Theologia Viatorum
ISSN: (Online) 2664-2980, (Print) 0378-4142
Page 1 of 8
Original Research
The Coptic origins of the Yoruba
Author:
Agai M. Jock1
Affiliation:
1
School of Religion,
Philosophy and Classics,
University of KwaZulu-Natal,
Durban, South Africa
Corresponding author:
Agai Jock,
[email protected]
Dates:
Received: 30 May 2021
Accepted: 31 Aug. 2021
Published: 18 Oct. 2021
How to cite this article:
Jock, A.M., 2021, ‘The Coptic
origins of the Yoruba’,
Theologia Viatorum
45(1), a124. https://doi.
org/10.4102/tv.v45i1.124
Copyright:
© 2021. The Authors.
Licensee: AOSIS. This work
is licensed under the
Creative Commons
Attribution License.
The theory according to which the Yoruba ancestors were Coptic Christians seemed
unpopular amongst many Yoruba people despite the fact that the theory was proposed by
the most revered Yoruba historian, Samuel Johnson. The aims of this research are firstly, to
study Johnson’s Coptic theory of the Yoruba origins and secondly, to highlight the
circumstances that might have informed him to associate the Yoruba people with the Coptic
Church. This research is achieved through a historical study of a possible interaction between
certain ethnic groups in Nigeria and the Coptic Church, and through a comparative study of
Church liturgies amongst the Copts and those of the Yoruba traditional churches. The
researcher explained that Johnson’s Christian background influenced his narrative of
connecting the Yoruba origins with the Copts. The researcher is of the opinion that there is
no evidence provided by Johnson according to which the Yoruba people originated from
the Copts.
Keywords: Africa; Ancient Near East; Copts; Egypt; Nubia; South-West Nigeria; Yorubaland.
Introduction
The Yoruba people are amongst the most populous ethnic groups in Africa. In Nigeria alone,
there are over 40 million Yoruba (Ayandele 2004:121). Their history is one of the most researched
amongst other ethnic groups in sub-Saharan Africa. The Yoruba are also indigenes of West
African states such as Togo and Benin Republic (Lange 2004:39). This research however, will be
centred on the Yoruba people of Nigeria. The Yoruba people of Nigeria occupy the south-western
region of the most populous African country comprising of six geographical states: Oyo, Osun,
Ondo, Ogun, Lagos and Ekiti. The Yoruba people are also found to be indigenes of Kogi and
Kwara states in north-central Nigeria. Despite the achievements they have made with regard to
the writing of their history and in the preservation of their culture, there is yet to be an absolute
conclusion as to where the Yoruba people originated (Afolayan 2004:32). A renowned writer of
Yoruba history, Samuel Johnson, described the origin of the Yoruba people as one that is still not
clear and full of obscurity (Johnson 1921:3). There are various theories pertaining to the Yoruba
origins. Whilst some say the Yoruba people originated from Mecca or Arabia, others say Egypt or
Monroe or North Africa or Etruria (Agai 2013b; Olojede 2011:344–345; Oyebade 2004:53–54).
Samuel Johnson is likely the first Yoruba person to document the Yoruba history extensively.
He said that the original Yoruba ancestors were Coptic Christians who originated from Upper
Egypt (Johnson 1921:6). After Samuel Johnson, many other Yoruba writers such as Lucas
Olumide, Toyin Falola, Fani-Kayode (2013:1–3), Afolayan and many more have continued to
associate the Yoruba origin with Egypt. Whilst Johnson emphasised a Christian origin of the
Yoruba from Upper Egypt or Nubia, Lucas went to associating the Yoruba origins with the
ancient Egyptians. He thought that the pre-dynastic and dynastic Egyptians had similar
cultural practices with the Yoruba people of Nigeria. He said that the Yoruba religious practices,
body mutilations, funeral rites, names, sacred numbers, social practices, knowledge, dress,
hieroglyphics, emblems and language are similar to those of the ancient Egyptians
(Lucas 1970:411–418). Lucas added that a possible contact between the Yoruba ancestors and
the ancient Egyptians took place during the pre-dynastic and dynastic Egyptian periods (Lucas
1970:291, 352). Unlike Johnson who linked the Yoruba origin with the period after Christ lived,
Lucas was of the opinion that the Yoruba ancestors lived before the emergence of Christianity.
