Misplaced Pages

Yoruba religion: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 03:26, 19 May 2022 editGreenC bot (talk | contribs)Bots2,562,056 edits Rescued 1 archive link; reformat 1 link. Wayback Medic 2.5← Previous edit Latest revision as of 15:15, 9 January 2025 edit undoOmoIyaLeke (talk | contribs)184 edits Brought Irunmalẹ sub-section into Cosmology Section 
(304 intermediate revisions by 88 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Religion of the Yoruba people of Africa (Isese)}} {{Short description|West-African religion}}
<!-- "none" is preferred when the title is sufficiently descriptive; see ] -->
{{More citations needed|date=September 2021}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2022}}
{{Orisa-Ifá sidebar}} {{Orisa-Ifá sidebar}}
{{Traditional African religion}}


The '''Yoruba religion''' (]: Ìṣẹ̀ṣe), or '''Isese''', comprises the traditional religious and spiritual concepts and practice of the ]. Its homeland is in present-day Southwestern ], which comprises the majority of ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] States, as well as parts of ] state and the adjoining parts of ] and ], commonly known as ]. It shares some parallels with the ] practiced by the neighboring ] and ] peoples to the west and to the religion of the ] to the east. Yoruba religion is the basis for a number of religions in the New World, notably ], ], ], ], and ].<ref name="Culture">{{cite book|title= Yoruba Culture: A Philosophical Account |first=Kola|last=Abimbola|edition=Paperback|publisher= Iroko Academics Publishers|year= 2005|isbn=1-905388-00-4}}</ref> Yoruba religious beliefs are part of Itàn (history), the total complex of songs, histories, stories, and other cultural concepts which make up the Yoruba society.<ref name="Culture"/><ref name="YRM"/><ref name="Religion"/> The '''Yoruba religion''' (]: Ìṣẹ̀ṣe), ''' West African Orisa''' (Òrìṣà), or '''Isese''' (Ìṣẹ̀ṣe), comprises the traditional religious and spiritual concepts and practice of the ]. Its homeland is in present-day Southwestern ], which comprises the majority of ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] ], as well as parts of ] state and the adjoining parts of ] and ], commonly known as ] ({{Langx|yo|Ilẹ̀ Káàárọ̀-Oòjíire}}).
It shares some parallels with the ] practised by the neighbouring ] and ] peoples to its west and with the religion of the ] to its east. Yoruba religion is the basis for several religions in the New World, notably ], ], ], and ].<ref name="Culture">{{cite book|title= Yoruba Culture: A Philosophical Account |first=Kola|last=Abimbola|edition=Paperback|publisher= Iroko Academics Publishers|year= 2005|isbn=1-905388-00-4}}</ref> Yoruba religious beliefs are part of Itàn (history), the total complex of songs, histories, stories, and other cultural concepts which make up the Yoruba society.<ref name="Culture"/><ref name="YRM"/><ref name="Religion"/>


==Term== ==Term==
The Yoruba name for the Yoruba religion is Ìṣẹ̀ṣẹ, which also refers to the traditions and rituals that encompass Yorùbá culture. The term comes from a contraction of the words Ìṣẹ̀, meaning "source or origin," and ìṣe, meaning "practice, or tradition," coming together to mean "The source of our tradition," as many of the practices, beliefs, traditions, and observances of the Yoruba originate from the religious worship of the orisa. The Yoruba name for the Yoruba indigenous religion is Ìṣẹ̀ṣẹ, which also refers to the traditions and rituals that encompass Yorùbá culture. The term comes from a contraction of the words '''Ìṣẹ̀''' (Ishɛ), meaning "''source/root origin''", and '''ìṣe''' (Ishe), meaning "''practice/tradition''" coming together to mean "The original tradition"/"The tradition of antiquity" as many of the practices, beliefs, traditions, and observances of the Yoruba originate from the religious worship of ] and the veneration of the Orisa.
== Beliefs ==


== Beliefs ==
]''' priestess in Ọ̀yọ́, Nigeria]]
]

]''']] ]]]


According to Kola Abimbola, the ] have evolved a robust cosmology.<ref name="Culture"/> In brief, it holds that all human beings possess what is known as "Àyànmọ́", which is regarded as destiny or fate.<ref name="Fate">{{cite book|title=Àyànmọ|first=Afọlabi|last=Ọlabimtan|location=Lagos, Nigeria|publisher=Macmillan|year= 1973|oclc=33249752}}</ref> Every person is expected to become eventually one in spirit with Olodumare (also known as ], the divine creator and source of all energy). Furthermore, the thoughts and actions of each person in Ayé (the physical realm) interact with all other living things, including the Earth itself.<ref name="YRM">{{cite book|first=Afọlabi|last=Ọlabimtan|oclc=33249752|others=Translated by George E. Simpson|title=Yoruba Religion and Medicine in Ibadan|publisher= Ibadan University Press|year= 1991|isbn=978-121-068-0}}</ref> According to Kola Abimbola, the ] have evolved a robust cosmology.<ref name="Culture"/> Nigerian Professor for ], ], summarizes that central for the Yoruba religion, and which all beings possess, is known as "Ase", which is "the empowered word that must come to pass," the "life force" and "energy" that regulates all movement and activity in the universe".<ref name="Fate">{{cite book|title=Àyànmọ|first=Afọlabi|last=Ọlabimtan|location=Lagos, Nigeria|publisher=Macmillan|year= 1973|oclc=33249752}}</ref><ref name="yancy01">{{Cite news |last=Yancy |first=George |date=2021-02-14 |title=Opinion {{!}} Death Has Many Names |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/14/opinion/Yoruba-religion-death.html |access-date=2022-12-26 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref><ref name="trad01">{{Cite journal |last=Olupona |first=Jacob K. |date=1993-01-01 |title=The Study of Yoruba Religious Tradition in Historical Perspective |url=https://brill.com/view/journals/nu/40/3/article-p240_2.xml |journal=Numen |language=en |volume=40 |issue=3 |pages=240–273 |doi=10.1163/156852793X00176 |issn=1568-5276}}</ref> Every thought and action of each person or being in Aiyé (the physical realm) interact with the Supreme force, all other living things, including the Earth itself, as well as with Orun (the otherworld), in which gods, spirits and ancestors exist.<ref name="YRM">{{cite book|first=Afọlabi|last=Ọlabimtan|oclc=33249752|others=Translated by George E. Simpson|title=Yoruba Religion and Medicine in Ibadan|publisher= Ibadan University Press|year= 1991|isbn=978-121-068-0}}</ref><ref name="yancy01"/><ref name="trad01"/> The Yoruba religion can be described as a complex form of ], with a Supreme but distant creator force, encompassing the whole universe.<ref name="trad01"/>


The anthropologist Robert Voeks described Yoruba religion as being ], noting that it was "firmly attached to place".{{sfn|Voeks|1997|p=160}} The anthropologist Robert Voeks described Yoruba religion as being ], noting that it was "firmly attached to place".{{sfn|Voeks|1997|p=160}}
Line 21: Line 24:
One's ori-inu (spiritual consciousness in the physical realm) must grow in order to consummate union with one's "Iponri" (Ori Orun, spiritual self).<ref name="Fate"/> One's ori-inu (spiritual consciousness in the physical realm) must grow in order to consummate union with one's "Iponri" (Ori Orun, spiritual self).<ref name="Fate"/>


Iwapẹlẹ (or well-balanced) meditative recitation and sincere veneration is sufficient to strengthen the ori-inu of most people.<ref name="YRM"/><ref name="Fate"/> Well-balanced people, it is believed, are able to make positive use of the simplest form of connection between their ]s and the omnipotent Olu-Orun: an adura (petition or prayer) for divine support. Ìwà pẹ̀lẹ́ (or well-balanced) meditative recitation and sincere veneration are sufficient to strengthen the ori-inu of most people.<ref name="YRM"/><ref name="Fate"/> Well-balanced people, it is believed, can make positive use of the simplest form of connection between their ] and the omnipotent Olu-Orun: an Àwúre (petition or prayer) for divine support.


In the Yoruba belief system, Olodumare has àṣẹ(authority) over all that is. Hence, it is considered supreme.<ref name="YRM"/>
Prayer to one's Ori Orun produces an immediate sensation of joy. Èṣù Elegbara initiates contact with spiritual realm on behalf of the petitioner, and transmits the prayer to Ayé; the deliverer of ] or ''the spark of life''. He transmits this prayer without distorting it in any way. Thereafter, the petitioner may be satisfied with a personal answer. In the event that he or she is not, the ] oracle of the ] ] may also be consulted. All communication with Orun, whether simplistic in the form of a personal prayer or complicated in the form of that done by an initiated ] (priest of divination), however, is energized by invoking ase.{{citation needed|date=June 2020}}


== Scripture ==
In the Yoruba belief system, Olodumare has ase over all that is. Hence, It is considered supreme.<ref name="YRM"/>
The Yoruba scriptures are called the ''Odu Ifá'', which is a collection of revealed oracular texts originally passed down through oral tradition among ]s.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=What Is Ifa? |url=https://www.theifainstitute.org/what-is-ifa |access-date=2024-09-30 |website=THE IFA INSTITUTE |language=en-US}}</ref> It is traditionally divided into 256 sections, or Odu, which are divided into verses. It is closely related to the divination system of the Yoruba religion, ]. The verses contain proverbs, stories, and statements that cover every aspect of life. The ''Odu Ifá'' is the foundation of Yoruba spiritual knowledge and has influenced spiritual communities in the Americas, such as ]. Ifá refers to the deity Orunmila, who is associated with wisdom, intellect, and ].<ref name=":0" />

In 2005, ] designated the ''Odu Ifá'' tradition as one of the world's ''Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity''.<ref name=":0" />

==Cosmology==
* ]
** ]
*** ]
**** ] (])
***** ] (])
****** ], ], etc.


===Olódùmarè=== ===Olódùmarè===
{{Main|Olodumare}} {{Main|Olodumare}}
] is the most important "state of existence".<ref name="God"/> Regarded as being all-encompassing, no gender can be assigned. Hence, it is common to hear references to "it" or "they" (although this is meant to address something of a singularity){{Citation needed|date=November 2021|reason=Whilst Olódùmarè is indeed void of sex or gender, in English, Olódùmarè is most commonly referred to as a "he", incorrectly one might add. I've not seen gender neutral (it/they) references to Olódùmarè outside of a few academic sources. How common does it have to be before we can claim it's common? Is the citation in the same source as the rest of the paragraph? If so, please specify.}}. "They" are the owner of all heads, for during human creation, Olódùmarè gave "èmí" (the breath of life) to humankind. In this, Olódùmarè is Supreme.<ref name="God">{{cite book|title= Olódùmarè: God in Yorùbá Belief|author=Bolaji Idowu|author-link=Bolaji Idowu|location=Ikeja, Nigeria|publisher=Longman|year= 1982|isbn=0-582-60803-1}}</ref> ] is the most important "state of existence".<ref name="God"/> "They" are the owner of all heads, for during human creation, Olódùmarè gave "èmí" (the breath of life) to humankind. In this, Olódùmarè is Supreme.<ref name="God">{{cite book|title= Olódùmarè: God in Yorùbá Belief|author=Bolaji Idowu|author-link=Bolaji Idowu|location=Ikeja, Nigeria|publisher=Longman|year= 1982|isbn=0-582-60803-1}}</ref>
Perhaps one of the most important human endeavours extolled within the Yoruba literary corpus is the quest to improve one's "Ìwà" (character, behaviour). In this way the teachings transcend religious doctrine, advising as they do that a person must also improve their civic, social and intellectual spheres of being; every stanza of the sacred ] oracular poetry (]) has a portion covering the importance of "Ìwà". Central to this is the theme of righteousness, both individual and collective.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ifaspeaks.blogspot.com/2011/02/odu-ifa-iwori-meji-ifa-speaks-on.html|title=Odù-Ifá Iwòrì Méjì; Ifá speaks on Righteousness|author=Ifaloju|publisher=S.S. Popoola, Ifa Dida, Library, INC|date=February 2011|access-date=8 April 2012|website=Ifa Speaks...}}</ref>

Perhaps one of the most important human endeavors extolled within the Yoruba literary corpus is the quest to improve one's "Ìwà" (character, behaviour). In this way the teachings transcend religious doctrine, advising as they do that a person must also improve their civic, social and intellectual spheres of being; every stanza of the sacred ] oracular poetry (]) has a portion covering the importance of "Ìwà". Central to this is the theme of righteousness, both individual and collective.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ifaspeaks.blogspot.com/2011/02/odu-ifa-iwori-meji-ifa-speaks-on.html|title=Odù-Ifá Iwòrì Méjì; Ifá speaks on Righteousness|author=Ifaloju|publisher=S.S. Popoola, Ifa Dida, Library, INC|date=February 2011|access-date=8 April 2012|website=Ifa Speaks...}}</ref>


===Creation=== ===Creation===
The Yorubas as a people regard ] as the principal agent of creation.<ref>{{Citation|last=Opoku|first=Kofi Asare|title=African traditional religion: An enduring heritage|work=Religious Plurality in Africa|year=1993|publisher=DE GRUYTER|doi=10.1515/9783110850079.67|isbn=978-3-11-085007-9}}</ref> Adherents of the Yoruba religion regard ] as the principal force of creation.<ref>{{Citation|last=Opoku|first=Kofi Asare|title=African traditional religion: An enduring heritage|work=Religious Plurality in Africa|year=1993|publisher=DE GRUYTER|doi=10.1515/9783110850079.67|isbn=978-3-11-085007-9|url=http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/itcj/vol16/iss1/25 }}</ref>


According to one of the Yoruba accounts of ], at a certain stage in the process, the "truth" was sent to confirm the habitability of the planets that were newly formed. The ], being one of these, was visited but considered too wet for conventional living.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Halliday|first=William D.|date=2018-09-08|title="Half-Earth: Our Planet's Fight for Life" by Edward O. Wilson, 2017. |journal=The Canadian Field-Naturalist|volume=132|issue=1|pages=78|doi=10.22621/cfn.v132i1.2129|issn=0008-3550|doi-access=free}}</ref> According to one of the Yoruba accounts of ], at a certain stage in the process, the "truth" was sent to confirm the habitability of the planets that were newly formed. The ], being one of these, was visited but considered too wet for conventional living.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Halliday|first=William D.|date=2018-09-08|title="Half-Earth: Our Planet's Fight for Life" by Edward O. Wilson, 2017. |journal=The Canadian Field-Naturalist|volume=132|issue=1|pages=78|doi=10.22621/cfn.v132i1.2129|issn=0008-3550|doi-access=free}}</ref>


