by Godwin Eigbe
Museum Garden Calabar |
It is a city
where your tribe and tongue does not count. A city that wakes up early and go
to sleep late without disturbing the peace and tranquility that are its trade
marks. A city of light, colours, carnivals and unending fun. The home of
Africa’s biggest street party.
Business or Leisure, welcome Home.
The people and the city bid you to Come And Live And Be At Rest.
With an
estimated population of over 1.2 Million residents, Calabar is truly the
Tourism Hotspot of Nigeria. The ancient city which is watered by the Cross
River and the Great Qua Rivers has a long history and a fascinating heritage.
Nearly after a century of contact with European sailors, Calabar gained
recognition as an International Sea Port in the 16th century. From
17th to 19th century, Calabar became a major slave trade
port. Although Calabar seating in the Bight of Biafra does not have the
impressive forts found in Ghana and Senegal because the estuary was a safe
haven for slave traders and the people on its shoreline were cooperative and
acted as trading agents to the slave merchants creating a buffer from inland
attacks, the region accounted for approximately 30 percent of Africans carted
away to the new world (America) as slaves from Africa, representing the largest
exit of slaves from a single point in Africa.
The ancient city
of Calabar was the first to utilize money as means of mercantile in West
Africa. This ancient money in Efik was called ‘Okpoho’. This money was later known
as the manilas. With the abolition of slave trade in South Eastern Nigeria from
1820 - 1850, Calabar’s main export became palm oil.
Calabar is truly
a city of firsts and the ancient city is credited with developing one of the
first African alphabets and scripts for communication called the Nsibidi. It is
a set of traditional ideographic symbols developed by the Ekpe Society a traditional
association responsible for protecting and defending the kingdom against all foreign
influence. Nsibidi is still in use today
by the Ekpe Society.
On the chronicle
of the city’s firsts, is the fact that Calabar was the seat of the Government
of the Oil River Protectorate and then the Southern Protectorate, the building
that is today known as the Old Residency Museum was ordered by Consul Hewett in
1882 from Britain and it arrived Calabar in 1884 where it was assembled. It
became the residence of the Consuls and High Commissioners that administered
the Protectorate.
As an
international trade route and colonial administrative headquarter, Calabar
housed the earliest of military barracks in the country. It was the first
kingdom to embrace Christianity and the first Presbyterian Church (Church of
Scotland Mission) was built in 1846. The first Roman Catholic Mass in Nigeria was
said at 19 Bocco Street ,
Calabar in 1903. The city also has the oldest secondary school in Eastern
Nigeria, Hope Waddell Training Institution established in 1895. Dr. Nnamdi
Azikiwe the First President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria was a student of
this school.
The first
monorail in Nigeria
was built in Calabar and the first modern road network was also constructed in
the city. In the health sector, the first public hospital St. Margaret Hospital
was in this city. In this hospital also is the first Medical Records Office in
Nigeria. Calabar also houses the oldest post office and one of the first two
Botanical Gardens in Nigeria.
Old Residency Museum Calabar which served as administrative centre for the Oil River protectorate and later the Southern Nigeria Protectorate |
The mantle of traditional
political authority which rests on the Obong, is hinged on a political tripod
whose legs are Duke Town, Old Town and Creek Town. Each leg of this tripod was
at one time ruled by a separate Obong. However through a gentleman’s agreement,
the three towns agreed to merge the crowns for one titular head that is today
referred to as the Obong of Calabar. The title rotates among them. Edidem Ekpo
Okon Abasi Otu IV is the present Obong of Calabar.
The development
of post colonial Calabar is closely tied to the development of the country Nigeria . On May
27 1967, South Eastern State was created from the existing Eastern Region and
in 1976 the name was changed to Cross River State after the river that flows
across the State and Calabar remained the Capital City. In September 1987, Akwa
Ibom was carved out from the State by the General Ibrahim Babangida
administration. The major towns in Cross
River State
are Calabar (its Capital) Akamkpa, Ikom, Obubra, Odukpani, Ogoja, Ugep, Obudu,
Obanliku, Akpabuyo and Yala.
Obudu Mountain Resort Gate |
When you
are in Calabar, the city gets into you and you feel and become part of it… Calabar
is truly one city, one people… a paradise indeed!