The site of Lagos, located in present …

Years: 1468 - 1479

The site of Lagos, located in present southwestern Nigeria on the Bight of Benin, an inlet of the Gulf of Guinea, occupies four islands (Lagos, Ikoyi, Victoria, and Ido) and parts of the mainland.

The site was originally inhabited by the Awori subgroup of the Yoruba people, who migrated to the area from Isheri along the Ogun river.

Under the leadership of the Oloye Olofin, the Awori moved to the island now called Iddo and then to the larger Lagos Island.

The Awori settlement had been conquered by the Bini warlords of the Benin Empire earlier in the fifteenth century and the island had become a Benin war-camp called "Eko" under Oba Orhogba, the Oba of Benin at that time. (The Yoruba still use the name Eko to refer to Lagos.)

The state first comes to the attention of the Portuguese when explorer Rui de Sequeira visits the area in 1472, naming the area around the city Lago de Curamo.

Lagos, which means "lakes", is a name given to the settlement by the Portuguese.

Another explanation is that Lagos was named for Lagos, Portugal—a maritime town which, at this time, is the main center of Portuguese expeditions down the African coast.

They soon establish a center here for the trade in enslaved Africans.

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