After a successful period of time, a number of divinities led by ] were sent to accomplish the task of helping earth develop its crust. On one of their visits to the realm, the arch-divinity Obatala took to the stage equipped with a ] that concealed some form of ]; winged beasts and some cloth like material. The contents were emptied onto what soon became a large mound on the surface of the water and soon after, the winged-beasts began to scatter this around until the point where it gradually made into a large patch of dry land; the various indentations they created eventually becoming hills and valleys.<ref name="God"/> After a successful period of time, a number of divinities led by ] were sent to accomplish the task of helping the earth develop its crust. On one of their visits to the realm, the arch-divinity Obatala took to the stage equipped with a ] that concealed some form of ], winged beasts, and some cloth-like material. The contents were emptied onto what soon became a large mound on the surface of the water and soon after, the winged beasts began to scatter this around until the point where it gradually made into a large patch of dry land; the various indentations they created eventually becoming hills and valleys.<ref name="Yoruba">{{cite book|url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/abstract/10.1093/acref/9780195102758.001.0001/acref-9780195102758-e-319?rskey=hcxXT3&result=309|title=Yoruba|chapter=Yoruba Creation|year=1994|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-510275-8|access-date=2010-04-30}}</ref>

Obatala leapt onto a high ground and named the place ]. The land became fertile and plant life began to flourish. From handfuls of earth, he began to mould figurines. Meanwhile, as this was happening on Earth, Olodumare gathered the gases from the far reaches of space and sparked an explosion that shaped into a fireball. He subsequently sent it to Ife, where it dried much of the land and simultaneously began to bake the motionless figurines. It was at this point that Olodumare released the "breath of life" to blow across the land, and the figurines slowly came into "being" as the first people of Ife.<ref name="Yoruba"/>

For this reason, Ife is locally referred to as "Ife Oodaye" – "cradle of existence".<ref name="God"/><ref>{{harvnb|Leeming|Leeming|2009}} – entry {{cite book|url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/abstract/10.1093/acref/9780195102758.001.0001/acref-9780195102758-e-319?rskey=hcxXT3&result=309|title=Yoruba|chapter=Yoruba Creation|year=1994|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-510275-8|access-date=2010-04-30}}</ref>

===Irunmalẹ===
The Irúnmalẹ̀, from the words; '''Ìrun''' meaning ' ''Origin'' ' and '''Imalẹ̀''' meaning ' ''Primal divinity'' ' are the original entities sent by ] to complete given tasks, often acting as liaisons between ''Òde Ọ̀run'' (the invisible realm) and ''Ilé Ayé'' (the physical realm).<ref name="Religion">J. Olumide Lucas, ''The Religion of the Yorubas'', Athelia Henrietta PR, 1996. {{ISBN|0-9638787-8-6}}</ref> Irunmale(s) can therefore best be described in English as the highest ranking divinities; whereby such divinities are regarded as principal Orishas. The Irunmale or Imalẹ̀ are the primary foundational divinities or divine entities. In summary, all Imale are also Orisha, but not all Orisha are Imale.

===Oku===
]
]
In Yoruba religion and culture, Oku is a complex and multifaceted concept that encompasses various aspects of death, the afterlife, and the relationship between the living and the dead. Oku is often translated as "death" or "the dead," but it carries a deeper meaning that goes beyond the physical act of dying.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Oripeloye |first1=Henri |last2=Omigbule |first2=Morufu Bukola |title=The Yoruba of Nigeria and the ontology of death and burial. |journal=Death Across Cultures: Death and Dying in Non-Western Cultures |date=2019 |pages=193-205}}</ref> Oku refers to the transition of a person from the world of the living to the world of the dead and the subsequent journey of the deceased to the afterlife.


Oku is a natural part of life, and death is seen as a transition to a new stage of existence rather than an end. <ref>{{cite journal |last1=Awe |first1=Solomon Kolawole |title=Existentialist Concerns in Africa: The Yorùbá Perspectives of Death and Suicide. |journal=Language, Literature and Culture |date=2019 |volume=2.2 |pages=41-48}}</ref> The Yoruba people believe that the dead continue to play an active role in the lives of their descendants and that they can influence the living in various ways.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Oripeloye |first1=Henri |last2=Omigbule |first2=Morufu Bukola |title=The Yoruba of Nigeria and the ontology of death and burial. |journal=Death Across Cultures: Death and Dying in Non-Western Cultures |date=2019 |pages=193-205}}</ref> Thus, Oku is also associated with the concept of "ara orun," which refers to the spiritual realm or the world of the dead.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Famule |first1=Olawole Francis |title=Art and Spirituality: The Ijumu Northeastern-Yoruba Egúngún. |date=2005 |publisher=The University of Arizona |page=64}}</ref> The Yoruba people believe that the dead reside in this realm, where they continue to live and interact with the living.
Obatala leaped onto a high-ground and named the place ]. The land became fertile and plant life began to flourish. From handfuls of earth he began to mold figurines. Meanwhile, as this was happening on earth, Olodumare gathered the gases from the far reaches of space and sparked an explosion that shaped into a fireball. He subsequently{{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} sent it to Ife, where it dried much of the land and simultaneously began to bake the motionless figurines. It was at this point that Olodumare released the "breath of life" to blow across the land, and the figurines slowly came into "being" as the first people of Ife.<ref name="God"/>


Furthermore, an earthly representation of the Oku is the ], which embodies the spirits of the ancestors and is often used to communicate with the dead and to honour their memory.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lawal |first1=Babatunde |title=Aworan: representing the self and its metaphysical other in Yoruba art. |journal=The Art Bulletin |date=2001 |volume=83.3 |pages=498-526}}</ref> The ] is the physical representation of the Oku tradition, which is focused on honouring and paying respects to the ancestors.<ref name=Adepegba>{{cite book|last=Adepegba|first=C.O.|title=. Yoruba Egungun: Its association with ancestors and the typology of Yoruba masquerades by its costume|year=1984|publisher=University of Ibadan|location=Ibadan, Nigeria}}</ref> The ] possesses spiritual powers and to be able to communicate with the ancestors, an Oku tradition of seeking the blessings and protection of the dead or ancestors.
For this reason, Ife is locally referred to as "Ife Oodaye" - "cradle of existence".<ref name="God"/><ref>{{harvnb|Leeming|Leeming|2009}} – entry {{cite book|url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/abstract/10.1093/acref/9780195102758.001.0001/acref-9780195102758-e-319?rskey=hcxXT3&result=309|title=Yoruba|chapter=Yoruba Creation|year=1994|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-510275-8|access-date=2010-04-30}}</ref>


However, it is worth noting that ] traditions are not simply a representation of Oku, but rather have their own unique characteristics and significance, depending on the context. Egungun can have its own set of rituals, ceremonies, and practices that are separate from the Oku tradition, although the two are connected and closely intertwined.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Famule |first1=Olawole Francis |title=Art and Spirituality: The Ijumu Northeastern-Yoruba Egúngún. |date=2005 |publisher=The University of Arizona |page=64}}</ref> Therefore, Yoruba people may refer to Egungun as "Oku ara orun," which means "the Oku of the heavens" or "the Oku of the spirits." This name reflects the close connection between Egungun and the Oku tradition and highlights the role of Egungun as a representation of the ancestors and the spiritual realm.
===Orisha===
{{Main|Orisha}}
An ] (correct spelling: Òrìṣà) is an entity that possesses the capability of reflecting some of the manifestations of Olodumare. Yoruba ''Orishas'' (commonly translated "unique/special/selected heads") are often described as intermediaries between humankind and the supernatural. The term is also translated as "Deities", "Divinities" or "Gods".<ref>Cf. for the acceptability of the translation</ref>


==The Orisha and Ajogun Pantheon==
{{Main|Orisha|List of Yoruba deities}}
The ], ({{Langx|yo|Òrìṣà}}) are entities that possess the capability of reflecting some of the manifestations of Olodumare. Yoruba ''Orishas'' (commonly translated as "unique/special/selected heads") are often described as intermediaries between humankind and the supernatural. The term has also been variously translated as "Deities", "Divinities" or "Gods".<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200711141759/http://organizations.uncfsu.edu/ncrsa/journal/v03/johnsonoyinade_yoruba.htm |date=11 July 2020 }} for the acceptability of the translation</ref>
Orisha(s) are revered for having control over specific elements of nature. They are thus also referred to as ''Imole''. There are those of their number that are more akin to ancient heroes and/or ]s than to primordial divinities.<ref name="Religion"/> These are best addressed as ]. Even though the term Orisha is often used to describe both classes of divine ], it is properly reserved for the former one.<ref name="Religion"/> Orisha(s) are revered for having control over specific elements of nature. They are thus also referred to as ''Imole''. There are those of their number that are more akin to ancient heroes and/or ]s than to primordial divinities.<ref name="Religion"/> These are best addressed as ]. Even though the term Orisha is often used to describe both classes of divine ], it is properly reserved for the former one.<ref name="Religion"/>

The '''Ajogun''' on the other hand are best described as active negative, destructive or malevolent forces of nature. They exist at the same operational plane as the Orisha but occupy counter positions and work against one's Ori. They represent the other side of the Yoruba duality of existence which can either be '''Ire''' "''(Goodness)'' " or '''Ibi''' "''(Evil)'' ". Broken down, the term Ajogun comes from the words; ''A + Jẹ + Ogun'', literally meaning; "That which feeds/thrives on trouble/war". The Ajogun are often personified as "warriors" who wage war against ]ity. Out of their number, there are eight principal Ajogun led by 'Iku' (Death).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ogunnaike |first1=Oludamini |title=Deep Knowledge: Ways of Knowing in Sufism and Ifa, Two West African Intellectual Traditions |date=26 October 2020 |publisher=Penn State Press |isbn=978-0-271-08763-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FJ6YEAAAQBAJ&dq=ajogun&pg=PA212 |access-date=22 September 2024 |language=en}}</ref>

The Yoruba have developed a robust pantheon of divinities, each well-developed in their different rites and traditions. Many of these have attained national/pan Yoruba statuses and are known all across Yoruba country, even diffusing beyond ] into the practices and beliefs of neighbouring groups, though they may be more strongly or closely associated with certain places, occupations or subregions spread across Yorubaland. There are said to be 400 plus 1 of them in total; The 200 of the right (''Igba Ọ̀tún''), the 200 of the left (''Igba Òsì'') and one more.

===List of Orisha and Ajogun===
{| class="wiki table" style="line-height:20px;text-align:center;"
! style="width:20%; color:#fff; background:black;" |Name
! style="width:60%; color:#fff; background:navy;" |Deity of
! style="width:20%; color:#fff; background:navy;" |Member of
|-
| ]
| Chameleon, Service
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Volcanoes, Wilderness, Desert, Fire
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Peace, Love, Equality
| Orisha
|-
| Akọgun
| Warrior, Hunter, Wear a straw
| Orisha
|-
|]
| Drummer, Muse, Percussion
| Orisha
|-
| Arira (Aara, Aira, Ara)
| Weather, Storm, Thunder
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Punishes crime, Retribution
| Orisha
|-
| Arọni
| Nature, Forest spirit, Herbs, Plants
| Orisha
|-
| Arun
| Diseases, Affliction
| Ajogun
|-
| Aje
| Wealth, Property, Good Fortune, Success
| Orisha
|-
| Aye
| Passion, Environmentalism, Nature
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Whirlwind, Wilderness, Herb, Plants, Leaf
| Orisha
|-
| Biri
| Darkness, Night, Midnight
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Earth, Epidemics (Smallpox), Healing
| Orisha
|-
| Bayanni
| Children, Dread Heads, Prosperity
| Orisha
|-
| Dada
| Youthfulness, Mischief, Playfulness
| Orisha
|-
| Ẹla
| Illumination, Knowledge, Charity & Giving
| Orisha
|-
| Edi
| Confusion, Undoing, Corruption
| Ajogun
|-
| Ẹgba
| Paralysis, Ineptitude, Laziness
| Ajogun
|-
| ]
| Sainted dead, Ancestors
| Orisha
|-
| Epe
| Curses, Imprecation
| Ajogun
|-
| ]
| Hunter, Earth, Natural Force, Universe
| Orisha
|-
| Eṣe
| Affliction, Scourge
| Ajogun
|-
| ]
| Trickery, Crossroads, Chance, Travel, Emissary, Chaos, Order
| Intermediary
|-
| Ẹwọn
| Imprisonment, Bondage
| Ajogun
|-
| ]
| Twins
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Trees, Wilderness
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Primordial Spirit
| Orisha
|-
| Iku
| Death
| Ajogun
|-
| Imọlẹ
| Sunlight, Soothsayer
| Orisha
|-
| Logunede
| War, Hunting
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Saviour
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| River, Passion, Homemaking, Domesticity
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Creation, Purity
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Progenitor, Warrior
| Orisha
|-
| Ofo
| Loss, Depletion, Deprivation, Forfeiture, Defeat
| Ajogun
|-
| ]
| Warriors, Soldiers, Blacksmiths, Metal Workers, Craftsmen
| Orisha
|-
| Oke
| Mountain, Hills & Hillocks
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Agriculture, Farming, Fertility, Rurality, Harvest
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Water, Health, Wealth
| Orisha
|-
| Ọran
| Trouble, Problems, Difficulty
| Ajogun
|-
| ]
| Progenitor, Bravery, Heroism
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Community justice, Bullroarers, Secrecy
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Progenitor
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Wisdom, Knowledge, Divination, Philosophy, Destiny, Prophecy
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Beforelife, Afterlife, Destiny, Personal Identity
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Herb, Plant, Nature, Herbalist, Magician
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Hunt, Forest, Warrior, Justice
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Water, Purity, Fertility, Love, Femininity
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Rainbow, Serpent, Regeneration, Rebirth
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| River, Fighter
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Storms, Wind, Thunder, Lightning, Dead
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Thunder, Lightning, Fire, Justice, Dance, Virility
| Orisha
|-
| Shigidi
| Home guardian, Environment guardian, Defender
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| Creation, Water, Moon, Motherhood, Protection
| Orisha
|-
| ]
| River, Dreams, Clarity
| Orisha
|}