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There might have been certain circumstances that made Johnson to connect the Yoruba people
with the Egyptians. Firstly, it is likely that the perception of the Egyptian civilisation or the rise
of Egyptology in the 18th and 19th centuries influenced his thinking to associate the origin of
Yoruba with the Egyptians (Reynolds 2012:1; Tyldesley 2005:1–8). Secondly, his interest in
Christianity may have influenced his views as well. This research examines Johnson’s view of
the Coptic origin of the Yoruba and the circumstances that might have influenced his thoughts
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to suggest that the ancestors of the Yoruba people were
Coptic Christians.1
The Coptic Christians
Some contemporary Egyptians think that their ancestors
were not Africans. They think so simply because many of
them are light-skinned and are politically and socially
connected to the people of the Middle East than the people
from other African countries. This is not surprising because
a number of 19th century scholars have declassified ancient
and contemporary Egypt as an African territory (Agai
2013a:88). Bluemenbach, an anthropologist in 1865, regarded
the ancient Egyptians as non-Africans (Adamo 2013:73). In
this research, the ancient Egyptians, the Nubians and the
Coptic Christians will be classified as light-skinned and
dark-skinned Africans.2 It therefore becomes pertinent to
know the time through which Christianity entered Africa
and especially Egypt. It is also relevant to know how Coptic
Christianity began and how it possibly spread to West
Africa as perceived by Samuel Johnson.
According to Mark, the word ‘Copts’ has a Greek origin
(Mark 2009:1). This could likely be so because in the past,
when a nation subdued another, they changed the country’s
or city’s names and the cultures of the people subdued. For
example, Alexander the Great captured Egypt in 332 BCE
and he made Greek language and culture prominent in
Egypt (Redford 2006:xiii). The Romans also captured some
regions of the Ancient Near East around 30 BCE and at that
time, Egypt was included administratively as a part of the
Near East. The Romans developed Egypt and built formidable
communication systems including the development of the
Nile. This development contributed to the Early Church’s
accessibility to travel and preach in Egypt (Boer 1983:1–7).
With regard to the connection of the word ‘Copts’ with Egypt,
Marcus said that the Greek word for ‘Copts’ is Aegyptus and
meant Egypt (Marcus 2011:4). Similarly, Mark said that the
Greek word Aegyptus meant Egypt and that the word
originated from the Egyptian name Hwt-Ka-Ptah meaning the
house of the spirit of an Egyptian god Ptah (Mark 2009:1).
Another word for Egypt is Kemet, which could be associated
with black land (Johnson 1978:10–11).
1.Despite the fact that the Coptic origin of the Yoruba is not emphasised specifically,
yet, the theory of the Egyptian origin of the Yoruba in general is gradually becoming
popular amongst Yoruba scholars and amongst people who are interested in
knowing the Yoruba history. The Egyptian theory is a view that is categorised into
the predynastic and dynastic Egyptians, the Nubians and the Upper Egyptians.
Samuel Johnson associated the Upper Egyptians with Coptic Christians. Johnson did
not give any detail about how the Coptic Christians influenced the Yoruba people,
yet, he implied that the Coptic theory of the origin of the Yoruba was his priority.
This research is a discourse about Johnson’s perspective of the Coptic origin of the
Yoruba. Students of African history will find this research to be of a great benefit
because it spelt-out the socio-political conditions of Johnson that prompted him to
associate the Yoruba origin with the Copts.
2.The ancient Egyptians might have been classified as dark-skinned people because of
the similarities of their culture with other Africans such as the Yoruba and also
because of their geographical location in Africa (O’Connor & Reid 2003:11). Adamo
and Eghubare had earlier observed that the entry of many nationalities into Egypt
such as the Hyksos, the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Greeks, the Romans, the
Palestinians, the Syrians and other Africans let into intermarriages between
the Egyptians the listed foreigners. The intermarriages might have resulted to
the Egyptians including the Copts to have light-skin (Adamo & Eghubare 2010:415).
This researcher is aware that the Coptic Christians are not necessarily people of
dark-skin yet some of them might be of dark skin. Skin colour whether dark or
light is not a priority in this research. The topic that is relevant precisely in the case
of this research is on whether the Egyptians were Africans or not.
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Original Research
In addition, Adamo and Eghubare associated the residences
of Kemet or the ancient Egyptians as a people with black
or dark skin (Adamo & Eghubare 2010:415). The points
mentioned here encourage the view according to which the
Copts were possibly people of an African descent; yet, this
classification of the Copts as Africans is open for further
investigation to ascertain its truthfulness. Marcus observed
that the Copts were not foreigners from the ancient Near East
but direct descendants of the ancient Egyptians. Before the
emergence of Christianity into Egypt, the Copts practiced
their traditional religions and lived mostly in rural areas
shepherding their flocks (Marcus 2011:4). Sanneh said that
Christianity in Egypt was at first received by the elite groups
that lived in urban areas until the middle of the 3rd century
CE, when the Egyptians who lived in the Nile began to
accept and spread the faith within Egypt and this led to the
building of more Coptic villages and towns (Sanneh 1983:7).
