| Ethiopia
is an encyclopedia of geology and geography open for all to read under
the intense blue of African sky. More than this, it is a living book in
which the whole story of man from his first beginnings millions of years
in the past, through all the stage of his evolution and development,
may be studied with awe and wonder. The traveler in Ethiopia voyage in
time as well as in space, for here the drama and beauty of the present
illuminated in countless ways by the grandeur and majesty of the past
and, in a nation that is building itself a new, by glimpses intuitions
of a noble future.
Ethiopia
is situated in the north-eastern Horn of Africa, equidistant between
the Equator and the Tropic of Capricorn, its bedrock belongs to the
earth’s first continent, a continent known by geologists as
Gondwanaland, of which Africa forms the largest intact remnant.Ethiopia’s
history as an organized and independent country dates back to about 100
BC with a kingdom at Axum in the Northern Regional state (Killil) of
Tigray. But the Axumite kingdom, as a state emerged at about the
beginning of the Christian era, i.e., 4th A.D and flourished during the
succeeding six or seven centuries. It then underwent prolonged decline
from the eighth to the twelfth century A.D. Axum’s period of greatest
power lasted from the 4th through the 6th centuries .Its core area lay
in the highlands of what’s today southern Eritrea, Tigray, Lasta (in the
present-day Wallo), and Angot (also in Wallo); its major centers were
at Axum and Adulis. Earlier centers, such as Yeha, also contributed to
its growth. At the kingdom's height, its rulers over the Red sea coast
from Sawak in present day Sudan, in the North to Berbera in the
present-day Somalia and inland as far as the Nile valley in modern
Sudan. On the Arabian side of the Red sea, the Axumite rulers at times
controlled the Coast and much of the interior of modern Yemen. During
the sixth and seventh centuries, the Axumite state lost its possessions
in South West Arabia and much of its Red sea coast line and gradually
shrank to its core area, with the political center of the state shifting
farther and farther South-ward.The
rise of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula had a significant impact on Axum
kingdom during the seventh and eighth centuries. By the time of the
Prophet Mohammed’s death (A.D.632), the Arabian Peninsula, and thus the
entire opposite shore of the Red sea, had come under the influence of
the new religion. The steady advance of the faith of Mohammed through
the next century resulted in Islamic conquest of all of the former
Sassanian Empire and most of the former Byzantine domination.During
the spread of Islam by conquest, the Islamic State's relations with
Axum were not hostile at first. According to Islamic tradition, some
members of Mohammed’s family and some of his early converts had taken
refuge in Axum during the troubled years presiding the Prophet’s rise to
power, and Axum was exempted from the Jihad, or Holy war, as a result.
The Arabs also considered the Axumite state to be on a par with the
Islamic State, the Byzantine Empire, and China of the world’s greatest
kingdoms. Commerce between Axum and at least some Ports on the Red sea
continued, albeit on an increasingly reduced scale.When
Axum collapsed in the eighth century, power shifted to South. As early
as the mid-seventh century, the old capital at Axum had been abandoned;
thereafter, it served only as a religious center and as a place of
coronation for a succession of kings who traced their lineage to Axum.
By then, Axumite cultural, political, and religious influence had been
established South of Tigray in Agew districts such as Lasta,Wag, Angot
and eventually, Amhara.This
southward expansion continued over the following several centuries. The
favored technique for expansion involved the establishment of military
colonies, which served as core centers from which Axumite culture,
Semitic language, and Christianity spread to the surrounding Agew
population. By the tenth century, a post-Axumite Christian kingdom had
emerged which controlled the central Northern highlands from modern
Eritrea to Shewa and the coast from old Adulis to Zeila in present-day
Somalia, territory considerably larger than the Axumites had governed.During
the eleventh and twelfth centuries, Shewa region became the scene of
renewed Christian expansion, carried out by Semities people-the Amhara.About
1137 A.D. a new Dynasty came to power in the Christian highlands known
as the Zagwe Dynasty and its center was based in the Agew district of
Lasta. It developed naturally out of the long cultural and political
contact between Cushitic and Semitic-speaking peoples in the Northern
highlands. Staunch Christians ,the Zagwe ,devoted themselves to the
construction of new churches and monasteries. These were often modeled
after Christian religious edifices in the Holy Land, a locale the Zagwe
and their subjects held in special esteem. The Zagwe kings were
responsible, among other things, for the great churches carved into the
rock in and around their capital at Adefa. During the time Adefa became
known as Lalibela, the name of the Zagwe king to whose reign the Adefa
churches’ construction had been attributed. Despite the Zagwe's
championing of Christianity and their artistic achievements
notwithstanding, there was discontent among the populace in what is now
Eritrea and Tigray and among the Amhara, an increasingly powerful people
who inhabited a region called Amhara to the south of the Zagwe center
at Adefa. About 1270 A.D., an Amhara noble, Yekuno Amlak, drove out the
last Zagwe ruler and proclaimed himself king.The
new dynasty that Yekuno Amlak founded came to be known as the
"Solomonic" Dynasty because its scions claimed descent not only from