==Major Orisha description and attributes==
{| class="wikitable sortable" {| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! scope="col" style="width: 7%;" | Orishas
! scope="col" style="width: 6%;" | Other names
! scope="col" style="width: 72%;" | Description and attributes
! Image
! scope="col" style="width: 15%;" |Earthly homes & Sites<ref>{{cite book |last1=Alabi |first1=Adetayo |title=Oral Forms of Nigerian Autobiography and Life Stories |date=19 August 2021 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-000-42886-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Rlw1EAAAQBAJ&dq=esu+ijelu&pg=PT46 |access-date=27 July 2023 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Origunwa |first1=Obafemi |title=Fundamentals of Òrìsà Lifestyle |date=20 May 2015 |publisher=Lulu.com |isbn=978-1-329-15169-7 |page=127 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MSzRCQAAQBAJ&dq=osun+ijumu&pg=PA127 |access-date=27 July 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
|- |-
| ''']'''
! scope="col" style="width: 12%;" | Orishas
|
! Attributes
| Ori is the universal household Orisha venerated by all in ], as the custodian of fate. Hence, Ori is propitiated or appeased that one may have a good fate. When one has a balanced character, one obtains an alignment with one's Ori or divine self. The representing image of Ori is said to be 41 cowries strung together in the shape of a coronet or tiara, usually kept in a large coffer or enclosure called '''Ile Ori''' (Ori's house) made from the same material and is as large as the votary can afford/want it to be.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Gbadegesin |first1=Segun |title=African philosophy: Traditional Yoruba philosophy and contemporary African realities |date=1991 |publisher=New York: Peter Lang |pages=27–59}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Camara |first1=Louis |title=Le choix de l'Ori: conte |date=1996 |publisher=Saint-Louis: Xamal}}</ref>
|]
| _______
|- |-
| ''']''' / Ọ̀rúnmìlà | ''']'''
| '''Àgbọnìrègún'''<br /> '''Ẹlẹ́rí Ìpín'''<br /> '''Ẹ̀là'''<br /> '''Àjànà'''<br /> '''Òkìtìbiri'''
| The Yoruba grand priest and custodian of the Ifa oracle, source of ] who is believed to oversee the knowledge of the ], ], the cures of illnesses and deformities. ]s are Orumila's subordinates as priests and followers.
| The Yoruba grand priest, sage and custodian of the Ifa oracle, source of ] who is believed to oversee the knowledge of the ], ], the cures of illnesses and deformities. ]s are Orumila's subordinates, who are priests, devotees, and followers. The light or illumination of Ifa itself is referred to as ''Ẹ̀là''. Babalawos and Iyanifas invoke Ela's light when calling for Orunmila's presence. Orunmila is considered synonymous with or an avatar of Ẹ̀là by many and the name is often broken down as (''Ọ̀run mí Ẹ̀là'') meaning; ''Heaven brings forth revelation/light''. Therefore, Ifa, Orunmila and Ela are all seen as aspects of the divine light which reveals things unknown - whether in the past, the present or the future.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kumari |first1=Ayele |title=Isese Spirituality Workbook |date=23 June 2020 |publisher=Ayele Kumari |page=61 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7pPsDwAAQBAJ&dq=orunmila+okiribiti&pg=PA61 |access-date=22 September 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
|]
|]. (Home) <br /> ________<br /> ]. (Origin)
|- |-
| ''']''' / Èṣù | ''']'''
| '''Láróyè''' <br /> '''Bàrà''' <br /> '''Láàlú''' <br /> '''Ògiri Òkò''' <br /> '''Ọ̀dàrà'''<br />'''Látọ́pa'''
| Often ill-translated as "The Devil" or "The Evil Being", Eshu is in truth neither of these. Best referred to as "The Trickster", he deals a hand of misfortune to those that do not offer tribute or are deemed to be ''spiritual novices''. Also regarded as the "divine messenger", a prime negotiator between negative and positive forces in the body and an enforcer of the "law of being". He is said to assist in enhancing the power derived from herbal medicines and other forms of esoteric technology.
| Often ill-translated as "The Devil" or "The Evil Being", Eshu is in truth neither of these. Best referred to as "The Trickster", he deals a hand of misfortune to those who do not offer tribute or are deemed to be ''spiritual novices''. Also regarded as the "divine messenger", a prime negotiator between negative and positive forces in the body and an enforcer of the "law of being". He is said to assist in enhancing the power derived from herbal medicines and other forms of esoteric technology.


Eshu is the Orisha of chance, accident and unpredictability. Because he is Olorun's linguist and the master of languages, Eshu is responsible for carrying messages and sacrifices from humans to the Sky God. Also known for his phallic powers and exploits, Eshu is said to lurk at gateways, on the highways and at the crossroads, where he introduces chance and accident into the lives of humans. He is known by a variety of names, including Elegbara.<ref>{{cite book|title=Tales of Yoruba Gods and Heroes|first=Harold|last=Courlander|isbn=978-0517500637|publisher=Crown Pub|date=March 1973|url=https://archive.org/details/talesofyorubagod00cour}}</ref> Eshu is the Orisha of chance, accident and unpredictability. Because he is Olorun's linguist and the master of languages, Eshu is responsible for carrying messages and sacrifices from humans to the Sky God. Also known for his phallic powers and exploits, Eshu is said to lurk at gateways, on the highways and at the crossroads, where he introduces chance and accident into the lives of humans. He is known by a variety of names, including Elegbara.<ref>{{cite book|title=Tales of Yoruba Gods and Heroes|first=Harold|last=Courlander|isbn=978-0517500637|publisher=Crown Pub|date=March 1973|url=https://archive.org/details/talesofyorubagod00cour}}</ref>
|]
|], ]. (Home)<br />_______<br />
Ìjẹ̀lú, ]. (Home)<br />_______<br />
], ]. (Site) <br />_______<br />
Iworo, ]. (Site)
|- |-
| ''']''' / Ògún | ''']'''
|'''Ajàngele'''
| Orisha of iron, war and ].
| The Orisha of agriculture, open fields and rurality. He was known as a fighter against sorcery, a hunter who kept a dog and a flute- credited with the development of agricultural practices. He is associated with the annual new yam harvest. Honey bees are his messengers, and prepared ] (melon) seeds from ''Bara'' pods (plants in the ] family) are his favourite offering.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Olupona |first1=Jacob Kẹhinde |last2=Rey |first2=Terry |title=Òrìşà Devotion as World Religion: The Globalization of Yorùbá Religious Culture |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QlW3ZMxrCKMC&dq=ajangele&pg=PA114 |publisher=Univ of Wisconsin Press |access-date=27 September 2024 |language=en |date=2008|isbn=978-0-299-22464-6 }}</ref> Orisha Oko is represented with a large staff with rolls of copper (Bàbà) strings wound around its handle (''Opa Orisha Oko'') and an ivory flute. ] (Ẹfun) and ''ilarere'' cowrie necklaces are used by his male votaries.<ref name="Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùbá">{{cite book |last1=Adeoye |first1=C. L. |title=Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùbá |date=1989 |publisher=Ibadan: Evans Bros. Nigeria Publishers |isbn=9781675098 |pages=270–279}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Prandi |first1=Reginaldo |title=Aimó: Uma viagem pelo mundo dos orixás |date=2017 |publisher=Editora Seguinte |isbn=978-8543809670 |page=200}}</ref>
| ]
|], ]. (Home, Origin)<br />_______<br />
], ]. (Home)<ref>{{cite book |last1=Olupona |first1=Jacob Kẹhinde |last2=Rey |first2=Terry |title=Òrìşà Devotion as World Religion: The Globalization of Yorùbá Religious Culture |date=2008 |publisher=Univ of Wisconsin Press |isbn=978-0-299-22464-6 |page=115 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QlW3ZMxrCKMC&dq=Obatala+iranje&pg=PA115 |access-date=20 September 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
|- |-
| ''']''' / Yemọja | ''']'''
| '''Lákáayé''' <br /> '''Aládá Méjì'''<br /> '''Ọṣìn Imalẹ̀''' <br /> '''Alágbẹ̀dẹ'''
|Patron of the Ògùn River that flows from Ọ̀yọ́ State, through Ogun State, and empties into the inland area of the Lagos Lagoon; other smaller tributaries and streams are dedicated to Iyemọja throughout Yorùbáland; spiritual mother of Ṣàngó. According to Olorishas, she is the ] in the womb of the pregnant woman, as well as the breasts which nurture. She is considered the protective energy of the feminine force. {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}}
| Orisha of iron, war, heroism and ]. He is venerated by all those who work with metals and technology.<ref name="Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùbá"/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Barnes |first1=Sandra |title=Africa's Ogun: Old World and New |date=1997 |publisher=Bloomington Ind: Indiana University Press |isbn=0253-332516}}</ref>
|]
|], ]. (Origin)<br />_______<br />
], ]. (Home)<br />_______<br />]. (Associated)
|- |-

| ''']''' / Ọ̀ṣun
| '''Bàyànni'''
| A second wife of Shango, the one time ] of ] (another Yoruba Orisha, see below), she is said to have entered into a river at Osogbo. The Yoruba clerics ascribed to her sensuality, beauty and gracefulness, symbolizing both their people's search for clarity and a flowing motion. She is associated with several powers, including abilities to heal with cool water, induction of fertility and the control of the feminine essence. Women appeal to her for child-bearing and for the alleviation of female disorders. The Yoruba traditions describe her as being fond of babies and her intervention is sought if a baby becomes ill. Oshun is also known for her love of honey. {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}}
| '''Dàda''' <br /> '''Àjàká''' <br /> '''Báyọ̀ni'''
| Bayanni or Dada-Ajaka was a brother to Shango and another son of ]. He was Alaafin of Oyo before Shango and again after him. He is the Orisha of birth, youngsters and children with natural hair of tufts that grow separately in tight curls (Dàda) and is often associated with prosperity. By some accounts, Dada Ajaka was actually the brother to Shango while Bayanni was a female and a sister.<ref>{{cite book |last1=PhD |first1=Patricia Monaghan |title=Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines |date=1 April 2014 |publisher=New World Library |isbn=978-1-60868-218-8 |page=6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Cj5OAwAAQBAJ&dq=bayanni+orisha&pg=PA6 |access-date=14 October 2023 |language=en}}</ref> However, the domains of both personages have become largely intertwined. He is strongly associated with the ] region and his object is a diadem/coffer of cowries with several strings with a tipped top ''(Ṣónṣó Orí)'' called ''Ade Bayanni'' (Bayanni's crown).<ref>{{cite web |title=X77.903 Ade Bayanni (cowrie crown) {{!}} Fowler Museum at UCLA |url=https://fowler.ucla.edu/product/x77-903-ade-bayanni-cowrie-crown/ |website=Fowler museum at UCLA |access-date=14 October 2023}}</ref>
|]
|]. (Home, Origin)
|- |-
| ''']''' / Ṣàngó | ''']'''
| '''Àwòyó''' <br /> '''Olódò''' <br />'''Mọjẹlẹ́wù'''
| Associated with virility, masculinity, fire, lightning, stones, Oyo warriors and magnetism. He is said to have the abilities to transform base substances into those that are pure and valuable. He was the ] of ] at some point in its history. He derived his nickname Oba Koso from the tales of his immortality. Shango is the Orisha of the thunderbolt, said to have ruled in ancient times over the kingdom of Oyo. Also known as Jakuta (Stone Thrower) and as Oba Koso (The King Does Not Hang). {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}}
|Matron of the Ògùn River that flows from the upper regions of Ọ̀yọ́ State ('']''), through Ogun State and the city of Abeokuta, before emptying into the Lagos lagoon (''Ọ̀sà''); other smaller tributaries and streams are dedicated to Iyemọja throughout Yorùbáland; spiritual mother of Ṣàngó. According to Olorishas, she is the ] in the womb of the pregnant woman, as well as the breasts which nurture. She is considered the protective energy of the feminine force. Her name is derived from the words; ''Yèyé-Ọmọ-Ẹja'' - Meaning; ''Mother of fish children'', which is a metaphor for bodies of water with fish including lakes and the ocean.<ref>{{cite web |last1=M. Smith |first1=Omari Tunkara |title=Manipulating the Sacred, Yoruba Art, Ritual and Resistance in Brazilian Candomble |url=https://womrel.sitehost.iu.edu/REL%20300%20Spirit/REL%20300_Spirit/Tunkara_Yemoja_Manipulatingsacred.pdf |website=iu.edu |access-date=28 July 2023}}</ref> ||]
|], ]. (Origin)<br />_______<br />
], ]. (Home) <br />_______<br />
Ibara, ], ]. (Site)
|- |-
| ''']''' / Ọya | ''']'''
| '''Yèyé''' <br /> '''Ládékojú'''<br /> '''Ẹ̀wùjí'''
| The third wife of the one time ] of ] called Shango (another Yoruba Orisha, see above), she is said to have entered into the ]. She is often described as the Tempest, Guardian of the Cemetery, Winds of Change, Storms and Progression. Due to her personal power, she is usually depicted as being in the company of her husband Shango. She is the Orisha of rebirth.{{Citation needed|date=May 2020}}
| A second wife of Shango, she is said to have entered into a river at Osogbo. The Yoruba clerics ascribed to her sensuality, beauty and gracefulness, symbolizing both their people's search for clarity and a flowing motion. She is associated with several powers, including abilities to heal with cool water, induction of fertility and the control of the feminine essence. Women appeal to her for child-bearing and for the alleviation of female disorders. The Yoruba traditions describe her as being fond of babies and her intervention is sought if a baby becomes ill. Oshun is also known for her love of honey and crocodiles are her messengers. Items closely associated with Oshun are; Brass fans (Abẹ̀bẹ̀), brass bells (Àjà), anklets and bangles (Ìdè), brass machetes (Àdá), brass hair pins (Ìkótí), red parrot feathers (Ikodídẹ) and brass combs (''Òyìyà/Òòyà'').<ref name="Monaghan2014">{{cite book|last1=Monaghan|first1=Monaghan|title=Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines|date=2014|publisher=New World Library|isbn=9781608682188|page=15}}</ref>
<ref name="Murrell2009">{{cite book|last1=Murrell|first1=Nathaniel Samuel|title=Afro-Caribbean Religions: An Introduction to Their Historical, Cultural, and Sacred Traditions|date=2009|publisher=Temple University Press|isbn=9781439901755|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9h5KDRfZ-JgC&pg=PA35}}</ref>
|]
| Ìgèdè, ]. (Home, Source)<br />_______<br /> ], ]. (Origin) <br />_______<br />], ]. (Grove)
|- |-
|''']''' / Ọ̀sanyìn | ''']'''
| '''Jákúta''' <br /> '''Ọba Kòso'''
|<nowiki>Represented as a one eyed, one hand, and one legged figure, he is the orisha of herbs, plants, magic, and healing.</nowiki>
| Orisha of thunder and lightning.<ref name=ges>{{cite journal |last1=Simpson |first1=George Eaton |date=December 1962 |title=The Shango Cult in Nigeria and in Trinidad |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/667846 |journal=] |volume=64 |issue=6|page=1205 |doi=10.1525/aa.1962.64.6.02a00050 |jstor=667846 |access-date=17 June 2024}}</ref> Associated with virility, masculinity, fire, lightning, stones, Oyo warriors and magnetism. He is said to have the ability to transform base substances into those that are pure and valuable. He was the ] of ] at some point in its history. He derived his nickname Oba Koso from the tales of his immortality. Shango is the Orisha of the thunderbolt, said to have ruled in ancient times over the kingdom of Oyo. Also known as Jakuta (Stone Thrower) and as Oba Koso (The king does not hang).<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ojebodé |first1=Ayokúnmi O. |title=Eulogizing the Big Man: Murals as Royal Art in Ọ̀yó Aláàfin Palace |journal=Delos |date=2023 |volume=38 |issue=1 |pages=1–119}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Thieme |first1=Darius L. |title=A descriptive catalogue of Yoruba musical instruments |date=1969 |publisher=The Catholic University of America}}</ref> His wives are Oya, Oshun and Oba.<ref name=ges/>
|]
| ]. (Home) <br />_______<br /> Kòso, ]. (Site)
|- |-
|''']''' '''/''' Ọbalúayé |''']'''
|'''Eyinlẹ̀'''
|Meaning, "Lord, ruler of the world," and a widely feared orisha, he is also known as ], the deity of smallpox. As Obaluaye, he is the orisha of diseases and sickness. While he has the power to inflict smallpox and other disease, he is also associated with the ability to heal those afflicted with these diseases. In the 20th century, worship of Obaluaye was banned by the British colonial Government as they were believed to purposely infect people with smallpox. {{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}
| A great hunter, fisherman and water lord Orisha had no wife and lived on the bank of the Erinle River. He is also known as a great healer. Some traditions credit him with starting the tradition of chanting '''Ijala''', a traditional oral poetry with a characteristic nasal twang mostly performed by hunters (and mostly associated with Ogun) due to his loneliness.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barnes |first1=Sandra T. |title=Africa's Ogun: Old World and New |date=22 June 1997 |publisher=Indiana University Press |isbn=978-0-253-11381-8 |page=148 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5UwAAQAAQBAJ&dq=erinle+ajagbusi&pg=PA148 |access-date=27 July 2023 |language=en}}</ref> He is represented by smooth black stones from the ], a tributary stream which empties into the ] near Ede, placed in an earthenware filled with water. His objects are a staff of wrought iron with prongs or branches surmounted by birds.<ref>{{cite book|title= Yoruba: nine centuries of African art and thought |first1= Henry John |last1= Drewal |first2= John |last2= Pemberton |first3= Rowland |last3= Abiodun |first4= Allen |last4= Wardwell |publisher= Center for African Art |date= 1989 |url=https://www.amherst.edu/system/files/media/1627/Reduced%2520Yoruba_9_Centuries_Chap_6_part_2.pdf
|isbn=978-0-8109-1794-1}}</ref>
|]
|Ajagbusi.
|- |-
|''']''' / Ọbàtálá | ''']'''
|'''Ìyásàán''' <br /> '''Àràká''' <br /> '''Òrìrí'''
|Also known as "Orisa-nla," meaning "the big Orisha," he is also known as the Sky father. He is often equated with purity, and represented by "ala," white cloth, and "efun," white chalk. He is regarded as the creator of Earth and shaping humans from clay. He is also known as the protector of the disabled. {{Citation needed|date=June 2021}}
| The third wife of the one time ] of ] called Shango, she is also known to possess a fiery temper similar to Sango and is said to have entered into the ]. She is the deity of powerful winds, storms and the tempest, guardian of the cemetery, storms and transformation. She possesses the power to shape shift between human and animal forms and is closely associated with the ]. She is also referred to as the ''Mother of Nine'' (Iya-esan) for the nine branches of the river. Due to her personal power and nature as a warrior goddess, she is usually depicted as being in the company of her husband Shango. She is the Orisha of rebirth.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Washington |first1=Teresa N. |title=The architects of existence: Aje in Yoruba cosmology, ontology, and orature. |date=2014 |publisher=Oya's Tornado}}</ref>
|]
| Ìrá, ], ]. (Home) <br />_______<br />], ], ]. (Iya Abessan temple)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Verger |first1=Pierre |title=Notes sur le culte des Orisa et Vodun à Bahia: la Baie de tous les saints au Brésil et à l'ancienne Côte des esclaves en Afrique |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XmdTAAAAYAAJ&q=abesan+porto+novo |publisher=IFAN |access-date=22 August 2023 |language=fr |date=1970}}</ref>
|- |-
|''']''' / Aganjù |''']'''
| '''Àrọ̀nì'''
|Roughly translating to "darkness of the wilderness," Aganju is regarded as the orisha of the forest, the desert, volcanoes, and the wilderness. He was originally a king of the Oyo empire before being deified after his death
|Osanyin is the most powerful deity of herbs with dominion over all those who deal with plants and magic. Represented as a one eyed, one-handed, and one-legged figure, he is the Orisha of herbs, plants, magic, potions, charms and healing. Osanyin is often depicted as a homoeopathic Orisha, meaning that he often takes the look or form of the ailment which it is invoked to treat or cure. He also represents the duality and balance of nature and the double facets of herbal power; 'That which can make you better can also harm you if used improperly or if abused'. His object is the ], ('''Opa Osanyin'''). The staff is composed of a circle of small birds and a shaft in the middle that elevates a large bird above smaller ones.<ref>{{cite book | last = Adeoye | first = C. L. | title = Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùba | publisher = Evans Bros. Nigeria Publishers | location = Ibadan | year = 1989 | isbn = 9781675098 | pages = 214–219 | language = Yoruba}}</ref>
|]
|], ]. (Home, Origin).