But how did Christianity spread to Egypt and who were the
role players in the spread of the Christian faith in Egypt?
Scriptural sources, historical sources and oral traditions are
the main sources of information we can rely on to know
about the spread of Christianity in Africa and especially in
Egypt (Sanneh 1983:1).
With regard to scriptural sources, the Book of Matthew
records that after the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem, he was
hunted by Herod, the district governor of Rome and as a
result, Mary, Joseph and Jesus left Bethlehem for Egypt
(Mt 2:1–23). Although Jesus was yet to start his ministry
when they went to Egypt with his family, Sanneh believed
that the coming of Jesus to Egypt with his parents marked the
first connection of Africa with the Christian faith ‘… [Jesus’
first appearance in Egypt] is the first tradition connecting
the African continent with the Christian story’ (Sanneh
1983:1–2). In addition, in the story of the crucifixion, the Book
of Mark records that a particular man by the name Simon of
Cyrenia (a province in Libya) was forced to take the cross
after the trial of Jesus (Mk 15:21–32). Other role players
identified in the New Testament as having an African origin
or connection include Rufus, Lucius, Simeon, Apollos and
Judich (Ac 18; Rm 16:3; 1 Cor 16:19; 2 Tim 4:19; Ac 11:26;
Ac 18; Rm 16:21) (Sanneh 1983:2).
The Coptic Church of today is mostly centred in Egypt only
with a few extensions or offices in other parts of the world,
still dominated by the Egyptians who travelled to those
countries. There are about 5 million members of the Coptic
Christians in Egypt (Harrington 2011:1–2). The Coptic
Christians in Egypt are still regarded as a minority group
because of their low population size that is incomparable
with those of the Muslims (Sanneh 1983:13). It is not known
precisely who started the church in Egypt (Boer 1983:24).
However, there is a tradition amongst the Coptic Egyptians
according to which John Mark or Saint Mark, the author of
the Gospel of Mark founded the Coptic Church when he
went to preach in Egypt in a date or year that is contestable
(Boer 1983:24–25). Notwithstanding this fact, most authors
agree that Saint Mark might have arrived in Alexandria in
68 CE (Marcus 2011:1):
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And they say that this Mark was the first that was sent to
Egypt, and that he proclaimed the Gospel which he had
written, and first established churches in Alexandria. And the
multitude of believers, both men and women, that were
collected there at the very outset, and lived lives of the most
philosophical and excessive asceticism, was so great, that
Philo thought it worth while to describe their pursuits,
their meetings, their entertainments, and their whole manner
of life.3
Eusebius of Caesarea also said that Saint Mark was the
first bishop of the church in Alexandria.4 The Copts have a
tradition according to which there were four evangelists
that came to preach in Alexandria at the emergence of
Christianity and that Mark was the first. They thought that
the establishment of the Coptic Church is a fulfilment of
the prophecy in Isaiah 19:19: [i]n that day there will be an
altar to the Lord in the midst of the land of Egypt, and a
pillar to the Lord at its border (Is 19:19) (The Christian
Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt 2020:1–2). There is also
another unpopular tradition that the apostle Thomas
preached the gospel in Egypt around 52 CE before he went
to India to preach (Sanneh 1983:4). Alexandria became
a significant place in the training of popular Christian
apologists some of whom became martyrs. Origen and
Clement, for example, all received formal theological
training in Alexandria (Boer 1983:24–25):
One of the strongest centres of Christianity in Egypt was
Alexandria. … It was in Alexandria that a serious attempt
was made to interpret Christian teachings in the light of Greek
philosophical thought, a process begun under Jewish scholars.
Clement made his mark there, though he was not a native of
that city; belonging to an elite, he stressed the element of reason
in religion and established it as an important foundation of
faith. … One of his [Clement] pupils was Origen (c. 185–253),
who was to eclipse him in learning and fame. In 203, after
Clement left Alexandria, Origen, then only eighteen, was
appointed to succeed his teacher at the Catechetical School
which he successfully guided through a time of fierce
persecution and gave it an enviable pre-eminence in the
Christian world. (Sanneh 1983:6)
It is important to note that the capturing of Egypt by Rome
brought about some developments around the Nile and this
resulted in easy access to communication in Egypt. The Early
Church benefitted in this project to the point that they found
it easier to travel and preach in Egypt (Boer 1983:1–7).
Contrary to the given development on the growth of the
Coptic Church, the Coptic Christians also faced persecution
by many people including a number of Roman Emperors.
The Romans were worried at the fast rate at which the
Coptic Church or Christianity generally was growing in
Egypt and they had to check the influence of Christianity.
