Courtship & marriageAI-aggregated

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. 1

    The introduction

    Both families meet over food; the groom’s side states its intention, and dates and the engagement list are agreed.

  2. 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. 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. 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

🇳🇬 🇧🇯 🇹🇬Yoruba (Yorùbá)people

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.

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