image for article on Nigerian independence

Nigeria gains independence, ending nearly 60 years of British rule

On October 1, 1960 C.E., the green-and-white flag of a new nation rose over Lagos. After decades of organized resistance, political agitation, and negotiation, Nigeria — home to more than 250 distinct ethnic groups and one of the most densely populated territories on the African continent — became a sovereign state. It was one of the largest acts of national self-determination in the twentieth century.

Key facts

  • Nigerian independence: Formally declared on October 1, 1960 C.E., Nigeria became independent from the United Kingdom within the Commonwealth, with Nnamdi Azikiwe later becoming its first indigenous Governor-General and then President.
  • Colonial consolidation: Britain had unified the northern and southern protectorates of Nigeria into a single administrative territory in 1914 C.E. — a decision made without meaningful input from the people living there, bundling together dozens of distinct nations and kingdoms.
  • Independence movement: The push for self-rule was driven by a broad coalition including the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons, the Action Group, and the Northern People’s Congress — organizations built by activists, lawyers, journalists, and trade unionists across ethnic and religious lines.

A civilization long before colonization

The story of Nigerian independence cannot be fully understood without knowing what existed before British rule — and that history runs extraordinarily deep.

The Nok culture, which may have emerged as early as 1500 B.C.E., produced sophisticated terracotta sculptures and is associated with some of the earliest evidence of iron metallurgy in sub-Saharan Africa. The Kingdom of Nri, the Benin Kingdom, and the Oyo Empire built complex systems of governance, trade, and art long before any European contact. The Dufuna canoe, discovered in Yobe State and dated to around 6300 B.C.E., is the oldest known boat in Africa and the second oldest in the world — a quiet testament to the ingenuity of peoples who lived in this region thousands of years before colonial maps were drawn.

Islam arrived through the Bornu Empire and Hausa Kingdoms in the eleventh century C.E. Christianity came via Portuguese missionaries in the fifteenth century C.E. Both traditions wove themselves into existing social and spiritual frameworks, producing religious cultures that were distinctly Nigerian rather than simply imported.

By the time Britain consolidated control of the entire territory in 1903 C.E. and unified it in 1914 C.E., it was not governing a blank slate. It was governing the descendants of some of the most sophisticated civilizations in human history.

What colonialism built — and what it cost

British colonial administration was not uniform in its effects. Ports, railways, newspapers, universities, and legal institutions were established — many of them, paradoxically, providing the very organizational infrastructure that Nigerians would later use to demand independence. Trade unions, political parties, and a free press grew, often against the preferences of colonial authorities who wanted controlled, manageable subjects rather than organized citizens.

At the same time, purchasing cartels run by companies including Unilever and Nestlé kept prices for cocoa, palm oil, and peanuts artificially low, structurally impoverishing Nigerian farmers and distorting the agricultural economy for generations. The 1885 C.E. Berlin Conference, at which European powers carved up Africa among themselves, drew Nigeria’s borders without reference to the ethnic, linguistic, or political realities on the ground — a decision whose consequences are still visible today.

Oil was discovered in the Niger Delta in 1956 C.E., just four years before independence. That discovery would shape Nigeria’s political economy in ways both promising and deeply damaging — a complexity that independence alone could not resolve.

How independence was won

Nigerian independence was not granted — it was organized, argued, and negotiated into existence by a generation of remarkable leaders. Nnamdi Azikiwe, Herbert Macaulay, Obafemi Awolowo, Ahmadu Bello, and many others built the political movements, newspapers, and civic institutions that made the case for self-governance over decades.

Women played essential roles too, often underacknowledged. The 1929 C.E. Women’s War — known in Igbo as Ogu Umunwanyi — in which tens of thousands of southeastern Nigerian women organized a mass protest against British taxation and interference, remains one of the most powerful acts of anti-colonial resistance in African history. It reshaped British colonial policy and demonstrated the organized power of communities that formal history has often overlooked.

By the mid-1950s C.E., the political momentum was irreversible. Nigeria became self-governing in 1957 C.E. and fully independent on October 1, 1960 C.E., celebrated across the country with dances, speeches, and the lowering of the Union Jack.

Lasting impact

Nigerian independence was part of a wave. Ghana had become independent in 1957 C.E. By the end of 1960 C.E. — a year sometimes called “the Year of Africa” — seventeen African nations had gained independence. Nigeria’s size, population, and regional influence made its independence a symbolic and practical turning point for the entire continent.

Today Nigeria is the most populous nation in Africa, with more than 220 million people. Its literature — shaped by writers including Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie — has profoundly influenced global culture. Its music, anchored in Afrobeats, reaches hundreds of millions of listeners worldwide. It produces five of Africa’s seven technology unicorn companies. The creative and intellectual energy that colonial rule tried to contain has continued to grow.

Nigeria’s 1960 C.E. independence also set a precedent for peaceful negotiated decolonization — demonstrating that organized civic pressure, international solidarity, and sustained political work could dismantle one of history’s most entrenched systems of control.

Blindspots and limits

Independence in 1960 C.E. was a genuine milestone, but it did not resolve the structural tensions that colonial rule had engineered. The Biafran War of 1967–1970 C.E. — rooted in part in the ethnic and regional fault lines drawn by British administrators — killed between one and three million people, making it one of the deadliest conflicts of the twentieth century. Nearly three decades of military rule followed independence before Nigeria transitioned to a democratic republic in 1999 C.E.

The borders inherited from colonialism, the distorted agricultural economy, and the oil-dependent revenue structure have created persistent institutional challenges that political independence alone could not undo. Recognizing those limits does not diminish what was achieved on October 1, 1960 C.E. — it makes the ongoing work of Nigerian citizens to build their country all the more visible and significant.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — History of Nigeria: Independence

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