Kenneth Onwuka Dike (17
December 1917 – 26 October 1983)
was an Igbo Nigerian historian and the first Nigerian Vice-Chancellor of the
nation's premier college, the University of Ibadan. During the Nigerian
civil war, he moved to Harvard University, Boston.
He was a founder of the Ibadan School that
dominated the writing of the History of Nigeria until the 1970s. He is
credited with "having played the leading role in creating a generation of
African historians who could interpret their own history without being
influenced by Eurocentric approaches."
Career
Born in Awka,
eastern Nigeria, Kenneth Onwuka Dike was educated in West Africa, England and
Scotland. He attended Fourah Bay College, Sierra Leone and also Durham University for his BSc,
the University of
Aberdeen for his MA, and King's College London for
his PhD. During
the 1960s, as a member of the University of Ibadan's history department, he
played a pioneering role in promoting African leadership of scholarly works
published on Africa.
As the head of the organizing committee of the
First International Congress of Africanists in Ghana in
1963, he sought for a strengthened meticulous non-colonial focused African
research, publication of research in various languages including indigenous and
foreign, so as to introduce native speakers to history and for people to view
African history through a common eye. In 1965 he was elected chairman of
the Association
of Commonwealth Universities.
Nwaubani argues that Dike was the first modern
scholarly proponent of Africanist history. His publications were a watershed in
African historiography. With a PhD from London, Dike became the first African
to complete Western historical professional training. At the University College
of Ibadan, he became the first African professor of history and head of a
history department.
He founded the Nigerian
National Archives, and helped in the founding of the Historical
Society of Nigeria. His book Trade and Politics in the Niger Delta
1830-1885 dealt with 19th-century economics politics in the Niger
Delta. He focused on internal African factors, especially defensive measures
undertaken by the delta societies against imperialist penetration. Dike helped
create the Ibadan School of African history and promoted the use of oral
evidence by African historians
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