impose anti-slavery treaties with West African coastal chiefs with so much doggedness that they created a strong presence along the West African coast from Sierra Leone all the way to the Niger Delta (today's Nigeria) and as far south as Congo.[25]

From the crowning of Ado as its Oba, Lagos (then called Eko) had served as a major center for slave-trade, from which then Oba of Benin and all of his successors for over two centuries supported — until 1841, when Oba Akitoye ascended to the throne of Lagos and attempted to ban slave trading. Local merchants strongly opposed the intended move, and deposed and exiled the king, and installed Akitoye's brother Kosoko as Oba.[3] Exiled to Europe, Akitoye met with British authorities, who had banned slave trading in 1807, and who therefore decided to support the deposed Oba to regain his throne.

In 1849, Britain appointed John Beecroft Consul of the Bights of Benin and Biafra, a position he held (along with his governorship of Fernando Po) until his death in 1854.[26] John Duncan was appointed Vice Consul and was located at Whydah.[27] At the time of Beecroft's appointment, the Kingdom of Lagos (under Oba Kosoko) was in the western part of the Consulate of the Bights of Benin and Biafra and was a key slave trading port.[28]

In 1851 and with pressure from liberated slaves who now wielded political and business influence, Britain intervened in Lagos in what is now known as the Bombardment of Lagos or Capture of Lagos[29][30] resulting in the installation of Oba Akitoye and the ouster of Oba Kosoko. Oba Akitoye then signed the Treaty between Great Britain and Lagos abolishing slavery. The signing of the 1852 treaty ushered in the Consular Period in Lagos's history wherein Britain provided military protection for Lagos.[31][4][32]

The Royal Navy originally used the port of the Spanish island of Fernando Po (now Bioko, Equatorial Guinea) off Nigeria as an extraterritorial base of operations. In 1855, Spain claimed this port for itself. The Royal Navy therefore had to find another naval base.[33] Lagos was the most attractive option.

Colonial Lagos

[edit]
Lagos Marina 1892
Street in Lagos, c. 1910
Lagos saw protest regarding house and land tax in 1895

Following threats from Kosoko and the French who were positioned at Whydah, a decision was made by Lord Palmerston (British Prime Minister) who noted in 1861, "the expediency of losing no time in assuming the formal Protectorate of Lagos".[34] William McCoskry, the Acting Consul in Lagos with Commander Bedingfield convened a meeting with Oba Dosunmu on 30 July 1861 aboard HMS Prometheus where Britain's intent was explained and a response to the terms were required by August 1861. Dosunmu resisted the terms of the treaty but under the threat to unleash a bombardment on Lagos by Commander Bedingfield, Dosunmu relented and signed the Lagos Treaty of Cession on 6 August 1861.[35][36][37]

Lagos as colony

[edit]
Lagos Marina (around 1900)
Aerial view of Lagos in 1929

Lagos was declared a colony on 5 March 1862 but governed by the Gold Coast, modern day Ghana. In 1886, Lagos became a separate colony from the Gold Coast under Governor Cornelius Alfred Moloney.[38] Navy port Lagos became an essential trading centre as traders realised they could count on the protection of the Royal Navy to protect them from pirates, for example.[33]

Lagos quickly became a destination for immigration. Along with migrants from all over Nigeria and other West African nations were the returnee ex-slaves known as Creoles, who came from Freetown, Sierra Leone, Brazil, and the West Indies to Lagos. The Creoles contributed to Lagos's modernization and their knowledge of Portuguese architecture can still be seen from the architecture on Lagos Island. Since the 19th century, Lagos gradually transformed into a melting pot of Africans and Europeans.[39][40][6][41]

In 1869, the Cathedral Church of Christ was established in Lagos. Five years earlier, Samuel Ajayi Crowther had become the first African bishop of the Anglican Church.

Lagos as capital

[edit]

The central importance of Lagos for Nigeria can be traced back to General Lugard, who advanced far north with British troops after 1900 and, as governor, made Lagos the capital of the south and later of the entire country.

