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Agnes Yewande Savage

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Agnes Yewande Savage
ɓii aadama
Jinsudebbum Taƴto
Ɓii-leydiyankaakuNaajeeriya, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Taƴto
InditirdeAgnes Yewande Savage Taƴto
InndeAgnes Taƴto
Innde ɓesnguSavage Taƴto
Ɗuubi daygo21 Colte 1906 Taƴto
Ɗoforde14, 15, 16 Buccleuch Place, Edinburgh Taƴto
Date of death1964 Taƴto
Place of deathScotland Taƴto
Manner of deathnatural causes Taƴto
Cause of deathstroke Taƴto
FatherRichard Akinwande Savage Taƴto
SiblingRichard Gabriel Akinwande Savage Taƴto
ƊemngalInngilisjo, Nigerian Pidgin Taƴto
WoldeInngilisjo, Nigerian Pidgin Taƴto
Writing languageInngilisjo, Nigerian Pidgin Taƴto
Sana'ajiphysician, teacher, Orthodox medicine-humanistic medicine-holistic health care, jannginoowo Taƴto
Field of workjannginoowo, physician, teacher Taƴto
EmployerAchimota School, sick bay, Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital Taƴto
Janngi toUniversity of Edinburgh Medical School, Royal College of Music, George Watson's College Taƴto
Academic degreebachelor's degree Taƴto
Academic majormedicine Taƴto

Agnes Yewande Savage (21 Feburuwa 1906 – 7 suwee 1964) en ɗi ɗiyam naijeriya e scotland ɗum doctor juulde, kadi ɗum ɗiyam adii West Africa mo woni nyiɓɓoowo fii waɗde jogiima ilmi juulde e nder laawol hakkunde.​​ ​Elliott-Horton wonti debbo ɗiɗmoAfrik hirnaange jaŋnguɗo duɗal jaaɓi haaɗtirde, kadi ko kañum woni debbo gadano heɓde dipolomaaji mum to bannge gannde.[1][2][3][4][5]

Nguurndam e jaŋde puɗɗagol

[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]

Savage jibinaa ko ñalnde 21 feebariyee 1906 to Edinburgh, Ecoppi, e galle Richard Akinwande Savage Sr ( safroowo Nijeernaajo, bayyinoowo jaayndeeji e jaŋnguɗo Edinburgh e hitaande 1900 , iwdi kreyol Siyeraa Leyoon ) e Maggie S. Bowiets ( Ecoppinaajo golloowo ). Miñiiko ko Richard Gabriel Akinwande Savage, kanko ne ko doktoor keɓɗo seedantaagal mum to Edinburgh e hitaande 1926.Savage waɗii ekkolaaji to duɗal jaaɓi haaɗtirde Royal Music e hitaande 1919, o rokkaa bursi ngam janngude to duɗal jaaɓi haaɗtirde rewɓe George Watson. Ko ɗoon o heɓi njeenaari ngam ganndal kuuɓtodinngal e golle ekkol, o heɓi kadi seedantaagal jaŋde toownde Ecoppi.

O naati duɗal jaaɓi haaɗtirde Edinburgh ngam janngude safaara, o ƴaañii e jaŋde makko. E hitaande nayaɓere jaŋde makko safaara, o dañii teddungal gadanal e fannuuji kala, o dañi njeenaari e ñawuuji ɓalli e medal e safaara ñaawoore, ɗum noon ko kanko woni debbo gadano e daartol Edinburgh waɗde ɗum. [lower-alpha 1] O heɓi njeenaari ciftorgol Dorothy Gilfillan sabu debbo ɓurɗo waawde heɓde dipolomaaji e hitaande 1929.[6]{{efn|A newspaper report of the graduation ceremonies noted: "Among the 95 medical graduates, was a young lady of colour from West Africa, bearing the not inappropriate name Agnes Yewande Savage, whose father is also a doctor. She gained the two prizes awarded to the most distinguished woman student of her year, and her success, to judge from her enthusiastic reception, was highly popular with her fellow undergraduates.

