Draft:Oloma
Community in Edo State, Nigeria
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Oloma (Ọ́lọ́̀mà) is a small rural community located in the Akoko-Edo Local Government Area of Edo State, Nigeria. It is the homeland of the Oloma people and the Oloma language, an Edoid language spoken by a relatively small number of speakers.
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Submission declined on 7 April 2026 by SafariScribe (talk).
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Comment: In accordance with Wikipedia's Conflict of interest guideline, I disclose that I have a conflict of interest regarding the subject of this article. BlackMiomi (talk) 21:36, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
Geography and settlement
Oloma is situated in northern Edo State within the Akoko-Edo region. The settlement lies within the foothills and rocky outcrops associated with the Igarra Formation, a geological feature characteristic of the northern part of the state.
The community lies in an inselberg-enclosed valley (a valley surrounded by isolated rocky hills) north of the hilltop settlement of Somorika, a few kilometres from the Ebira-speaking town of Igarra and its neighbouring Edoid villages of Enwan and Akuku. To the east of the main village is Ozirami, and to its southwest is Okpe, both Edoid-speaking communities.
The community is structured as a linear settlement divided into three sections: the entry camp, the main community, and the exit camp. The entry and exit camps are largely inhabited by migrant farmers, while the main community is predominantly occupied by indigenes and serves as the cultural and administrative centre.
Infrastructure in the community includes residential buildings, churches, a primary school, a health centre, and a town hall.
Demography
Oloma has a small and dispersed population, with no official census figures specific to the community. Estimates suggest that the total number of people of Oloma origin, including those living outside the village, is around 1,000.[1]
The number of fluent speakers of the Oloma language is estimated at between 200 and 400 individuals, a figure consistent with the language's endangered status and the heavy emigration of younger generations to urban centres.[1] A large proportion of the younger population resides outside the community in urban centres such as Akure, Ibadan, and Lagos.
Economy
The economy of Oloma is primarily based on subsistence farming and hunting. Agricultural production, particularly yam cultivation, plays a central role in both the economy and cultural life of the community.
Residents commonly trade farm produce in nearby towns such as Igarra, which functions as a local commercial hub.
Social structure and governance
Oloma operates a traditional system of governance headed by a hereditary ruler known as the Ọ́guà. The kingship is restricted to a ruling family referred to as the Rẹ́guà lineage.
The ruler is responsible for maintaining social order, resolving disputes, and overseeing ceremonial activities. In the absence of a reigning monarch, leadership may be assumed by a regent.
Culture and festivals
Cultural life in Oloma is marked by traditional festivals, notably the Masquerade festival (Úwámì) and the New Yam festival.
New Yam festival
The New Yam festival is the most significant cultural event in the community and marks the beginning of the traditional year. It is typically celebrated in early August and lasts up to fourteen days.
The festival celebrates the harvest of new yams and involves communal feasting, rituals, and performances.
A key component of the festival is Ìnátò, in which participants attempt to knock down an erected tree trunk using canes. A corresponding female festival, ényé, involves dance performances and body adornment using plant-based dyes.
Language
The Oloma language is an Edoid language spoken within the community and is considered endangered due to its limited number of speakers and declining intergenerational transmission. It belongs to the Northwestern branch of the Edoid family, which comprises at least 30–40 distinct languages.[2]
The language is tonal, with two primary tones (high and low), and exhibits phonological processes such as nasalization and glide formation.[1]
Noun classes and gender
The nominal system of Oloma (also referred to in older linguistic literature as Ogbe-Oloma) features a complex noun class and gender system. The language marks nominal form class and agreement class through a system of prefixes, a pattern first identified by Elugbe and Schubert in their foundational 1976 study.[3]
Subsequent reanalysis identified seventeen nominal form classes and eight agreement classes underpinning fourteen genders — a system notably more elaborate than what has been described for many related Edoid languages.[2]
Prefix mapping from nominal form class to agreement class is non-isomorphic but is constrained by syllable shape (CV- versus V-) and the alliterative consonant quality of the prefix, rather than vowel quality. One gender is reserved exclusively for nouns with human reference, encoded by vowel-initial (V-) prefixes, distinguishing it structurally from all other genders in the system.[2]
Tone and the noun phrase
Fieldwork conducted in 2024, based on data elicited from three native Oloma speakers, has documented the tonal behaviour of Oloma noun phrases.[4]
Oloma noun phrases exhibit a phrasal High-Low (HL) tonal melody, resulting in obligatory spreading of high tone and consistent lowering of the final tone within noun phrases. An exception arises in simple noun phrases consisting of a noun followed by a cardinal numeral or quantifier, where the canonical HL pattern does not apply.[4]
In complex noun phrases with multiple modifiers, the HL pattern reasserts itself regardless of the noun's position within the phrase, indicating that tonal changes are determined at the phrasal rather than the lexical level. The distinct tonal behaviour of noun-cardinal numeral combinations — as opposed to noun-determiner or noun-adjective combinations — suggests that cardinal numerals do not integrate phonologically with nouns in the same way as other modifiers.[4]
Language contact
Yoruba serves as a second language for many members of the Oloma community. Its presence is linked to historical migration, regional administrative structures, and formal education. Despite prolonged contact, the Oloma language retains distinct features with relatively limited interference from Yoruba.[1]
Documentation
Oloma has been referenced in linguistic literature since at least the mid-19th century. The German missionary linguist Sigismund Wilhelm Koelle recorded Oloma in his 1854 comparative wordlist Polyglotta Africana, making it one of the earliest recorded Edoid varieties.[2]
The first detailed structural study of the language was published by Ben Elugbe and Klaus Schubert in 1976 in The Journal of West African Languages, focusing on noun classes and concord.[3]
Modern academic research has contributed further to the documentation of the language. Ajani's (2023) doctoral dissertation at Tulane University provides a comprehensive phonological analysis of Oloma.[1] More recently, research has extended to the prosodic and tonal properties of the noun phrase.[4]


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