In 1906, Lagos was merged with the Protectorate of Southern Nigeria and became its capital.[42] In Lekki, near Lagos, the Nigerian Bitumen Corporation under businessman John Simon Bergheim found oil during test drilling in 1908.[43]

On January 1, 1914, Northern Nigeria and Southern Nigeria were united into a single state, the "Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria"; Lagos became the capital.[44] However, the British ruled northern and southern Nigeria in different ways, which continues to have an impact to the present day. In the north, "indirect rule" was practised, which left the traditional, partly centuries-old ruling structures largely intact. In the south, like Lagos, the British ruled directly and tried to impart European achievements to the local inhabitants. This includes the "Nigerian Council" of the Clifford Constitution of 1922, a kind of parliament with 46 representatives among which four locals, including three from Lagos. Northern Nigerians were not represented.[45]

Modernisation

[edit]

The Lagos Government Railway began construction of a Cape Gauge railway line from Lagos to Ibadan in 1896, which was opened on 4 March 1901. The line was later extended to Nguru via Oshogbo, Ilorin, Kaduna, Zaria and Kano, making a total length of about 1360 km.[46] From 1902, the LGR also operated the Lagos steam tramway.[47]

Telegraph cables connecting Lagos to London had been established by 1886.[48][49][50]

Electrification was implemented in Lagos on 19 September 1898, 17 years after its introduction in England. The total generation at that time was 60 kilowatts (kW). The power line supplied the Lagos marina from the Government House to the north side of the island.[51]

In 1901, the first bridge was built between Lagos Island and the mainland, the Carter Bridge, named after the governor from 1891 to 1898.[52]

In 1913, the Lagos Port was commissioned.[53]

Epidemic

[edit]

The outbreak of bubonic plague was a milestone in the history of Lagos. The epidemic, which began in 1924 and lasted until 1931, was the cause of a total of 1,947 cases and 1,813 deaths, corresponding to a mortality rate of 94.02%.[54]

Mailboat connection, "Boat Express"

[edit]
Mail steamer MS Apapa in route service between Liverpool and Lagos/Calabar/Fernando Po (picture from 1950)

Since 1 February 1914, a regular mailboat service ran between Lagos and Great Britain (Liverpool). The first mail steamer of this line was the S/S Akoko.[53] The contact of the colony of Nigeria with Great Britain was mainly maintained by such mail ships before the beginning of air transport (1945). Once a month, a mail steamer of the Elder Dempster Lines from Liverpool docked in the capital Lagos/Apapa and in Calabar/Port Harcourt. These were alternately the MS Apapa and her sister ship, the MS Accra. In addition to letters and parcels, they also carried cargo and about 100 passengers and also stopped in Gambia, Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Gold Coast (Ghana).[55] This was how colonial officials, colonial army officers, business travellers and globetrotters reached the West African colonies of the Commonwealth or home. Travellers from mail steamers could board the "Boat Express" waiting next to the steamer and reach Kano in far northern Nigeria within 43 hours in sleeping and dining cars. Such passengers were predominantly the officers of the colonial army in the first class compartment.[56] In 1935, the railway network in colonial Nigeria reached its maximum expansion. It comprised 3,056 km of track at that time. In 1916, a 550 m railway bridge over the Niger River and in 1932 (or 1934) a bridge over the Benue River had connected the three parts of the rail network.[56] 179 mainline and 54 shunting locomotives were in use. The maintenance and repair workshop in Ebute Metta employed 1,500 locals.[56] High school graduates could be trained by the railway company as locomotive drivers or technicians in six-year courses - during which they worked in the workshop mentioned above and in the construction department, for example. During this training, the apprentices were paid and received an annual salary of £480 (about £48,000 in today's money, significantly more than the average Nigerian income today) upon completion of the training.[56] For the trainees in Lagos, the railway company had specially provided a discarded but still functioning steam locomotive, which they could use to learn how it worked.[56]

Second World War

[edit]

During the Second World War, in 1942, Lagos played a role in "Operation Postmaster". In an adventurous way, British special agents on the nearby but Spanish and thus neutral island of Bioko captured Italian and German supply ships for U-boats in the South Atlantic and brought them to the home port of Lagos.[57] The incident - in which no shot was fired - almost led to Franco's Spain entering the war alongside the Third Reich and fascist Italy.

