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A well rounded document of the evolution of the 19th century

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This is a good piece and people in school dealing with history, and also generally for people who would like to know about heritage

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Subido en
13 de agosto de 2024
Número de páginas
8
Escrito en
2024/2025
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Notas de lectura
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Agricultural Production in the Nineteenth Century

At the start of the nineteenth century, the economic resources of Nigeria depended largely on

agriculture. The bulk of the population were engaged in farming. Farmlands were allocated to

families which wanted the lands by the traditional rulers of each community. Land was very

important during this period because it was simply the only means of providing basic foodstuffs

and domestic materials. The head of the family take responsibility from the traditional head to

reallocate land to the individual member of the family subject to good behaviour and to the

performance of his duties towards the chiefs. These duties may include paying regular tribute in

kind. The family could retain the land perpetually. Farming consisted of series of simple operations

and the universal system of farming was shifting cultivation. Shifting cultivation was especially

adopted in the forest areas where farming was the main economic activity. In the forest areas

bushes were cleared using some systemic methods before farming whereas farmland was burnt in

preparation for farming. The ashes served as manure for the land. Firewood were collected after

the bush burning and small games were trapped for meat.

With shifting cultivation, the fallow system was prevalent. The effectiveness of the system

in maintaining soil fertility was determined by the length of the fallow period. The period fallow

was dependent on the extent to which the crops grown had impoverished the soil. The longer the

period of fallow the more the fertility level of the soil, except for erosion and other strange forces.

Low population density was one of the factors that promoted shifting cultivation in the various

communities. Apart from bush farming, however, cultivation on a much smaller scale, in the form

of gardening was done inside the villages and towns, within different compounds. In the small

scale farming, crops such as vegetables, beans, pepper, and maize which were easy to tend by very

young children and old people were planted. Locally manufactured knives cutlass and hoes



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, constituted the farm implements. There was two types of hoe including the large heavy type and

the small hoe. The heavy hoe was used in making farm ridges and for constructing the drainage

system on the farm. The small lighter hoe was used for weeding and other less heavy work. The

knives and cutlasses were used for clearing the bush and for digging out root crops such as yam

and cassava.

The principal food crops that were grown included guinea corn, maize, millet, beans of

several varieties, yams of various species, sweet potatoes, pepper of various kinds, kola nuts and

vegetables of different species. Cotton was also grown to provide raw materials for the indigenous

textile industry. Palm trees were grown in the bush to provide the vegetable oil needed by the

people. A number of wild plants which provided fruits such as paw-paw and mangoes were also

planted. Agricultural production were largely subsistence, though some form of plantation existed

in certain areas. Surplus agricultural produce were exchanged for local industrial products like

hoes, mats, pottery, and leather products. It was customary for the entire family to provide labour,

especially during planting and harvesting. Each family possessed at least a farmland, and provided

labour on it. Some slave labour existed to supplement the family labour when necessary. The farms

owned by chiefs were largely farmed by slaves.

By the second half of the nineteenth century, agricultural production in Nigeria had taken

another dimension. There was gradual prominence of agricultural produce for export. The three

most important agricultural products during this period were palm products, cocoa, and rubber.

Palm Products: Palm products became more important with the spread of the industrial

revolution in Europe. Palm trees grew abundantly and successfully in several parts of Nigeria and

provided the people with vegetable oil which was a basic necessity of every household. In Europe,

palm oil was needed for vegetable fats, for the soap and candle industries, and for the



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