Uromi
Uromi is a town in northeastern Edo State, Nigeria, functioning as the headquarters of Esan North-East Local Government Area and the largest settlement in Esanland, the homeland of the Esan ethnic group.[1][2] The Esan people, speakers of the Esan language closely related to Edo/Bini, trace their origins to successive migrations from the Benin Kingdom, particularly during the reign of Oba Ewuare in the 15th century, driven by resistance to centralized autocracy.[3][4] With an estimated population of 85,084 across 10.7 square kilometers, Uromi supports a local economy dominated by agriculture, including crop processing, and bustling markets that serve as commercial hubs for surrounding communities.[5][6] The town is traditionally led by the Onojie (king) of Uromi, maintaining cultural practices such as festivals that preserve Esan heritage amid modern educational and religious institutions.[7]
History
Origins and Settlement Patterns
The origins of Uromi trace to multiple phases of human habitation and migration in the Esan region of present-day Edo State, Nigeria, with archaeological evidence indicating occupation as early as 3000 BC and settled communities by AD 770, pointing to pre-existing aboriginal populations engaged in agriculture amid fertile post-recession landscapes.[6] Traditional narratives emphasize migrations from the Benin Kingdom, beginning with fugitive groups between 900 and 1400 AD, including the foundational settlement by Egbele (also Ozorgbor), second son of Oakha, around 1395 AD, who fled Benin amid conflicts with Oba Egbeka and established Idumu-Oto-Egbele as the earliest known locale.[8][4] A pivotal settlement expansion occurred circa 1460 AD during Oba Ewuare's reign (c. 1440–1473), triggered by internal Benin strife, punitive exiles, and expansionist policies, which prompted organized outflows of nobles, princes, and warriors—led by figures such as three brothers—who integrated with or supplanted earlier inhabitants in Uromi (originally Uronmun or Urhonmhun).[8][4] This wave formalized social structures, culminating in the 1463 institution of a hereditary monarchy under Onojie Ichesan, whose descendants formed the ruling houses centered in Eguare, with kingmakers drawn from quarters like Idumije and Ebhoyi.[8] Settlement patterns reflect layered growth: initial dispersed agrarian and hunting communities absorbed successive Benin-linked arrivals, evolving into clustered wards including Okhiode, Obiruan, and Obiyuan, with Egbale (or Egbele) recognized as the oldest core area.[8] Linguistic analysis reveals approximately 20% of Uromi lexicon without Benin etymologies, underscoring underlying aboriginal cultural substrates rather than wholesale replacement.[6] Multidisciplinary scholarship challenges monolithic Benin-origin accounts, noting potential biases in colonial records (e.g., those by H.L.M. Butcher) that prioritized centralized narratives over local traditions, and posits hybrid genesis involving aboriginal resilience alongside migrant dominance, as evidenced by enduring non-Benin linguistic and archaeological markers.[6]Resistance to External Powers
The Uromi kingdom, situated in Esanland, encountered external threats from northern invaders such as the Nupe during the pre-colonial era, as Esan polities collectively mounted defenses against territorial encroachments from the 19th century onward. These conflicts involved series of battles where southern Esan communities, including Uromi, repelled Nupe forces seeking to expand southward, often leveraging local terrain and alliances to counter superior numbers.[9] The most documented and intense resistance occurred against British colonial expansion in 1900–1901. British forces invaded Uromi in 1900 under the pretext of establishing administrative control, facing immediate opposition from Onojie Ogbidi Okojie, the ruler from 1857 to 1944, who refused to submit to foreign authority. To dismantle the leadership, British authorities arrested and exiled Okojie to Calabar, aiming to fracture organized defiance.[10] Resistance persisted under Prince Okojie, with the full-scale British assault commencing on March 16, 1901, involving over 200 troops armed with cannons, shotguns, and other advanced weaponry. Uromi defenders employed guerrilla tactics, prolonging the conflict for more than 50 days and inflicting casualties despite their inferior arms, which consisted primarily of traditional weapons like spears and dane guns.[11] This defiance exemplified broader Esan resistance patterns, where decentralized communities offered prolonged guerrilla warfare even after initial village captures, compelling British concessions such as Okojie's eventual release. The campaign underscored Uromi's strategic use of local knowledge but ultimately led to colonial imposition, with effects on intra-Esan relations persisting post-conquest.[12][13]Colonial Encounters and Independence
