Igbajo is a town in the southwest of Nigeria, in the Boluwaduro Local Government Area in Osun State.
[1] It neighbors the cities of Iresi, Ìlá Òràngún, Okemesi, Ada, Iree, Otan-Aiyegbaju, Otan-Ile, Imesi-Ile, Edemosi and Oyan.
[citation needed] It is located 199 mi or (321 km) southwest of Abuja, the capital of Nigeria.
[citation needed] Igbajo has 10 village farm settlements which includes: Aragba, Edi-Araromi, Peete, Aiyetoro, Ajegunle, Osoro-Odoka, Kajola, 'Budo Kiriji and Oke Budo.
The first secondary school in the region, Kiriji Memorial College, was named in remembrance of the peace treaty.
The green part covers more than 15 acres of land and it spreads from the wards to the residential areas of the health facility.
It is about 5,000 meters above sea level and maintain about 5 kilometers from Igbajo Township along Koro road.
The brook served as the main source of water supply for students who lived in the college hostel when the boarding system was in place.
Oja-Olua and Orogun Meji Among the physical features of Igbajo, there are some mysterious stones along Oke Edi route.
The festival brings together the ruling houses with a view to celebrating their progenitors by killing a cow which is shared among them under a lively atmosphere.
Members of the royal families are accompanied to the shrine by drummers who spice up the occasion with music and panegyrics in a spectacle that provokes nostalgia of Igbajo of old.
Privately held by Prince Gbolahan Odo, Tungba 90.3 FM is an entertainment station with a focus on the cultural renaissance of Yoruba tradition and history.
Igbajo comes from the root word gbajo, as in Agbajo Eniyan meaning “assembly of people”.
Igbajo is said to have been the meeting place of ten monarchs as they traveled to found their respective kingdoms.
[4] Tourist destinations include Eleyinla Mountain, Obalara, Oluajo, Aruka, Oke Agere, old ile Oyinbo and Okuta-Mewa at Ija-Oke.
[5] The Faragbota tree is rumored to have protected the Igbajo and Ibadan armies during war by absorbing bullets from their adversaries when they hid behind it.
It was facilitated by British emissaries and made symbolic by inserting the signed agreement into a bottle and then burying it.