The Yoruba introduction and engagement
The Yoruba two-act path to marriage: a formal introduction of the families, then the engagement day run by the alaga ijoko, with letters read aloud, prostration, and the gift list.
The names it answers to
- Mo mi n mo eYorùbá · "know me and let me know you", the introduction
- ÌdánaYorùbá · the engagement rite
What happens
- 1
The introduction
Both families meet over food; the groom’s side states its intention, and dates and the engagement list are agreed.
- 2
The proposal and acceptance letters
On the engagement day the groom’s family presents a written proposal letter, read aloud by a young daughter; the bride’s family replies with an acceptance letter.
- 3
The prostration (ìdọ̀bálẹ̀)
The groom, with his friends, prostrates flat before the bride’s parents to ask for their daughter; the alaga (master of ceremonies) orchestrates with humour and fines.
- 4
The gifts and the ring
The engagement items (yams, honey, alligator pepper, drinks, the Bible or Qur’an where faith applies) are presented; the bride accepts the ring inside the holy book or gift tray.
WHY
The letters make the union a matter of record between houses, in the Yoruba tradition of formal, witnessed speech.
Prostration is the groom’s body saying what words cannot: total respect for the family whose daughter he asks for.
Each engagement item is a prayer in object form: honey for sweetness, alligator pepper for many children, yams for sustenance.
WHYs are plural by design: your family may hold another. Dispute or add below; disagreement is recorded, never erased.
Who practices it
Provenance
- generated: 2026-07-04
- source: Model-knowledge aggregation pass (2026-07-04); unverified, awaiting community affirmation.
This entry is a hypothesis awaiting its people. If your family does it differently, that difference is exactly what we want recorded.
Nearby in the library
Ìkómọjáde · the Yoruba naming day
On the seventh (girls), ninth (boys), or eighth day by family practice, the Yoruba child is carried out and named before family, with symbolic foods placed on the tongue and the oríkì declared.
🇳🇬 🇧🇯 🇹🇬Yoruba
Lobola · the bride wealth negotiation
The formal meeting of two families in which the groom’s side presents cattle or money to the bride’s side, joining the clans and dignifying the bride.
🇿🇦 🇿🇼 🇸🇿 🇲🇿 🇱🇸Zulu · Xhosa · Ndebele +8
Umembeso and umabo · the gift exchanges
Two mirrored Zulu gift ceremonies after lobola: the groom’s family brings gifts to the bride’s household (umembeso), and the bride later distributes blankets and mats to the groom’s family (umabo).
🇿🇦Zulu