
Elaborate costumes, blaring music and vibrant processions took over Nigeria's Lagos Island on Monday as the annual Fanti Carnival hit the streets.
The festivities have lit up Lagos' financial hub for more than two centuries, celebrating the legacy of the Afro-Brazilian returnees who once settled in the city.
This year's carnival featured musical performances, bedazzled horses, huge dragons and dancing stilt walkers.
In the 1800s, some formerly enslaved Africans and their descendants migrated back to the continent from countries like Brazil and Cuba.
Many Afro-Brazilians settled on Lagos Island, bringing with them new customs.
These customs fused with those of Nigeria's Yoruba people, leading to creations like the Fanti Carnival.
On Monday, carnival attendee Glamour Sandra told the AP news agency that she loved "the energy, the artistic splendour, the creativity" of the event.
"It is important that we preserve this, so that... generation after generation everybody will get to understand the importance of this and how Brazilians and Lagos came to be," carnival-goer Ademola Oduyebo told AP.
Youngsters appear to be heeding this message - several children and teenagers participated in the Monday's parades, decked out in creative costumes.
The celebration is sustained by seven historic associations, which are rooted in different areas of Lagos Island. One carnival-goer wore an eye-catching outfit, bearing each of the associations' names.
Each community can be distinguished by its signature colours - members of the Lafiaji association always wear red and white.
The carnival's organisers are immensly proud of the event, which will return again next April.
They describe it as "neither wholly Brazilian nor wholly Yoruba, but entirely its own".
Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.
Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica
BBC Africa podcasts
LATEST POSTS
- 1
We analyzed Philly street scenes and identified signs of gentrification using machine learning trained on longtime residents’ observations - 2
AfD in Brandenburg takes back suit against the intelligence service - 3
Wedding Guest Outraged That Bride and Groom, Who Are in Their 60s and Have Both Been Married Before, Registered for Gifts - 4
Changing Negative Cash Mentalities: Enabling Your Monetary Excursion - 5
Vote In favor of Your Favored Language Learning Applications
Cheetah, Hammerhead Shark, and 38 Other Animals in Danger of Extinction Receive New International Protections from U.N.
Russia’s New KVS Drone May Be Designed To Restore Reach In The FPV War
'Harmonious' meeting between Merz, Lula despite Belém controversy
Avoid Slam: Clearing the Street for the Eventual fate of Standard Size Trucks
Germany's Lufthansa enters race for stake in Portuguese airline TAP
Fire Allegedly Triggered by Wedding Cake Sparkler Causes Venue to Go Up in Flames, Leaving Groom with Second-Degree Burns
New Year's Eve Live: Nashville's Big Bash: How to watch the star-studded country music special live
Remote Headphones: Improve Your Sound Insight
Iran war drives global fertilizer prices up, raising food cost fears