In June 1945, railway workers in Lagos initiated a nationwide general strike. It was the first of its kind in the nation, growing to comprise 200,000 workers and seventeen labor unions.[58][59] In 1946, the commission increased wages of workers.[60] The strike served as a focal point for criticism of British rule of Nigeria.[61] It has been cited as a "turning point" in Nigerian labor relations.[59] An article on the strike in the Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria declared its main legacy to be "the need for mutual sobriety." Nigeria did not have another general strike for nineteen years.[60]

Independence

[edit]
Map of Lagos' initial city boundaries, showing its contemporary districts. This definition is rarely used in the present day; the expanded metropolitan area is now a more accepted definition of Lagos.

Lagos maintained its status as capital when Nigeria obtained its independence from Britain in 1960. Lagos experienced rapid growth throughout the 1960s and 1970s as a result of Nigeria's economic boom.[62] This continued through the 1980s and 1990s up to the present date.[citation needed]

Split into 13 LGA's

[edit]
Modernist fountain of Tinubu Square, in an image from 1962

Before 27 May 1967, Lagos had been administered directly by the Federal Government as a Federal Territory through the Federal Ministry of Lagos Affairs, while the Lagos City Council (LCC) governed the city.[63] Lagos, along with the towns from the then Western region (Ikeja, Agege, Mushin, Ikorodu, Epe and Badagry), were eventually merged to create Lagos State.[63] Lagos city was split into the present day seven Local Government Areas (LGAs), while the other towns now make up 13 LGAs in the state. Lagos played the dual role of being the State and Federal Capital until 1976 when the state capital was moved to Ikeja. Lagos was adversely affected during Nigeria's military rule.[64]

Music Industry, McCartney's "Band on the Run"

[edit]

Lagos has been a centre of the music industry since the seventies. International stars like Beyoncé also record their hits in Lagos.

The pioneer in this respect was Paul McCartney, who recorded the album "Band on the Run" with his then band Wings at the EMI studio on 7 Wharf Road in Apapa, Lagos, from August to October 1973. Among other things, the ex-Beatle hoped for inspiration from the exotic location. "Band on the Run" is still (2023) McCartney's most successful album, which is also praised by critics.[65]

The cement armada

[edit]

One of the strangest chapters in the history of Lagos is that of the "cement armada". Due to corruption and incompetence of the central government under General Gowon, hundreds of ships with ordered cement deliveries - half of the world supply - were lying outside the port in 1974, causing chaotic scenes.[66][67][68]

Volkswagen plant in Lagos

[edit]

Volkswagen of Nigeria began assembling the VW 1300 in Lagos on 21 March 1975. In 1976, it produced over 16,000 vehicles, including the Passat and the Audi 100. In 1982, the Shagari government reacted to Nigeria's lack of foreign currency by imposing import restrictions, which hampered production in Lagos in the 1980s.[69]

In March 1990, the Volkswagen Group decided to withdraw from the Nigeria business. Negotiations on a sale to a Nigerian group of companies, which began in 1992, failed to reach a conclusion because of internal political power struggles. In 1994, Volkswagen withdrew the last German employees. Since then, production has been at a standstill.[70] The district where the production plant was located is still called "Volkswagen".

FESTAC 77

[edit]
Regatta on the occasion of FESTAC 77 in Lagos 1977

From January to February 1977, the Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC) took place in Lagos (and in Kaduna). FESTAC 77 is believed to be the largest cultural event held in Africa in the 20th century. It included events and exhibitions on African art, film, music, literature, dance and religion. The site on the Badagry Expressway in the west of the city is still called "Festac town" today.

