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The Concept and Practice of Pre-colonial Warfare in Ibibio Land

This paper examines the concept and practice of warfare in the pre-colonial Ibibio society, challenging the Eurocentric view that dismiss pre-state African military engagements as falling outside the classical definition of war. The study argues that the pre-colonial Ibibio society possessed organised and purposeful military structures comparable to that of European and other world civilisations. The study reveals that warfare in the pre-colonial Ibibio society was triggered by economic, political and social factors, including boundary disputes, competition for fertile land and fishing grounds, slave raids, and struggle for territorial dominance. It further reveals that in the absence of a standing army, military recruitment was drawn from agencies such as; individuals and families with established martial reputation, the secret society, and the hunters and blacksmiths guilds. Indeed, the pre-colonial Ibibio employed a wide range of sophisticated military practices, including the use of envoys, espionage, ambushes, deception, vulnerability theory, supernatural rituals and coded communication system. Weapons ranged from spears, machetes, bows and arrows, and later firearms. The study relies mainly on secondary sources and adopts descriptive, thematic analytical approaches to reconstruct the military history of the study area. It concludes that the pre-colonial warfare was structured, culturally embedded engagement with clearly defined practices of declaration of hostilities, preparation for battle, command organisation and cessation of hostilities. Far from being primitive or stateless violence, Ibibio military culture reflects a rich warrior tradition that contributed meaningfully to the study of military history, pre-dating the arrival of Europeans in the area.

Keywords: Ibibio, pre-colonial, war, warfare, tactics and strategy.