The British conquest of Uromi occurred amid the broader subjugation of Esanland following the 1897 Benin Expedition, with direct military invasion launched on March 16, 1901, involving over 200 British troops equipped with cannons and shotguns against local forces armed primarily with bows, arrows, and dane guns.[11] The Onojie (king) Ogbidi Okojie (r. c. 1857–1944) led a prolonged resistance that lasted approximately 50 days, outlasting the Benin opposition by over a month and demonstrating the formidable organization of Esan warriors, who employed guerrilla tactics and local knowledge to inflict casualties despite technological disparities.[14][10] Ogbidi Okojie was captured through betrayal by local collaborators and exiled to Calabar around 1900–1901, where he encountered the deposed Oba Ovonramwen of Benin; his deposition facilitated the imposition of indirect rule via warrant chiefs and native courts, restructuring traditional authority to align with colonial administration.[10][13] Colonial governance in Uromi emphasized resource extraction, taxation, and infrastructure like roads for palm oil trade, while suppressing indigenous institutions; intergroup relations in Benin-Esan areas shifted due to forced labor and administrative boundaries that exacerbated ethnic tensions.[15] Resistance persisted sporadically, as Esan kingdoms collectively opposed British forces for over seven years in some accounts, reflecting broader patterns of African agency against imperial overreach rather than passive acceptance.[12] Uromi's path to independence intertwined with national movements, highlighted by Anthony Enahoro (1923–2010), a Uromi native and nationalist who, in 1953, moved the first motion for self-governance in Nigeria's House of Representatives, pressuring Britain toward decolonization despite initial deferral.[16] Nigeria achieved independence on October 1, 1960, dissolving colonial structures and restoring local autonomies, though Uromi retained its Onojie monarchy under the reinstated Ogbidi lineage post-exile; this transition preserved Esan cultural continuity while integrating into the federal system, without unique local upheavals documented beyond national frameworks.[17]Post-Colonial Developments
Following Nigeria's independence in 1960, Uromi, as part of Esanland, was integrated into the Mid-Western Region in 1963, later becoming part of Bendel State in 1976 and Edo State in 1991, organized under five local government areas within the Edo Central Senatorial District.[18] The Esan people, including Uromi's residents, experienced the impacts of the Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970), which contributed to post-war poverty and economic stagnation in the region.[19] Economically, Uromi retained its agrarian base in crops like yams and cassava, but federal neglect post-oil boom shifted priorities away from agriculture, leading to minimal investment, poor roads, and absent industrialization.[18] Globalization introduced capitalist elements such as agricultural mechanization, digital banking via ATMs and mobile wallets, and diaspora remittances funding housing and small enterprises, though challenges included rural labor migration, cyber fraud among youth, and disruptions from internet unreliability.[20] Infrastructure developments remained limited until recent state initiatives, including the dualization of the Ekpoma–Uromi–Ubiaja Road awarded in December 2024 to improve connectivity.[21] Social services expanded with post-colonial educational growth, exemplified by institutions like the National Institute of Construction Technology in Uromi, and health facilities such as St. Camilus Catholic Hospital, tracing roots to broader Nigerian reforms from the 1960s.[22] The traditional monarchy persisted under Anselm Aidenojie II, but faced state intervention in 2016 when the Edo government suspended him for seven days over assaulting a subject, Betty Okoebor, on September 28, ignoring a query, and other misconduct; he later apologized, averting deposition amid protests.[23] Tensions escalated in 2025 with mob violence in Uromi, where residents burned at least 16 northern men alive on March 27, accused of kidnapping, highlighting security failures.[24] These events underscore ongoing governance strains in a region marked by federal underinvestment and local autonomy conflicts.[18]Geography
Location and Physical Features
Uromi is situated in the Esan North-East Local Government Area of Edo State, in the southern region of Nigeria, serving as the administrative headquarters of the LGA.[25] The town lies at approximately 6°42′N latitude and 6°20′E longitude.[26] The physical terrain of Uromi features a central plateau with gently undulating slopes, typical of the surrounding Esan landscape.[27] Average elevation reaches about 366 meters above sea level, contributing to a landscape of moderate relief.[28] Hydrological features include sparse rivers and streams in the plateau's central areas, with watercourses becoming more prominent on descending slopes; vegetation is relatively thin across the region.[27] The broader Uromi district spans roughly 60 square miles, encompassing varied but predominantly low-relief topography.[6]Climate and Environmental Conditions