Visit of Jimmy Carter

[edit]

From 31 March to 3 April 1977, the then US President Jimmy Carter visited Lagos. To date, it is the only visit by a US president to the city (as of 2023).[71]

Not Nigeria’s capital anymore

[edit]

In 1991, Ibrahim Babangida, the Military President and other government functions moved to the newly built capital Abuja. This was as a result of intelligence reports on the safety of his life and what was later to be termed his hidden agenda, which was the plan to turn himself into a civilian president. He finished what was started by the Murtala/Obasanjo regime. The change resulted in Lagos losing some prestige and economic leverage. However, Lagos remains the financial center of the country, and also grew to become the most populous conurbation in the country.[63]

New millennium

[edit]

The rise of Nollywood

[edit]

After 2000, the centre of the Nigerian film industry, commonly referred to as Nollywood, developed in the Surulere district. Lagos itself has since been the location and setting for many films. The 2016 film "Captain America: Civil War" contains a scene set in Lagos.[72] The Spanish police series "La unidad" (2020 - 2023), the British drama "The Last Tree" (2019) and the US-Spanish drama "The Way, Chapter 2" with Martin Sheen (2023 still in development) also use Lagos as a filming location. The film "93 days" (2016) with Danny Glover is a somewhat melodramatic but fact-based account of the 2014 Ebola outbreak in Lagos and was filmed on original locations. Since the success of the Nigerian thriller "The Figurine", Nigerian film has increasingly focused on high-quality productions that are also commercially successful. This in turn has led to ever new records in box office takings in Nigeria (2009: "The Figurine", 2013: "Half of a Yellow Sun", 2016: "The Wedding Party").[73][74]

Emergency situations

[edit]

On 27 January 2002, explosions occurred at a barracks site in the city. According to military sources, the cause was the spread of a fire from a street market. It led to about 30 explosions in an ammunition depot, which affected adjacent buildings. People fled in panic.[75] The disaster emanating from the ammunition depot cost at least a thousand lives. Many families were left homeless as their homes were destroyed.[76] Impacts occurred within a seven-kilometre radius of the explosion site. Many children drowned in a sewer as they fled.[77]

In 2012, 163 people were killed when a McDonnell Douglas MD-83 crashed into a local furniture works and printing press building.[78]

On 1 November 2021, a 21-storey high-rise building under construction in the affluent Ikoyi district collapsed (full article here). 44 people were killed,[79] including the owner and the construction manager who were investigating problems in the structure on site at the time of the collapse. According to witnesses, a pillar on the first floor showed cracks. The owner, Femi Osibona, demanded that the contractor replaced this pillar with a new, intact one and offered the construction workers breakfast for the extra work.[80] Shortly afterwards, the building had collapsed. The building permit had only allowed 15 storeys and the original contractor had withdrawn from the project a year earlier because of the deliberate deviations from the building plan. For example, after two identical buildings were built in close proximity, a different concrete mix had been used.[81] - The construction disaster is the largest of its kind in Lagos (as of 2023); multi-storey buildings often collapse in the metropolis of Lagos, but the number of storeys and fatalities are quite a bit lower than in the above case.

Narrow escape: Ebola in Lagos

[edit]

On 20 July 2014, a traveller from Liberia infected with Ebola arrived at the airport in Lagos and was diagnosed after being admitted to a private hospital. This patient may have infected 72 people at the airport and hospital. The patient died on 25 July; as of 24 September, there were 19 laboratory-confirmed Ebola cases and one probable case in two states, with 894 contacts identified and followed up as part of the response. No new cases had emerged since 31 August, suggesting that the Ebola outbreak in Nigeria may be contained. The rapidly established Emergency Operations Centre, which used an Incident Management System (IMS) to coordinate response and consolidate decision-making, was instrumental in containing the outbreak in Nigeria at an early stage and avoiding a disaster scenario.[82]

Tech Hub in Yaba, Zuckerberg visit

[edit]

