“Give not thy strength unto women, nor thy ways
to that which destroyeth kings” Proverbs 31:3 (KJV)
Introduction
History is adorned with exploits of women; some
heroic and valiant; others atrocious and villainous. Women build men and
empires and bring down kings and kingdoms.
Apart from the overriding love for God and humanity,
the other driving force that propelled High Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs from the
proverbial grass to grace; from a hand truck pusher to a household name and
from an agricultural labourer to an oil mogul - the unquenchable zeal that
propelled him through his checkered life history, was the institutionalization
of the Lulu-Briggs family within the pantheon of the Young-Briggs chieftaincy
stool and the Oruwari Briggs House of Abonnema.
High Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs spearheaded a
renaissance that restored the pride of place to the Young-Briggs stool and the
Oruwari Briggs House of Abonnema, recounting history and erecting monuments,
whilst announcing the strong presence of the Lulu-Briggs family among the great
families and houses in Kalabari Kingdom.
All of these are at the brink of destruction and are
about to be consigned into the dustbin of history, ruined by the ongoing feud
within the Lulu-Briggs family since the death of the patriarch.
The family is entangled in a succession and
inheritance battle to determine who is the proper person to spearhead and
ensure the permanency of the Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs legacy.
But history is replete with stories of how Kingdoms,
communities and families go into long and arduous search for worthy successors
to uphold the cherished legacies of forbearers and ancestors.
King Saul was anointed because he was head and
shoulder above his peers and King David was chosen because he had fought off
lions from devouring the family herd. King Amachree was a warrior King that led
his people to war against enemies.
But the conflict in the Lulu-Briggs family is that
of “minimalization”, the act of reducing the bar, even when there are ready and
very capable hands to fly the family flag. Unfortunately, those who are
propagating these aberrations, cling on to feminist and anti-cultural
sentiments, without also upholding truth and rectitude, even as they say that
they are pastors.
At the center of the crisis are the second son of
the late High Chief O.B. Lulu-Briggs, Chief Dumo Lulu-Briggs, who is the
incumbent chief of the family and the all-powerful widow of the late High
Chief, Mrs. Seinye Lulu-Briggs.
How did Mrs. Seinye Lulu-Briggs acquire so much powers
and influence in her husband's family, to the extent of pushing for her younger
children to supersede the older sons of her husband, considering that she was
married to Chief O.B. Lulu-Briggs for only 16 years of his 88 years on earth
and got married to him when he was already well established at 72 years old and
she in her early 40s.
Agrippina complex and the Lulu-Briggs family
crisis: Comparative analysis
The story of Empress Agrippina of Rome sheds light
on the puzzle in the Lulu-Briggs house of Abonnema. How Agrippina schemed to
marry Claudius, lured him to adopt her son Nero, allegedly killed her husband
and ultimately installed her son as emperor over Emperor Claudius' biological
son, Britannicus.
The term “Agrippina Complex” is used here to encapsulate
the complicated and difficult behaviour of a woman, as exhibited by Mrs. Seinye
Lulu-Briggs, in her uncontrollable desire for wealth and power, often of
suicidal proportion, that destroys everything in its path to achieve that
desire.
It is adapted from Sigmund Freud's “Oedipus Complex”
which the Austrian psychoanalyst derived from Sophocles Tragedy (drama),
"Oedipus Rex" in which King Oedipus of Thebes unwittingly fulfilled a
prophecy to kill his father and marry his mother.
The Agrippina story has a lot of similarities with
the ongoing crisis in the Lulu-Briggs family. Julia Agrippina was a Roman
Empress who lived from A.D. 15 to 59. She was the mother of Emperor Nero and
was overwhelmed by the uncontrollable desire for wealth and influence which brought
unspeakable sorrow on the Roman Empire.
The quest to make her son Emperor, saw Agrippina
scheming her way to become Emperor Claudius wife in an intriguing story full of
betrayals and murders. She was ruthless, ambitious, violent and domineering but
physically very beautiful and was a woman of means.
Following the killing by Emperor Claudius of
Messalina (his third wife), who was his wife for 10 years, Agrippina became
Emperor Claudius wife. She was recommended to the Emperor by one of his
advisers, Marcus Pallas, who was Agrippina's lover at the time. Claudius had
accused Messalina of treason.
Agrippina's marriage to Claudius was not based on
love, but for power. It was her third marriage and the fourth for Claudius and
she became an Empress and the most powerful woman in the Roman Empire.
