The Irigwe people, who speak Bantu rigwe and are part of the wider Benue-Congo ethnolinguistic group, are an ancient, hospitable and pleasant people who live in the Plateau State’s Bassa and Barakin Ladi Local Government Areas as well as Kaduna State’s Saminaka Local Government Area.
The Irigwe are primarily residents of Bassa LGA in Plateau State’s Miango, Jos, and Bukuru village. Anthropologists were well-known for these people’s customary ceremonial dance and polyandry. The Mango Rest House, tall hills, waterfalls, and other tourist attractions abound in the Mango Village. There are around 90,000 or so Irigwe people residing in Nigeria.
Most Irigwes no longer practice polyandry as a result of Christianity and anthropologists labeling the Irigwe tribe as “primitive” and “pagan” civilization for engaging in polyandry, as well as the British government killing many of its indigenous people because they posed a threat to them.
Image 1: Irigwe Men, Jos Plateau. 1959.
Image 2: Irigwe Women, Jos Plateau. 1959