On 30 August 2016, Mark Zuckerberg visited tech startups in the Yaba district, in particular CcHUB and IT instructor Andela. During his surprise visit, Zuckerberg spoke to children who are learning programming languages during their summer holidays, among other things.[83] In October 2017, Facebook established the first African SME Council in Nigeria to support small and medium-sized enterprises.[84]

Infrastructure measures

[edit]

On 10 June 2021, Lagos received a standard gauge railway link with Nigeria's third largest city, Ibadan, including a modern central station, Mobolaji Johnson.[85] While other sub-Saharan African countries continue to use or decommission railway networks from the colonial era, Nigeria is expanding its rail network with Chinese assistance. In 2022, the Nigerian Railway Corporation reported profitable operation of the Lagos-Ibadan line despite restrictions due to Covid epidemic.[86]

In January 2023, the new deep-sea port of Lekki was opened to relieve traffic at the more centrally located but congested and shallower ports of Apapa and Tin Can Island.[87]

On 4 September 2023, the first section, the blue line, of the Lagos suburban railway went into operation.[88]

On 14 February 2024, Governor Sanwo-Olu announced that the Red Line of the Lagos suburban railway between Agbado and Oyingbo would be inaugurated on 29 February 2024 in the presence of Nigerian President Tinubu.[89]

Construction of a multi-purpose arena

[edit]

On 24 February 2024, the foundation stone was laid on Victoria Island for a multi-purpose arena that will seat 12,000 and provide a suitable stage for the booming entertainment industry.[90] Live Nation, Oak View Group LLC, Persianas Group and the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) formed a consortium to build the arena, which is expected to be completed in December 2025. The arena will host a range of activities from performances by international and Nigerian music icons to family entertainment, basketball matches, UFC fights, boxing matches, WWE shows and much more. The arena is set to become Africa's leading venue for live entertainment. It will host 200 events a year.[91]

