Bring Them in From the Fields: Re-appraising the Historiography of Documenting Burial Monuments and Artefacts of Catholics
- Authors
-
-
Cletus Nwabuzo
Dominican University, Ibadan
Author
-
- Keywords:
- African historiography, Burial monuments and artefacts, Documentation Catholic priests, religious and catechists
- Abstract
-
This essay addresses a historiographical problem of documentation. African Historiography has long played a second fiddle just like the continent itself in the global village. Its documentations and monuments are consistently not often taken into contention. There are either no documents to support historical facts or the documents are riddled with inaccuracies that give room to accusations of fake and forgery. This essay focuses on a small question of this larger problem of documentation. It raises the question of documentation of burial monuments of Catholic priests, religious and catechists often laid to rest in non-traditional burial places for various reasons. These burial monuments (graves) are not often well documented in retrievable archives or records. Consequently, the buried record history but are of little value to evidentiary history in a discipline that thrives on verifiable documentation. They are also of little value to the Catholic Church in the process of canonisation. The essay, therefore, pleads for a better documentation of these monuments, as they would not only aid history writing but also ensure accurate historical documentation.
- References
- Downloads
- Published
- 2021-12-20
- Section
- Articles
How to Cite
Similar Articles
- Victoria Openif’Oluwa Akoleowo, Ph.D, Decolonisation, National Development and the Humanities , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 3 (2022): June, 2022
- Francis Kolade Ajila, Ethno-Philosophy and the Challenge of African Humanity , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 1 (2021): June, 2021
- Akinjide Omoniyi Adewumi, Ph.D, Deborah Oluwasola Owoyemi, African Democratic Experience and Fukuyama’s Liberal Interpretation of History , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 3 (2022): June, 2022
- Francis Kolade Ajila, An Appraisal of Olusegun Oladipo’s Philosophy of African Development , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 4 (2022): December, 2022
- Emmanuel Actor Oyewole, PhD, Timothy O. E. Popoola, PhD, The Church and Purgatory: A Theological and Systematic Balance , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 9 (2025): June, 2025
- Omotade Adegbindin, Negritude and Pan-Africanism: Towards a Paradigm for the Unification of Africa , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 2 (2021): December, 2021
- David Ogar Okata, The Metaphysics of Governance in Postcolonial Nigeria , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 9 (2025): June, 2025
- Rev. Sr. Dr. Mary Christine Ugobi-Onyemere, IHM, C. Raymond Okoro, Rethinking Democracy in Africa: A Thomistic Perspective on Governance, Identity, and the Common Good , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 9 (2025): June, 2025
- Joseph Omokafe Fashola, Morality and Cultural Identity , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 1 (2021): June, 2021
- Patrick Uche Akunne, The Language Problem in African Philosophy , DU Journal of Humanities: Vol. 2 (2021): December, 2021
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.