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The Nsude pyramid shrines are an archaeological site located in Nsude, a village in southeastern Nigeria in modern-day Enugu.

A Nsude pyramid taken by G.I Jones 1935

These pyramid-shaped shrines were constructed by the Igbo people. In the 1930s[1] an anthropologist and colonial administrator in the area, G.I. Jones, photographed them.[2]

Eyewitness accounts

Archaeologist Kenneth Murray published an article on these pyramids in "The Nigerian Field", the journal of the Nigerian Field Society. In it he discussed finding ten solid mud pyramids about 1.25 miles from Nsude but in open ground and not visible from Nsude. These were circular and estimated to be twenty-seven feet in diameter, 18-19 feet high and in two rows twenty yards apart and seventy yards long. In each row they were about 12 feet apart. He talked to local people about them and was told that "tutelary or protective fetish or juju of the village of Nsude is called Uto and is said to possess the special merit of killing thieves."[3]

George Basden wrote two ethnographic studies of the Igbo. In one of them he wrote about a visit to ten pyramids near Nsude. Two years before Basden's visit Uto's priest was told by the local Dibla, a mystic or witchdoctor, that Uto wanted 10 large Nkpura (pyramids) built in his honor as a sign of his greatness. Basden says that there were meant to be 10 of these because "there are ten quarters or extended families in the village and each was required to erect one Nkpuru. The local laterite soil was unsuitable so they were built on soft soil nearby.[3]

Materials

Three Nsude Pyramids
Multiple Nsude Pyramids

The Nsude pyramids were constructed using earth and clay, and they consist of a series of stepped terraces that form a pyramid-like shape. The first base section was 60 ft (18 m) in circumference and 3 ft (0.91 m) in height. The next stack was 45 ft (14 m) in circumference.[4] Circular stacks continued, until it reached the top. The purpose of these pyramids is believed to have been primarily ceremonial and religious.[citation needed] They were thought to have been used as platforms for religious rituals and ceremonies.

Cultural significance

The pyramids are thought to have held spiritual and cultural importance to the Igbo people. They are likely linked to religious practices and rituals of the time. The stepped terraces of the pyramids could have been used for various ritualistic activities, including offerings, sacrifices, and ceremonies related to agricultural or ancestral veneration.[citation needed] Over time, the Nsude pyramids experienced erosion and degradation due to their earthen construction and exposure to the elements.[citation needed] Today, only remnants of the pyramids remain.

References

  1. ^ "G. I. Jones, Photographic Archive of Southeastern Nigerian Art and Culture | World History Commons". worldhistorycommons.org. Retrieved 2023-08-10.
  2. ^ "Jones Archive | Southeastern Nigerian Art & Culture". Retrieved 2023-08-10.
  3. ^ a b Basden, G. T. (1 February 2013). Among the Ibos of Nigeria: 1912. Routledge. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-136-24849-8. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  4. ^ Basden, G. T. (1 February 2013). Among the Ibos of Nigeria: 1912. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-24849-8. Retrieved 4 February 2024.