When did slavery end in Badagry?

1886
Over the course of three centuries, more than 500,000 Africans were sold into slavery through Badagry’s coast. From the 16th Century till its abolition in 1886, the coastal town of Badagry, now a part of Lagos State, was the final point of departure for indigenes who were sold into slavery.

What is Badagry in Nigeria known for?

Badagry, also spelled Badagri, town and lagoon port in Lagos state, southwestern Nigeria. Coconut plantations were first established in the vicinity in the 1880s, and modern Badagry exports coconuts, copra, coir (coconut husk fibre), fish, vegetables, and cassava to Lagos (34 miles [55 km] east). …

Is Badagry a Yoruba town?

As of the preliminary 2006 census results, the municipality had a population of 241,093. Serving as a lagoon and an Atlantic port, Badagry emerged as a commercial center on the West African coast between 1736 and 1851….Badagry.

Badagry Àgbádárìgì
Coordinates: 6°25′N 2°53′E
CountryNigeria
StateLagos State
LGABadagry

How did slavery start in Nigeria?

Causes for Human Trafficking There is no exact date for when human trafficking in Nigeria began but it began to rise in Nigeria in the early 1990s with the increase in drug trafficking and the Advanced Fee Fraud (419).

What tribe is Badagry?

The Ogu people are found in Badagry and in the Yewa and Ipokia region of Ogun State. They are also located in some parts of the Republic of Benin.

Is Aworis a Yoruba?

The Awori is a tribe of the Yoruba people speaking a distinct dialect of the Yoruba language.

Where did Yoruba slaves go?

With the onset of the Atlantic slave trade, Yoruba people from Nigeria and Benin were forcibly transported to America as slaves. Their religion expanded across many borders — to Trinidad, Cuba, Saint Lucia, Benin, Togo, Brazil, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, to name a few.

Where do Egun people come from?

The Ogu people, sometimes called Egun people, are an ethnic group located majorly in Lagos and Ogun State in the South-Western part of Nigeria. The Ogu people have varieties of dialects including Thevi, Xwela, Seto and Toli and they also account for about 15% of the indigenous population of Lagos State.

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