I was not too surprised when a fellow FLTA from France said to me two weeks ago over dinner at the Union Station in Washington DC that the city was developed by a French person. She is french, and, as she said so, everything had just fallen along the line of positive French stereotypes in my mind. They designed the Eiffel Tower and the Statue of Liberty, they must also be the big brilliant brain behind the planning and beautiful layout of the country’s capital. It was my first time of hearing the story, and though she didn’t have the name of the said designer, I believed it.
Today, I had a different conversation with Papa Rudy who says the city was developed by a black man. Now I’m confused. I told him of my discussion with the French girl, and he insisted that a black man did the city’s design. And somewhere in the conversation, the name Du Pont came up. Now I am familiar with a DuPont Circle in Washington DC, and reading more on it this afternoon showed me that it was named after a man Samuel Francis Du Pont (from the famous Du Pont family who really were originally from France). However, he is neither black nor an architect. He was a rear admiral during the Civil War. The wikipedia article on the beautiful Paris-like city does not say much about the “designers” of the city, so I’m giving up.
Or not. I have now come up with my own theory, that the person who conceived the brilliant layout of the city with the Washington Monument obelisk standing almost in its centre, could only have been the son of Oduduwa (the fabled progenitor of the Yoruba people). That’s the only explanation that can suffice to clear the air on the similarity between the Opa Oranmiyan obelisk in Ilé-Ifè and this Washington Monument obelisk. The Opa Oranmiyan was erected at a spot once believed to have been the burial site of Oranmiyan, a grandson of Oduduwa. Archeological evidence has now shown it not to be standing on any burial spot at all, but to be just a visible memorial to the fabled progenitor whose name it bears on it’s body. On the Opa Oranmiyan, as has been since its (undated) erection is an inscription in middle-eastern letters that archeologists have accepted as corresponding in sound to “Oranmiyan”.
It’s not the same in height and size as the Washington Monument, but that’s beside the point. The only other way to look at it is that Oranmiyan himself walked over to Washington DC from Ile-Ife with the Washington Monument on his right hand as a staff of office, and planted it firmly at the centre of the city as an artifact for future generation of archeologists to behold. What about that?
1
Vera Ezimora at http://www.verastic.com
You know, I have often wondered where I had previously seen the Washington Monument. Now, I know!!! Oh, “these people.” When will they stop stealing our ideas? It only takes a second for anyone to notice that the Washington Monument is an exact replica of the whatever-that-thing-is-called in Nigeria. Sure, they might be different in every other way, but it is an exact replica!!
All in favor of suing America and demanding a few million dollars per month for the pain and suffering, say “AYE!”
Posted at December 23, 2009 on 9:35pm.
2
Kola Tubosun at http://www.ktravula.com
Aye!
And when you do get the money, do not forget me, seeing that I was the first bloggarcheologist to unearth this genius fact ;).
Posted at December 25, 2009 on 1:54am.
3
Bola at http://YourWebsite
I know who was the designer: A black Frenchwoman of Yoruba descent who studied urban planning in Germany!
Posted at December 24, 2009 on 1:09am.
4
Kola Tubosun at http://www.ktravula.com
LOL 🙂
How about “The designer is a black Frenchwoman of Yoruba descent who studied urban planning in Germany and later became an American citizen by marriage to a Latino Indian-American Sculptor from South Dakota”?
Posted at December 25, 2009 on 1:55am.
5
baba kay at http://voicesfromdowndeep.wordpress.com/
Clearly, you just have to be right on this one… The concept – of a tree reaching to the sky – has to be have been copied at the very least. Sadly there are no patents we can claim have been infringed!
Posted at December 24, 2009 on 3:04am.
6
Kola Tubosun at http://www.ktravula.com
🙂 😉 LOL
Posted at December 25, 2009 on 1:55am.
7
Segun Babaranti at http://YourWebsite
Lol! do you have any proof? You still need to do more research. consult a Washington-based archaeologist to discover more, cos if you were wrong, you know what they can do to you for falsifying monumental dignity.
Posted at December 24, 2009 on 10:03am.
8
Kola Tubosun at http://www.ktravula.com
Indeed. Like they don’t have anything better to do than run after bloggers with a sense of humour. YOU go do the research and come back to tell me who designed those two obelisks. That’s why we hungered and suffered to send you to school.
Posted at December 25, 2009 on 1:58am.
9
Abimbola Adunni at http://YourWebsite
But how come the Obelisk, the Tower of Pisa and Eiffel are all shaped like phalluses? Even the Statue of Liberty is a man holding up something that looks like manpower. Or am I rambling?
Posted at December 24, 2009 on 10:43am.
10
Kola Tubosun at http://www.ktravula.com
Yes, I think you are 😉
The Statue of Liberty is a woman holding a torch.
But I get the phallic reference. Maybe there’s something in us that likes to poke the sky.
Posted at December 24, 2009 on 4:11pm.
11
Don Thieme at http://gamoonbat.blogspot.com
I just came across your wonderful blog here. This is a great post. I believe that the architect whom you friend mentioned was Pierre L’enfant, after whom L’enfant Plaza takes its name. Washington has a very logical layout aside but the diagonal avenues and roundabouts create a lot of traffic snarls for motor traffic.
Posted at December 25, 2009 on 2:35pm.
12
Kola Tubosun at http://www.ktravula.com
Thank you Don for stopping by. I’m going to check out your blog as well.
I’m grateful for providing me with this information about the architect. You’re right, Washington DC has a very good layout. They said it was designed after Paris.
Posted at December 25, 2009 on 7:57pm.
13
Kola Tubosun at http://www.ktravula.com
The design of the Washington Monument and the Opa Oranmiyan both follow the architectural format called Egyptian Revival http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_Revival, and this explains quite a lot. The inscriptions on the Opa Oranmiyan in Ilé-Ife bear middle-eastern letters that spell the name of the man for whom it was erected – Oranmiyan.
Posted at January 1, 2010 on 2:57am.
14
umele peter at http://none
am really happy that when the deep calls,a deep has to answer. why dont you take a trip to your home country and see things of great history and heritage. they are very rich i tell you.
welldone for this piece anyway
Posted at March 4, 2010 on 3:34pm.
15
Zamora Lanz
Thanks for sharing this interesting post. You really have a nice information here and many readers would love to share it with their friends.
Posted at May 25, 2011 on 11:08pm.