In 1516, the Igala army marched south to conquer Benin, which controlled West Africa's trade routes for ivory and pepper. Despite Benin's young king and divided army, the kingdom successfully defended itself and ended the Igala threat permanently, demonstrating effective military organization and strategic defense.
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Why the Igala army targeted Benin’s trade routes #beninkingdomAjouté :
In 1516, an army marched from the north.
Their goal was simple. Erase Benin from the map. They were the Igala.
Northern warriors with one mission.
Organized, trained, and coming fast.
Benin controlled the trade routes.
Ivory, pepper, wealth flowing south.
If you took Benin, you took West Africa.
Thousands of men, weeks of marching.
Benin had 12 days before they arrived at the gates.
Inside Benin City, panic. The king was young. The army was split.
And the enemy was 3 days away. But what happened next changed everything. Benin didn't just survive. They ended the Igala threat forever. Part two next week.
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