Uromi lies within Nigeria's tropical savanna climate zone (Köppen Aw), marked by consistently high temperatures and pronounced wet and dry seasons driven by the Intertropical Convergence Zone's seasonal migration. The dry season extends from November to March, featuring low humidity, harmattan winds carrying dust from the Sahara, and minimal rainfall often below 50 mm per month. In contrast, the wet season from April to October brings heavy downpours, with the highest precipitation in June and July exceeding 240 mm monthly, contributing to an annual total of approximately 1,600 mm.[29][30] Temperatures remain elevated throughout the year, with average daily highs ranging from 32°C to 35°C during the hottest months of February to April, and lows typically between 22°C and 25°C; relative humidity peaks at over 80% in the wet season, exacerbating heat discomfort. Historical data indicate rare extremes, such as highs up to 39°C in the dry season, underscoring the region's thermal stability but vulnerability to heat stress without modern cooling infrastructure.[31][32] The local environment supports agriculture through loamy soils that retain moisture effectively during rains, fostering derived savanna vegetation interspersed with oil palm groves and secondary forest remnants. However, intense seasonal rainfall on undulating terrain promotes gully erosion, a persistent issue in Edo State exacerbated by deforestation, unregulated land use, and poor drainage, leading to soil degradation and habitat loss in susceptible areas. Groundwater resources, vital for dry-season needs, show variable quality influenced by surface contamination risks from erosion and agricultural runoff.[33][34][35]Demographics
Population Dynamics
Uromi's population has grown substantially over the past several decades, driven by high fertility rates characteristic of sub-Saharan Africa and net in-migration from surrounding rural Esan communities seeking urban amenities and economic opportunities. Estimates for the town's population vary due to the absence of a recent national census with granular local data; figures range from 73,569 based on 2006 projections adjusted for urban centers to approximately 108,608 in modeled assessments. The encompassing Esan North-East Local Government Area recorded 119,346 residents in estimates derived from the 2006 census, with Uromi as its principal urban hub. Gender distribution remains nearly balanced, with males comprising about 50.5% of the population in available demographic breakdowns.[36][37][38] Historical trends show a compounded annual growth rate supporting a 93.1% increase from 1975 to 2015, reflecting rapid urbanization amid Nigeria's overall population expansion at around 2.7% annually in Edo State. This expansion correlated with land use changes, including a shift from agricultural to built-up areas, as evidenced by remote sensing analyses indicating progressive urban sprawl from 2000 onward. Population density in Uromi stands at roughly 8,000 persons per square kilometer over its core 10.7 km² area, underscoring pressures on infrastructure and services.[5][39][5] Recent dynamics reveal a shift toward out-migration, particularly among youth and working-age adults departing for employment in major cities like Benin City, Lagos, or abroad, amid declining rural livelihoods and globalization's economic disruptions. This has contributed to a moderated growth pace, with some analyses noting a mere 6.3% rise from 2000 to 2015 in certain models, potentially signaling early stages of demographic transition with falling fertility and rising emigration. Internal rural-urban inflows persist but are offset by these outflows, straining local labor pools in agriculture while bolstering remittances. Official data from Nigeria's National Population Commission remains limited to state-level projections post-2006, highlighting challenges in precise tracking amid politicized census processes.[20][5][40]Ethnic and Social Composition
The population of Uromi is predominantly composed of the Esan ethnic group, an Edoid people indigenous to central Edo State, Nigeria, who form the core of the town's demographic and cultural identity.[41] The Esan trace their origins to migrations from the Benin Kingdom, maintaining linguistic and ancestral ties to the Bini (Edo) while developing distinct communal structures centered on village clusters known as ẹkpālhọmẹ or clans.[42] This ethnic homogeneity is evident in the widespread use of the Esan language as the primary medium of communication, with over 90% of residents identifying as Esan in local surveys and oral histories.[8] Minority ethnic groups include migrants from Igbo, Yoruba, and other Nigerian regions, primarily drawn by trade and agricultural opportunities, though they constitute a small fraction of the population estimated at around 200,000–250,000 residents as of recent local enumerations.[4] These groups often integrate into Esan-dominated neighborhoods but maintain separate social networks, contributing to a multicultural undercurrent without altering the Esan majority's dominance in land ownership and community leadership. Socially, Uromi society operates on a gerontocratic framework, where councils of elders (Ọghẹdẹ) hold authority over dispute resolution, land allocation, and moral oversight, reflecting a patrilineal kinship system that prioritizes family lineages (idumu).[19] Age-grade associations (ighene for mature men and parallel women's groups) facilitate communal labor, rites of passage, and enforcement of norms, fostering cohesion amid extended family units that typically number 10–20 members per household.[4] Traditional hierarchies emphasize deference to seniority and title-holders, such as Ọha (community heads), which underpin social stability but can limit mobility for younger cohorts in a predominantly agrarian context.[43]Economy
