Oyotunji village is named after the Oyo empire, and the name literally means Oyo returns or Oyo rises again.[1][3] Oyotunji village covers 27 acres (11 ha) and has a Yoruba temple which was moved from Harlem, New York to its present location in 1960.[4][5][6] During the 1970s, the era of greatest population growth at the village, the number of inhabitants grew from 5 to between 200 and 250.[7][8][9] The population is rumored to fluctuate between 5 and 9 families as of the last 10 years. It was originally intended to be located in Savannah, Georgia, but was eventually settled into its current position after disputes with neighbors in Sheldon proper, over drumming and tourists.
The village is constructed to be analogous to the villages of the traditional Yoruba city-states in modern-day Nigeria, although modernization of the village's public works have been carried out under Adefunmi II.[citation needed]
Following Adefunmi I's death in 2005, he was succeeded by his son, Oba Adejuyigbe Adefunmi II. In July 2024, Adefunmi II was fatally stabbed to death by his sister Akiba Meredith after a "heated argument". Adefumni II was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.[10]
^Hunt, Carl M. (1979). yotunji Village: the Yoruba movement in America. University Press of America (University of Michigan). ISBN9780819107480. OCLC5625761.