Golle safaara e ndonu

[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]
Agnes Yewande Savage wearing a cloche hat, from a 1929 issue of The Crisis
Agnes Yewande Savage, ummoraade e tonngoode 1929 e nder jaaynde wiyeteende « La crise »

Savage ina jokkondiri e caɗeele juɓɓule jinnaaɓe e njiyaagu e nder golle mum . Caggal nde o timmini jaŋde makko, o naati e golle koloñaal to Gold Coast ( Gana hannde) o woni Ofisee Safrooɓe tokooso . Hay so tawii o ɓuri ko ɓuri heewde e banndiraaɓe makko worɓe waawde, o heɓaani nafooje seeɗa. [7]

E hitaande 1931, o ƴettaa e juuɗe gardiiɗo duɗal jaaɓi haaɗtirde Achimota . E dow yamiroore hooreejo duɗal ngal, hono Alec Garden Fraser, laamu koloñaal rokki mo kontraa ɓurɗo moƴƴude. O woniino e Achimota duuɓi nay ko o safroowo e jannginoowo . Nde o woni to Achimota, o jokkondiri e Susan de Graft-Johnson nde o woni hooreejo duɗal sukaaɓe rewɓe. Johnson ina heewnoo gollodaade e Savage to sick bay, caggal ɗuum o yahi kadi janngude safaara to duɗal jaaɓi haaɗtirde Edinburgh, o woni debbo gadano safroowo to Ganaa . Debbo goɗɗo Afriknaajo hirnaange, piilaaɗo safaara, jannguɗo to Achimota e Edinburgh fof ko Matilda J. Clerk, wonnoo debbo Ganaajo gadano heɓde bursi jaŋde toownde, debbo ɗiɗaɓo doktoor to Ganaa e debbo nayaɓo Afriknaajo jannguɗo cafroowo . [8]

Caggal Achimota, Savage arti e sarwiis safaara koloñaal, o rokkaa njeenaari ɓurndi moƴƴude, gardinooɗo kilinikuuji wellitaare sukaaɓe, jokkondirɗi e opitaal Korle Bu to Accra . E oon sahaa, o toɗɗaa ko balloowo safrooɓe to departemaa jibinannde safrirde ndee, e gardotooɗo hostel infirmiyee en . To Korle-Bu, o ardii sosde duɗal heblo infirmiyee en, Koldaa heblo infirmiyee en Korle-Bu, ɗo ward inniraa e teddungal makko.

Savage woppi golle mum ko yaawi sabu "caɗeele ɓanndu e hakkille" e hitaande 1947, o waɗi heddiiɓe e nguurndam makko ko e Ecoppi ngam nehde ɓiɗɗo mawniiko gorko e ɓiɗɗo mawniiko gorko. O sankii ko caggal mboros, to opitaal St Paul, to Hemel Hempstead, to Angalteer, ñalnde 7 suwee 1964, omo yahra e duuɓi 58.

  • Waktuuji rewɓe e nder ganndal
  • Rewɓe e nder safaara.
  1. Mitchell, Henry (November 2016). "Dr Agnes Yewande Savage – West Africa's First Woman Doctor (1906–1964)". Centre of African Studies. Archived from the original on 14 April 2019.
  2. "CAS Students to Lead Seminar on University's African Alumni, Pt. IV: Agnes Yewande Savage". CAS from the Edge (in Engeleere). 16 November 2016. Archived from the original on 14 April 2019. Retrieved 2018-05-31.
  3. Tetty, Charles (1985). "Medical Practitioners of African Descent in Colonial Ghana". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 18 (1): 139–144. doi:10.2307/217977. JSTOR 217977. PMID 11617203.
  4. "Agnes Yewande Savage (1906 – 1964)". The University of Edinburgh (in Engeleere). Archived from the original on 24 November 2018. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
  5. Ferry, Georgina (November 2018). "Agnes Yewande Savage, Susan Ofori-Atta, and Matilda Clerk: three pioneering doctors". The Lancet (in English). 392 (10161): 2258–2259. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32827-7. ISSN 0140-6736. S2CID 53713242.CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  6. Mitchell, Henry (November 2016). "Dr Agnes Yewande Savage – West Africa's First Woman Doctor (1906–1964)". Centre of African Studies. Archived from the original on 14 April 2019.
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  1. A newspaper report of the graduation ceremonies noted: "Among the 95 medical graduates, was a young lady of colour from West Africa, bearing the not inappropriate name Agnes Yewande Savage, whose father is also a doctor. She gained the two prizes awarded to the most distinguished woman student of her year, and her success, to judge from her enthusiastic reception, was highly popular with her fellow undergraduates."
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