Olateru Olagbegi II

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Olateru Olagbegi, KBE, was a flamboyant Olowo (King) of Owo, an ancient city which was once the capital of an Eastern Yoruba city state.[1] He was appointed Olowo in 1941 and ruled for 25 years before he was deposed. His exile from power was a fallout of a regional crisis between two Action Group leaders: Awolowo and Samuel Ladoke Akintola. The Action Group which was launched in his palace a decade earlier, was led by Awolowo in the 1950s. A battle of wills between the two gladiators in the early 1960s saw Oba Olateru pitching his tent with Akintola. However, his choice only fomented tension in his community. A military coup in 1966 created an avenue for some citizens of Owo to unleash violence and revolt against Olagbegi. He was banished from power in 1966 by the military administrator of the Western Region.

However, in 1993, he was re-appointed to his former title of Olowo after the death of the reigning monarch.[2] [3] He died in 1998 and crown passed to his son Oba Folagbade Olagbegi III

[edit] References

  1. ^ Robin Poynor, 'Naturalism and Abstraction in Owo Masks', African Arts, Vol. 20, No. 4 (Aug., 1987)
  2. ^ Bamidele Johnson, "Exit Of A Two-Time Monarch," Tempo. November 12, 1998
  3. ^ Bamidele Adebayo, "Bloody Throne," The News (Lagos). September 27, 1999