Axum but also from king Solomon of ancient Israel. According to
traditions that were eventually molded into a national epic, lineage of
Axumite kings originated with the offspring of an alleged union between
Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. Consequently, the notion arose that
royal legitimacy derived from descent in a line of Solomonic kings. The
Zagwes were denied to have any share in that heritage and viewed as
usurpers. Yekuno Amlak’s accession, thus, came to be seen as the
legitimate “restoration” of the Solomonic line.Beginning
in the thirteenth century, one of the chief problems confronting the
Christian kingdom, then ruled by the Amhara, was the threat of Muslim
encirclement. By that time, a variety of people East and South of the
highlands had embraced Islam, and some had established powerful
sultanates (or Sheikhdoms) .One of these was the Sultanate of Ifat in
the North Eastern Shewa foot hills, and another was centered in the
Islamic city of Harar farther East. In the lowlands along the Red Sea
were two other important Muslim peoples - the Afar and the Somali.Although
the Christian state was unable to impose its rule over the Muslim
states to the East, it was strong enough to resist the Muslims
incursions throughout the fourteenth and most of the fifteenth century.By
the second decade of the sixteenth century, however, a young soldier in
the Adali army, Ahmed Ibin Ibrhim Al Ghazi ,had begun to acquire a
strong following by virtue of his military successes and in time became
the de facto leader of Adal. Concurrently, he acquired the states of a
religious leader. Ahmed, who came to be called Grang (the “left handed“)
by his Christian enemies, rallied the ethnically diverse Muslims,
including many Afar and Somali, in a Jihad intended to break Christian
power.It
was not until 1543 that Emperor Galawdewos (reigned 1540-49), joined by
a small number of Portuguese soldiers requested earlier by Lebena
Dengel, defeated the Muslim forces and killed Gran. The death of
charismatic Grang destroyed the unity of the Muslim forces that had been
created by their leader’s successes, skill, and reputation as a warrior
and religious figure. Christian armies slowly pushed Muslims back and
regained control of the highlands.With
the request of the Christian kingdom of Ethiopia, Portugal gave an
assistance for the defeat of the Muslims .The first Portuguese forces
responded to a request for aid in 1541, although by that time the
Portuguese were concerned primarily with strengthening their hegemony
over the Indian Ocean trade routes and with converting the Ethiopians to
Roman Catholicism. Nevertheless, joining the forces of the Christian
kingdom, the Portuguese succeeded eventually in helping to defeat and
kill Gragn.Efforts
to induce the Ethiopians to reject their Monophysite beliefs and accept
Rome’s supremacy continued for nearly a century and engendered
bitterness as Pro-and Anti-Catholic parties maneuvered for control of
the state. At last the expulsion of the Jesuits and all Roman Catholic
missionaries followed. This religious controversy contributed to the
isolation that followed for the next 200 years.Emperor
Fasilidas kept out the disruptive influences of the foreign Christians,
dealt with sporadic Muslim incursions, and in general sought to
reassert central authority and to reinvigorate the Solomonic monarchy
and the Orthodox church .He established his camp at Gonder - a locale
that gradually developed into a permanent capital and which became the
cultural and political center of Ethiopia during the Gonder period. After
the 16th century of Fasiladas’s time most of Ethiopia’s history was
dominated by regional nobility. But through this nobility sentiment, a
certain king who was devoted to the unity of the country, rose. Tewodros
II’s origin was in the era of the princess, but his ambitions were not
those of the regional nobility. After controlling Shewa, he faced
constant rebellions in other provinces, despite the fact that he could
reign in a relatively peaceful atmosphere from 1861 to 1863. After 1863
internal and external oppositions were enhanced against Emperor Tewodros
and Emperor Yohannes succeeded him in 1868.By
the late 18th century; although powerless Emperors and the Ethiopian
Orthodox (Coptic) church provided an element of continuity, real power
was in the hands of provincial Nobles from the highlands of Tigry, Oromo
and Amhara, who fought for control of the throne .In 1880’s Yohannes IV
from Tigray region successfully fended off Egyptians, Italians and
Dervishes; his successor, Menilik of shoa, reunited and expanded the
empire to the East, South and West of Shoa, taking over largely Oromo
inhabited areas rich in coffee, gold, ivory and slaves. Menilik‘s
successes coincides with the arrival of the European colonial powers. He
defeated the Italians at the battle of Adowa in 1896.Menilik
(who died in 1913) presided over the first stages of Ethiopian’s
modernization Haile Selassie (Emperor during1930-74) ;turned Ethiopia
into a centralized autocracy. The process was interrupted by the Italian
invasion and conquest of 1935-41. But after Ethiopia’s liberation
Emperor Haile Selassie continued a largely successful policy of
centralization, playing off the United Kingdom, which came close to
occupying Ethiopia after 1941 (it only withdrew from the Ogaden in 1948
and reserved Haud area in 1954), against the USA. In 1952, after
protracted discussion, Eritrea, a UN-mandated territory after the war,
was federated with Ethiopia. Haile Silassie immediately begun
dismantling its institutions, including the press ,trade unions,
political parties and the elected parliament ,an anathema to his own
highly centralized structure of control. In 1962 Eritrea became a
province of Ethiopia, igniting the Eritrean struggle for independence.
