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Found 1 results for "39a6e90166ba7cd032708f03af2ff3ee" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous /his/17755643#17755906
6/12/2025, 12:56:28 AM
>>17755818
>>17755837
>sacred-city of Ife
BTW Most of the Yoruba myths take place in this place. You can trace the origin of these SSA thunder gods to here and the Back to Africa Eurasian Neolithic Revolution since that is what these cycles in nature are that these myths represent.

>Shango (Yoruba language: Ṣàngó, also known as Changó or Xangô in Latin America; as Jakuta or Badé; and as Ṣangó in Trinidad Orisha) is an Orisha (or spirit) of thunder in Yoruba religion

>The legendary origins of the Oyo Empire lie with Ọranyan (also known as Ọranmiyan), the last prince of the Yoruba Kingdom of Ile-Ife (Ife)

>Ifẹ̀ (Yoruba: Ifẹ̀, Ilé-Ifẹ̀) is an ancient Yoruba city in south-western Nigeria founded sometime between the years 1000 BC and 500 BC. By 900 AD, the city had become an important West African emporium producing sophisticated art forms

>According to the traditions of the Yoruba religion, Ilé-Ifẹ̀ was founded by the order of the Supreme God Olódùmarè by Obatala. It then fell into the hands of his brother Oduduwa, which created enmity between the two. Oduduwa created a dynasty there, and sons and daughters of this dynasty became rulers of many other kingdoms in Yorubaland. The first Ọọ̀ni of Ifẹ̀ is a descendant of Oduduwa, which was the 401st Orisha

Funny that Muzzies we wuzzing them.

>Ile-Ife, the holy city of the Yoruba people, which is said to have been conquered by Oduduwa, Kisra's grandson in one version

>The Kisra legend is a migration story shared by a number of political and ethnic groups in modern Nigeria, Benin, and Cameroon, primarily the Borgu kingdom and the people of the Benue River valley. The migration legend depicts the arrival of a large military force in what is currently Northern Nigeria around the 7th Century AD. The Borgu kingdom claimed direct descent from the leader of this migration and a number of other polities recognize the migration through ceremony and formal regalia