Queen Amina Statue

Queen Amina Statue is an equestrian statue in honour of Queen Amina, an Hausa Warrior Queen of Zazzau.[1] The sculpture was originally designed by Ben Ekanem in 1975 during the Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture and was placed at the entrance of the National Arts Theatre in Lagos State.[2] It was destroyed in 2005 due to weathering but was however re-designed in 2014 by an unsigned artist.[3]

Queen Amina Statue
Queen Amina Statue at the entrance of the National Arts Theatre in Lagos
ArtistBen Ekanem
Year1975 (1975)
TypeSculpture
MediumConcrete
Bronze
ConditionErect
LocationLagos, Nigeria

Background

Queen Amina was the eldest daughter of Queen Bakwa Turunku, founder of the Zazzau Kingdom. She was a fierce Hausa Warrior Queen of Zazzau who reigned around the early 16th century.[4] The Queen Amina Statue was designed in memory of her bravery and exploits.[5]

Description

Queen Amina Statue is a colossal bronze and concrete sculpture. It shows Queen Amina proudly brandishing her sword while riding on a standing horse.[6]

gollark: Esolangs fractures into two divided by different opinions on game theory WHEN?
gollark: It works if they're *identical* and know they'll both make the same decision.
gollark: Taking one box is also rational because if you do you get 1 million and if you don't you get 10000.
gollark: Predicting which box I'll take effectively means running a high accuracy simulation of me. Thus, since I may be being simulated when I choose, my choice does affect the (eventual) box content, thus take one box.
gollark: No. I've thought about this.

References

  1. Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch (1997). Africaines. WestviewPress. ISBN 978-0-8133-2360-2.
  2. Drum. African Drum Publications. 1979.
  3. Ozolua Uhakheme; Moyosore Adeniji (3 September 2008). "Honour for heroes". The Nation. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
  4. Wale Ogunyẹmi (1999). Queen Amina of Zazzau. University Press PLC. ISBN 978-978-030-567-3.
  5. Africa Woman. Africa Journal Limited. 1981.
  6. Ginette Curry (1 January 2004). Awakening African Women: The Dynamics of Change. Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 13–. ISBN 978-1-904303-34-3.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.