Emperor Diocletian (284–305) persecuted the Coptic
3.“Eusebius of Caesarea ~ 340 AD CHURCH HISTORY.” L.1, C.17, from file:///D|/
Documenta%20Chatolica%20Omnia/99%20-%20Provvi...ibrary/001%20-Da%20
Fare/01/EusebiusChurchHistory1-16.htm2006-06-03 11:29:32.
4.Ahmed Osman said that a tradition in Egypt together with Eusebius’s book History
of the Church, written in Greek around 310 AD confirms Eusebius argument that
Saint Mark started the Coptic Church or the first Church of Alexandria (Osman
2014:1).
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Christians very harshly (Marcus 2011:5). The Roman edict of
202 CE in Egypt was meant to stop the Egyptians from
converting to Christianity and the edict of 250 CE forced all
Egyptians including the Coptic Christians to carry alongside
a certificate indicating that they made sacrifices to the Roman
gods. The aim was to deny Coptic Christians the worship of
their own God but the Roman gods (Marcus 2011:4–5).
Unlike the Early Church and the Apostolic Fathers who
spread the gospel because they were persecuted (Boer
1983:49–53), the case-study of the Coptic Christians was
different. Sanneh said that that around 300 CE when the
Coptic Christians were persecuted, they did not travel to
other countries to preach the Gospel. Instead, they used the
time of their isolation to develop lengthy and sophisticated
liturgical church orders used locally during their daily
and weekly church programmes (Sanneh 1983:7–8). Around
the 7th century CE and precisely in 642 CE, some Muslims
attacked the Coptic Christians in Egypt and subdued the
Christian faith. As a result, Islam continued to grow capturing
the different tribes in Egypt and, by 702 CE, the Berbers were
also Islamised (Skolfield 2001:142–143). The question that
matters for this research is: Did the persecution of the Copts
by the Romans and the rise of Islam in Egypt contribute to
the migration of the Coptic Christians to other parts of Africa
or the world? Considering the low spread of the Coptic
Christians to other countries especially Nigeria, why did
Johnson associate the Yoruba origin with the Coptic
Christians?
The Connection of the Yoruba
Origins with the Coptic Christians
Before Samuel Johnson, Mohammed Belo, the son of Uthman
dan Fodio who was not a Yoruba indigene wrote that the
Yoruba people originated from Arabia, around 1812 (Lange
2011:583). Johnson said that Belo was responsible for linking
the Yoruba origin with Arabia (Johnson 1921:5; Olojede
2011:343–44). Samuel Johnson is the first Yoruba indigenous
writer to write about the Yoruba history. He was born in 1846
to his Christian missionary parents Sarah and Henry Johnson,
both of whom served as missionaries with the Church
Missionary Society (CMS). His parents were slaves who were
freed or returnees who lived in Sierra Leone after the abolition
of slave trade in 1807. Rev. David Hinderer, a missionary
with the CMS who worked in Abeokuta and Ibadan visited
Sierra Leone and liked Johnson’s parents. Hinderer requested
Mr. Henry to return to Ibadan to serve in the mission centre
as a teacher (Falola 1999:37).
Samuel Johnson attended the Abeokuta Training Institution
between 1863 and 1865. He was influenced by the school
principal Gotlieb Bühler to admire liberal education alongside
the Bible. He studied General education, History, Philosophy,
Mathematics, Greek, Religious Studies and Latin (Falola
1999:33–37). He served as a school teacher in Ibadan, Aremu
and Kudi around 1865 and 1866. He became a deacon with
the CMS in 1867 and a catechist at Aremu church in 1875.
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He mediated and served as a translator during the early and
mid-19th century Yoruba wars. He mediated between the
Yoruba leaders and the British administrators that came
to serve in south-western Nigeria before Nigeria got her
independence in 1960. His experiences with the Christian
communities, the Yoruba traditional leaders and ordinary
citizens together with the foreign missionaries and the British
staffers who worked in Nigeria exposed him to having a
wider knowledge and understanding of the Yoruba people
and their culture (Omolewa 2008:124–133).
Samuel Johnson developed interest in the writing of the
history of the Yoruba people. Through his experiences, his
interests and exposures, he wrote the History of the Yorubas:
From the earliest times to the beginning of the British Protectorate
(Johnson 1921:ix). Johnson’s book is regarded by many
Yoruba people as the most detailed, the most respected and
seemingly the most accurate or sacred up-to-date document
on Yoruba history (Doortmont 1991:167).
