States of Nigeria
States of Nigeria | |
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Category | Federated state |
Location | Federal Republic of Nigeria |
Number | 36 States |
Populations | 1,739,136 (Ebonyi) – 21,000,534 (Lagos) |
Areas | 3,580 km2 (1,381 sq mi) (Lagos) – 76,360 km2 (29,484 sq mi) (Niger) |
Government | |
Subdivisions |
Nigeria portal |
A state of Nigeria is one of the 36 administrative divisions, which shares sovereignty with the Federal Government of Nigeria. There is also the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), which is not a state, but a territory, under the direct control of the Federal Government. The states are further divided into a total of 774 Local Government Areas.[1]
Current states and the Federal Capital Territory of Abuja
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Former state boundaries
Before and after independence in 1960, Nigeria was a unitary state of three Regions: Northern, Western, and Eastern. Provinces were also used in colonial times. In 1963, two provinces were detached from the Western Region to form the new Mid-Western Region. In 1967, the regions were replaced by 12 states due to a military decree; only the former Mid-Western Region escaped division, and formed a single state following the restructuring. From 1967 to 1970 the areas of Mid-Western State and the Eastern Region attempted to secede, as Biafra. In 1976, seven new states were created, making 19 altogether.[2]
The Federal Capital Territory was established in 1991. In 1987 two new states were established, followed by another nine in 1991, bringing the total to 30.[2] The latest change, in 1996, resulted in the present number of 36 states.
1991-1996
During this period, there were 30 states and the Federal Capital Territory.
1987-1991During this period, there were 21 states and, |
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1976-1987During this period, there were 19 states. |
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1967-1976During this period, there were 12 states. |
1963-1967During this period, there were 4 regions. |
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1960-1963During this period, there were 3 regions. |
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Chronology
Regions | States | ||||
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1960 | 1967 | 1976 | 1987 | 1991 | 1996 |
Eastern | South-Eastern | Cross-River | Akwa Ibom | ||
Cross-River | |||||
East Central | Imo | Abia | |||
Imo | |||||
Anambra | Anambra | ||||
Enugu | Enugu | ||||
Ebonyi (also includes part of old Abia) | |||||
Rivers | Bayelsa | ||||
Rivers | |||||
Mid-Western (1963) | Mid-Western | Bendel | Delta | ||
Edo | |||||
Western | Lagos | ||||
Western | Ogun | ||||
Ondo | Ekiti | ||||
Ondo | |||||
Oyo | Osun | ||||
Oyo | |||||
Northern | Benue-Plateau | Benue | |||
Plateau | Nasarawa | ||||
Plateau | |||||
Kano | Jigawa | ||||
Kano | |||||
Kwara | Kwara | ||||
Kogi (also includes part of old Benue) | |||||
North Central | Kaduna | Kaduna | |||
Katsina | |||||
North Western | Niger | ||||
Sokoto | Kebbi | ||||
Sokoto | Sokoto | ||||
Zamfara | |||||
North Eastern | Bauchi | Bauchi | |||
Gombe | |||||
Borno | Borno | ||||
Yobe | |||||
Gongola | Adamawa | ||||
Taraba |
See also
Notes
- ^ "USAID Nigeria mission: Nigeria administrative divisions" United States Agency for International Development, October 2004, last accessed 21 April 2010
- ^ a b Kraxberger, Brennan (2005) "Strangers, Indigenes and Settlers: Contested Geographies of Citizenship in Nigeria" Space and Polity 9(1): pp. 9-27, pages 10, 11, & 15
Sources
- Ajayi, Gboyega (2007) The military and the Nigerian state, 1966-1993: a study of the strategies of political power control Africa World Press, Trenton New Jersey, ISBN 1-59221-568-8
- Benjamin, Solomon Akhere (1999) The 1996 state and local government reorganizations in Nigeria Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research, Ibadan, Nigeria, ISBN 978-181-238-9
- Suberu, Rotimi T. (1994) 1991 state and local government reorganizations in Nigeria Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria, ISBN 978-2015-28-8
External links
- "New States of Nigeria". Statoids.
- Headline News in Nigeria States