|- |-
|''']'''
|''']''' '''/''' Ọ̀ṣọ́ọ̀sì
|'''Ṣọ̀pọ̀ná''' <br /> '''Babalú Ayé''' <br />'''Ọmọlú''' <br />'''Olóde''' <br />'''Sapata'''
|He is the orisha of hunting and the forest, and is another patron of hunters. {{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}
|Meaning; "Lord/ruler of the earth" and a widely feared orisha, he is also known as ], Omolu or Sapata, the Orisha of diseases and sickness. While he has the power to inflict smallpox, Leprosy, Tuberculosis and other communicable diseases, he is also associated with healing those afflicted. In the early 20th century (1917), Obaluaye in Nigeria was banned by the British colonial Government because its devotees were thought to deliberately spread smallpox. Later writers tended to disapprove of these earlier opinions/suggestions.

Shoponna priests prevented the spread of contagious diseases by being responsible for the removal of corpses and belongings of those who died from them. Sopona priests seem to have known of the protective and dangerous nature of the virus and often inoculated people against the disease by skin incisions.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Parrinder |first1=Geoffrey |title=West African Religion: A Study of the Beliefs and Practices of Akan, Ewe, Yoruba, Ibo, and Kindred Peoples |date=17 September 2014 |publisher=Wipf and Stock Publishers |isbn=978-1-4982-0492-7 |page=44 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UAOQBAAAQBAJ&dq=shopona+four+principal+deities+with+his+own+sacred+day&pg=PA41 |access-date=24 September 2024 |language=en}}</ref>
|]
|
|- |-
|''']''' '''/''' Olóòkun |''']'''
|
|A primoridal force present at creation, Olokun, meaning "Owner of the ocean," is an androgynous orisha embodying the ocean. They are the parent of the orishas Aje and Olosa, and represents wealth, healing, and the vastness of the sea.{{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}
|Orisha of the ] associated with cemeteries, clarity, beauty, dreams and magic. She lives in the cemetery with Oba and Oya. She brings souls to her sister Oya meaning she is the initiator of the beginning of all change that occurs. Explicit or loud speech near her places of worship is not tolerated. There is also a pataki of how this orisha was able to effectively trick death itself. Also, Yewa cannot be venerated near Shango as according to the patakis he molested her. Yewa is also responsible for gifting humans with dreams and imagination.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Africa and the Americas: Interconnections during the Slave Trade |publisher=Africa World Press |year=2005 |editor-last=Curto |editor-first=José C. |chapter=R. Yewa |editor-last2=France |editor-first2=Renée Soulodre-La}}</ref>
|
|- |-
|''']'''
|'''Aje /''' Ajé
|'''Òrìṣàlá''' <br /> '''Òṣàlúfọ́n''' <br />'''Òṣàgìrìyan''' <br /> '''Olúwa Ayé''' <br />'''Oṣẹ̀rẹ̀màgbó'''
|Not to be confused with ], she is also called Aje Saluga. Aje is the representation and the orisha of wealth and economic success. She is also a patron of traders, businesspeople, and markets. The Yoruba word for Monday, is called Aje as it is often the first day of the week when markets open. {{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}
|Also known as ''Orisa-nla/Oshala'', meaning "the big Orisha," and ''Orisha Funfun''; ''The white Orisha''. He is also known as the Skyfather. He is often equated with purity, and represented by "Ala," or white cloth, and "Ẹfun," white chalk. Most items associated with Obatala are either white or clear. He is regarded as the creator of Earth and the shaper of the human body from clay. He is also known as the protector of the physically challenged/different. His favourite consort was Yemowo (Yèyé Mowò). At his ] abode, he is known by the name ''Oshalufon'', while in ] he goes by the appellation ''Oshagiyan''/''Oshagiriyan'', two popular avatars of Obatala. His offerings are the African land snails (Ìgbín).<ref name="Probst 2011 p. ">{{cite book | last=Probst | first=Peter | title=Osogbo and the Art of Heritage | publisher=Indiana University Press | publication-place=Bloomington | date=2011 | isbn=978-0-253-22295-4 | page=17}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=OBATALA - the Yoruba God of Purity (Yoruba mythology) |url=https://www.godchecker.com/yoruba-mythology/OBATALA/ |access-date=2022-12-06 |website=Godchecker - Your Guide to the Gods}}</ref>
|]
|]. (Origin, Home) <br />_______<br />], ]. (Associated)<br />_______<br />], ]. (Associated)
|- |-
|''']''' '''/''' Odùdùwà |''']'''
| '''Aganjùṣọlá'''
|Regarded as the founder of the Yoruba people and the first Oba of Ife, he is also associated with an androgynous orisha of creation. Most Yoruba people, and their monarchs most especially, claim descent from Oduduwa. He is a father or grandfather of Oranmiyan, Sango, Ajaka, Obalufon, and other Obas of Ife. He is also regarded as an ancestor of the Obas of the Benin Empire. {{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}
|Roughly translating to "darkness of the wilderness," Aganju is very closely related to Sango and is regarded as the Orisha of the forest, the desert, volcanoes, and the wilderness. He was originally a king of the Oyo empire (See; Alaafin Aganju sola) before being deified after his death. He is the patron deity of long-distance travelling, is said to walk with a sword in long strides as if leaping over obstacles, and is said to fight by shooting fire, as opposed to Sango who fights with thunderbolts and lightning while hurling ] (''Ẹdun àrá''). His object is a ] similar to Sango's but with a longer handle.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pinn |first1=Anthony |title=Pinn, Anthony. "Orisha Worship in the United States |date=2000 |publisher=Down by the Riverside: Readings in African American religion |pages=243–255}}</ref>
|
|]. (Home)
|- |-
|''']'''
|] '''/''' Àyàngalú
|'''Ọ̀ṣọ́wùsì''' <br /> '''Ọdẹ Mẹ́ta'''
|Ayangalu is the orisha of drumming, the patron of the talking drum, and the orisha of ]. People born into drumming families often have the prefix "Àyàn," in their first or last names. {{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}
|He is the Orisha of adventure, hunting and the forest, and is another patron of hunters. He is a master of archery (He is called 'the archer of the Orisha') and is always depicted holding a bow and arrow often with a quiver, (''Apó''). His power is made manifest in the speed and accuracy of his arrow and his prideful assertion of mental and physical dexterity. His object is a brass iron crossbow (''Ọrún'') often with strings of cowries hanging down from it, and small iron cylinders filled with miniature arrows (''Ọfà'')<ref>{{cite book |last1=Thompson |first1=Robert Farris |title=Flash of the Spirit: African & Afro-American Art & Philosophy |date=26 May 2010 |publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-307-87433-7 |page=57 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DzOIY4iHSjAC&dq=osanyin&pg=PA42 |access-date=18 September 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
|]
|Ìdó.
|- |-
|''']''' '''/''' Ọbà |''']'''
|'''Malòkun''' <br /> '''Ṣẹ̀níadé'''
|The first and most senior wife of ], she is the Orisha of the River Oba, and also is the orisha of domesticity, energy, movement, and the flow of time and life. She is most known for being tricked by the other wives of Shango into cutting off her ear and attempting to feed it to Shango.{{Citation needed|date=July 2021}}
|A primordial force present at creation, Olokun, meaning "Owner of the ocean" is also known as Imalẹ̀ Òkun, "Deity of the Ocean". Olokun had been present since the beginning of creation as an androgynous Orisha ruling the depths of the ocean and all the waters on earth before Obatala was supposed to come and create dry land. They are the parent of the Orishas Ajé and Ọlọ́sà and represents wealth, healing, and the vastness of the sea.<ref name="Harvey2015">{{cite journal|last1=Harvey|first1=Marcus|title=Engaging the Orisa: An Exploration of the Yoruba Concepts of Ibeji and Olokun as Theoretical Principles in Black Theology|journal=Black Theology|volume=6|issue=1|year=2015|pages=61–82|issn=1476-9948|doi=10.1558/blth2008v6i1.61|s2cid=144995131}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Adeoye | first = C. L. | title = Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùba | publisher = Evans Bros. Nigeria Publishers | location = Ibadan | year = 1989 | isbn = 9781675098 | pages = 227–236 | language = yo}}</ref><ref name=ClarkSanteria2007>{{cite book|last=Clark|first=Mary Ann|title=Santería : correcting the myths and uncovering the realities of a growing religion|year=2007|publisher=Praeger Publishers|location=Westport, Conn.|isbn=978-0-275-99079-4|pages=62}}</ref>
|
|], ]. (Origin, Home)
|-
|'''Ajé'''
|'''Ṣàlùgá''' <br />'''Ògúgúlùso'''
|Not to be confused with ], he is also called Aje Saluga. Aje is the representation and the orisha of wealth and economic success. He is also a patron of traders, businesspeople, and markets. The Yoruba word for Monday, is called Aje as it is often the first day of the week when markets open.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Verger |first1=Pierre Fatumbi |title=Orixás |date=1985 |publisher=Salvador: Corrupio}}</ref>
|
|-
|''']'''
|'''Ọlọ́fin Àdìmúlà''' <br /> '''Ọṣìn Ọ̀rà''' <br />'''Ọlọ́fin Ayé'''
|Regarded as the founder of the Yoruba people and the first Oba of Ife, he is also associated with an androgynous orisha of creation. Most Yoruba people, and their monarchs most especially, claim descent from Oduduwa. He is a father or grandfather of Oranmiyan, Sango, Ajaka, Obalufon, and other Obas of Ife. He is also regarded as an ancestor of the Obas of the Benin Empire. He is the Orisha of the Earth and the initiator of the ] which started from the sacred city of Ife and are charged with the maintenance of social order.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Nwanyanwu |first1=O. J. |last2=Opajobi |first2=Bola |last3=Olayinka |first3=Sola |title=Education for Socio-economic & Political Development in Nigeria |date=1997 |publisher=Visual Resources |isbn=978-978-34467-0-0 |page=159 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=99tCAQAAIAAJ&q=oke+ora+ife |access-date=1 May 2024 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Law|first=R. C. C.|date=1973|title=The Heritage of Oduduwa: Traditional History and Political Propaganda among the Yoruba|journal=The Journal of African History|volume=14|issue=2|pages=207–222|doi=10.1017/S0021853700012524|jstor=180445|s2cid=148987750 |issn=0021-8537}}</ref>
|
|]. (Origin, Home)<br />_______<br />
]. (Home)
|-
|''']'''
|'''Ibu'''
|The first and most senior wife of ], she is the Orisha of the ], and also is the Orisha of domesticity, energy, movement, and the flow of time and life. She is most known for being tricked by the other wives of Shango into cutting off her ear and attempting to feed it to her husband Shango.<ref name="Yoruba concepts of the soul">{{cite book |last1=Bascom |first1=William |title=Men and Cultures |chapter=Yoruba Concepts of the Soul |date=1960 |pages=401–410|doi=10.9783/9781512819526-065 |isbn=978-1-5128-1952-6 }}</ref>
|]
|} |}

===Irunmọlẹ===
Irunmọlẹ are entities sent by ] to complete given tasks, often acting as liaisons between Orun (the invisible realm) and Aiye (the physical realm).<ref name="Religion">J. Olumide Lucas, ''The Religion of the Yorubas'', Athelia Henrietta PR, 1996. {{ISBN|0-9638787-8-6}}</ref> Irunmole(s) can best be described as ranking divinities; whereby such divinities are regarded as the principal Orishas. Irunmole, from "Erinrun" - 400, "Imole" - Divinities or Divine Spirits.


