Originally published in 1954, this book is a pentrating study of Nupe religion and the increasing influence that Islam has had on indigenous forms of worship.
The concluding chapter of this book gives the deductions drawn from the cultural landscape values of Nupe community which resulted in the formulation of Grounded Theory with spatial implications.
... Nupe life has been jolted by the shocks of Western civilization . The rapidity and magnitude of these changes make any attempt to describe Nupe culture in its emerging or current form a dif- ficult , if not futile , exercise . In ...
... Nupe principalities gained the upper hand over their more numerous Yorùbá neighbors. Since horse breeding was not effective in the Nupe homeland because of trypanosomiasis infections, the Nupe militarist leaders had to use the imported ...
... Nupe kingdom was never a culturally homogeneous and distinct society . Leaving aside the dialect and cultural differences between those who would call themselves Nupe , there were a variety of non - Nupe communities within the polity ...