Trades and Professions
The principal occupations of men are: --- Agricultural, commerce, weaving, iron-smelting, smithing, tanning and leather working, carving on wood and on calabashes, music, medicine, barbing, and other minor employments.
Agriculture. --- This is the most general occupation of the bulk of the people. It is carried on with simple and primitive instruments, viz. A hoe and a cutlass, and nothing more, both of home manufacture. Ploughing is unknown, and it is very doubtful indeed whether a plough would be of much service to them under present conditions; experiments with that instrument by those who understand the use of it have not proved successful.
The principal articles of food and of commerce grown are: - Corn (guinea corn in the North and maize in the South), beans of several varieties, ground nuts (arachis hypogea), yams of various species, sweet potatoes, koko (colocasia antiquorum), pepper, piper, calabashes and other kinds of gourds, coffee, cocoa, kola nuts, vegetables of all sorts for home consumptio, cotton for weaving, etc.
When a plot has been worked with rotation of crops for a few years, it is left to lie fallow for some years whilst contiguous plots are put under cultivation, and so on alternately; manuring is unknown. The soil is remarkably fertile under present system.
Women and children assist in reaping and in bringing harvest home. No beasts of burden are employed in agricultural operations.
All farmers and men of any importance have generally smaller farms nearer home “Oko Etile” and a more distant one generally smaller in the forest “Oko Egan.” When engaged in the nearer one, they work form 6 or 7 a.m. To 5 p.m., with intervals for meals, and remain there for weeks and months before returning home. Regular farmers do so only at the annual festivals. In these farms, not only are fruits of the Earth cultivated but also poultry and and smaller cattle are reared for the market. Fairs are held periodically in some central farm markets where these products are disposed of to market women from surrounding towns and villages.
Although the soil is well adapted for raising fruits, yet fruit trees are rarely cultivated for the supply of the markets.
Commerce. --- Commerce comes next in the order of importance. Yorubas are keen traders, they are to be found in every part of neighbouring countries for that purpose. A large trade is carried on by barter. Cowry shells, the medium of exchange, being too clumsy for large transactions, are used by travellers. Costly beads are used by many on distant journeys for trade, they are valued as precious stones. Thus the products of the North are given for those of neighbouring states always by barter. Both sexes are engaged in trade but each in his own line.
Currency. --- Metallic currency was unknown previously to the arrival of European traders, and even as lately as 1897 in places far off from the coast coins were regarded more or less as a curiosity. Silver was better appreciated than gold and copper, because it can be converted to ornaments. Silversmiths abound in the country whilst there were no goldsmiths. Shells then stood for money and are thus calculated:
40 cowries = 1 string
50 strings = 1 head
10 heads = 1 bag
The value of a cowry was never fixed. Countries nearer the coast can obtain them with greater facility than those inland, and therefore they are higher value in the interior; but since the British Occupation of Lagos the principal port of the Yoruba country, and English coins began to circulate in the country, the rate of exchange became practically fixed at 6d. For a “head” (the usual standard of calculation) i.e. 2,000 cowries; hence 3d. = 3,000 cowries. Cowries are an absolute necessity at the present stage of the country, and should be used pari passu with coins for purchases below one penny. Fruits, herbs, and small articles of food may purchases for a few cowries, beggars collect them by two's and three's from passers by, and thereby earn enough to keep life going; to what extent they are rare, to that extent the hardships of life are felt in the land.
The custom of stringing cowries was for the facility of counting large sums; they were usually strung by 200 in 5 strings of 40 each, three of 66 of 100 each and with a discount of one per cent.
Esusu is a universal custom for the clubbing together of a number of persons monetary aid. A fixed sum agreed upon is given by each at a fixed time (usually every week) and place, under a president; the total amount is paid over to each member in rotation. This enables a poor man to do something worth while where a lump sum is required. There are laws regulating this system.
Weaving. --- This is also carried on by both sexes but in different styles of manufacture. Men weave cloths of narrow breadths about 51/2 inches wide called Alawe. The loom is operated upon with both hands and feet; the threads of the warps are so arranged that they open and close by a mechanical contrivance worked by both feet moving alternately as the pedals of an harmonium, whilst the shuttle about 8 by 2 inches carrying the woof is tossed and caught by the right and left hand alternately through the opening, the disengaged hand being rapidly used in ramming in the thread. The cloth is woven in one long strip and then cut to the required lengths and tacked together.
Tailoring is done mostly by men only as it is only men's dress which requires a tailor. It includes embroidery made in the neck and breast of men's gowns. Women being wrapped in plain cloths hardly require tailoring. The stiches are made the contrary way to that of Europeans tailors, the needle being pushed away from the seamsters, and not toward himself.
Iron Smelting was carried on more largely in earlier than in modern times. Certains districts are rich in iron ores, its iron production gave its name to the City of Ilorin, from Ilo Irin, iron grinding, also to Eleta a district of Ibadan “Eta” being the term for iron ore. Certain districts in the Ekiti province are also famous for their iron ores from which good steel was made , such as OKE MESI. Charcoal from hard wood, and the shells of palm nuts are the materials generally used for generating the great heat required for the furnace(called Ileru) which is kept going all the year round. Iron rods and bars of European commerce being cheaper are fast displacing home-made products, and here and there all over the country the furnaces are being closed, and soon will doubts begin to be expressed as to whether Yorubas ever knew the art of smelting iron from the ores.
Other products of the mines e.g. gold, silver, tin, etc., are not known among the Yorubas.
Smithery is carried on largely. Before the period of intercourse with Europeans, all articles made of iron and steel, from weapons of war to pins and needles were of home manufacture; but the cheaper and more finised articles of Europeans make, especially cutlery though less durable are fast displacing home-made wares.
There are also brass and copper smiths who make ornaments from these materials; for this purpose brass and copper bars are imported from foreign parts.
Workers in leather were formely their own tanners, each one learns to prepare for himself, whatever leather he wants to use; black, white, green, yellow, and brown are the prevailing colours given to the leather.