Kaduna State

Kaduna State
State
Nickname(s): Centre of Learning

Location of Kaduna State in Nigeria
Coordinates: 10°20′N 7°45′E / 10.333°N 7.750°E / 10.333; 7.750Coordinates: 10°20′N 7°45′E / 10.333°N 7.750°E / 10.333; 7.750
Country  Nigeria
Date created 27 May 1967
Capital Kaduna
Government
  Governor
(List)
Mallam Nasir Ahmad el-Rufai (All Progressives Congress)
Area
  Total 46,053 km2 (17,781 sq mi)
Area rank 3rd of 36
Population (2006 census)1
  Total 6,066,562
  Rank 3rd of 36
  Density 130/km2 (340/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)
  Year 2007
  Total $10.33 billion[1]
  Per capita $1,666[1]
Time zone WAT (UTC+01)
ISO 3166 code NG-KD
^1 Preliminary results

Kaduna, usually referred to as Kaduna State to distinguish it from the city of Kaduna, is a state in Northwest Nigeria. Its capital is Kaduna.

History

The word 'Kaduna' is said to be a corruption of a Gbagyi word/name for a river. Another version of the etymology of the name is a narrative linked to the Hausa word for crocodile - but this is contested by the Gbagyi ethnic group known to have lived in the area for centuries. It is therefore indicative that the name, Kaduna, was taken-up by Lord Frederick Lugard and his colonial colleagues when they moved the capital of the then Northern Region from Zungeru to Kaduna in 1916. This move of the colonial office to Kaduna started 1912-1918/20 with the initial effort having been made in 1902 from Jebba to Zungeru.

At the start of British colonial rule in northern Nigeria the people groups who live in the area became 'Northern Nigerians'- a construct which continues even till date. By 1967 these people groups again were carved into 'North Central State' and this was the case until 1975 that 'Kaduna State' was formerly created by the then military leader, Gen. Murtala Mohammed, with all distinct identities amalgamated into one state without a referendum. The state hence is the successor of the old Northern Region of Nigeria, which had its capital at Kaduna which is now the state capital to about 6.3 million people (Nigerian census figure, 2006).

It was from the old Northern Region that in the year 1967 gave birth to six states in the north, leaving Kaduna as the capital of North-Central State, whose name was changed to Kaduna State in 1976. Meanwhile, Kaduna was further divided in 1987, creating Katsina State. Under the governance of Kaduna is the ancient city of Zaria, Kafanchan and Nok, the area one of Africa's earliest civilization is recorded to have been excavated. The most intriguing aspect of this area is that the colonial construction and its post-colonial successor call 'Nigeria' hardly documented the history or the method of how Kaduna state's people groups encompassed in these constructs define and identify themselves as such the people groups who populate the area have lived in near oblivion or obscurity as they often are thought of as Hausa people.

Local Government Areas

Kaduna State consists of twenty-three (23) Local Government Areas. They are:

Demographics

Kaduna State, north central Nigeria, is politically classified as belonging to the now 'North - West' zone of the current six (6) Geo - political zones of Nigeria. It is populated by about 59 to 63 different ethnic groups if not more with the exactitude of the number requiring further verification through a genuine field work [Hayab, 2014]. The question therefore is what ethnic groups make up who are 'Kaduna State indigenes' today? This question has largely been answered as indicated in the last paragraph with the Hausa and Fulani as the dominant ethnic groups followed by at lease 60 others. These groups include:

  1. Adara (dubbed Kadara),
  2. Akurmi (labelled Kurama by the Hausa),
  3. Anghan (dubbed Kamanton by the Hausa),
  4. Amo,
  5. Aruruma (named Ruruma by the Hausa),
  6. Atachaat (dubbed Kachechere),
  7. Atyab (dubbed Kataf by the Hausa),
  8. Atuku,
  9. Ayu,
  10. Bajju,
  11. Bakulu (Ikulu by the Hausa),
  12. Bhazar (named Koro),
  13. Bur (Sanga),
  14. Binawa,
  15. Dingi,
  16. Fantswam,
  17. Fulfulde (Arrived around 1800s),
  18. Gbagyi,
  19. Gure,
  20. Gwandara,
  21. Gwong (Kagoma in Hausa),
  22. Ham (dubbed Jaba in Hausa which is a derogatory name),
  23. Hausa,
  24. Jangi,
  25. Kaibi,
  26. Kahugu,
  27. Kanufi,
  28. Kigono,
  29. Kinugu,
  30. Kitimi,
  31. Kiwafa,
  32. Kiwollo,
  33. Kono,
  34. Kuvori (call Surubu),
  35. Kuturmi,
  36. Lemoro * not sure,
  37. Mada (Mardan) Mada must have migrated during colonial rule,
  38. Nandu,
  39. Nduyah,
  40. Numana,
  41. Nindem,
  42. Ningeshe,
  43. Ninkyop,
  44. Ninzo,
  45. Nyenkpa (Yeskwa),
  46. Oegworok,
  47. Pikal,
  48. Pitti,
  49. Ribang,
  50. Rishuwa,
  51. Rumada,
  52. Ruruma,
  53. Rumayya,
  54. Shemawa* Hausa name?,
  55. Sholio (Dubbed Marwa),
  56. Siyawa (Bauchi state?),
  57. Takad,
  58. Tarri, and
  59. Tsam (Chawai)

Available records show that Christian mission activities in the area began formally from the 1900s with the establishment of Sudan Interior Mission (S.I.M.) in the Ham town of Har Kwain (Kwoi) hence today these people groups are predominantly Christians. Culturally, the people groups of the then southern Zaria who now see themselves as southern Kaduna, with some exception it must be acknowledged, share a lot in the cultural practices of marriage rites, naming, burial, farming, social organisations, kinship, etc. Until a full scale research is undertaken, the diversity of Kaduna state remains blurred as some ethnic groups are so small in population so much so that they are often overshadowed by the larger groups who live near them.[2]

Education

Kaduna is one of the education centers in Nigeria, with many colleges and the most recognized university in Nigeria

References

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.