Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case Study

Marriage is an ordained institution by God, and it is held in high esteem in every society, Ùlále ̣ ̀ inclusive. A lady who is going into a marriage contract is expected to be pure by abstaining from sexual experience prior to the official seal of the marriage with her spouse. Ùlále ̣ ̀ display...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oladiipo Ajiboye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LibraryPress@UF 2023-01-01
Series:Yoruba Studies Review
Online Access:https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/132804
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1825206061804552192
author Oladiipo Ajiboye
author_facet Oladiipo Ajiboye
author_sort Oladiipo Ajiboye
collection DOAJ
description Marriage is an ordained institution by God, and it is held in high esteem in every society, Ùlále ̣ ̀ inclusive. A lady who is going into a marriage contract is expected to be pure by abstaining from sexual experience prior to the official seal of the marriage with her spouse. Ùlále ̣ ̀ displays a long marriage process that could span two decades depending on the level at which a would-be bride is sighted by her suitor and approved of by her parents as found in ìnna síse ‘obligatory responsibility to in-laws’. The marriage ceremony is filled with some flamboyancy of ùdanàa ‘engagement’, ugbá ìyàó dídì ‘packing of bridal wedding materials’, the concepts and presentation of ẹran ọkọgbó-yàgbó ‘animal for marriage rites’ and asọ ùbálé ‘virginity napkin’. I established that of the various marriage types, the ìyàó yeeyà ‘solemnity wedding’ is the most remarkable and the ultimate that every member of the community looks forward to. Its uniqueness in terms of the process of becoming a suitor, to the ìnna síse, and the procedures for the marriage ceremony has been carefully discussed. I presented the concept of ùbálé ‘virginity’ in this community and showed “its value” and “the shame” that awaits a lady who lost her virginity before the marriage. I gave the concept of virginity a wider view and established that virginity may be lost inadvertently and concluded that breaking the hymen, which is to be synonymous with loss of virginity, is not obtained through sexual intercourse alone    
format Article
id doaj-art-2ab0994aaa164965a36840c7f19c3e4e
institution Kabale University
issn 2473-4713
2578-692X
language English
publishDate 2023-01-01
publisher LibraryPress@UF
record_format Article
series Yoruba Studies Review
spelling doaj-art-2ab0994aaa164965a36840c7f19c3e4e2025-02-07T13:44:22ZengLibraryPress@UFYoruba Studies Review2473-47132578-692X2023-01-0172Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case StudyOladiipo Ajiboye0University of Lagos Marriage is an ordained institution by God, and it is held in high esteem in every society, Ùlále ̣ ̀ inclusive. A lady who is going into a marriage contract is expected to be pure by abstaining from sexual experience prior to the official seal of the marriage with her spouse. Ùlále ̣ ̀ displays a long marriage process that could span two decades depending on the level at which a would-be bride is sighted by her suitor and approved of by her parents as found in ìnna síse ‘obligatory responsibility to in-laws’. The marriage ceremony is filled with some flamboyancy of ùdanàa ‘engagement’, ugbá ìyàó dídì ‘packing of bridal wedding materials’, the concepts and presentation of ẹran ọkọgbó-yàgbó ‘animal for marriage rites’ and asọ ùbálé ‘virginity napkin’. I established that of the various marriage types, the ìyàó yeeyà ‘solemnity wedding’ is the most remarkable and the ultimate that every member of the community looks forward to. Its uniqueness in terms of the process of becoming a suitor, to the ìnna síse, and the procedures for the marriage ceremony has been carefully discussed. I presented the concept of ùbálé ‘virginity’ in this community and showed “its value” and “the shame” that awaits a lady who lost her virginity before the marriage. I gave the concept of virginity a wider view and established that virginity may be lost inadvertently and concluded that breaking the hymen, which is to be synonymous with loss of virginity, is not obtained through sexual intercourse alone     https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/132804
spellingShingle Oladiipo Ajiboye
Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case Study
Yoruba Studies Review
title Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case Study
title_full Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case Study
title_fullStr Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case Study
title_short Marriage and the Concept of Ubale, the Sanctity and the Ridicule: Ulale-Mobà as a Case Study
title_sort marriage and the concept of ubale the sanctity and the ridicule ulale moba as a case study
url https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/132804
work_keys_str_mv AT oladiipoajiboye marriageandtheconceptofubalethesanctityandtheridiculeulalemobaasacasestudy