Obas (Kings) of Onim / Lagos

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Lagos, Nigeria Metro Area Population 1950-2022". www.macrotrends.net. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  2. ^ Oluwole, Victor (2022-04-14). "Top 10 wealthiest cities in Africa". Business Insider Africa. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  3. ^ a b "LAGOS". www.hubert-herald.nl.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Lagos". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  5. ^ Green 2020, pp. 309, 375.
  6. ^ a b Hutchison, Ray (2009). Encyclopedia of Urban Studies. SAGE. p. 427. ISBN 978-1-412-9143-21.
  7. ^ Peil, Margaret (1991). Lagos: the city is the people (World cities series). G.K. Hall. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-816-1729-93.
  8. ^ Appiah, Anthony; Gates, Henry Louis (2010). Encyclopedia of Africa, Volume 1. Oxford University Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-195-3377-09.
  9. ^ "Awori People: A brief history and belief of the original indigenes of Lagos". Pulse Nigeria. 2022-02-09. Archived from the original on 6 March 2022. Retrieved 2022-03-12.
  10. ^ "Lagos | City, Population, & History | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Archived from the original on 5 June 2019. Retrieved 2022-06-12.
  11. ^ Guardian, The (2017-05-29). "Lagos History Lecture and no man's land exponents". The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News. Retrieved 2023-09-17.
  12. ^ Williams, Lizzie (2008). Nigeria: The Bradt Travel Guide. Bradt Travel Guides. ISBN 978-1841621241.
  13. ^ "History of Isale Eko – Isale Eko". Retrieved 2023-09-17.
  14. ^ a b Green 2020, p. 163.
  15. ^ "The Origin of Eko (Lagos)". Edo Nation. Archived from the original on 2 October 2009. Retrieved 2 June 2010.
  16. ^ "History Of Lagos". One Lagos Fiesta. 2016-07-10. Archived from the original on 7 April 2022. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  17. ^ "Lagos, Nigeria (Ca. 1350- )". 6 July 2010. Archived from the original on 6 May 2023. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  18. ^ "Lagos · Praia da Luz Holidays". Archived from the original on 21 May 2023. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  19. ^ "Why the name: Lagos?". 14 January 2015. Archived from the original on 21 May 2023. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  20. ^ "LAGOS". Archived from the original on 11 September 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  21. ^ Green 2020, pp. 163, 181.
  22. ^ a b Green 2020, p. 309.
  23. ^ Green 2020, p. 375.
  24. ^ Green 2020, p. 473.
  25. ^ Smith, Robert (January 1979). The Lagos Consulate 1851-1861. Macmillan. p. 2. ISBN 9780520037465.
  26. ^ Howard Temperley, "Beecroft, John (1790–1854)", rev. Elizabeth Baigent, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  27. ^ Gibson, J.W. "Duncan, John (1805-1849)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 16. pp. 166–167.
  28. ^ A. Adu Boahen (1985). Africa Under Colonial Domination 1880-1935 (General history of Africa). Vol. 7. Unesco. International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa. p. 134. ISBN 978-9-231-0171-31.
  29. ^ A. Adu Boahen (1985). Africa Under Colonial Domination 1880-1935 (General history of Africa). Vol. 7. Unesco. International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa. p. 134. ISBN 978-9-231-0171-31.
  30. ^ Sir William M.N. Geary (2013). Nigeria Under British Rule (1927). Routledge. pp. 24–28. ISBN 978-1-136-9629-43.
  31. ^ Austen, R. (2009-04-01). "Slavery and the Birth of an African City: Lagos, 1760-1900, by Kristin Mann". African Affairs. 108 (431): 328–329. doi:10.1093/afraf/adp004. ISSN 0001-9909.
  32. ^ "The Reduction of Lagos:Introduction". 25 March 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  33. ^ a b "Lagos Colony". www.britishempire.co.uk. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  34. ^ Smith, Robert (January 1979). The Lagos Consulate 1851-1861. Macmillan. p. 121. ISBN 9780520037465.
  35. ^ Sir William M.N. Geary (2013). Nigeria Under British Rule (1927). Routledge. pp. 24–28. ISBN 978-1-136-9629-43.
  36. ^ Elebute, Adeyemo (2013). The Life of James Pinson Labulo Davies: A Colossus of Victorian Lagos. Kachifo Limited/Prestige. pp. 143–145. ISBN 9789785205763.
  37. ^ Anderson, David; Rathbone, Richard (2000). Africa's Urban Past. James Currey Publishers, 2000. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-852-5576-17.
  38. ^ L. Bigon (2009). A History of Urban Planning in Two West African Colonial Capitals: Residential Segregation in British Lagos and French Dakar (1850-1930). Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press.