Traditional and Agricultural Base
The traditional economy of Uromi, a key settlement of the Esan people in Edo State, Nigeria, has historically revolved around subsistence agriculture, which served as the primary means of livelihood and social organization in pre-colonial and early colonial periods.[44] Agricultural activities were deeply integrated into Esan cultural practices, with farming providing the foundation for food security, trade, and community interrelations among chiefdoms. The fertile soils and tropical climate of the region supported crop cultivation without extensive irrigation, relying instead on seasonal rainfall patterns.[4] Gender-specific roles defined traditional farming practices in Uromi chiefdom. Men typically handled land clearing, bush burning, and planting of staple tubers such as yams, which required significant labor and were interspaced with early-maturing crops like maize or corn.[44] Women then contributed by sowing secondary crops, including cotton seeds between yam heaps, as well as vegetables and other legumes, allowing for efficient land use through mixed cropping systems that maximized yields on small plots. Key crops historically included yams, cassava, maize, oil palm for produce and oil extraction, and cotton, reflecting an early agricultural evolution from indigenous staples like palm trees to diversified cultivation.[45] [46] Farming relied on rudimentary tools such as hoes, machetes, and digging sticks, indicative of non-mechanized, labor-intensive methods that persisted into the mid-20th century.[20] Surplus produce facilitated local markets and inter-village trade, where agricultural goods were exchanged for tools, cloth, or other necessities, fostering economic ties and reducing reliance on external imports. This agrarian base not only sustained population growth but also underpinned traditional institutions, with land tenure often communal or lineage-based, emphasizing communal labor during planting and harvest seasons.[19]Contemporary Challenges and Opportunities
Uromi, like much of rural Edo State, grapples with infrastructural deficits that impede economic productivity, including dilapidated roads that escalate transportation costs for agricultural produce and limit market access. Poor network coverage and unreliable electricity further hinder micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), with studies identifying inadequate digital infrastructure as a primary barrier to broader economic participation. Mass out-migration driven by globalization has depleted local labor pools, leading to a collapse in traditional rural livelihoods over the past decade, as residents seek opportunities elsewhere in Nigeria, necessitating reliance on external migrant workers for farming. Additionally, high costs of data, digital tools, and training—rated as severe challenges by local MSMEs—restrict adoption of digital marketing and e-commerce, despite 57% participation rates in the digital economy.[47][48][20] Opportunities arise from Edo State's push toward agricultural modernization, including the 2025 allocation of N70 billion for farming inputs and equipment to address climate and market challenges, potentially benefiting Uromi's yam and cassava sectors through enhanced mechanization and value-chain development. Diaspora remittances, projected to contribute significantly to Edo's economy (with national inflows reaching $24 billion in 2024), enable investments in housing, enterprises, and digital banking via mobile wallets and ATMs, fostering local business expansion. Initiatives like those from Uromi Justice Development Peace and Caritas (JDPCI) empower migrant returnees with grants—such as N1 million disbursed to seven individuals in 2025—and promote sustainable agriculture, while high smartphone ownership (mean score 3.53) positions MSMEs for growth through subsidized training and improved rural networks. Government-backed large-scale farming and crop processing technologies further offer pathways to food security and export potential, countering storage and transport gaps via integrated strategies.[49][50][20][51][48][52]Culture and Religion
Traditional Beliefs and Practices