Johnson discussed the Yoruba oral tradition according to
which a mythical personage by the name Oduduwa came
from the ‘East’ or ‘Mecca’ to Yoruba land to form the Yoruba
nation. The East in Yoruba oral tradition meant Arabia or
Mecca or North Africa or Meroe or even Iraq (Johnson 1921:5;
Olojede 2011:343–345). Johnson disputed this theory that
associated the Yoruba origin with a Muslim country. He
believed that the Yoruba ancestors might have originated
from Upper Egypt or Nubia or that they might have been
Coptic Christians. He said the following:
1. That they sprung [sic] from Upper Egypt, or Nubia.
2. That they were subjects of the Egyptian conqueror
Nimrod who was of the Phoenician origin andthat they
followed him in his wars of conquest as far as Arabia,
where they settled for a time. It might probably then be
shown that the ancestors of the Yorubas, hailing from
Upper Egypt, were either Coptic Christians or at any
rate that they had some knowledge of Christianity
(Johnson 1921:6–7).
It is clear that Johnson specified two possible geographical
sources that narrate the various views of the origin of the
Yoruba people. The geographical sources are Upper Egypt
and Nubia. In this research, I shall concentrate on Johnson’s
interest regarding the Coptic Church. Although he mentioned
Nubia and Upper Egypt, it is likely that he preferred to
associate the Yoruba origin with Coptic Christianity in order
to dissociate the Yoruba origin from Islam. Johnson said the
Coptic Christians he referred to in his book originated from
Upper Egypt (Johnson 1921:7). He also mentioned Nubia
that comprised of of the areas from Aswan in the southward
direction to the present-day Khartoum in Southern Sudan.
There were Christians in Nubia from the beginning of the
6th century CE. The Byzantine missionaries preached in
Nubia around 540 CE, but the 7th century Arab conquest
interrupted the spread of the gospel out of Nubia by the
Nubian Christians (Bowers 1985:2, 6).
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More so, Information about them [the Nubian Christians] was
scanty until the 1930s when Nubian archaeologists started to
find possible traces of the practices of Christianity in Nubia
(Bowers 1985:2–3). It is not known whether Johnson was
aware of the Nubian Christianity but his connection of the
Yoruba origin with the Coptic Christians and with the
Nubians suggests that he might be aware that Nubia had
some Christians who were possibly contemporaries of the
Coptic Christians after the 6th century CE.
Johnson’s background as a pastor or a clergy, his parent’s
background as missionaries and his faith in Christianity
might have motivated him to promote Christianity above
any other faith. Moreover, so, during the Yoruba wars, the
Hausa and the Fulani people were also involved at some
instances in fighting with the Yoruba people. For example,
the Fulani people invaded Oyo in the early 19th century
(Doortmont 2001:253) and after 1812, Ilorin and other parts of
Yorubaland were captured by the Fulani jihadists (Omolewa
2008:111–112, 117). Johnson was aware of the Hausa and
Fulani influence on Yorubaland (Doortmont 2001:1–2). More
so, The Yoruba people also fought against one another
from the early 19th century until the end of the century
(Peel 2000:27–29). In the midst of the Yoruba’s internal
conflicts, Johnson had to promote his Christian faith, which
he believed promoted human civilisation and enhanced
peace and unity amongst humanity (Olabimtan 2009:253).
Falola said Johnson’s ‘…greatest wish was to see the triumph
of Christianity over other religions’ (Falola 1999:46) and
Olupona described Johnson’s connection of the Yoruba’s
origin with the Coptic Church as Christocentric (Olupona
1993:242).
It is still not known whether the Yoruba ancestors were
Coptic Christians or not and Johnson might be right or he
might not be right in his classification of the Yoruba ancestors
as Coptic Christians. What is clearly known is that his
Christian background influenced his association of the
Yoruba origin with the Coptic Christians or probably some
Christians who lived in Egypt and his dissociation of the
Yoruba origin with Islam. He was adamant that the Yoruba
ancestors were Christians to the point that he discussed a
Yoruba legend that has a link with the Jesus’ story of
sacrificing himself for the sake of rescuing all humanity from
some form of sinful nature or from an enemy:
If so [that the Yoruba ancestors were Coptic Christians], it might
offer a solution of the problem [of the Yoruba origins] of how it
came about that traditional stories of the creation, the deluge, of
Elijah, and other scriptural characters are current amongst them
[local Yoruba people that were not Christians], and indirect stories of
our Lord, termed ‘son of Moremi’. (Johnson 1921:7)
There is a Yoruba legend according to which the goddess
Moremi had only one begotten son by the name Ela or
Olurogbo. The legend has it that the Igbos through some
spiritual means tormented the people of Ile Ife in Yorubaland.
Moremi sacrificed her only son Ela in order to redeem the
Yoruba people who lived at Ile Ife. The story is similar to
biblical account of God sacrificing his only begotten son Jesus
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for the entire human race (Jn 3:16) (Johnson 1921:148).
