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Oshogbo
(redirected from Osogbo)

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Oshogbo (ōshōb`bō), city (1991 est. pop. 421,000), SW Nigeria, on the Oshun River. Primarily a farming and commercial city, it has cotton gins, a steel-rolling mill, a traditional textiles industry, and cigarette and food-processing factories. The city is also a road and rail junction, and has an airport. Oshogbo was probably founded in the 17th cent. as a town in the Yoruba Yoruba , people of SW Nigeria and Benin, numbering about 20 million. Today many of the large cities in Nigeria (including Lagos, Ibadan, and Abeokuta) are in Yorubaland.
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 kingdom of Ijesha (see Ilesha Ilesha , city (1991 est. pop. 334,000), SW Nigeria. Formerly a caravan trade center, Ilesha is today an agricultural and commercial city. Cacao, kola nuts, palm oil, and yams are shipped from there. There is a sawmill, and alluvial gold is found.
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). In 1839 it was the site of a decisive battle in which Ibadan Ibadan , city (1991 est. pop. 1,263,000), SW Nigeria. The second largest city in Nigeria, it is a major commercial center. Manufactures include metal products, furniture, soap, and handicrafts.
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, a Yoruba city-state, defeated Ilorin Ilorin , city (1991 est. pop. 420,000), SW Nigeria. It is an industrial city and the market (especially for cattle, poultry, palm products, and yams) and transport center for a wide region. Manufactures include cigarettes, matches, and sugar.
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, an expansionist Fulani Fulani , people of W Africa, numbering approximately 14 million. They are of mixed sub-Saharan African and Berber origin. First recorded as living in the Senegambia region, they are now scattered throughout the area of the Sudan from Senegal to Cameroon.
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 state, thus halting Ilorin's southward advance. An influx of refugees after the battle swelled Oshogbo's population.

Oshogbo

City (pop., 1996 est.: 476,800), Nigeria. Located northeast of Ibadan, it lies along the Oshun River. Originally settled by the Ilesha from Ibokun, it remained a small town until the early 19th century when an influx of Yoruba fleeing from Fulani conquerors arrived. In 1840 it was the scene of a battle won by Ibadan that proved to be the turning point in the Fulani-Yoruba wars. It was made part of Oyo state in 1976 and the capital of the newly created state of Osun in 1991. It is a trade centre for cocoa and palm oil; weaving and dyeing cotton cloth and growing tobacco are other local occupations.


Oshogbo
a city in SW Nigeria: trade centre. Pop.: 629 000 (2005 est.)

Oshogbo 

a city in Nigeria, in the Western State, on the Oshun River. Population, 252,600 (1971). Oshogbo is a railroad and highway junction and an important center for the harvesting of cocoa beans, African oil-palm fruit, cotton, and tobacco. The city has tobacco and cotton-ginning enterprises.



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Location and Environmental Settings The Osogbo area where the present study is confined is located within latitude 7[degrees]6'N & 7[degrees]15'N and longitude 3[degrees]17'E & 3[degrees]25'E and covers about 268[km.
This is because, if the character and forms of the productions of workshop centers such as Osogbo (1963-1966), Frank McEwen's stone carvers in Zimbabwe (1958-1973), or the artists of Ruth Schaffner's Gallery Watatu in Nairobi (1990s) were usually naive, with the artists having little if any Western education (Kasfir 1999), the Abayomi Barber School artists, equally poorly educated, produce super-realistic works described as no different from those of the formally trained (Adepegba 1996).
Wenger, along with other artists, created the shrines in the Sacred Groves -- a wood in the town of Osogbo, in which the internationally renowned school of art of the same name originated.
 
 
 
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