Overami or Ovonramwen was the last Oba or King of the African Kingdom of
Benin, also sometimes referred to as the Benin Empire (not be confused
with the modern country of Benin) which occupied an area mostly within
what is now Nigeria. For many years prior to Ovonramwen coming to the
throne British influence in the area had been expanding and
strengthening but Benin remained independent but that independence,
particularly the trade monopoly the Oba held in the region, aroused the
jealousy of elite colonial investors and businessmen. They were
determined to bring Benin with its palm-oil, rubber and ivory wealth
under British control. Ovonramwen came to the throne in 1888 as the 35th
Oba of Benin and in 1892 signed a treaty with the British to abolish
the slave trade in the region and making the Kingdom of Benin an
autonomous protectorate of Great Britain.
However, powerful
forces were arrayed against the king, particularly the Vice-Consul James
Robert Phillips and Captain Gallwey of the Oil Rivers Protectorate.
Their goal was the full annexation of Benin to the British Empire and
the overthrow of the Oba who stood in their way. In 1896 a British
column led by Phillips went to meet with Oba Ovonramwen in Benin City
but did not get to see the monarch who was occupied with performing
important ceremonies at the time. Another expedition was launched
despite warnings from the Oba not to come as their visit was timed to
coincide with the celebration of the annual Igue Festival; a time of
much ceremony when all outsiders were encouraged to stay away. The
British were asked to postpone the visit for two months but Phillips
refused and sent the king his stick; a traditional sign of insult and a
deliberate provocation. As a result, when the party entered Benin
territory they were ambushed and massacred with only a few managing to
escape.
In February of 1897 the British launched a full-scale
attack on Benin City which fell after eight days of fierce fighting. The
Kingdom of Benin was totally destroyed, many inhabitants killed, the
city looted and many valuable artifacts taken as trophies. The accused
mastermind of the ambush and massacre of Captain Phillips and his party,
Ologbohere, was put on trial and hanged. Oba Ovonramwen was to be
hanged as well but after his surrender was deposed instead and exiled to
Calabar with his two wives where he died in January of 1914. The king
had actually had nothing to do with the massacre, knowing well enough
that such an act would only provoke a war he could not hope to win,
which is exactly what happened. The area of Benin was annexed and
allowed for further British expansion into the interior of West Africa.
However, despite the exile and death of the last reigning Oba of Benin
the royal family continued on and still does today in the person of
Crown Prince Solomon Akenzua who succeeded as Oba Erediauwa of the Benin
people in Nigeria in 1978.
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