The traditional religious worldview of the Uromi people, who are part of the Esan ethnic group in Edo State, Nigeria, posits a supreme deity called Osenobua (or Osanobua), conceived as the omnipotent creator and ultimate sovereign over the earth and all existence. This belief system emphasizes a hierarchical cosmology where Osenobua delegates authority to subordinate deities and ancestral spirits, through whom humans mediate supplications and offerings. Deities such as Osun (god of medicine and healing) and Olokun (associated with the sea and fertility) represent specific domains of natural and human life, reflecting a polytheistic framework intertwined with animistic elements where environmental forces like earth, iron, and thunder are personified as divine agents.[53][54][55] Ancestor veneration, known as honoring the Enikalo (departed forebears), forms a core practice, with the belief that ancestors act as intermediaries between the living and Osenobua, influencing prosperity, protection, and community harmony. Rituals typically involve animal sacrifices—such as goats or chickens—poured libations of palm wine or gin, and invocations at family shrines or sacred groves to appease spirits and seek guidance. Divination practices, often conducted by specialized priests or elders using tools like cowries or rods, diagnose misfortunes attributed to ancestral displeasure or witchcraft, underscoring a causal view of illness and calamity as spiritual imbalances rather than mere coincidence. Personal spirituality includes the concept of Ehi, an indwelling divine guardian spirit representing one's pre-birth destiny and intuitive link to the divine, which guides ethical conduct and decision-making.[56][57][56] Traditional rulers, including the Onojie (king) of Uromi, historically served as custodians of these beliefs, presiding over communal rites to ensure fertility of the land, successful harvests, and resolution of disputes through oaths sworn on deities. These practices, rooted in pre-colonial Esan migrations from the Benin Kingdom around the 15th century, persist in rural areas despite widespread Christian conversion since the 19th century, often syncretized with modern observances like second burial ceremonies that reaffirm ancestral ties through feasts and symbolic reburials. Empirical accounts from Esan communities indicate that such rituals correlate with social cohesion, as non-adherence is viewed as risking communal sanctions or spiritual retribution.[58][59][60]Festivals and Rituals
The Oto-Uromi Festival, a pan-Uromi event, occurs annually for one day in July or early August to propitiate the land spirits and ancestors, ensuring fertility and bountiful harvests in the subsequent farming season; rituals include communal offerings, prayers, and invocations led by traditional priests.[61][62] The Ukpe Festival, signifying the conclusion of the traditional year, is observed in June across Uromi villages, featuring ceremonies of reflection, sacrifices to deities for renewal, and feasts to invoke prosperity for the ensuing cycle.[62][63] Ihuan, the New Yam Festival, is celebrated clan-wide from September to October following the harvest, with rituals encompassing the first cutting and sharing of yams, masquerade dances, libations to earth deities, and communal feasting to express gratitude for agricultural abundance and reinforce social bonds.[64][65][66] The Ekaba Festival honors ancestral deities through ritual dances, animal sacrifices, and chants aimed at spiritual appeasement and communal harmony, typically integrated into broader annual cycles.[63] Traditional rituals in Uromi often involve okhuele (masquerades) performing during these festivals to mediate between the living and spirits, alongside prohibitions on certain foods or activities to maintain ritual purity, reflecting Esan emphasis on agrarian causality and ancestral causality in sustaining societal order.[64][66]Influence of Christianity and Modernization
Christianity arrived in Esanland, including Uromi, in the early 20th century through European missionaries, with Roman Catholic missions establishing presence in nearby Ubiaja in 1906 and Uromi in 1908.[67] These efforts introduced monotheistic worship centered on Osanobua, the traditional Esan supreme deity, reinterpreted through Christian theology, leading to widespread conversions while traditional ancestor veneration persisted alongside saint reverence in some practices.[57] The Catholic Diocese of Uromi, encompassing all of Esanland's six local government areas, formalized this presence, fostering institutions like schools and hospitals that promoted literacy and healthcare.[68] The faith reshaped social norms, particularly marriage and family structures, shifting from polygamous traditions toward monogamy and nuclear families under church teachings, though conflicts arose with indigenous customs like bride price and widowhood practices.[69] Christianity stimulated socio-cultural development by discouraging practices deemed incompatible, such as certain rituals, while integrating elements like communal ethics into church life, resulting in a hybrid belief system where many Esan Christians maintain traditional worship discreetly.[70] Pentecostal influences, evident in institutions like the Church of God Mission International and Benson Idahosa Cathedral Academy in Uromi, further emphasized prosperity gospel and evangelism, accelerating church growth post-independence.