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@onlinevarietyshop: #headband #headbandstyle #headbands #metalheadband #unisexheadband
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The creation of the map of Nigeria and the administrative decision to place the "Middle Belt" area (including present-day Benue) into Northern Nigeria was primarily the work of Sir Frederick Lugard, with the boundary-making process supported by British colonial surveyors and the Intelligence Division of the War Office. While Flora Shaw (who later married Lugard) is famous for suggesting the name "Nigeria" in 1897, it was Lugard who physically and politically shaped the map through his role as High Commissioner and later Governor-General. 1. Who Drew the Map? The technical drawing of the map was not done by one person, but by the British War Office (Intelligence Division) and the Colonial Survey Committee. The War Office: Issued the first comprehensive maps of the "Northern Nigeria Protectorate" around 1900–1902 to aid in military conquest. Frederick Lugard: As the man on the ground, Lugard defined the "Northern Protectorate" boundaries after the 1885 Berlin Conference and the subsequent conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate in 1903. 2. Why was Benue put in the North? The decision to include the Benue region (then referred to as part of Munshi Province) in the North was a strategic administrative choice made by Lugard for several reasons: The Rivers as Boundaries: Lugard and his predecessors used the Niger and Benue Rivers as natural markers for the southern boundary of the North. Anything north of the Benue River was automatically considered "Northern Nigeria," even though the people in the Benue region (like the Tiv and Idoma) were ethnically and culturally distinct from the Hausa-Fulani Caliphate. The "Middle Belt" Buffer: Lugard wanted a large, unified northern territory to maximize the reach of his "Indirect Rule" policy. Even though the Middle Belt groups did not have a centralized emirate system, they were "tacked on" to the North to create a massive administrative block that could be governed from Kaduna. The 1914 Amalgamation: When Lugard merged the Northern and Southern Protectorates in 1914, he chose to keep the existing 1906 provincial boundaries. He resisted shifting the Middle Belt (Benue, Plateau, etc.) to the South because it would have significantly reduced the landmass and political weight of the Northern Province, which he favored. 3. The Resulting Tension The decision to put Benue in the North has been a point of historical contention. Because the Benue region (and the wider Middle Belt) was culturally different from the Islamic North, political movements (like the United Middle Belt Congress) emerged in the 1950s specifically to protest being "lumped in" with the Northern Region. #HistoryTok #NigeriaHistory #LearnOnTikTok #NaijaFacts #MiddleBelt
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