Agrippina came into the marriage with a son from her
previous marriage and lured Claudius to adopt him. Claudius did and renamed
him, Nero. This is significant because Agrippina would exert great influence
over Claudius regarding the advancement of her biological son, in spite of
being the stepmother of her husband's children from previous marriages,
prominent among them were a female, Octavia and a son, Britannicus, children of
the slain Messalina.
Empress, Agrippina eliminated anyone from the
imperial court who she thought was loyal and dedicated to the memory of her
husband's former wife, Messalina. She also eliminated or removed anyone she
considered a potential threat to her position and the future of her son.
Agrippina systematically took control of the
Imperial government while Claudius was left to appear as a figurehead in front
of his wife's real power.
Meanwhile Agrippina's son, Nero continued to be
advanced as the heir to Claudius while she deprived Claudius biological son,
Britannicus of his heritage and further isolated him from his father and
succession to the throne.
By the time Emperor Claudius repented marrying
Agrippina and adopting Nero and began to favor his son, Britannicus, and
preparing him for the throne, it was too late.
By 54 AD, Agrippina was secured enough in her
position, and that of her son, that she no longer needed Claudius to rule the
empire. She took matters into her own hands. On October 13, AD 54, Claudius
died while attending a feast.
There are conflicting reports on how Claudius died
but most indicated that he was poisoned by tainted mushrooms, even though
Claudius had reached the venerable age of 64 (quite advanced for the ancient
world, though not uncommon among the aristocracy) and had shown a history of
poor health.
Regardless, the scheming of Agrippina proved
fruitful and the 16-year-old Nero was immediately hailed as the new Emperor
without any consideration for Claudius' biological son, Britannicus.
Like Agrippina, Seinye the wife of High Chief O. B.
Lulu-Briggs is physically beautiful and is a woman of means. She has shown
evidence of ruthlessness and a domineering character as can be adduced from
some of her recent posturing in the ongoing family dispute, especially her
blatant refusal to release the corpse of her husband to his family of origin
and to his chiefs.
The manner Seinye became the wife of Chief O. B
Lulu-Briggs after the ousting of his wife of seven years, Madam Udakwu
Lulu-Briggs, nee Obiora, is reminiscent of the introduction of Agrippina to
Emperor Claudius.
Like Marcus Pallas, Dumo Lulu-Briggs was the
matchmaker who brought Seinye to his father straight from the cell of the
Olu-Obasanjo police station in Port Harcourt where she was allegedly locked up
by the W.W. White family for financial impropriety. Seinye was Dumo's friend
but not his lover like Agrippina was to Pallas. Dumo and Seinye were friends
all the same.
The choice of Seinye by Dumo has brought untold
crisis to the Lulu-Briggs family just as Pallas choice of Agrippina brought a
terrible twist of fate into the life of Emperor Claudius and the Roman Empire.
Like Agrippina and Emperor Claudius, Seinye married
Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs as her second husband and became the fourth or fifth
wife in his life and the most powerful person in the family, although she has
two daughters of her own out of wedlock.
Like the marriage of Agrippina to Claudius, the
marriage of Seinye to the ailing Lulu-Briggs who was 72 years old at the time,
was said to be more for what she can get than for her love for the old man.
This is supported by how Seinye brought in a grown child into her new marriage
and like Agrippina, she is advancing her own biological daughter over her
husband's older sons. Seinye would not have married O.B. Lulu-Briggs if he were
a pauper.
Seinye is scheming to make her own adopted children
the inheritors of Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs estate in total exclusion of his
older biological sons, Senibo, Dumo and Sofiri, just like Agrippina made
Claudius to adopt her son as his heir.
Another trait of Agrippina exhibited by Seinye is
the maligning of the older sons; accusing them of abandoning their father just
to cast them in bad light and claim her husband's estate for herself and her
children.
Above all, Seinye systematically took over the
Lulu-Briggs business empire while High Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs was still alive
and made him play the role of mere figure head while she wielded all the real
powers.
Just as Emperor Claudius, in his last days,
regretted adopting Agrippina's son Nero and began to prepare his biological
son, Britannica as heir, Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs began to favour Dumo as his
heir but like Claudius, Chief Lulu-Briggs also had to die.
Chief O. B. Lulu-Briggs and Emperor Claudius both
died in controversial circumstances. Claudius was alleged to have been poisoned
at the age of 64 which was quite advanced for the ancient world and Chief O. B.
Lulu-Briggs died at over 88, buoyed by modern medical sciences; Claudius had a
history of poor health so was O. B. Lulu-Briggs.
©Sotonye Ijuye-Dagogo
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