The struggle originally led by the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF),
suported mainly by Muslim pastoralists from low land areas, by the early
1970’s was joined by the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF),
which was more representative of the Tigrian highland agriculturists.Emperor
Haile Sellasie I supplied the trappings of a more modern state,
including, in 1955, a constitution with an elected, though powerless,
parliament. He made no real effort to change land policy, or adjust the
hierarchies of administrative power. During his reign Ethiopia remained
essentially feudal, with small Amhara-dominated modern sectors in the
bureaucracy and in industry. This provided the impetus for opposition
among non-Amhara nationalities, in Tigrai region in 1943, among Oromos
and Somalies in Bale in 1963-70 , and after 1961 in Eritrea. Emperor
Haile Sellasie himself preferred to concentrate on international
affairs. During his era Addis Ababa became the head quarters of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), and the UN Economic Commission for
Africa. His main ally was the USA. Ethiopia, the main recipient of US
aid in Africa in the 1950s and 1960s, provided the USA with a major
communications base at Kagnew, in Eritrea.Long
term weaknesses of the regime included a growing agrarian crisis,
inequitable distribution of land, and lack of development. More
immediately, the costs of the revolt in Eritrea after 1961, drought and
famine in Wallo in 1972-74 (in which 200,000 people died), and, by 1973,
Haile Sellasie ‘s own near senility and his failure to designate an
heir, fuelled the grievances of the military, students and workers. A
series of army mutinies, started in January 1974, accompanied paralleled
civilian strikes. Attempts at reform by a new Prime Minister made
little progress, and from June a coordinating committee of the armed
forces begun to arrest leading officials. Haile Sellasie was deposed in
September, and was murdered the following year. His remains were finally
reburied in Trinity Cathedral in November 2001, with the presence of
many of the exiled royal family. The monarchy was formally abolished in
March 1975.Under
the influence of left-wing politicians, the Provisional Military
Administrative Council (PMAC), which replaced the Imperial regime, begun
to see itself as the vanguard of Ethiopian revolution. In December
1974, Ethiopia was declared a Socialist state, and a program of
revolutionary reforms called Ethiopia Tikdem ('Ethiopia First’) was
initiated.In
April 1976, the Derg set forth its goals in greater detail in the
program for the National Democratic Revolution (PNDR). As announced by
the leaders, these objectives included progress toward Socialism under
the leadership of workers, peasants, the petite bourgeoisie, and all
anti-feudal and anti-imperialist forces. The Derg’s ultimate aim was the
creation of a one party system.Soon
after taking power, the Derg promoted Ye-Itiopia Hibrtesebeawinet
(Ethiopian Socialism). The concept was embodied in slogans such as
“self-reliance,” “the dignity of labor” and “the supremacy of the common
good.” These slogans were devised to combat the wide spread disdain of
mutual labor and a deeply rooted concern with status. Although
the government took a radical approach to land reform, it exercised
some caution with respect to the industrial and commercial sectors .In
January and February 1975, the Derg nationalized all Banks and Insurance
firms and seized control of practically every important company in the
country.In
February 1977, Mengistu declared himself as Derg’s chairman and set
about consolidating his power. However, several internal and external
challenges prevented Mengistu from doing this. Various insurgent groups
posed the most serious threat to the Derg. In February 1977, a terrorist
attack known as the White Terror had been initiated against Derg
members and their supporters. This violence provoked a government's
counteraction-the Red Terror. During the Red Terror, which lasted until
late 1978, government security forces systematically hunted down and
killed suspected members and supporters of opposition groups. Mengistu
and the Derg eventually won the struggle.Despite
strengthening its power, Derg couldn’t stand the activities of
insurgencies which appeared in various parts of the country, the most
important of which were in Eritrea and Tigray. The Derg decided to
impose a military settlement on the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) and
the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF). Attempts to invade
rebel-held Eritrea failed repeatedly, and the insurgent groups
controlled most of the country. Despite large commitments of arms and
training from Communist countries, the Derg failed to suppress the
opposition. The rebels controlled the country in 1991 & establish
their own government by the name of Ethiopian People Revolutionary
Democratic Front (EPRDF).
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