Johnson did not provide further details on the specific
identities of the Coptic Christians who allegedly came to
Yorubaland. He did not say about the date or the migration
routes the Coptic Christian used to arrive in Yorubaland.
He only mentioned that the ancestors of the Yoruba people
might have been Coptic Christians in only one page of his
over 740 pages of the history of the Yorubas. He only mentioned
the Coptic Christians once in his book yet it is likely that he
meant to emphasise the Coptic theory of the Yoruba origin
above any other theory. This is allegedly possible because,
despite his interest in the knowledge of writing the Yoruba
history, he seemed to emphasise a Christian perspective
of reading the Yoruba origin.
It is likely that Johnson had to connect the Yoruba origin
with the Coptic Christians in order to check the influence of
Islam on the Yoruba people in the 19th century. Also, some
Yoruba oral historians in the 19th century associated
the Yoruba origins with the ‘East’ or ‘Arabia’ or ‘Mecca’
(Johnson 1921:7). There is a Yoruba oral tradition according
to which the original ancestor of the Yoruba is Oduduwa
and that he came from Mecca or Arabia and was a Muslim
before he became a pagan. The tradition has it that Oduduwa
came to Yorubaland with a relic called Idi, a copy of the
Koran. Johnson disputed the tradition and said that the Idi
was not the Koran, but a copy of the Christian Holy scripture
built in rolls (Johnson 1921:7).
Did the Coptic Christians spread
Christianity to Yorubaland?
It is not known with precision the first time Christianity
found itself into the Nigerian soil and particularly into
Yorubaland (Sadiku 2004:124–136). However, historians of
West African history believe that there are two possible
phases by which Christianity might have found its way into
Nigeria. The business of slave trade and commodities such as
pepper, palm oil and other spices opened up Nigeria to the
Europeans and the Americans for exploration, expedition,
research and Christian missions (Omolewa 2008:134–136).
The Portuguese were amongst the earliest to trade for slaves
in Nigeria around the 15th century. Ruy de Sequira, a
Portuguese explorer and trader led the first voyage to Benin
in south-south Nigeria in 1475 and by 1480, about 400 Benin
slaves were captured. The activities of early traders and
explorers in Nigeria had opened the country for the entrance
of Christian missionaries (Sanneh 1983:36–37).
The first missionaries to have preached in Nigeria during the
first phase of the spread of Christianity were from Portugal.
They came to Benin in 1515 and to Warri in 1570 and in 1538;
the Oba (king) of Benin welcomed and accepted to be
baptised by the missionaries (Omolewa 2008:136). The first
phase of the spread of Christianity in Nigeria yielded poor
results because the Nigerians at that time and within the
specified areas listed were not sincere in their acceptance of
the Christian faith. The missionaries failed to understand the
culture of the Nigerian people, and consequently some
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Nigerians thought that the missionaries worked together
with the slave traders (Adewale & Abu 2013:122; Omolewa
2008:137). The missionaries left Nigeria mostly around the
end of the 18th century through the early 19th centuries for
their poor performances (Omolewa 2008:137).
The second phase of the spread of Christianity to Nigeria
started around the 19th century when more and richer
documents were found that explained the activities of early
Christian organisations in Nigeria (Stevens 2015:1–2). The
abolition of slave trade in 1807 contributed to the spread of
Christianity in Nigeria. Sierra Leone, Brazil and Liberia
became major centres where returnee slaves were hosted. It
was in Freetown, Sierra Leone that Samuel Johnson became
exposed to meeting foreign missionaries (Adewale & Abu
2013:122). It was during these periods, that is, from the mid19th century that the Church Missionary Society (CMS), the
Roman Catholic missions, the Qua Iboe missions, the Scottish
Presbyterian Church and many others extended their mission
work to West Africa and to Nigeria in particular (Fyfe
1979:39–41; Omolewa 2008:139). Subsequently, the slaves
who were freed from Sierra Leone and from Brazil helped to
spread Christianity in Yorubaland in the 19th century.
Around the middle of 1850s, the Brazilian returnees who had
received Christianity came to Yorubaland to preach. They
came to Lagos in 1859 and in 1872. They built a Catholic
Church in Lagos, which became famous in 1881 (Sundkler &
Steed 2000:947, 959).
The Sierra Leonean returnees also referred to as the Aku as
they were called in Sierra Leone played a great role in the
spread of Christianity in Yorubaland around the mid-19th
century (Sadiku 2004:125). Rev. Thomas Birch Freeman came
to Badagry to preach on 24th September 1842 where he met
300 other returnees who had settled in Badagry (Adewale &
Abu 2013:124). During the second phase of the spread of
Christianity in Nigeria, many foreign mission organisations
preached and established humanitarian centres such as
hospitals and schools in Yorubaland. The Wesleyan
missionaries established mission centres in Lagos, Ibadan,
Badagry, Ilesa and Abeokuta from 1842 to 1845. The Roman
Catholics through their subsidiary mission originations such
as the Society of African Mission and the Holy Ghost Fathers
established their mission stations in Lagos, Ibadan and some
parts of Eastern Nigeria from 1860 to 1871 (Adewale & Abu
2013:124, 127).
