-
known and
spelt in old
literature as; Hueda, Whidah, Ajuda, Ouidah, Whidaw,
Juida, and Juda (Yoruba: Igelefe; French: Ouidah) was a
kingdom on the
coast of...
- Buffon, Georges-Louis
Leclerc de (1775). "Le
merle violet à
ventre blanc de
Juida".
Histoire Naturelle des
Oiseaux (in French). Vol. 6. Paris: De L'Imprimerie...
- Roi de
Juida,
after Jacques Gr****et de Saint-Sauveur (1757–1810)....
- (English: /ˈwiːdə/; French: [wi.da]) or
Whydah (/ˈhwɪdə, -ɔː/; Ouidah,
Juida, and Juda by the French; Ajudá by the Portuguese; and Fida by the Dutch)...
-
Crowning of the King of
Juida (Whydah) in Savi in 1725...
- heritage. The
people of
Juida, a
tattooed people whose women were
known to be
extroardinarily flirtatious. The
women of
Juida wore a
heavy ring inside...
- the
Dutch naturalist Pieter Boddaert coined the
binomial name
Todier de
Juida in his
catalogue of the
Planches Enluminées. The type
locality is Saint...
- heritage. The
people of
Juida, a
tattooed people whose women were
known to be
extroardinarily flirtatious. The
women of
Juida wore a
heavy ring inside...