  39. ^ Agawu, Kofi (2014). "19th century Lagos". Representing African Music: Postcolonial Notes, Queries, Positions. Routledge. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-317-7940-66.
  40. ^ J. F. Ade Ajayi; Unesco. International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa (1998). Africa in the Nineteenth Century Until the 1880s. Vol. 6. University of California Press. p. 286. ISBN 978-0-520-0670-11.
  41. ^ "1914 - 2014 Colonial Footprints: Lagos, Then and Now". The Centenary Project (Google Arts and Culture). March 2014. Retrieved 14 May 2016.
  42. ^ "WHKMLA : History of Southern Nigeria, 1899-1914". www.zum.de. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  43. ^ Steyn, Phia (2009). Oil exploration in colonial Nigeria in The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 37/2. Routledge. pp. 249–274. doi:10.1080/03086530903010376. hdl:1893/2735. ISSN 0308-6534. S2CID 159545684.
  44. ^ "Nigeria - Colonial History, Economy, People | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  45. ^ Wheare, Joan (1950). The Nigerian Legislative Council. London: Faber & Faber. p. 265. OCLC 504865.
  46. ^ "Nigeria & Sierra Leone - Railway Wonders of the World". railwaywondersoftheworld.com. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  47. ^ Miller, Nevil (1966). "Lagos steam tramway and its unique locomotives". The Railway Magazine. 115: 103–106. ISSN 0033-8923.
  48. ^ Williams, Lizzie (2008). Nigeria: The Bradt Travel Guide. Bradt Travel Guides. p. 111. ISBN 978-1-841-6223-92.
  49. ^ Ulrich, Hans F.; Lehrmann, Ernst P. (2008). Telecommunications Research Trends. Nova Publishers. p. 144. ISBN 978-1-604-5615-86.
  50. ^ Noam, Eli M. (1999). Telecommunications in Africa (Global communications series). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-195-3562-74.
  51. ^ Olukoju, Ayodeji (2003). Infrastructure Development and Urban Facilities in Lagos, 1861-2000, "Chapter two. Electricity supply in Lagos, 1898-2000". Institut français de recherche en Afrique. pp. 22–45. ISBN 979-1-09231222-5.
  52. ^ Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, Rosamund (2011). Governance and Bureaucracy: Leadership in Nigeria's Public Service. VDM Verlag Dr. Müller. ISBN 978-3-639-36307-4.
  53. ^ a b Segun, Segun (2008). "Historical Background" (PDF). Nairametrics. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  54. ^ Faleye, Olukayode A. (2019). Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Geschichte der Medizin und der Naturwissenschaften (ed.). "Beyond "White Medicine": Bubonic Plague and Health Interventions in Colonial Lagos". Gesnerus. 76 (1). Basel: Schwabe: 90–110. ISSN 0016-9161.
  55. ^ Davies, Peter N. (2000). The Trade Makers: Elder Dempster in West Africa, 1852-1972, 1973-1989 (2nd ed.). Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, UK. pp. 19–36. ISBN 978-0-9681288-9-3.
  56. ^ a b c d e "Nigeria & Sierra Leone - Railway Wonders of the World". railwaywondersoftheworld.com. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  57. ^ Churchill's Greatest Gamble - How Britain Went All or Nothing on Their SOE Experiment, retrieved 2023-07-15
  58. ^ "Can Nigeria repeat the 1945 general strike?". The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News. 2018-02-12. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
  59. ^ a b Lindsay, Lisa A. (1999). "Domesticity and Difference: Male Breadwinners, Working Women, and Colonial Citizenship in the 1945 Nigerian General Strike". The American Historical Review. 104 (3): 783–812. doi:10.2307/2650988. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 2650988. PMID 19291892.
  60. ^ a b Oyemakinde, Wale (1975). "The Nigerian General Strike of 1945". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 7 (4): 693–710. ISSN 0018-2540. JSTOR 41971222.
  61. ^ Coates, Oliver (2018-09-02). "'His telegrams appear to be hysterical, but he is very astute': Azikiwe's spectacular self and the 1945 General Strike in Nigeria". Journal of African Cultural Studies. 30 (3): 227–242. doi:10.1080/13696815.2017.1286969. ISSN 1369-6815. S2CID 152030129.
  62. ^ "2008 All Africa Media Research Conference" (PPT). Pan African Media Research Organisation. p. 8. Retrieved 4 April 2012. [permanent dead link]
  63. ^ a b c "Lagos State Information". National Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original on 9 November 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  64. ^ Draper, Robert; Hammond, Robin (1 January 2015). "Lagos Nigeria: Africa's First city". National Geographic. Archived from the original on December 23, 2014. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  65. ^ "Band On The Run: 1973 - McCartney Saved Career With Album Made Under Duress". International Business Times. 2013-07-16. Retrieved 2023-09-15.
