Submitted:
11 July 2026
Posted:
13 July 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
Introduction
Portuguese Motives and West African Realities
Warri’s Origins and Portuguese Contact
The Diplomatic Structure: Benin, Warri, and Portugal
The Limits of Christian Conversion: Sacred Kingship and Political Resistance
Ryder, Ocho, and the Problem of Court Christianity in Warri
Conclusion
References
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- Henry the Navigator was a Portuguese prince noted for patronage of voyages among the Madeira Islands and along the western coast of Africa; Britannica also notes that the title “Navigator” is misleading because he did not personally undertake exploratory voyages. See Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Henry the Navigator.”.
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- John II reigned from 1481 to 1495 and is associated with the resumption of African exploration and the quest for India; Diogo Cão reached the Congo River in 1482, and Bartolomeu Dias rounded southern Africa in 1488. See Encyclopaedia Britannica, “John II”; Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Diogo Cão”; and standard accounts of Bartolomeu Dias’s 1488 voyage; See Gomes Eannes de Azurara, The Chronicle of the Discovery and Conquest of Guinea (London: Hakluyt, 1896).
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- A.F.C. Ryder, Benin and the Europeans, 1485-1897 (Bristol, 1969).
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- Ekeh, Peter P. “J. O. S. Ayomike and the Truth about Warri City.” Urhobo Digital Library and Museum. Accessed June 8, 2026. https://urhobodigitallibrarymuseum.com/j-o-s-ayomike-and-the-truth-about-warri-city/.
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- For details see E.O. Babalola, Christianity in West Africa (Ibadan, 1988), pp 5-8.
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- E.A. Ayandele, The missionary impact on modern Nigeria, 1842-1914: a political and social analysis (London, 1966), p.3.
- He was named after King Sebastião of Portugal (1568-78). See R. Hickey (1995) Sixteenth century Augustinian missions revisited. Orita: Ibadan Journal of Religious Studies 27(2): 78–89; K. Koschorke, F. Ludwig, Delgado M, et al. (2007) A History of Christianity in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, 1450-1990: A Documentary Sourcebook. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing; A. Strathern (2018) Catholic missions and local rulers in Sub-Saharan Africa. In: Po-Chia H (ed.) A Companion to the Early Modern Catholic Global Missions. Brill, pp. 151–178.
- See Bengt Sundkler & Christopher Steed, A history of the Church in Africa (Cambridge, 2000); Adrian Hastings, The church in Africa, 1450-1950 (Oxford, 1996), Patrick Harries and David Maxwell (eds), The spiritual in the secular: Missionaries and knowledge about Africa (Grand Rapids, 2012). Olu Erejuwa, who ruled from 1720 to 1800, consolidated Warri’s independence from the Benin Empire, then the most powerful kingdom in the region. During this period, the Itsekiri prospered through the ivory and slave trades with Dutch and Portuguese merchants. For a fuller discussion, see Michael Crowder, The Story of Nigeria, (Faber and Faber, London, 1978 (1962).
- Kenny, The Catholic Church, p. 49.
- Ryder, Missionary Activity, p. 2;
- Deji Ayegboyin and Samson Fatokun, The Church in West Africa (Ibadan: Baptist Press, 2018), p. 23.
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- Falola and Adediran, Islam and Christianity, p. 86.
- Falola and Adediran, Islam and Christianity, p. 86.
- See Charles Gore, Art, Performance and Ritual in Benin City (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007); Digital Benin Project, https://digitalbenin.org/ Accessed 10 June 2026; Barbara Plankensteiner, Benin Kings and Rituals: Court Arts from Nigeria ( Ghent: Snoeck Publishers, 2007); Bryna Freyer, Royal Benin Art in the Collection of the National Museum of African Art (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1987); Folarin Shyllon, “Unraveling History: Return of African Cultural Objects Repatriated and Looted in Colonial Times,” in Cultural Heritage Issues: The Legacy of Conquest, Colonization and Commerce, eds. James A. R. Nafziger and Ann M. Nicgorski (Leiden: Brill, 2010), 159–68.
- Ryder, A. F. C. “Missionary Activity in the Kingdom of Warri to the Early Nineteenth Century.” Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 2, no. 1 (1960): 1–26.
- Ocho, Okechukwu Hilary. “Beyond Conversion: The Need for Empathy and Sacrificial Commitment in Mission. A Case Study of the Portuguese Mission to Warri.” Missiology: An International Review (2026): 1–10.
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