The Egba people's original homeland in the Egba forest was established by Yoruba migrants from elsewhere. According to
The History of the Yorubas by
Samuel Johnson,
Eso Ikoyi chiefs in the retinue of the first
Alake of the Egba joined him in founding a new community - the confederacy of towns that became known as Orile Egba - in the forest after they left the nascent
Oyo empire in around the 13th century AD. Orile Egba continued to exist until its destruction during the
Yoruba civil war of the 19th century. As a result, many of the leading families of the Egba Ake claim descent from the Eso Ikoyis today. Abeokuta was founded as a replacement for Orile Egba in around 1830 by the Egbas after the collapse of the Oyo empire during the civil war. The city was founded because of its strong defensive physical position by refugees trying to protect themselves against slave raiders from
Dahomey, who were trying to benefit from the war. Chief Shodeke, the first paramount chief of Abeokuta and the rest of Egbaland, was a member of the Egba Ake section. Using
oral traditions of the Alake's claim to membership of
Oduduwa's family being superior to that of any of the other Egba kings to cement the section's position, he is said to have allocated the tracts of land that each of the junior sections settled upon following their arrival in the city. The Egba Ake have been the traditional landowners of Egbaland ever since this event. In 1832,
Abeokuta was involved in war with the people of Ijebu Remo, and in 1834 with the
Ibadan people. Sporadic fighting continued with the people of Ota (1842), Ado (1844),
Ibarapa (1849), Dahomey (1851), Ijebu-Ere (1851), Ijaye (1860–1862) and the Makun War of 1862–1864. On 18 January 1893, a treaty was signed with the governor and commander-in-chief of the British
Lagos Colony for the purpose of trade; the British recognized
Egbaland as an independent state. In 1898, the
Egba United Government was formed. In 1904, an agreement was made where the British assumed jurisdiction in certain legal cases, and in the same year, the Alake Gbadebo paid a state visit to England. Over the following years, the British steadily assumed more responsibility for administration while continuing to formally recognize the Egba state. In 1914, the kingdom was incorporated into the newly amalgamated British Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria. In 1949, as a result of agitation by the women's rights leader Chief
Funmilayo Ransome Kuti, the Alake
Ladapo Ademola was forced to abdicate. He later returned to the throne. ==Rulers==