===Reincarnation=== ===Reincarnation===
] masquerade dance garment in the permanent collection of ]]]{{Unreferenced section|date=May 2019}} ] masquerade dance garment in the permanent collection of ]]]
The Yoruba believe in Atunwa, ] within the family. The names Babatunde (father returns), Yetunde (Mother returns), Babatunji (Father wakes once again) and Sotunde (The wise man returns) all offer vivid evidence of the Ifa concept of familial or lineal rebirth.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Omobola|first=Odejobi|title=Influence of Yoruba Culture in Christian Religious Worship|journal=International J. Soc. Sci. & Education|volume=4|pages=586}}</ref> There is no simple guarantee that your grandfather or great uncle will "come back" in the birth of a child, however. The Yoruba believe in Atunwa, the possibility of ] within the family. The names Babatunde (father returns), Yetunde (Mother returns), Babatunji (Father wakes once again) and Sotunde (The wise man returns) all offer vivid evidence of the Ifa concept of familial or lineal rebirth.<ref name="Omobola 586">{{Cite journal|last=Omobola|first=Odejobi|title=Influence of Yoruba Culture in Christian Religious Worship|journal=International J. Soc. Sci. & Education|volume=4|pages=586}}</ref> There is no simple guarantee that one's grandfather or great uncle will "come back" in the birth of a child, however.


Whenever the time arrives for a spirit to return to Earth (otherwise known as The Marketplace) through the conception of a new life in the direct bloodline of the family, one of the component entities of a person's being returns, while the other remains in Heaven (Ikole Orun). The spirit that returns does so in the form of a Guardian Ori. One's Guardian Ori, which is represented and contained in the crown of the head, represents not only the spirit and energy of one's previous blood relative, but the accumulated wisdom he or she has acquired through myriad lifetimes. This is not to be confused with one’s spiritual Ori, which contains personal destiny, but instead refers to the coming back to ''The Marketplace'' of one's personal blood Ori through one's new life and experiences. The Primary Ancestor (which should be identified in your Itefa) becomes – if you are aware and work with that specific energy – a “guide” for the individual throughout their lifetime. At the end of that life they return to their identical spirit self and merge into one, taking the additional knowledge gained from their experience with the individual as a form of ''payment''. {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} Whenever the time arrives for a spirit to return to Earth (otherwise known as The Marketplace) through the conception of a new life in the direct bloodline of the family, one of the component entities of a person's being returns, while the other remains in Heaven (Ikole Orun). The spirit that returns does so in the form of a Guardian Ori. One's Guardian Ori, which is represented and contained in the crown of the head, represents not only the spirit and energy of one's previous blood relative, but the accumulated wisdom he or she has acquired through myriad lifetimes.<ref name="Yoruba concepts of the soul"/> This is not to be confused with one's spiritual Ori, which contains personal destiny, but instead refers to the coming back to ''The Marketplace'' of one's personal blood Ori through one's new life and experiences. The Primary Ancestor (which should be identified in your Itefa) becomes—if you are aware and work with that specific energy—a "guide" for the individual throughout their lifetime. At the end of that life they return to their identical spirit self and merge into one, taking the additional knowledge gained from their experience with the individual as a form of ''payment''.<ref name="Omobola 586"/>


==Influence== ==Influence==
Line 121: Line 469:


===African diaspora religions=== ===African diaspora religions===
According to Professor Adams Abdullahi Suberu, the Yoruba were exquisite statesmen who spread across the globe in an unprecedented fashion;<ref name="History">{{cite book|title=A history of the Yoruba people|first=Prof S. A.|last= Akintoye|publisher=Amalion Publishing|year= 2010|isbn=978-2-35926-005-2|id= {{ASIN|2359260057|country=uk}}}}</ref> the reach of their culture is largely due to migration—the most recent migration occurred with the ], and with Nigerian and Beninoise Yorùbá emigrating to the United States, the UK, Brazil, and other countries of the Americas and Europe. During the colonial period, many Yoruba were captured and sold into the slave trade and transported to ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and other parts of the Americas. With them, they carried their religious beliefs. The school-of-thought integrated into what now constitutes the core of the "New World lineages" which are a variety of Yorùbá-derived contemporary African religions:<ref name="History"/><ref name="Santeria">{{cite book|title=Santería Enthroned: Innovation in an Afro-Cuban Religion|first=David H.|last= Brown (Ph.D.)|publisher=] |year= 2003|isbn=0-226-07610-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://anthrocivitas.net/forum/showthread.php?t=9088 |title=Anthropology: |author=Oditous|publisher=Anthrocivitas Online |year=2010 |access-date=2011-03-27}}</ref><ref name="Concept">{{cite book|title=The Handbook of Yoruba Religious Concepts|first=Baba Ifa |last= Karade|publisher=Weiser Books|location= York Beach, New York|year=1994|isbn=0-87728-789-9}}</ref> According to Professor Adams Abdullahi Suberu, the Yoruba were exquisite statesmen who spread across the globe in an unprecedented fashion;<ref name="History">{{cite book|title=A history of the Yoruba people|first=Prof S. A.|last= Akintoye|publisher=Amalion Publishing|year= 2010|isbn=978-2-35926-005-2|id= {{ASIN|2359260057|country=uk}}}}</ref> the reach of their culture is largely due to migration—the most recent migration occurred with the ], and with Nigerian and Beninoise Yorùbá emigrating to the United States, the UK, Brazil, and other countries of the Americas and Europe. During the pre-colonial period, many Yoruba were captured and sold into the slave trade and transported to ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and other parts of the Americas. With them, they carried their religious beliefs. The school-of-thought integrated into what now constitutes the core of the "New World lineages" which are a variety of Yorùbá-derived contemporary African religions:<ref name="History"/><ref name="Santeria">{{cite book|title=Santería Enthroned: Innovation in an Afro-Cuban Religion|first=David H.|last= Brown (Ph.D.)|publisher=] |year= 2003|isbn=0-226-07610-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://anthrocivitas.net/forum/showthread.php?t=9088 |title=Anthropology: |author=Oditous|publisher=Anthrocivitas Online |year=2010 |access-date=2011-03-27}}</ref><ref name="Concept">{{cite book|title=The Handbook of Yoruba Religious Concepts|first=Baba Ifa |last= Karade|publisher=Weiser Books|location= York Beach, New York|year=1994|isbn=0-87728-789-9}}</ref>
* ] (], ], ]) * ] (], ], ])
* ] (], ], ]) * ] (], ], ])
* ] (]) * ] (])
*] (]) *] (])
* ] (]) * ] (])
* ] (], ], ]) * ] (], ], ])
Line 132: Line 480:
| last1=Fandrich|first1=Ina J.|title=Yorùbá Influences on Haitian Vodou and New Orleans Voodoo|journal=Journal of Black Studies|volume=37|issue=5 (May)|pages=775–791|year=2007|jstor=40034365|doi=10.1177/0021934705280410|s2cid=144192532}}</ref> | last1=Fandrich|first1=Ina J.|title=Yorùbá Influences on Haitian Vodou and New Orleans Voodoo|journal=Journal of Black Studies|volume=37|issue=5 (May)|pages=775–791|year=2007|jstor=40034365|doi=10.1177/0021934705280410|s2cid=144192532}}</ref>


In ], Yoruba religion has been in intense ] with ], ] and ] since the first arrival of African immigrants. In Brazil, the religion of ] was born from the rich interaction of beliefs that Latin America provided. Followers of ] typically consider themselves ], but honor ] and ] as manifestations from god or as ]. Umbanda worship also include elements from ] rituals such as the ritual use of ] and communication with the spirits of deceased Indian warriors (]). {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} In ], Yoruba religion has been in intense ] with ], ] and ] since the first arrival of African immigrants. In Brazil, the religion of ] was born from the rich interaction of beliefs that Latin America provided. Followers of ] typically consider themselves ], but honor ] and ] as manifestations from god or as ]. Umbanda worship also include elements from ] rituals such as the ritual use of ] and communication with the spirits of deceased Indian warriors (]).<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Engler |first1=Steven |title=Umbanda and Africa. |journal=Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions |date=2012 |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=13–35|doi=10.1525/nr.2012.15.4.13 }}</ref>


In the 1949 documentary ''Fiestas de Santiago Apóstol en Loíza Aldea'', anthropologist ] noted a similar tendency at ], arguing that the affinity between the black population in the municipality and the Catholic saint ] may derive from the way in which he is depicted as a warrior; a similar theme to some depictions of Shango and Adams.<ref name="Hernández125">{{Harvnb|Hernández|2002|pp=125}}</ref> This theory supposed that this resemblance was used by the population as a covert form to honor their ancestral deity. {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} In the 1949 documentary ''Fiestas de Santiago Apóstol en Loíza Aldea'', anthropologist ] noted a similar tendency at ], arguing that the affinity between the black population in the municipality and the Catholic saint ] may derive from the way in which he is depicted as a warrior; a similar theme to some depictions of Shango and Adams.<ref name="Hernández125">{{Harvnb|Hernández|2002|pp=125}}</ref> This theory supposed that this resemblance was used by the population as a covert form to honor their ancestral deity.<ref name="Hernández125">{{Harvnb|Hernández|2002|pp=125}}</ref>


In the early 21st century, Nigerian migrants have also taken Yoruba religion to Brazil.{{sfn|Schmidt|2014|p=139}}
===Japan===
Yoshiaki Koshikawa, professor of literature at ], became the first Japanese person to be initiated as a ] in 2013.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gyoseki1.mind.meiji.ac.jp/mjuhp/KgApp?kyoinId=ymkogeygggy&Language=2|title = Faculty Database - Koshikawa Yoshiaki}}</ref>


=== Nigerian Chrislam === ===Japan===
{{Ill|Koshikawa Yoshiaki|ja|越川芳明}}, professor of literature at ], became the first Japanese person to be initiated as a ] in 2013.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://gyoseki1.mind.meiji.ac.jp/mjuhp/KgApp?kyoinId=ymkogeygggy&Language=2|title = Faculty Database - Koshikawa Yoshiaki}}</ref>
{{Main|Nigerian Chrislam}}
] refers to the assemblage of ] and ] religious practices in Nigeria.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Janson|first=Marloes|date=November 2016|title=Unity Through Diversity: A Case Study of Chrislam in Lagos|url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/22667/1/Janson_22667.pdf|journal=Africa: Journal of the International African Institute|volume=86|issue=4|pages=646–672|doi=10.1017/S0001972016000607|s2cid=147663644|via=SOAS, ResearchGate|doi-access=free}}</ref> Chrislam also refers to the series of religious movements that merged ] and ] religious practice during the 1970s in ]. {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} The movement was pioneered by ] peoples in south-west Nigeria.<ref name=":0" /> &nbsp;Chrislam works against the conventional understanding of ] and ] as two separate and exclusive religions, seeking out commonalities between both religions and promoting an inclusive union of the two.<ref name=":0" /> Chrislam also occupies a distinct geographical space; Nigeria is often understood to be geographically and religiously polarized, with a predominantly Muslim base in the North, and a predominantly Christian base in the South. {{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} However, the ]s that occupy the South-Western ] region of Nigeria are a Muslim-majority ethnic group with a large Christian minority.<ref name=":0" />


==References== ==References==
===Footnotes=== ===Footnotes===
{{Reflist|2}} {{Reflist}}


===Bibliography=== ===Bibliography===
*{{cite book| title=Ricardo Alegría: Una Vida| first=Carmen Dolores|last=Hernández|publisher=Centro de Estudios Avanzados del Caribe, Fundación Puertorriqueña de las Humanidades, Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña, Academia Puertorriqueña de Historia|language=es|date=2002|isbn=1563282100}} *{{cite book| title=Ricardo Alegría: Una Vida| first=Carmen Dolores|last=Hernández|publisher=Centro de Estudios Avanzados del Caribe, Fundación Puertorriqueña de las Humanidades, Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña, Academia Puertorriqueña de Historia|language=es|date=2002|isbn=1563282100}}
* {{cite journal |last=Schmidt |first=Bettina E. |title=Spirit Possession in Brazil: The Perception of the (Possessed) Body |journal=Anthropos |year=2014 |volume=109 |issue=1 |pages=135–147 |doi=10.5771/0257-9774-2014-1-135 |jstor=43861689 |url=https://repository.uwtsd.ac.uk/id/eprint/1763/1/43861689%20Anthropos_Spirit%20Possession.pdf }}
* {{cite book |last=Voeks |first=Robert A. |title=Sacred Leaves of Candomblé: African Magic, Medicine, and Religion in Brazil |location=Austin, TX |publisher=University of Texas Press |year=1997 |isbn=9780292787315}} * {{cite book |last=Voeks |first=Robert A. |title=Sacred Leaves of Candomblé: African Magic, Medicine, and Religion in Brazil |location=Austin, TX |publisher=University of Texas Press |year=1997 |isbn=9780292787315}}


Line 156: Line 503:
* Chief S. Solagbade Popoola Library, INC {{ISBN|978-0-9810013-1-9}} * Chief S. Solagbade Popoola Library, INC {{ISBN|978-0-9810013-1-9}}
* Chief S. Solagbade Popoola Library, INC {{ISBN|978-1-926538-24-2}} * Chief S. Solagbade Popoola Library, INC {{ISBN|978-1-926538-24-2}}
* by Philip John Neimark: Publisher HarperOne; 1st edition (May 28, 1993) {{ISBN|978-0-06-250557-6}} * by Philip John Neimark: Publisher HarperOne; 1st edition (28 May 1993) {{ISBN|978-0-06-250557-6}}
* ''Olódùmarè : God in Yoruba Belief'' by ], Ikeja : Longman Nigeria (1982) {{ISBN|0-582-60803-1}} * ''Olódùmarè : God in Yoruba Belief'' by ], Ikeja : Longman Nigeria (1982) {{ISBN|0-582-60803-1}}
* Dr. Jonathan Olumide Lucas, "The Religion of the Yorubas", Lagos 1948, C. M. S. Bookshop. * Dr. Jonathan Olumide Lucas, "The Religion of the Yorubas", Lagos 1948, C. M. S. Bookshop.
Line 162: Line 509:
* {{cite book | author = Morales, Ed | title = The Latin Beat | publisher = Da Capo Press | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-306-81018-2 | url = https://archive.org/details/latinbeatrhythms00mora_0 }}, pg. 177 * {{cite book | author = Morales, Ed | title = The Latin Beat | publisher = Da Capo Press | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-306-81018-2 | url = https://archive.org/details/latinbeatrhythms00mora_0 }}, pg. 177
* ], ''Santería: The Beliefs and Rituals of a Growing Religion in America'', 2004, {{ISBN|0-8028-4973-3}}. * ], ''Santería: The Beliefs and Rituals of a Growing Religion in America'', 2004, {{ISBN|0-8028-4973-3}}.
* Miguel R. Bances – Baba Eshu Onare, . Los 16 Meyis y sus Omoluos u Odus o Signos de Ifa. * Miguel R. Bances – Baba Eshu Onare, {{usurped|1=}}. Los 16 Meyis y sus Omoluos u Odus o Signos de Ifa.
*{{cite book | title=The cradle of Yoruba culture | edition = Rev. | publisher=Institute of Yoráubâa Culture ; Center for Spoken Words | author=Ológundúdú, Dayọ̀ ; foreword by Akinṣọla Akiwọwọ | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-615-22063-5}} *{{cite book | title=The cradle of Yoruba culture | edition = Rev. | publisher=Institute of Yoráubâa Culture ; Center for Spoken Words | author=Ológundúdú, Dayọ̀ ; foreword by Akinṣọla Akiwọwọ | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-615-22063-5}}


Line 170: Line 517:
{{commons category}} {{commons category}}
* *
* {{usurped|1=}}
*
*
* *
* *
* *
* Yoruba Theatre is the origin of Nigeria's Nollywood, the equivalent of America's Hollywood. * {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230226231118/http://www.naijavideos.com/channel/28/yoruba-movies/ |date=26 February 2023 }} Yoruba Theatre is the origin of Nigeria's Nollywood, the equivalent of America's Hollywood.


