Editorial Archive
Portrait of Queen Idia of Benin

Queen Idia of Benin

fl. 1504 — 1517 · Iyoba of Benin; mother of Oba Esigie; the only woman ever to receive the title Queen-Mother of the Benin Empire and the inspiration of the ivory mask carried by British Punitive Expedition in 1897

Idia was the senior wife of Oba Ozolua of Benin, who reigned in the Edo capital city of Edo — present-day Benin City — from approximately 1481 to 1504. The dynastic histories of the Royal Court of Benin preserve no record of her birth-year, lineage of origin or maiden name; the surviving record begins with her marriage to Ozolua and the birth of her son Esigie around 1488. At Ozolua's death in 1504, the succession was disputed between Esigie at Benin City and his half-brother Aruanran at the rival capital of Udo. The civil war that followed lasted approximately a decade.

Idia commanded a separate army on her son's behalf — the only woman ever to do so in the recorded history of the Benin Empire. Her army defeated Aruanran's forces in the field near Udo around 1517 and secured Esigie's claim. In recognition Esigie founded for her a new royal title — Iyoba, queen-mother — and instituted the constitutional position that would for the following four centuries make the queen-mother one of the three highest officers of the Benin state. The Iyoba was given her own court at Uselu outside the city walls, her own corps of palace attendants, and the right to wear the ada — the ceremonial sword previously restricted to the Oba alone.

Esigie's reign — which under Idia's counsel extended to 1550 — was the period of greatest territorial expansion in Benin's history and the moment of first sustained contact with Portuguese traders at the coast. The royal court produced in her honour a portrait series of ivory pendant masks worn by the Oba at the Ugie Erha Oba ceremony commemorating the past Obas of Benin; one of these — the Iyoba Idia mask — was looted by the British Punitive Expedition of 1897 and is presently held at the British Museum.

She is honored here as the Iyoba — the first queen-mother of Benin.

Curated with honor.

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