Aku Kwabolu: Difference between revisions
No edit summary Tags: Reverted Visual edit: Switched |
No edit summary Tag: Manual revert |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | {{Aku Kwabolu} |
+ | {{Aku Kwabolu}} |
'''Aku Kwabolu''' ([[Bosso language|Bosso]]: ''Akų Kwàbṑlu'' <small>/ˈákʊ̃́ kwàˈbòːlú/</small> "traditional belief") are the polytheistic beliefs of the Bosso-descended peoples of eastern Nkungu. Aku Kwabolu was previously an ethnic religion practiced exclusively among the ancient Bosso people, but after the ethnogenesis of the Nyamu and Hlong peoples of modern Khobeh, seperate ethnoreligious sects eventually came about, with both Nyamu and Hlong people having their respective rituals and traditions according to their sect. By the 32nd century CY, several other offshoots arose from orthodoxical differences brought about by traditional philosophers such as [[Sakha Biakor]], opposing the orthopractic ritualism of before. Although the number of sects and offshoots (referred to as ''ajų'') branching from Aku Kwabolu are many, they all are still recognized as Aku Kwabolu due to their homogeneity in deities and cosmology. In the current era, Aku Kwabolu is the most predominant religion practiced in the eastern Nkungu area, including non-Bossoid adherents. |
'''Aku Kwabolu''' ([[Bosso language|Bosso]]: ''Akų Kwàbṑlu'' <small>/ˈákʊ̃́ kwàˈbòːlú/</small> "traditional belief") are the polytheistic beliefs of the Bosso-descended peoples of eastern Nkungu. Aku Kwabolu was previously an ethnic religion practiced exclusively among the ancient Bosso people, but after the ethnogenesis of the Nyamu and Hlong peoples of modern Khobeh, seperate ethnoreligious sects eventually came about, with both Nyamu and Hlong people having their respective rituals and traditions according to their sect. By the 32nd century CY, several other offshoots arose from orthodoxical differences brought about by traditional philosophers such as [[Sakha Biakor]], opposing the orthopractic ritualism of before. Although the number of sects and offshoots (referred to as ''ajų'') branching from Aku Kwabolu are many, they all are still recognized as Aku Kwabolu due to their homogeneity in deities and cosmology. In the current era, Aku Kwabolu is the most predominant religion practiced in the eastern Nkungu area, including non-Bossoid adherents. |
Revision as of 22:44, 13 January 2023
Part of a series on |
Aku Kwabolu |
---|
Beliefs |
|
Practices |
|
Scriptures |
History |
|
Sects |
|
People |
Culture |
Holy places |
|
Related conceptions |
Aku Kwabolu (Bosso: Akų Kwàbṑlu /ˈákʊ̃́ kwàˈbòːlú/ "traditional belief") are the polytheistic beliefs of the Bosso-descended peoples of eastern Nkungu. Aku Kwabolu was previously an ethnic religion practiced exclusively among the ancient Bosso people, but after the ethnogenesis of the Nyamu and Hlong peoples of modern Khobeh, seperate ethnoreligious sects eventually came about, with both Nyamu and Hlong people having their respective rituals and traditions according to their sect. By the 32nd century CY, several other offshoots arose from orthodoxical differences brought about by traditional philosophers such as Sakha Biakor, opposing the orthopractic ritualism of before. Although the number of sects and offshoots (referred to as ajų) branching from Aku Kwabolu are many, they all are still recognized as Aku Kwabolu due to their homogeneity in deities and cosmology. In the current era, Aku Kwabolu is the most predominant religion practiced in the eastern Nkungu area, including non-Bossoid adherents.
Deities and beliefs
Aku Kwabolu theology centers around the creator god Yajā Àṣìakɔ and the existence of seven different spiritual realms (mati):
- Yajāmati, a spacious and barren realm wherein Yajā Àṣìakɔ resides in solitude
- Kɔmati, the realm where all other gods below Yajā reside
- Fewimati, the realm of mortal beings
- Ṣuamati Ñąrų, the realm of dead human spirits, directly governed by twin death god Ɛ̀ri
- Ṣuamati Bų̄̀rų, the realm of dead animal spirits and other entities, directly governed by twin death god Òri
- Kɔ̀ndumati, the realm of evil spirits and demons
- Wāwāti, a realm of eternal darkness not overseen by Yajā Àṣìakɔ (the existence of which is debated among different ajų)
Entities from each realm are capable of influencing entities of any of the other realms either directly or indirectly. Each realm, except Yajāmati and Wāwāti, have respective hierarchies of the entities that exist within them, all of which constitute the Eternal Hierarchy. While in the spiritual realms like Kɔmati and the Ṣuamati realms, the Eternal Hierarchy exists in the form of spiritual tiers, in the Fewimati realm, the hierarchy exists in the form of religiously enforced castes.
Bosso name | Nyamu name | Hlong name | Purpose & Association | Tier |
---|---|---|---|---|
Yajā Àṣìakɔ | Yaja Àṣìakɔ | Yajàṣìaku | Ultimate creator and overseer of the seven realms | Yajā |
Nsangbą | Nsangba | Sangba, Saba | Guardian of Fewimati and creator of human life, often associated with light | Ìsi |
Biṣà | Biṣà | Biṣà | Divine messenger of Kɔmati, often consulted in prayer to either request intercession, or to receive signs from a deity; patron god of speech and traditional poetry | |
Ɛ̀ri i Òri | Ɛ̀ri i Òri | Ɛ̀l i Òl | Twin gods of death, guardians of the Ṣuamati realms, with Ɛ̀ri governing Ṣuamati Ñąrų and Òri governing Ṣuamati Bų̄̀rų | |
Ɔ̀gbɛĺɛ | Ɔ̀gbɛṣɛ | Bɛĺɛ | Leader of all evil spirits (kɔ̀ndu), guardian of Kɔ̀ndumati | |
Yṑru | Yū̀ru | Yū̀l | Solar deity, firstborn son of Nsangba | Awu |
Caya | Cia | Cay | Lunar deity, secondborn son of Nsangba | |
Ikhà | Ikhà | Ihà | Goddess of water and rain, mother of river spirits; thirdborn daughter of Nsangba | |
Fakoro | Fakoru | Fakul | God of land, vegetation, and guardian of humanity; fourthborn son of Nsangba. Some sects associate Fakoro with being the guardian of a certain ethnic group or Bossoid peoples instead of humanity at large. | |
Umɔ̀nɔ̀ | Umɔ̀nɔ̀ | Mun | Demigod associated with fire, war, and political power. Often consulted in traditional crowning ceremonies, the death of a leader, or during wartime. | Mbe-awu |
Kàṣi Jufakoro | Kàṣi Jufakoro | Kàṣ Jufakul | Demigod of wisdom and oral tradition, son of Fakoro; also often associated with being the guardian of an ethnic group | |
Sunkudi | Sunkudi | Sunkuri | Demigod of healing and medicine |