{{Orisa-Ifá}} {{Orisa-Ifá}}
Line 184: Line 530:


{{DEFAULTSORT:Yoruba Religion}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Yoruba Religion}}
]
]
] ]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 15:15, 9 January 2025

West-African religion

Part of a series on
Yoruba religion
The Global symbol of Ìṣẹ̀ṣe
Deities
Beliefs
Practices
Variants
Sacred sites
Legendary figures
Part of a series on
Traditional African religions
A traditional Kanaga mask
Religions
Doctrines
Deities
Sacred places
Education
Priesthood
Relation with other religions

The Yoruba religion (Yoruba: Ìṣẹ̀ṣe), West African Orisa (Òrìṣà), or Isese (Ìṣẹ̀ṣe), comprises the traditional religious and spiritual concepts and practice of the Yoruba people. Its homeland is in present-day Southwestern Nigeria, which comprises the majority of Oyo, Ogun, Osun, Ondo, Ekiti, Kwara and Lagos states, as well as parts of Kogi state and the adjoining parts of Benin and Togo, commonly known as Yorubaland (Yoruba: Ilẹ̀ Káàárọ̀-Oòjíire).

It shares some parallels with the Vodun practised by the neighbouring Fon and Ewe peoples to its west and with the religion of the Edo people to its east. Yoruba religion is the basis for several religions in the New World, notably Santería, Umbanda, Trinidad Orisha, and Candomblé. Yoruba religious beliefs are part of Itàn (history), the total complex of songs, histories, stories, and other cultural concepts which make up the Yoruba society.

Term

The Yoruba name for the Yoruba indigenous religion is Ìṣẹ̀ṣẹ, which also refers to the traditions and rituals that encompass Yorùbá culture. The term comes from a contraction of the words Ìṣẹ̀ (Ishɛ), meaning "source/root origin", and ìṣe (Ishe), meaning "practice/tradition" coming together to mean "The original tradition"/"The tradition of antiquity" as many of the practices, beliefs, traditions, and observances of the Yoruba originate from the religious worship of Olodumare and the veneration of the Orisa.

Beliefs

A symbol of the Yoruba religion (Isese) with labels
Yoruba divination board Opon Ifá

According to Kola Abimbola, the Yorubas have evolved a robust cosmology. Nigerian Professor for Traditional African religions, Jacob K. Olupona, summarizes that central for the Yoruba religion, and which all beings possess, is known as "Ase", which is "the empowered word that must come to pass," the "life force" and "energy" that regulates all movement and activity in the universe". Every thought and action of each person or being in Aiyé (the physical realm) interact with the Supreme force, all other living things, including the Earth itself, as well as with Orun (the otherworld), in which gods, spirits and ancestors exist. The Yoruba religion can be described as a complex form of polytheism, with a Supreme but distant creator force, encompassing the whole universe.

The anthropologist Robert Voeks described Yoruba religion as being animistic, noting that it was "firmly attached to place".

Each person living on earth attempts to achieve perfection and find their destiny in Orun-Rere (the spiritual realm of those who do good and beneficial things).

One's ori-inu (spiritual consciousness in the physical realm) must grow in order to consummate union with one's "Iponri" (Ori Orun, spiritual self).

Ìwà pẹ̀lẹ́ (or well-balanced) meditative recitation and sincere veneration are sufficient to strengthen the ori-inu of most people. Well-balanced people, it is believed, can make positive use of the simplest form of connection between their Ori and the omnipotent Olu-Orun: an Àwúre (petition or prayer) for divine support.

In the Yoruba belief system, Olodumare has àṣẹ(authority) over all that is. Hence, it is considered supreme.

Scripture

The Yoruba scriptures are called the Odu Ifá, which is a collection of revealed oracular texts originally passed down through oral tradition among babalawos. It is traditionally divided into 256 sections, or Odu, which are divided into verses. It is closely related to the divination system of the Yoruba religion, Ifá. The verses contain proverbs, stories, and statements that cover every aspect of life. The Odu Ifá is the foundation of Yoruba spiritual knowledge and has influenced spiritual communities in the Americas, such as Santeria. Ifá refers to the deity Orunmila, who is associated with wisdom, intellect, and divination.

In 2005, UNESCO designated the Odu Ifá tradition as one of the world's Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity.

Cosmology

Olódùmarè

Main article: Olodumare

Olódùmarè is the most important "state of existence". "They" are the owner of all heads, for during human creation, Olódùmarè gave "èmí" (the breath of life) to humankind. In this, Olódùmarè is Supreme. Perhaps one of the most important human endeavours extolled within the Yoruba literary corpus is the quest to improve one's "Ìwà" (character, behaviour). In this way the teachings transcend religious doctrine, advising as they do that a person must also improve their civic, social and intellectual spheres of being; every stanza of the sacred Ifá oracular poetry (Odu Ifa) has a portion covering the importance of "Ìwà". Central to this is the theme of righteousness, both individual and collective.

Creation

Adherents of the Yoruba religion regard Olodumare as the principal force of creation.

According to one of the Yoruba accounts of creation, at a certain stage in the process, the "truth" was sent to confirm the habitability of the planets that were newly formed. The earth, being one of these, was visited but considered too wet for conventional living.

After a successful period of time, a number of divinities led by Obatala were sent to accomplish the task of helping the earth develop its crust. On one of their visits to the realm, the arch-divinity Obatala took to the stage equipped with a mollusc that concealed some form of soil, winged beasts, and some cloth-like material. The contents were emptied onto what soon became a large mound on the surface of the water and soon after, the winged beasts began to scatter this around until the point where it gradually made into a large patch of dry land; the various indentations they created eventually becoming hills and valleys.

Obatala leapt onto a high ground and named the place Ife. The land became fertile and plant life began to flourish. From handfuls of earth, he began to mould figurines. Meanwhile, as this was happening on Earth, Olodumare gathered the gases from the far reaches of space and sparked an explosion that shaped into a fireball. He subsequently sent it to Ife, where it dried much of the land and simultaneously began to bake the motionless figurines. It was at this point that Olodumare released the "breath of life" to blow across the land, and the figurines slowly came into "being" as the first people of Ife.

For this reason, Ife is locally referred to as "Ife Oodaye" – "cradle of existence".

Irunmalẹ

The Irúnmalẹ̀, from the words; Ìrun meaning ' Origin ' and Imalẹ̀ meaning ' Primal divinity ' are the original entities sent by Olorun to complete given tasks, often acting as liaisons between Òde Ọ̀run (the invisible realm) and Ilé Ayé (the physical realm). Irunmale(s) can therefore best be described in English as the highest ranking divinities; whereby such divinities are regarded as principal Orishas. The Irunmale or Imalẹ̀ are the primary foundational divinities or divine entities. In summary, all Imale are also Orisha, but not all Orisha are Imale.

Oku

Egungun (Ara Orun) with an infant.
Egungun (Ara Orun) with an infant.
Egungun (Ara Orun)
Egungun (Ara Orun)

In Yoruba religion and culture, Oku is a complex and multifaceted concept that encompasses various aspects of death, the afterlife, and the relationship between the living and the dead. Oku is often translated as "death" or "the dead," but it carries a deeper meaning that goes beyond the physical act of dying. Oku refers to the transition of a person from the world of the living to the world of the dead and the subsequent journey of the deceased to the afterlife.

Oku is a natural part of life, and death is seen as a transition to a new stage of existence rather than an end. The Yoruba people believe that the dead continue to play an active role in the lives of their descendants and that they can influence the living in various ways. Thus, Oku is also associated with the concept of "ara orun," which refers to the spiritual realm or the world of the dead. The Yoruba people believe that the dead reside in this realm, where they continue to live and interact with the living.

Furthermore, an earthly representation of the Oku is the Egungun, which embodies the spirits of the ancestors and is often used to communicate with the dead and to honour their memory. The Egungun is the physical representation of the Oku tradition, which is focused on honouring and paying respects to the ancestors. The Egungun possesses spiritual powers and to be able to communicate with the ancestors, an Oku tradition of seeking the blessings and protection of the dead or ancestors.

However, it is worth noting that Egungun traditions are not simply a representation of Oku, but rather have their own unique characteristics and significance, depending on the context. Egungun can have its own set of rituals, ceremonies, and practices that are separate from the Oku tradition, although the two are connected and closely intertwined. Therefore, Yoruba people may refer to Egungun as "Oku ara orun," which means "the Oku of the heavens" or "the Oku of the spirits." This name reflects the close connection between Egungun and the Oku tradition and highlights the role of Egungun as a representation of the ancestors and the spiritual realm.

The Orisha and Ajogun Pantheon

Main articles: Orisha and List of Yoruba deities

The Orisha, (Yoruba: Òrìṣà) are entities that possess the capability of reflecting some of the manifestations of Olodumare. Yoruba Orishas (commonly translated as "unique/special/selected heads") are often described as intermediaries between humankind and the supernatural. The term has also been variously translated as "Deities", "Divinities" or "Gods". Orisha(s) are revered for having control over specific elements of nature. They are thus also referred to as Imole. There are those of their number that are more akin to ancient heroes and/or sages than to primordial divinities. These are best addressed as dema deities. Even though the term Orisha is often used to describe both classes of divine entities, it is properly reserved for the former one.

The Ajogun on the other hand are best described as active negative, destructive or malevolent forces of nature. They exist at the same operational plane as the Orisha but occupy counter positions and work against one's Ori. They represent the other side of the Yoruba duality of existence which can either be Ire "(Goodness) " or Ibi "(Evil) ". Broken down, the term Ajogun comes from the words; A + Jẹ + Ogun, literally meaning; "That which feeds/thrives on trouble/war". The Ajogun are often personified as "warriors" who wage war against humanity. Out of their number, there are eight principal Ajogun led by 'Iku' (Death).

The Yoruba have developed a robust pantheon of divinities, each well-developed in their different rites and traditions. Many of these have attained national/pan Yoruba statuses and are known all across Yoruba country, even diffusing beyond Yorubaland into the practices and beliefs of neighbouring groups, though they may be more strongly or closely associated with certain places, occupations or subregions spread across Yorubaland. There are said to be 400 plus 1 of them in total; The 200 of the right (Igba Ọ̀tún), the 200 of the left (Igba Òsì) and one more.

List of Orisha and Ajogun

Name Deity of Member of
Agẹmọ Chameleon, Service Orisha
Aganju Volcanoes, Wilderness, Desert, Fire Orisha
Ajaka Peace, Love, Equality Orisha
Akọgun Warrior, Hunter, Wear a straw Orisha
Ayangalu Drummer, Muse, Percussion Orisha
Arira (Aara, Aira, Ara) Weather, Storm, Thunder Orisha
Ayelala Punishes crime, Retribution Orisha
Arọni Nature, Forest spirit, Herbs, Plants Orisha
Arun Diseases, Affliction Ajogun
Aje Wealth, Property, Good Fortune, Success Orisha
Aye Passion, Environmentalism, Nature Orisha
Ajija (Aaja, Aija, Aja) Whirlwind, Wilderness, Herb, Plants, Leaf Orisha
Biri Darkness, Night, Midnight Orisha
Babalu Aye Earth, Epidemics (Smallpox), Healing Orisha
Bayanni Children, Dread Heads, Prosperity Orisha
Dada Youthfulness, Mischief, Playfulness Orisha
Ẹla Illumination, Knowledge, Charity & Giving Orisha
Edi Confusion, Undoing, Corruption Ajogun
Ẹgba Paralysis, Ineptitude, Laziness Ajogun
Egungun (Eegun) Sainted dead, Ancestors Orisha
Epe Curses, Imprecation Ajogun
Erinlẹ Hunter, Earth, Natural Force, Universe Orisha
Eṣe Affliction, Scourge Ajogun
Eshu Trickery, Crossroads, Chance, Travel, Emissary, Chaos, Order Intermediary
Ẹwọn Imprisonment, Bondage Ajogun
Ibeji Twins Orisha
Iroko Trees, Wilderness Orisha
Iya Nla Primordial Spirit Orisha
Iku Death Ajogun
Imọlẹ Sunlight, Soothsayer Orisha
Logunede War, Hunting Orisha
Moremi Saviour Orisha
Ọba River, Passion, Homemaking, Domesticity Orisha
Ọbatala Creation, Purity Orisha
Oduduwa Progenitor, Warrior Orisha
Ofo Loss, Depletion, Deprivation, Forfeiture, Defeat Ajogun
Ogun Warriors, Soldiers, Blacksmiths, Metal Workers, Craftsmen Orisha
Oke Mountain, Hills & Hillocks Orisha
Orisha Oko Agriculture, Farming, Fertility, Rurality, Harvest Orisha
Olokun Water, Health, Wealth Orisha
Ọran Trouble, Problems, Difficulty Ajogun
Ọranyan Progenitor, Bravery, Heroism Orisha
Orò Community justice, Bullroarers, Secrecy Orisha
Ọrọnṣẹn Progenitor Orisha
Ọrunmila Wisdom, Knowledge, Divination, Philosophy, Destiny, Prophecy Orisha
Ori Beforelife, Afterlife, Destiny, Personal Identity Orisha
Ọsanyin Herb, Plant, Nature, Herbalist, Magician Orisha
Ọshọsi Hunt, Forest, Warrior, Justice Orisha
Ọshun Water, Purity, Fertility, Love, Femininity Orisha
Oshunmare Rainbow, Serpent, Regeneration, Rebirth Orisha
Ọtin River, Fighter Orisha
Ọya Storms, Wind, Thunder, Lightning, Dead Orisha
Shango Thunder, Lightning, Fire, Justice, Dance, Virility Orisha
Shigidi Home guardian, Environment guardian, Defender Orisha
Yemoja Creation, Water, Moon, Motherhood, Protection Orisha
Yewa River, Dreams, Clarity Orisha

Major Orisha description and attributes

Orishas Other names Description and attributes Image Earthly homes & Sites
Orí Ori is the universal household Orisha venerated by all in Yorubaland, as the custodian of fate. Hence, Ori is propitiated or appeased that one may have a good fate. When one has a balanced character, one obtains an alignment with one's Ori or divine self. The representing image of Ori is said to be 41 cowries strung together in the shape of a coronet or tiara, usually kept in a large coffer or enclosure called Ile Ori (Ori's house) made from the same material and is as large as the votary can afford/want it to be. Symbol of the inner head (shibori) Africa Nigeria Yoruba people 19th-20th century leather glass beads cowrie shells Dallas Museum of Art _______
Ọ̀runmìlà Àgbọnìrègún
Ẹlẹ́rí Ìpín
Ẹ̀là
Àjànà
Òkìtìbiri
The Yoruba grand priest, sage and custodian of the Ifa oracle, source of knowledge who is believed to oversee the knowledge of the human form, purity, the cures of illnesses and deformities. Babalawos are Orumila's subordinates, who are priests, devotees, and followers. The light or illumination of Ifa itself is referred to as Ẹ̀là. Babalawos and Iyanifas invoke Ela's light when calling for Orunmila's presence. Orunmila is considered synonymous with or an avatar of Ẹ̀là by many and the name is often broken down as (Ọ̀run mí Ẹ̀là) meaning; Heaven brings forth revelation/light. Therefore, Ifa, Orunmila and Ela are all seen as aspects of the divine light which reveals things unknown - whether in the past, the present or the future. Ado Ekiti. (Home)
________
Ilé Ifẹ̀. (Origin)
Èṣù (Ẹlẹ́gba) Láróyè
Bàrà
Láàlú
Ògiri Òkò
Ọ̀dàrà
Látọ́pa
Often ill-translated as "The Devil" or "The Evil Being", Eshu is in truth neither of these. Best referred to as "The Trickster", he deals a hand of misfortune to those who do not offer tribute or are deemed to be spiritual novices. Also regarded as the "divine messenger", a prime negotiator between negative and positive forces in the body and an enforcer of the "law of being". He is said to assist in enhancing the power derived from herbal medicines and other forms of esoteric technology.

