Oboro (Nigeria)

Oboro
Ndi Oboro
Oboro
Total population
70,407 (1921)
Languages
Oboro Igbo, English, Nigerian Pidgin
Religion
Christianity (majority methodist)
Related ethnic groups
Ibere, Ibeku, Ngwa, Asa, Ndoki, Bende, Abam, Aro, Itumbauzo, Ibibio

Oboro is the largest of four clans in Ikwuano Local Government Area of Abia State, Nigeria.[1][2][3] It is bounded to the north by Ibeku and Bende clans, west by the Olokoro and Ngwa, east by Ibere and south by the Isuogu (Ariam/Usaka and Oloko). Oboro was classified in the Ohuhu-Ngwa cluster of the Southern Igbo area by British anthropologists Forde and Jones.[4] It is also one of 18 Igbo clans in the Old Bende Division of the defunct Owerri Province. The Oboro speak a common language with the other 17 clans of the Bende Division though dialectal variations exist. These clans share a history of inter-ethnic relations.[5]

  1. ^ "Ikwuano LGA". www.finelib.com. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  2. ^ "Abia, APGA gov candidate trade blame over violence". Exportiamo.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-06-11.
  3. ^ Rapheal (2023-02-08). "Emenike promises to set up industrial clusters in Abia LGs". The Sun Nigeria. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
  4. ^ Forde, Daryll; Jones, G. I. (2017). Western Africa Part III. doi:10.4324/9781315297736. ISBN 9781315297736.
  5. ^ ORIGIN, MIGRATION AND SETTLEMENT IN PRE-COLONIAL OLD BENDE DIVISION OF SOUTHEASTERN NIGERIA - Chiedozie Atuonwu (Research Gate)

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