Ife-Olukotun traces its origin to the ancient Yoruba migration waves from
Ile-Ife, the spiritual homeland of the Yoruba people. Oral tradition holds that the founders were part of the princely lineage that dispersed from Ile-Ife centuries ago, eventually settling in the hilly savanna terrain of present-day Yagba land. The village developed as an independent community under its own traditional ruler, the
Obajema of Ife-Olukotun, whose stool remains active and is classified as a third-class traditional institution in Kogi State. Like most Okun communities, Ife-Olukotun was affected by the 19th-century Yoruba wars and the subsequent Fulani jihadist incursions into northern Yorubaland, though it largely escaped direct conquest. During the colonial period, it fell under the Northern Nigeria Protectorate and later the Kabba Province. == Geography ==