Eshu is the Orisha of chance, accident and unpredictability. Because he is Olorun's linguist and the master of languages, Eshu is responsible for carrying messages and sacrifices from humans to the Sky God. Also known for his phallic powers and exploits, Eshu is said to lurk at gateways, on the highways and at the crossroads, where he introduces chance and accident into the lives of humans. He is known by a variety of names, including Elegbara.

Kétu, Benin. (Home)
_______

Ìjẹ̀lú, Èkìtì. (Home)
_______
Igbeti, Ọ̀yọ́. (Site)
_______
Iworo, Lagos. (Site)

Òrìṣà Oko Ajàngele The Orisha of agriculture, open fields and rurality. He was known as a fighter against sorcery, a hunter who kept a dog and a flute- credited with the development of agricultural practices. He is associated with the annual new yam harvest. Honey bees are his messengers, and prepared Egusi (melon) seeds from Bara pods (plants in the Gourd family) are his favourite offering. Orisha Oko is represented with a large staff with rolls of copper (Bàbà) strings wound around its handle (Opa Orisha Oko) and an ivory flute. White chalk (Ẹfun) and ilarere cowrie necklaces are used by his male votaries. Ifẹ̀, Osun. (Home, Origin)
_______

Ìràwọ̀, Oyo State. (Home)

Ògún Lákáayé
Aládá Méjì
Ọṣìn Imalẹ̀
Alágbẹ̀dẹ
Orisha of iron, war, heroism and metallurgy. He is venerated by all those who work with metals and technology. Ilé Ifẹ̀, Ọ̀ṣun. (Origin)
_______

Ìrè, Èkìtì. (Home)
_______
Ṣakí, Ọ̀yọ́. (Associated)

Bàyànni Dàda
Àjàká
Báyọ̀ni
Bayanni or Dada-Ajaka was a brother to Shango and another son of Oranyan. He was Alaafin of Oyo before Shango and again after him. He is the Orisha of birth, youngsters and children with natural hair of tufts that grow separately in tight curls (Dàda) and is often associated with prosperity. By some accounts, Dada Ajaka was actually the brother to Shango while Bayanni was a female and a sister. However, the domains of both personages have become largely intertwined. He is strongly associated with the Yewa/Egbado region and his object is a diadem/coffer of cowries with several strings with a tipped top (Ṣónṣó Orí) called Ade Bayanni (Bayanni's crown). Ọ̀yọ́ Ilé. (Home, Origin)
Yemọja Àwòyó
Olódò
Mọjẹlẹ́wù
Matron of the Ògùn River that flows from the upper regions of Ọ̀yọ́ State (Oke Ogun), through Ogun State and the city of Abeokuta, before emptying into the Lagos lagoon (Ọ̀sà); other smaller tributaries and streams are dedicated to Iyemọja throughout Yorùbáland; spiritual mother of Ṣàngó. According to Olorishas, she is the amniotic fluid in the womb of the pregnant woman, as well as the breasts which nurture. She is considered the protective energy of the feminine force. Her name is derived from the words; Yèyé-Ọmọ-Ẹja - Meaning; Mother of fish children, which is a metaphor for bodies of water with fish including lakes and the ocean. Ilé Ifẹ̀, Ọ̀ṣun State. (Origin)
_______

Ṣakí, Ọ̀yọ́ State. (Home)
_______
Ibara, Abẹ́òkúta, Ògùn State. (Site)

Ọ̀ṣun Yèyé
Ládékojú
Ẹ̀wùjí
A second wife of Shango, she is said to have entered into a river at Osogbo. The Yoruba clerics ascribed to her sensuality, beauty and gracefulness, symbolizing both their people's search for clarity and a flowing motion. She is associated with several powers, including abilities to heal with cool water, induction of fertility and the control of the feminine essence. Women appeal to her for child-bearing and for the alleviation of female disorders. The Yoruba traditions describe her as being fond of babies and her intervention is sought if a baby becomes ill. Oshun is also known for her love of honey and crocodiles are her messengers. Items closely associated with Oshun are; Brass fans (Abẹ̀bẹ̀), brass bells (Àjà), anklets and bangles (Ìdè), brass machetes (Àdá), brass hair pins (Ìkótí), red parrot feathers (Ikodídẹ) and brass combs (Òyìyà/Òòyà).

Ìgèdè, Èkìtì. (Home, Source)
_______
Ìjùmú, Kogi. (Origin)
_______
Òṣogbo, Osun. (Grove)
Ṣàngó Jákúta
Ọba Kòso
Orisha of thunder and lightning. Associated with virility, masculinity, fire, lightning, stones, Oyo warriors and magnetism. He is said to have the ability to transform base substances into those that are pure and valuable. He was the Oba of Oyo at some point in its history. He derived his nickname Oba Koso from the tales of his immortality. Shango is the Orisha of the thunderbolt, said to have ruled in ancient times over the kingdom of Oyo. Also known as Jakuta (Stone Thrower) and as Oba Koso (The king does not hang). His wives are Oya, Oshun and Oba. Ọ̀yọ́ Ilé. (Home)
_______
Kòso, Kwara. (Site)
Erinlẹ̀ Eyinlẹ̀ A great hunter, fisherman and water lord Orisha had no wife and lived on the bank of the Erinle River. He is also known as a great healer. Some traditions credit him with starting the tradition of chanting Ijala, a traditional oral poetry with a characteristic nasal twang mostly performed by hunters (and mostly associated with Ogun) due to his loneliness. He is represented by smooth black stones from the Erinle River, a tributary stream which empties into the Osun River near Ede, placed in an earthenware filled with water. His objects are a staff of wrought iron with prongs or branches surmounted by birds. Ajagbusi.
Ọya Ìyásàán
Àràká
Òrìrí
The third wife of the one time Oba of Oyo called Shango, she is also known to possess a fiery temper similar to Sango and is said to have entered into the River Niger. She is the deity of powerful winds, storms and the tempest, guardian of the cemetery, storms and transformation. She possesses the power to shape shift between human and animal forms and is closely associated with the African buffalo. She is also referred to as the Mother of Nine (Iya-esan) for the nine branches of the river. Due to her personal power and nature as a warrior goddess, she is usually depicted as being in the company of her husband Shango. She is the Orisha of rebirth. Ìrá, Oyun, Kwara. (Home)
_______
Okọ̀rọ̀, Àjàṣẹ́, Benin. (Iya Abessan temple)
Òsanyìn Àrọ̀nì Osanyin is the most powerful deity of herbs with dominion over all those who deal with plants and magic. Represented as a one eyed, one-handed, and one-legged figure, he is the Orisha of herbs, plants, magic, potions, charms and healing. Osanyin is often depicted as a homoeopathic Orisha, meaning that he often takes the look or form of the ailment which it is invoked to treat or cure. He also represents the duality and balance of nature and the double facets of herbal power; 'That which can make you better can also harm you if used improperly or if abused'. His object is the Osanyin staff, (Opa Osanyin). The staff is composed of a circle of small birds and a shaft in the middle that elevates a large bird above smaller ones. Ìsaba, Ìkọ̀lé, Èkìtì state. (Home, Origin).
Ọbalúayé Ṣọ̀pọ̀ná
Babalú Ayé
Ọmọlú
Olóde
Sapata
Meaning; "Lord/ruler of the earth" and a widely feared orisha, he is also known as Sopona, Omolu or Sapata, the Orisha of diseases and sickness. While he has the power to inflict smallpox, Leprosy, Tuberculosis and other communicable diseases, he is also associated with healing those afflicted. In the early 20th century (1917), Obaluaye in Nigeria was banned by the British colonial Government because its devotees were thought to deliberately spread smallpox. Later writers tended to disapprove of these earlier opinions/suggestions.

Shoponna priests prevented the spread of contagious diseases by being responsible for the removal of corpses and belongings of those who died from them. Sopona priests seem to have known of the protective and dangerous nature of the virus and often inoculated people against the disease by skin incisions.

Yéwa Orisha of the Yewa River associated with cemeteries, clarity, beauty, dreams and magic. She lives in the cemetery with Oba and Oya. She brings souls to her sister Oya meaning she is the initiator of the beginning of all change that occurs. Explicit or loud speech near her places of worship is not tolerated. There is also a pataki of how this orisha was able to effectively trick death itself. Also, Yewa cannot be venerated near Shango as according to the patakis he molested her. Yewa is also responsible for gifting humans with dreams and imagination.
Ọbàtálá Òrìṣàlá
Òṣàlúfọ́n
Òṣàgìrìyan
Olúwa Ayé
Oṣẹ̀rẹ̀màgbó
Also known as Orisa-nla/Oshala, meaning "the big Orisha," and Orisha Funfun; The white Orisha. He is also known as the Skyfather. He is often equated with purity, and represented by "Ala," or white cloth, and "Ẹfun," white chalk. Most items associated with Obatala are either white or clear. He is regarded as the creator of Earth and the shaper of the human body from clay. He is also known as the protector of the physically challenged/different. His favourite consort was Yemowo (Yèyé Mowò). At his Ifon abode, he is known by the name Oshalufon, while in Ejigbo he goes by the appellation Oshagiyan/Oshagiriyan, two popular avatars of Obatala. His offerings are the African land snails (Ìgbín). Òde Ìrànjé (Ìdẹ̀ta), Ifẹ̀. (Origin, Home)
_______
Ifọ́n, Òṣun. (Associated)
_______
Èjìgbò, Òṣun. (Associated)
Aganjù Aganjùṣọlá Roughly translating to "darkness of the wilderness," Aganju is very closely related to Sango and is regarded as the Orisha of the forest, the desert, volcanoes, and the wilderness. He was originally a king of the Oyo empire (See; Alaafin Aganju sola) before being deified after his death. He is the patron deity of long-distance travelling, is said to walk with a sword in long strides as if leaping over obstacles, and is said to fight by shooting fire, as opposed to Sango who fights with thunderbolts and lightning while hurling thunderstones (Ẹdun àrá). His object is a double axe similar to Sango's but with a longer handle. Ọ̀yọ́ Ilé. (Home)
Ọ̀ṣọ́ọ̀sì Ọ̀ṣọ́wùsì
Ọdẹ Mẹ́ta
He is the Orisha of adventure, hunting and the forest, and is another patron of hunters. He is a master of archery (He is called 'the archer of the Orisha') and is always depicted holding a bow and arrow often with a quiver, (Apó). His power is made manifest in the speed and accuracy of his arrow and his prideful assertion of mental and physical dexterity. His object is a brass iron crossbow (Ọrún) often with strings of cowries hanging down from it, and small iron cylinders filled with miniature arrows (Ọfà) Ìdó.
Olókun Malòkun
Ṣẹ̀níadé
A primordial force present at creation, Olokun, meaning "Owner of the ocean" is also known as Imalẹ̀ Òkun, "Deity of the Ocean". Olokun had been present since the beginning of creation as an androgynous Orisha ruling the depths of the ocean and all the waters on earth before Obatala was supposed to come and create dry land. They are the parent of the Orishas Ajé and Ọlọ́sà and represents wealth, healing, and the vastness of the sea. Ilé Ifẹ̀, Ọ̀ṣun. (Origin, Home)
Ajé Ṣàlùgá
Ògúgúlùso
Not to be confused with Iyami Aje, he is also called Aje Saluga. Aje is the representation and the orisha of wealth and economic success. He is also a patron of traders, businesspeople, and markets. The Yoruba word for Monday, is called Aje as it is often the first day of the week when markets open.
Odùduwà Ọlọ́fin Àdìmúlà
Ọṣìn Ọ̀rà
Ọlọ́fin Ayé
Regarded as the founder of the Yoruba people and the first Oba of Ife, he is also associated with an androgynous orisha of creation. Most Yoruba people, and their monarchs most especially, claim descent from Oduduwa. He is a father or grandfather of Oranmiyan, Sango, Ajaka, Obalufon, and other Obas of Ife. He is also regarded as an ancestor of the Obas of the Benin Empire. He is the Orisha of the Earth and the initiator of the Ogboni which started from the sacred city of Ife and are charged with the maintenance of social order. Òkè Ọ̀rà. (Origin, Home)
_______

Ilé Ifẹ̀. (Home)

Ọbà Ibu The first and most senior wife of Shango, she is the Orisha of the Oba River, and also is the Orisha of domesticity, energy, movement, and the flow of time and life. She is most known for being tricked by the other wives of Shango into cutting off her ear and attempting to feed it to her husband Shango.

Reincarnation

An Egungun masquerade dance garment in the permanent collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

The Yoruba believe in Atunwa, the possibility of reincarnation within the family. The names Babatunde (father returns), Yetunde (Mother returns), Babatunji (Father wakes once again) and Sotunde (The wise man returns) all offer vivid evidence of the Ifa concept of familial or lineal rebirth. There is no simple guarantee that one's grandfather or great uncle will "come back" in the birth of a child, however.

