Saturday, 15 September 2018

THE GROUNDNUT PYRAMIDS OF KANO

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THE GROUNDNUT PYRAMIDS OF KANO
Groundnut pyramids were pyramid-like structures made from groundnut sacks. The pyramids were built in northern Nigeria in cities such as Kano, where groundnut production was a key part of the economy. They were viewed as both a tourist attraction and a symbol of wealth.
In the 1960s and 70s, as production in Nigeria shifted from agriculture to oil, the groundnut pyramids disappeared.
Groundnut pyramids were the invention of Alhassan Dantata (1877—1955), a prominent nut trader. Dantata came to Kano in 1919 and within five years was one of the most successful businessmen, supplying the Royal Niger Company (RNC) with most of their groundnuts. Dantata’s company kept their groundnuts at a facility in Kofar Nassarawa, and they stacked the bags in the shape of a pyramid before they were shipped.
One pyramid could be made from as much as 15,000 filled bags.
The pyramids were built all across northern Nigeria, in cities like Kofar Mazugal, Brigade, Bebeji , Malam Madori and Dawakin Kudu.
The pyramids became synonymous with Nigeria’s agriculture wealth; a postage stamp even featured a groundnut pyramid. However, as groundnut production declined in the 1970s and 1980s the pyramids disappeared and were replaced with buildings.

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