Several generations of ancestors were remembered by name at the ojú'po to the paternal ancestors of an extended family. The altar at the house of the Oludasa of Owo still stood in 1973, but the wooden osanmasinmi in the form of human heads sporting rams' horns had been destroyed by fire during political infighting in the late 1960s. Justine Cordwell recorded the oju'po of the Oludasa chieftaincy in 1949.
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