Whenever the time arrives for a spirit to return to Earth (otherwise known as The Marketplace) through the conception of a new life in the direct bloodline of the family, one of the component entities of a person's being returns, while the other remains in Heaven (Ikole Orun). The spirit that returns does so in the form of a Guardian Ori. One's Guardian Ori, which is represented and contained in the crown of the head, represents not only the spirit and energy of one's previous blood relative, but the accumulated wisdom he or she has acquired through myriad lifetimes. This is not to be confused with one's spiritual Ori, which contains personal destiny, but instead refers to the coming back to The Marketplace of one's personal blood Ori through one's new life and experiences. The Primary Ancestor (which should be identified in your Itefa) becomes—if you are aware and work with that specific energy—a "guide" for the individual throughout their lifetime. At the end of that life they return to their identical spirit self and merge into one, taking the additional knowledge gained from their experience with the individual as a form of payment.

Influence

See also: Yoruba history

African diaspora religions

According to Professor Adams Abdullahi Suberu, the Yoruba were exquisite statesmen who spread across the globe in an unprecedented fashion; the reach of their culture is largely due to migration—the most recent migration occurred with the Atlantic slave trade, and with Nigerian and Beninoise Yorùbá emigrating to the United States, the UK, Brazil, and other countries of the Americas and Europe. During the pre-colonial period, many Yoruba were captured and sold into the slave trade and transported to Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Tobago, St. Vincent & The Grenadines, Uruguay, Venezuela, and other parts of the Americas. With them, they carried their religious beliefs. The school-of-thought integrated into what now constitutes the core of the "New World lineages" which are a variety of Yorùbá-derived contemporary African religions:

The Vodun faith, which originated amongst a different ethnic group (the Gbe speaking peoples of present-day Benin, Togo, and Ghana), holds influential aspects on the African diaspora in countries such as Haiti and Cuba, also New Orleans, Louisiana in the United States.

In Latin America, Yoruba religion has been in intense Syncretism with Christianity, Indigenous religions and Spiritism since the first arrival of African immigrants. In Brazil, the religion of Umbanda was born from the rich interaction of beliefs that Latin America provided. Followers of Umbanda typically consider themselves Monotheistic, but honor Catholic Saints and Orisha as manifestations from god or as Tutelary deities. Umbanda worship also include elements from Native South American rituals such as the ritual use of Tobacco and communication with the spirits of deceased Indian warriors (Caboclo).

In the 1949 documentary Fiestas de Santiago Apóstol en Loíza Aldea, anthropologist Ricardo Alegría noted a similar tendency at Loíza, Puerto Rico, arguing that the affinity between the black population in the municipality and the Catholic saint Santiago Apóstol may derive from the way in which he is depicted as a warrior; a similar theme to some depictions of Shango and Adams. This theory supposed that this resemblance was used by the population as a covert form to honor their ancestral deity.

In the early 21st century, Nigerian migrants have also taken Yoruba religion to Brazil.

Japan

Koshikawa Yoshiaki [ja], professor of literature at Meiji University, became the first Japanese person to be initiated as a babalawo in 2013.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Abimbola, Kola (2005). Yoruba Culture: A Philosophical Account (Paperback ed.). Iroko Academics Publishers. ISBN 1-905388-00-4.
  2. ^ Ọlabimtan, Afọlabi (1991). Yoruba Religion and Medicine in Ibadan. Translated by George E. Simpson. Ibadan University Press. ISBN 978-121-068-0. OCLC 33249752.
  3. ^ J. Olumide Lucas, The Religion of the Yorubas, Athelia Henrietta PR, 1996. ISBN 0-9638787-8-6
  4. ^ Ọlabimtan, Afọlabi (1973). Àyànmọ. Lagos, Nigeria: Macmillan. OCLC 33249752.
  5. ^ Yancy, George (14 February 2021). "Opinion | Death Has Many Names". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  6. ^ Olupona, Jacob K. (1 January 1993). "The Study of Yoruba Religious Tradition in Historical Perspective". Numen. 40 (3): 240–273. doi:10.1163/156852793X00176. ISSN 1568-5276.
  7. Voeks 1997, p. 160.
  8. ^ "What Is Ifa?". THE IFA INSTITUTE. Retrieved 30 September 2024.
  9. ^ Bolaji Idowu (1982). Olódùmarè: God in Yorùbá Belief. Ikeja, Nigeria: Longman. ISBN 0-582-60803-1.
  10. Ifaloju (February 2011). "Odù-Ifá Iwòrì Méjì; Ifá speaks on Righteousness". Ifa Speaks... S.S. Popoola, Ifa Dida, Library, INC. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  11. Opoku, Kofi Asare (1993), "African traditional religion: An enduring heritage", Religious Plurality in Africa, DE GRUYTER, doi:10.1515/9783110850079.67, ISBN 978-3-11-085007-9
  12. Halliday, William D. (8 September 2018). ""Half-Earth: Our Planet's Fight for Life" by Edward O. Wilson, 2017. [book review]". The Canadian Field-Naturalist. 132 (1): 78. doi:10.22621/cfn.v132i1.2129. ISSN 0008-3550.
  13. ^ "Yoruba Creation". Yoruba. Oxford University Press. 1994. ISBN 978-0-19-510275-8. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
  14. Leeming & Leeming 2009 – entry "Yoruba Creation". Yoruba. Oxford University Press. 1994. ISBN 978-0-19-510275-8. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
  15. Oripeloye, Henri; Omigbule, Morufu Bukola (2019). "The Yoruba of Nigeria and the ontology of death and burial". Death Across Cultures: Death and Dying in Non-Western Cultures: 193–205.
  16. Awe, Solomon Kolawole (2019). "Existentialist Concerns in Africa: The Yorùbá Perspectives of Death and Suicide". Language, Literature and Culture. 2.2: 41–48.
  17. Oripeloye, Henri; Omigbule, Morufu Bukola (2019). "The Yoruba of Nigeria and the ontology of death and burial". Death Across Cultures: Death and Dying in Non-Western Cultures: 193–205.
  18. Famule, Olawole Francis (2005). Art and Spirituality: The Ijumu Northeastern-Yoruba Egúngún. The University of Arizona. p. 64.
  19. Lawal, Babatunde (2001). "Aworan: representing the self and its metaphysical other in Yoruba art". The Art Bulletin. 83.3: 498–526.
  20. Adepegba, C.O. (1984). . Yoruba Egungun: Its association with ancestors and the typology of Yoruba masquerades by its costume. Ibadan, Nigeria: University of Ibadan.
  21. Famule, Olawole Francis (2005). Art and Spirituality: The Ijumu Northeastern-Yoruba Egúngún. The University of Arizona. p. 64.
  22. The Concept of God: The People of Yoruba Archived 11 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine for the acceptability of the translation
  23. Ogunnaike, Oludamini (26 October 2020). Deep Knowledge: Ways of Knowing in Sufism and Ifa, Two West African Intellectual Traditions. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-08763-4. Retrieved 22 September 2024.
  24. Alabi, Adetayo (19 August 2021). Oral Forms of Nigerian Autobiography and Life Stories. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-42886-5. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  25. Origunwa, Obafemi (20 May 2015). Fundamentals of Òrìsà Lifestyle. Lulu.com. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-329-15169-7. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  26. Gbadegesin, Segun (1991). African philosophy: Traditional Yoruba philosophy and contemporary African realities. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 27–59.
  27. Camara, Louis (1996). Le choix de l'Ori: conte. Saint-Louis: Xamal.
  28. Kumari, Ayele (23 June 2020). Isese Spirituality Workbook. Ayele Kumari. p. 61. Retrieved 22 September 2023.
  29. Courlander, Harold (March 1973). Tales of Yoruba Gods and Heroes. Crown Pub. ISBN 978-0517500637.
  30. Olupona, Jacob Kẹhinde; Rey, Terry (2008). Òrìşà Devotion as World Religion: The Globalization of Yorùbá Religious Culture. Univ of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-22464-6. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  31. ^ Adeoye, C. L. (1989). Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùbá. Ibadan: Evans Bros. Nigeria Publishers. pp. 270–279. ISBN 9781675098.
  32. Prandi, Reginaldo (2017). Aimó: Uma viagem pelo mundo dos orixás. Editora Seguinte. p. 200. ISBN 978-8543809670.
  33. Olupona, Jacob Kẹhinde; Rey, Terry (2008). Òrìşà Devotion as World Religion: The Globalization of Yorùbá Religious Culture. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-299-22464-6. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  34. Barnes, Sandra (1997). Africa's Ogun: Old World and New. Bloomington Ind: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253-332516.
  35. PhD, Patricia Monaghan (1 April 2014). Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines. New World Library. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-60868-218-8. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  36. "X77.903 Ade Bayanni (cowrie crown) | Fowler Museum at UCLA". Fowler museum at UCLA. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  37. M. Smith, Omari Tunkara. "Manipulating the Sacred, Yoruba Art, Ritual and Resistance in Brazilian Candomble" (PDF). iu.edu. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  38. Monaghan, Monaghan (2014). Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines. New World Library. p. 15. ISBN 9781608682188.
  39. Murrell, Nathaniel Samuel (2009). Afro-Caribbean Religions: An Introduction to Their Historical, Cultural, and Sacred Traditions. Temple University Press. ISBN 9781439901755.
  40. ^ Simpson, George Eaton (December 1962). "The Shango Cult in Nigeria and in Trinidad". American Anthropologist. 64 (6): 1205. doi:10.1525/aa.1962.64.6.02a00050. JSTOR 667846. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  41. Ojebodé, Ayokúnmi O. (2023). "Eulogizing the Big Man: Murals as Royal Art in Ọ̀yó Aláàfin Palace". Delos. 38 (1): 1–119.
  42. Thieme, Darius L. (1969). A descriptive catalogue of Yoruba musical instruments. The Catholic University of America.
  43. Barnes, Sandra T. (22 June 1997). Africa's Ogun: Old World and New. Indiana University Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-253-11381-8. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  44. Drewal, Henry John; Pemberton, John; Abiodun, Rowland; Wardwell, Allen (1989). Yoruba: nine centuries of African art and thought (PDF). Center for African Art. ISBN 978-0-8109-1794-1.
  45. Washington, Teresa N. (2014). The architects of existence: Aje in Yoruba cosmology, ontology, and orature. Oya's Tornado.
  46. Verger, Pierre (1970). "Notes sur le culte des Orisa et Vodun à Bahia: la Baie de tous les saints au Brésil et à l'ancienne Côte des esclaves en Afrique" (in French). IFAN. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  47. Adeoye, C. L. (1989). Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùba (in Yoruba). Ibadan: Evans Bros. Nigeria Publishers. pp. 214–219. ISBN 9781675098.
  48. Parrinder, Geoffrey (17 September 2014). West African Religion: A Study of the Beliefs and Practices of Akan, Ewe, Yoruba, Ibo, and Kindred Peoples. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-4982-0492-7. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
  49. Curto, José C.; France, Renée Soulodre-La, eds. (2005). "R. Yewa". Africa and the Americas: Interconnections during the Slave Trade. Africa World Press.
  50. Probst, Peter (2011). Osogbo and the Art of Heritage. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-253-22295-4.
  51. "OBATALA - the Yoruba God of Purity (Yoruba mythology)". Godchecker - Your Guide to the Gods. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  52. Pinn, Anthony (2000). Pinn, Anthony. "Orisha Worship in the United States. Down by the Riverside: Readings in African American religion. pp. 243–255.
  53. Thompson, Robert Farris (26 May 2010). Flash of the Spirit: African & Afro-American Art & Philosophy. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-307-87433-7. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  54. Harvey, Marcus (2015). "Engaging the Orisa: An Exploration of the Yoruba Concepts of Ibeji and Olokun as Theoretical Principles in Black Theology". Black Theology. 6 (1): 61–82. doi:10.1558/blth2008v6i1.61. ISSN 1476-9948. S2CID 144995131.
  55. Adeoye, C. L. (1989). Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùba (in Yoruba). Ibadan: Evans Bros. Nigeria Publishers. pp. 227–236. ISBN 9781675098.
  56. Clark, Mary Ann (2007). Santería : correcting the myths and uncovering the realities of a growing religion. Westport, Conn.: Praeger Publishers. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-275-99079-4.
  57. Verger, Pierre Fatumbi (1985). Orixás. Salvador: Corrupio.
  58. Nwanyanwu, O. J.; Opajobi, Bola; Olayinka, Sola (1997). Education for Socio-economic & Political Development in Nigeria. Visual Resources. p. 159. ISBN 978-978-34467-0-0. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
  59. Law, R. C. C. (1973). "The Heritage of Oduduwa: Traditional History and Political Propaganda among the Yoruba". The Journal of African History. 14 (2): 207–222. doi:10.1017/S0021853700012524. ISSN 0021-8537. JSTOR 180445. S2CID 148987750.
  60. ^ Bascom, William (1960). "Yoruba Concepts of the Soul". Men and Cultures. pp. 401–410. doi:10.9783/9781512819526-065. ISBN 978-1-5128-1952-6.
  61. ^ Omobola, Odejobi. "Influence of Yoruba Culture in Christian Religious Worship". International J. Soc. Sci. & Education. 4: 586.
  62. ^ Akintoye, Prof S. A. (2010). A history of the Yoruba people. Amalion Publishing. ISBN 978-2-35926-005-2. ASIN 2359260057.
  63. Brown (Ph.D.), David H. (2003). Santería Enthroned: Innovation in an Afro-Cuban Religion. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-07610-5.
  64. Oditous (2010). "Anthropology: [Yoruba]". Anthrocivitas Online. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  65. Karade, Baba Ifa (1994). The Handbook of Yoruba Religious Concepts. York Beach, New York: Weiser Books. ISBN 0-87728-789-9.
  66. Fandrich, Ina J. (2007). "Yorùbá Influences on Haitian Vodou and New Orleans Voodoo". Journal of Black Studies. 37 (5 (May)): 775–791. doi:10.1177/0021934705280410. JSTOR 40034365. S2CID 144192532.
  67. Engler, Steven (2012). "Umbanda and Africa". Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions. 15 (4): 13–35. doi:10.1525/nr.2012.15.4.13.
  68. ^ Hernández 2002, pp. 125
  69. Schmidt 2014, p. 139.
  70. "Faculty Database - Koshikawa Yoshiaki".

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

Yoruba religion (Orisa-Ifá)
Spirits
Supreme Creator (God)
Orishas/Irunmole
Countries of development
Topics
Sacred sites
Legendary figures
Religion
Religious groups and denominations
Western
Abrahamic
Judaism
Christianity
Islam
Other
Iranian
Zoroastrian
Kurdish
Other
Eastern
East Asian
Chinese
Japonic
Korean
Vietnamese
Indian
Hinduism
Buddhism
Other
Ethnic
Altaic
Austroasiatic
Austronesian
Native
American
Tai and Miao
Tibeto-Burmese
Traditional
African
North African
Sub-Saharan
African
Other ethnic
New
religious
movements
Syncretic
Modern
paganism
De novo
Historical religions
Topics
Aspects
Theism
Religious
studies
Religion
and society
Secularism
and irreligion
Overviews
and lists
Religion by country
Africa
Asia
Europe
North America
Oceania
South America
African diaspora religions
Religions
Practices and concepts
Diverse roots
Yoruba topics
History
Subgroups
Yoruboid languages
Politics
Geography
(Yorubaland)
Precolonial state
Departments
States
Major cities
Demographics
Culture
Education & philosophy
Yoruba Misplaced Pages
Categories: