Early origins The Itsekiri people are an ethnic group with a rich history that dates back several centuries before the founding of the
Kingdom of Warri. According to oral traditions and records from Itsekiri historians like J.O.S Ayomike, Itsekiris were formed by several groups of tribes who spoke
Yoruba dialects and practiced
Yoruba religion which migrated in early antiquity into the western
Niger delta region and established several communities, among them; Inorin, Ugborodo, Irigbo, Ureju and Omadino. These
Yoruba groups are remembered today and referred to as
Umale or
Egungun, spirits or mythical beings, and the period as the Egungun or Umale period, since not much was documented in writing during this period of early Itsekiri history, making much of the recounting of their epoch semi-mythical in nature. These Umale people are believed in Itsekiri society to be the owners of the
blue coris beads. Some of them refused to submit to the authority of Olu Iginuwa by paying tribute, and are said to have gotten into canoes and 'disappeared' into the creeks, never to return or be seen again. Others, such as Itsekiri himself (after whom the country was named, and who was also part of the pre-Ginuwa Umale group) chose to remain and accept the lordship. These oral traditions are likely
allegorical accounts describing the complex inter-group relations between the incoming royal group and the aboriginal group of Yoruba stock already 'on ground', but with no centralized kingship structure. The Yoruba tribes that made up the Itsekiri people were primarily from the
Ijebu,
Mahin,
Ugbo,
Owo (Ọ̀ghọ̀),
Igala and
Ile-Ife regions. These groups were collectively known by the ethnonym "Olukumi", with "Olukumi" translating to mean "my friend" in the itsekiri language. This name was used to refer to the Yoruba people for centuries. The Yoruba connection of the Itsekiri was noted and recorded by several historians and European scholars of the exploratory and colonial period. The ethnologist
Henry Ling Roth, in his work
Great Benin: Its Customs, Art and Horrors (1903), observed: It is curious that though the Jekri chiefs were undoubtedly of Benin origin, and of the royal line, the Jekri people are evidently more Yoruba than Benin. A British Parliamentary report from 1893 similarly stated: The Jakri tribe occupies the lower part of the Benin River, extending to the Forcados to the southward, and to the Mahin country to the northward. The tribe is distinct from the Benin and Sobo people, but is said to be connected with the Yorubas. Likewise, Captain H. L. Gallwey, British Vice-Consul in the Niger Coast Protectorate, wrote in 1893: First we come to the Jakris, who are connected in race and language with the Yoruba people, extending from the Mahin country on the west to the Forcados on the east, and inland about as far as Sapele.
Formation of the Warri Kingdom A significant event in Itsekiri history occurred sometime before the year 1480 when
Olu Ginuwa left the
Kingdom of Benin due to a royal imbroglio within the palace, to found the
Kingdom of Warri in the creeks of the western Niger river delta and was able to successfully coalesce the different pre-existing communities into a single kingdom with the capital at Okotomu Irigbo, later renamed Ode-Itsekiri. Shortly after this time, some Benin people who were chasing after
Olu Ginuwa joined the pre-existing aboriginal
Yoruba group in the area and founded the settlement of
Okere. The
Kingdom of Warri has continued on to the present day with the Olu,
Ogiame Atuwatse III currently ruling as the king of Warri Kingdom. The
Warri Kingdom's historical capital is
Ode-Itsekiri (also called "Big Warri" or "Ale Iwerre"), although the monarch's main palace is in the main tonship of
Warri. == Itsekiris and the Europeans ==