Also, at Ogbomosho, Lagos and Abeokuta, the Southern
American Baptist Mission founded their mission stations
since 1862 (Adewale & Abu 2013:126). The Qua Iboe Mission
was founded by Samuel A. Bill in 1887. The mission
organisation now has branches distributed all over
Nigeria (Adewale & Abu 2013:128). The Scottish Presbyterian
Church also established branches in some parts of Yorubaland
(Omolewa 2008:139). Significant to the spread of Christianity
in Yorubaland are Samuel Johnson and Bishop Ajayi Crowther.
Crowther translated the Bible into Yoruba in 1843 and he
preached Christianity in Yorubaland (Ume 1980:154). The
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second phase of the spread of Christianity in Nigeria and in
the Yorubaland in particular was more successful than
the first phase.
Some problems were encountered during the second phase
of the spread of Christianity in Nigeria and especially in
Yorubaland. Nigerian priests were not respected by foreign
priests who came to preach in Yorubaland. They did not
also submit themselves to the church leaders who were
indigenes of Yorubaland and certain cultural practices
like polygamy were discouraged by foreign missionaries.
The foreign missionaries discouraged the use of local
or traditional names by the Yoruba people (Adewale&
Abu 2013:126). The poor relationships between foreign
missionaries and local Yoruba pastors in the mid- and late19th century made some Yoruba people to start their own
indigenous churches that will accommodate their cultures
and allow respect for the Yoruba people. Some Yoruba
Christian leaders started churches such as the Aladura in
1918 and the Aladura is divided into four groups: the
Apostolic Churches, the Cherubim and Seraphim Churches,
the Church of the Lord and the Celestial Church (Sadiku
2004:127–128; Sundkler & Steed 2000:950–951).
Considering the history of how Christianity came to
Yorubaland, the role players in the spread of Christianity
are first, the Yoruba indigenes themselves and second,
foreign missionaries from Europe and America. There is
virtually little or no information that the Copts from Egypt
came to Yorubaland to preach before or after the 19th
century. Samuel Johnson mentioned that the Yoruba
ancestors might have been Nubians, which may either be
Nubian Christians or not. Paul Bower said that in the 1930s,
archaeologists have found traces of Nubian monastery in
western Sudan near the border of Chad. He said that during
the 1930s search, Nubian artefacts were found around the
north of Lake Chad. Bowers did not say that the finding
have had any some connection with Yorubaland. He further
pointed out that it is likely that Franciscan missionaries in
1700s preached in Borno and Katsina all in northern Nigeria.
Bowers (1985) said that:
Christian symbols were reported in the last century among
the royal regalia of a tribal kingdom on the Benue, south of
Hausaland, though the religious meaning of the symbols had
been forgotten. (p. 4)
Bowers’ emphasis had been on Nubian Christians whilst
Johnson emphasised on the Coptic Christians as the major
influencers of the Yoruba origin.
Lucas pointed out that there are traces of contact between
the Egyptians and Nigerians from the 11th century. He
added that a number of Muslims from Borno in Nigeria
travelled to Cairo for pilgrimages in the 11th century. More
so, He also said that in the 1870, the Egyptian adventurer
Rabeh came to Borno for a visit and was chased away by the
Sultan of Borno in 1893 (Lucas 1970:400–401). Despite all the
travels that connected the Egyptians and the Nigerians,
there is still no mention that the Coptic Church came to
https://theologiaviatorum.org
Original Research
Yorubaland or that the Yoruba people went to worship
amongst the Copts in Egypt. There might have been or there
might not have been a possible contact between the Coptic
Christians and the Yoruba ancestors. This view ought to be
opened for further research because evidence of a possible
contact in Yorubaland or in Egypt is not available now
except for future researches.
It is important to note that Yoruba local churches were
strictly founded by the Yoruba people and not the Egyptians.
More so, there are wide differences in the order of worship
between Coptic Christians and the Yoruba local churches.
For example, the Coptic Christian emphasises proclamation
of the Athanasius creed in every worship service whilst the
Yoruba local churches do not. Although the Copts split
from the Catholic Church in 451 AD, yet their liturgical
orders and especially worship have many similarities with
those of the Catholic Church (Zavada 2019:1–2). The Yoruba
churches on the other hand worship with many local
instruments, they sing loudly, they are vibrant at churches
and they dance vigorously during church services without
high liturgical observances as the Coptic Christians do.