  66. ^ Naija, JoJo (2021-10-28). "'Cement Armada' Affair: How The Gowon Regime Flooded Lagos Port With Cements". Jojo Naija. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  67. ^ "Legacies of the Cement Armada". The Historical Association. 2021-08-20. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  68. ^ Marwah, Hanaan (2020-05-18). "Untangling government, market, and investment failure during the Nigerian oil boom: the Cement Armada scandal 1974–1980". Business History. 62 (4): 566–587. doi:10.1080/00076791.2018.1458839. ISSN 0007-6791. S2CID 158188922.
  69. ^ "1973 bis 1981". Volkswagen Group (in German). 2023-06-16. Retrieved 2023-09-15.
  70. ^ "1982 bis 1991". Volkswagen Group (in German). 2023-06-16. Retrieved 2023-09-15.
  71. ^ "Nigeria - Travels of the President - Travels - Department History - Office of the Historian". history.state.gov. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  72. ^ Deyveed (2016-08-06). "Nigerian Architecture Worth Seeing: The Civic Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos". ThaDopestArchitect. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  73. ^ Ademola, Bisi (2023-06-20). "Nollywood: Blockbusters To Streaming Success | African Folder". Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  74. ^ Matt (2023-06-12). "7 Best Nigerian Movies: A Celebration of Nollywood Cinema • Filmmaking Lifestyle". Filmmaking Lifestyle. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  75. ^ AG, VADIAN NET. "Nach Explosionen herrscht in Lagos das Chaos". www.news.ch (in German). Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  76. ^ "Stammesfehde: Mindestens 100 Tote bei Unruhen in Nigeria". FAZ.NET (in German). 2002-02-05. ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  77. ^ JOHNSON, DOMINIC (2002-02-05). "In Lagos bleibt die Stimmung explosiv". Die Tageszeitung: taz (in German). p. 10. ISSN 0931-9085. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  78. ^ "Crash of a McDonnell Douglas MD-83 in Lagos: 159 killed | Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives". www.baaa-acro.com. Retrieved 2023-07-14.
  79. ^ Ikoyi Building Collapse: 44 Bodies Recovered, 15 Rescued From 21-Storey Debris, retrieved 2023-09-13
  80. ^ "How Owner Of Collapsed 21-Storey Ikoyi Building, Engineers Caused Disaster— Survivor | Sahara Reporters". saharareporters.com. Retrieved 2023-09-13.
  81. ^ "ShieldSquare Captcha". doi:10.1088/1742-6596/1378/4/042022/pdf. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  82. ^ Shuaib, Faisal; Gunnala, Rajni; Musa, Emmanuel O.; Mahoney, Frank J.; Oguntimehin, Olukayode; Nguku, Patrick M.; Nyanti, Sara Beysolow; Knight, Nancy; Gwarzo, Nasir Sani; Idigbe, Oni; Nasidi, Abdulsalam; Vertefeuille, John F.; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2014-10-03). "Ebola virus disease outbreak - Nigeria, July-September 2014". MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 63 (39): 867–872. ISSN 1545-861X. PMC 4584877. PMID 25275332.
  83. ^ Busari, Stephanie (2016-08-31). "Mark Zuckerberg's visit gives Nigerian startups much-needed boost". CNN. Retrieved 2023-09-15.
  84. ^ "2 years after Mark Zuckerberg came to Nigeria ..." 2018-08-30. Retrieved 2023-09-15.
  85. ^ Adewole, Segun (2021-06-10). "Buhari inaugurates Lagos-Ibadan Railway project". Punch Newspapers. Retrieved 2023-09-17.
  86. ^ Nigeria, News Agency of (2023-06-14). "Rail transport revenue dropped to N768 million in Q1 2023: NBS". Peoples Gazette. Retrieved 2023-09-17.
  87. ^ "History as Buhari Inaugurates $1.5bn Lekki Deep Sea Port, Witnesses First Cargo Ship Offloading - THISDAYLIVE". www.thisdaylive.com. Retrieved 2023-09-17.
  88. ^ "Metro rail service starts in Nigeria's Lagos, set to ease traffic". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2023-09-17.
  89. ^ Akoni, Olasunkanmi (2024-02-14). "Lagos: Tinubu to inaugurate Red Line Rail project Feb 29". Vanguard. Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  90. ^ Rial, Bradley (2024-02-26). "Live Nation, OVG back new 12,000-capacity arena in Lagos". The Stadium Business. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  91. ^ "Lagos to Unveil 12,000 Seat Entertainment Centre - THISDAYLIVE". www.thisdaylive.com. Retrieved 2024-03-06.

Works cited

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Victorian Lagos: Aspects of Nineteenth Century Lagos Life by Michael J. C. Echeruo. London: Macmillan 1977.