References
Archival Documents
Assessment Reports, Owerri Division Records, page 1, paragraphs 1 and 4.
Memorandum of Secretary, Southern Provinces, No. S. P6659/ Vol. III 24th of December, 1929. Paragraph 81.
Memorandum of the Secretary, Southern Provinces, on the Origin and Causes of the Disturbances in the Owerri and Calabar Provinces of 16th January, 1930, paragraphs 160 and 276.
NAI, Headlines. No. 8, November 1973.
Report of Mr. Cook, District Officer, Bende, 28th November, 1929.
Report of Mr. Matthews, Assistant Commissioner of Police, 24th December, 1929.
Report of Mr. Toovey, Station Magistrate, Aba, of 23rd December, 1929, paragraph 9.
Report of the Commission of Inquiry Appointed to Inquire into the Disturbances in the Calabar and Owerri Provinces, December, 1929. Lagos: The Government Printer, 1930.
Report of the Commission of Inquiry appointed to Inquire into the Disturbances in the Calabar and Owerri Provinces, December, 1929. Lagos: The Government Printer, 1930, p. 14.
Books
Afigbo, A.E. 1972. The Warrant Chiefs: Indirect Rule in Southeastern Nigeria, 1891-1929. London: Longman.
Akpan, E. Otu and Ekpo, V.I. 1988. The Women’s War of 1929 (Preliminary Study): A Popular Uprising in South Eastern Nigeria. Calabar: Government Printer.
Falola, Toyin and Paddock, Adam. 2011. The Women’s War of 1929: A History of Anti Colonial Resistance in Eastern Nigeria. North Carolina: Carolina Academic Press.
Gailey, H.A. 1970. The Road to Aba: A Study of British Administrative Policy in Eastern Nigeria. New York: New York University Press.
Matera, Marc; Bastian, Misty and Kingsley, Susan, 2012. The Women’s War of 1929: Gender and Violence in Colonial Nigeria. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.
Nwabara S.N. 1972. Iboland: A Century of Contact with Britain, 1860–1960. New Jersey: Humanities Press.
Nwaguru, J.E.N. (1973). Aba and British Rule: The Evolution and Administrative Development of the Old Aba Division of Igbo land, 1896-1960. Enugu, Nigeria: Santana Press and Publishing Co.
Scott, James C. 1985, Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance, New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Tamuno, T.N. 1972. The Evolution of Nigeria State: The Southern Phase, 1898-1914, London: Longman Group Limited.
Book Chapters
Bastian, M.L. 2002. ‘“Vultures of the Marketplace”: Southeastern Nigerian Women and Discourses of the Ogu Umumwaanyi (Women’s War) of 1929’, in: Allman, Jean; Geiger, Susan and Musisi, Nakanyike (eds.). Women in African Colonial Histories. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp. 260–281.
Okpoko, A.I and Ibeanu A.M. 2005. ‘Igbo Civilization: An Archaeological and Historical Ethnographic Profile’, in: Ogundiran, Akin (ed.). Pre-colonial Nigeria. Essays in Honor of Toyin Falola. Trenton: Africa World Press, pp. 187–202.
Edited Volumes
Shillington, Kevin (ed). 2005. Encyclopedia of African History, Vol. 1, A-G. London: Fitzroy Dearborn.
Journal Articles
Afigbo, A.E. 1966. ‘Revolution and Reaction in Eastern Nigeria, 1900- 1929, The Background of the Women's Riot of 1929’. Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 3 (3), pp. 551 – 621.
Van Allen, Judith. 1972. “’Sitting on a Man.’ Colonialism and the Lost Political Institutions of Igbo Women’. Canadian Journal of African Studies VI(II), p. 173. https://doi.org/10.2307/484197.
Oladiti, A. A. and Alao, A. 2017. ‘The Interaction of Law and Religion in Central Nigerian Societies’. Africology: The Journal of Pan African Studies 10 (5), pp. 42–65.