Even if there are similarities in religious practices between
the Coptic Church and the Yoruba indigenous churches,
there is no evidence that the Yoruba churches originated
from the Copts. This again raises a question on Johnson’s
connection of the Yoruba origin with the Coptic Christians.
So, why did Johnson say that the Yoruba people originate
from the Copts?
Conclusion
At the moment, there is no evidence that the Coptic Christians
came to Yorubaland to preach the gospel of Christ before or
after the time of Samuel Johnson. Johnson might have been in
haste to connect the Yoruba origin with the Coptic Christians
because he never took time to explain or give further
information about the Coptic Christians and Yoruba
connection. In his over 740 pages book The History of the
Yorubas, the words ‘Coptic Christians’ are only mentioned
once (Johnson 1921:7), yet, the Coptic theory of the Yoruba
origin was paramount to Johnson because of his Christian
background.
There are no evidence that Johnson ever travelled to Egypt so
he might have been influenced to have the knowledge of
Egypt from his school principal who knew about the
popularity of Egyptology in the 18th and 19th centuries. The
school Principal Gotlieb Bühler taught Johnson about the
histories of Egypt, the Near East and of Alexander the Great
(Brier 2013:20; Olabimtan 2011:1–5). Johnson’s interest on
Egypt might have been influenced by the rise of Egyptomania
in the 18th and the 19th centuries.5 It is not surprising that he
compared and claimed similarities between the Yoruba
Ife Marbles and those of the Egyptians, which he said are still
found at the Egyptian Court of the British Museum
5.Napoleon’s expedition and archaeological discoveries in 1798 promoted further
archaeological interests and researches in Egypt. The love for Egypt increased
around the world. The Europeans and the Americans, for example, were fascinated
at the findings and they began to visit Egypt frequently (Thompson 2015:1).
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Page 7 of 8
Original Research
(Johnson 1921:6). His emphasis of the Yoruba’s origin from
Upper Egypt or Nubia or from the Copts supports his
unflinching interest about Egypt, which he might or might
not have regarded as an African country. The fact that
Johnson expressed his displeasure and frowned at the Yoruba
educated people who knew the histories of Europe and
America and not the history of the Yoruba (Johnson 1921:viii)
suggest that he was Afrocentric and might have appreciated
linking the Yoruba origin with another African country and
another African people, the Egyptians. This suggestion is
open for further interpretation.
Competing interests
Furthermore, J.D.Y. Peel6 said that in the mid-19th century,
there was an ongoing competition between Islam and
Christianity in Yorubaland. The seeming competition
necessitated the need for each of these two religions to
provide a more unifying and attractive identities for the
Yoruba people (Peel 2000:187–200). It was compelling for
Samuel Johnson to link the origin of the Yoruba people with
his faith in Christianity, thus he chose the Coptic Christians.
Before Johnson, Mohammed Belo suggested an Arab or a
Muslim origin of the Yoruba whilst Johnson suggested a
Coptic or Christian origin of the Yoruba. Peel’s view about
the competition between Islam and Christianity suggests that
the two religions influenced Johnson in his narration of the
Yoruba origin. This is why it can be hypothesised that the
Coptic theory of the Yoruba origin was paramount and
preferred to Johnson because the theory accommodated his
faith in Christianity.
Funding information
In addition, Johnson, a Christian missionary needed to unite
the Yoruba people and to proffer to them an identity of origin
he found worthy. This might have motivated his interest to
participate as a mediator in curbing the Yoruba wars. Peel
explained that the spread of Christianity in Yorubaland
contributed immensely to creating a consciousness of unity
and oneness amongst the Yoruba people. He said that before
Christianity in Yorubaland, the Yoruba people never saw
themselves as one ethnic group (Peel 2000:27, 88–89, 152–
155). Johnson saw the ethnic tension amongst the Yoruba
people in the 19th century and he decided to unite them by
associating their origin to one source, the Coptic Christians.
His association of the Yoruba origin with the Copts is an
expression of his dissatisfaction with the theory that
associated the Yoruba origin with Islam.
Adamo, D.T., 2013, ‘The African wife of Jeroboam (ano): An African reading of 1 King
14:1–18’, Theologia Viatorum 2(37), 71–87.
Acknowledgements
The authors have declared that no competing interest exist.
Author’s contributions
I declare that I am the sole author of this research article.
Ethical considerations
This article followed all ethical standards for a research
without direct contact with human or animal subjects.
This research received no specific grant from any funding
agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
Data availability
Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data
were created or analysed in this study.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of
the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or
position of any affiliated agency of the author, and the
Publisher/s.
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