[71] Modernization intertwined with Christian missions through Western education and infrastructure, with mission schools laying foundations for higher literacy rates and professional training among Esan people.[72] Recent developments, including road dualization projects like the Ekpoma-Uromi-Ubiaja route flagged off in April 2025 and urban land use expansion from 2000 to 2025, reflect broader economic transformation influenced by global integration, though traditional agriculture remains dominant.[73] [39] These changes empowered women via education and reduced reliance on ancestral rites for decision-making, yet challenges persist in balancing modernization with cultural preservation amid rapid urbanization.[74]Governance and Politics
Traditional Kingship System
The traditional kingship system in Uromi constitutes a hereditary monarchy led by the Onojie, the paramount traditional ruler of the Esan people in the region. Succession adheres to the rule of primogeniture, whereby the eldest surviving legitimate son assumes the throne after performing the required burial ceremonies for the deceased predecessor, ensuring continuity within the royal lineage.[75] Under customary law, the Onojie's position is lifelong, terminating only upon death, with no traditional provisions for deposition or removal, underscoring the system's emphasis on permanence and ancestral legitimacy.[75] The Onojie exercises authority in collaboration with a council of chiefs and elders, who provide advisory and legislative support in governance matters.[4] Uromi is administratively divided into three primary groups—Okhiode, Obiruan, and Obiyuan—with individual villages governed by an Odiowele, the eldest indigenous male, aided by a village council responsible for maintaining peace, enforcing decisions, and handling local disputes.[76] This decentralized structure allows the Onojie to focus on overarching rulership, including adjudication of inter-village conflicts, oversight of communal welfare, and enforcement of customs, while the councils address day-to-day legislative and punitive functions. The institution traces its establishment to the mid-15th century, when Ijesan (also rendered Ichesan) was installed as the inaugural Onojie around 1463 by Oba Ewuare of the Benin Kingdom, amid migrations of groups from Benin to Esanland that formed early settlements.[76][4] Oral traditions attribute the system's formalization to Benin suzerainty, including requirements for Oba confirmation of successors, yet archaeological evidence of settlements dating to circa 3000 B.C. and linguistic analyses revealing non-Benin vocabulary components indicate aboriginal foundations predating heavy Benin influence, suggesting a syncretic evolution rather than wholesale importation.[6] This kingship has historically preserved Uromi's autonomy, as exemplified by early rulers' resistance to external expansions, while embedding roles in ritual oversight and cultural custodianship central to Esan identity.List of Onojie
The Onojie (traditional king) of Uromi heads the hereditary monarchy established circa 1463 when Oba Ewuare of Benin installed Ijesan (also spelled Ichesan) as the first ruler.[76][8] Succession follows patrilineal lines within the ruling house, primarily from Eguare, with 17 Onojie recorded up to the present, though exact reigns for early rulers remain approximate due to reliance on oral traditions and limited colonial-era documentation.[76]| No. | Name | Approximate Reign | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ijesan (Ichesan) | c. 1463–1488 | First Onojie; appointed by Benin; founded ruling house at Eguare after migration from Ivue.[8][76] |
| 2 | Agba N'Ojie | 1488–1504 | Second Onojie; led Uzea War (1502–1503) against Benin; deified post-mortem as "God of War."[8][76] |
| 3 | Ikenoa | c. 1504–? | Third Onojie; internal conflicts with brothers, including purges by fire.[8][76] |
| 4 | Ehenoa | ? | Succeeded amid familial strife.[76] |
| 5 | Ikhivabhojere | ? | Part of early succession chain.[76] |
| 6 | Okuoye | ? | Limited records available.[76] |
| 7 | Ikhize | ? | Hereditary continuity.[76] |
| 8 | Ikhimigbale | ? | Pre-colonial ruler.[76] |
| 9 | Uwagbo | ? | Maintained kingdom amid regional dynamics.[76] |
| 10 | Ediale | ? | No specific events documented in sources.[76] |
| 11 | Akhilomen | ? | Late pre-colonial era.[76] |
| 12 | Okolo N'Ojie | 1873–1900 | Executed by British forces during resistance; father of Ogbidi Okojie.[8][76] |
| 13 | Ogbidi Okojie | 1901–1918, 1931–1944 | Exiled by British in 1918, returned 1931; known for resistance and territorial expansion; regarded as 13th or 14th depending on counting variations.[8][76] |
| 14 | Uwagbale Okojie | 1944–? | Son of Ogbidi; regent 1919–1931; emphasized peace post-colonialism.[8][76] |
| 15 | Edenojie Okojie I | ?–? | Post-independence ruler.[76] |
| 16 | Omelimen Edenojie II | ?–? | Continued modern governance.[76] |
| 17 | Anslem Aidonojie II (Zaiki Anslem Okojie) | c. 2000s–present | Current Onojie as of 2025; holds titles including JP and MFR; focuses on community leadership.[76][77] |