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jaqueline241194
Jaqueline :
Rezept
2026-06-22 19:20:56
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_manu_hro
_Manu&Johnny_🐾⚓️ :
Wir brauchen das Rezept 🥺🥺😂😂😂
2026-06-23 12:04:17
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superlemonhase23
SuperLemonHase :
Hätte auch gern das Rezept bitte 🥺
2026-06-23 12:57:19
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herzschlag_konzertmoment
jenny :
Brauch das Rezept 😅
2026-06-23 10:11:18
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anna.sophie.kunko
Anna Sophie Kunkowski :
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-22 18:35:14
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Gèlé Gèlé a Benin riverine port trading town under the ughoton community.  The foundation of gèlé gèlé community as one of Benin commercial towns in the corridor of Benin Kingdom is one of the most documented and written about places in Benin history.  Gèlé Gèlé was historically a quarter under the authority of Ughoton and was traditionally associated with the Okao of Ughoton. Much of what is known about the area in the nineteenth century comes from the accounts of European visitors, traders, missionaries, and colonial officials who wrote extensively about Ughoton and the nearby quarter of Gèlé Gèlé. Among the most notable of these accounts is Captain Alan Boisragon's The Benin Massacre (1897), in which he described the route through Ughoton and the surrounding riverine settlements during the events leading to the British Punitive Expedition against Benin.  Early British maps of Benin and the approach to Benin City recorded Gèlé Gèlé in brackets with Ughoton, indicating that colonial surveyors and visitors recognized Gèlé Gèlé as being under the authority of the Ughoton community. This provides cartographic evidence of the historical relationship between Ughoton and its riverine quarter, Gèlé Gèlé. 📸1 Cap. Boisragon in his 1899 book noted that gèlé gèlé was the first Benin village burnt down by the British army during the 1897 invasion and clear states gèlé gèlé and ughoton went by the same name as far as 1897 but the difference between this two riverine community was that gèlé gèlé was a port town occupied by ijaw and jakris (itsekiri traders) - 📸2 & 3. The British officers' narrative on gèlé gèlé being a trade unit of ughoton, the book Benin massacre 1899, fits into the edo history of the quarter.  It's said it was founded by one of the daughters of Oba Ozolua who erected a trading outpost in ughoton town to facilitate Benin wares/seafood trade with the ijaws, itsekiri and other riverine tribe.  Over time, these traders from  because of the distance between ughoton and the nearest ijaw town, many of them settled in ughoton to do their business and the trade little trade outpost became a big  commercial town and the people of ughoton named the outpost
Gèlé Gèlé a Benin riverine port trading town under the ughoton community. The foundation of gèlé gèlé community as one of Benin commercial towns in the corridor of Benin Kingdom is one of the most documented and written about places in Benin history. Gèlé Gèlé was historically a quarter under the authority of Ughoton and was traditionally associated with the Okao of Ughoton. Much of what is known about the area in the nineteenth century comes from the accounts of European visitors, traders, missionaries, and colonial officials who wrote extensively about Ughoton and the nearby quarter of Gèlé Gèlé. Among the most notable of these accounts is Captain Alan Boisragon's The Benin Massacre (1897), in which he described the route through Ughoton and the surrounding riverine settlements during the events leading to the British Punitive Expedition against Benin. Early British maps of Benin and the approach to Benin City recorded Gèlé Gèlé in brackets with Ughoton, indicating that colonial surveyors and visitors recognized Gèlé Gèlé as being under the authority of the Ughoton community. This provides cartographic evidence of the historical relationship between Ughoton and its riverine quarter, Gèlé Gèlé. 📸1 Cap. Boisragon in his 1899 book noted that gèlé gèlé was the first Benin village burnt down by the British army during the 1897 invasion and clear states gèlé gèlé and ughoton went by the same name as far as 1897 but the difference between this two riverine community was that gèlé gèlé was a port town occupied by ijaw and jakris (itsekiri traders) - 📸2 & 3. The British officers' narrative on gèlé gèlé being a trade unit of ughoton, the book Benin massacre 1899, fits into the edo history of the quarter. It's said it was founded by one of the daughters of Oba Ozolua who erected a trading outpost in ughoton town to facilitate Benin wares/seafood trade with the ijaws, itsekiri and other riverine tribe. Over time, these traders from because of the distance between ughoton and the nearest ijaw town, many of them settled in ughoton to do their business and the trade little trade outpost became a big commercial town and the people of ughoton named the outpost "gèlé gèlé okhién èvbo - truly truly the little market became a town". This story was strengthen by the British officers narrative that gèlé gèlé can also be called ughoton but the difference is that gèlé gèlé is a trading outpost, which it served for more than 300yrs before it was burnt down by the British... If Gèlé Gèlé was truly separate from the Benin Kingdom, why was it among the first settlements destroyed by British forces in retaliation for the killing of Phillips' party on their advance to Benin City? The British clearly regarded it as part of the territory through which they were marching against Benin. 📸4 Furthermore, if Gèlé Gèlé existed as an independent community distinct from Ughoton and the Benin Kingdom, who was its king at the time it was burnt? Historical records of the period identify the Oba of Benin as the sovereign authority, not a separate ruler of Gèlé Gèlé. A useful comparison can be found in Ikpe Town in present-day Ikpoba-Okha. Ikpe Waterside has long been occupied by Ijaw traders and settlers, yet no one argues that Ikpe Waterside is a separate community detached from Ikpe itself. By the same reasoning, the presence of settlers or trading groups in Gèlé Gèlé "does not automatically make it independent of Ughoton, with which it has historically been associated. Source: Edo History and Archive #edostate#greatbeninkingdon

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