Ehtiopia's History
Human settlement in Ethiopia is very ancient. Fossilized remains of the
earliest ancestors to the human species, discovered in Ethiopia, have been
assigned dates as long ago as 5.9 million years.
Together with Djibouti and the southeastern part of the Red Sea coast of
Somalia, it is considered the most likely location of the land known to
the ancient Egyptians as Punt (or "Ta Netjeru," meaning land
of the Gods), whose first mention dates to the twenty-fifth century BC.
Ethiopia is the oldest independent country in Sub Saharan Africa. The earliest
evidence of Ethiopian history was in around 1000BC when the Queen of Sheba
visited King Solomon.
The first recorded kingdom in Ethiopia grew around Axum during the 3rd
century BC. Axum was an offshoot of the Semitic Sabeam kingdoms of southern
Arabia, it became the greatest ivory market in the north east.
Ethiopia influenced the state of Meroe in Sudan. Over the next few centuries,
Axum encroached more and more on Meroe until, when Christianity became
the state religion in the 4th century AD, Ethiopia conquered the kingdom.
Christianity was adopted in the country by a Syrian youth named Frumentius
who grew up in Axum and converted the King; the youth was later made
the first Bishop in 330 AD. Axum conquered parts of Yemen and southern
Arabia
and remained a great power until the death of the Prophet Mohammed.
Islam was expanding which had the effect of cutting off Ethiopia from its
former Mediterranean trading partners and allies, Muslims replaced the
Egyptians in
the Red Sea ports. Ethiopians were allowed to consecrate their Bishops in Cairo
and pilgrims were allowed to travel to Jerusalem.
Unfortunately, the Ethiopians did not have such a good relationship with the
tribes in the south and pressure from these tribes forced the Ethiopian emperors
to adopt the life of nomadic military commanders living in makeshift cities.
The priests were forced to become monks and hermits. After some time these
tribes were pacified and Ethiopia recovered enough to take the provinces of
Amhara,
Lasta, Gojam and Damot. At a similar time the capital was moved to the south
to the Amhara province.
In the 12th century Muslim expansion began.
As independent trading kingdoms grew up along the coast of the Red Sea they
expanded down to the Awash Valley. Their wealth was based mainly upon a trade
in slaves, gold and ivory.
During the 13th and 14th centuries the Red Sea Kingdoms became Ethiopian
vassal states.
During the 15th century with the expansion of the Ottoman Empire, Ethiopian
fortunes were reversed. The Turks who succeeded the Mamelukes in Egypt
supported the Muslim kingdoms providing both firearms and artillery; the
only thing
that saved the Christian empire from collapse was the Portuguese. In 1542
as a result of this, missionaries from Portugal attempted to persuade the
Ethiopians to accept the Pope in Rome as the leader of the Church.
In the 18th century the empire broke down into constituent provinces, and
a hundred years of constant warfare between existing war lords and their
successors followed.
Ras Kassa had himself crowned as the emperor at Axum under a different
name, Tewodros. This happened in 1855 when he constructed an army to reunite
the
provinces of Tigre, Amhara and Shoa. Tewodros shot himself because the
British, in 1867, blockaded his fortress.
He was succeeded by John the 4th who took power by using British arms and
was forced to accept a powerful young vassal King of Shoa as his heir,
named Menelik. He built up large stores of European arms which he used
to defeat
the Italians in 1896 at Adowa.
John the 4th enlarged his empire at the expense of the Afars, the Somalis
of Harrar and the Ogadam, and the Gallas.
In 1916, Haile Selassie, born Prince Ras Tafari Makonnen, led a revolution
and became Prince Regent, heir to the throne. He was proclaimed Emperor
in 1930.
Mussolini, from Italy overran the country in 1936. Haile Selassie fled
to England where he lived in exile. He appealed for help, but none was
offered
although the western nations condemned the action. The Italians remained
present in Ethiopia until 1941. Haile Selassie returned as Emperor.
After World War 2 Ethiopia's course as an independent nation continued
although the province of Eritrea remained under British control until 1952
when it
was federated with Ethiopia, a result of a plebiscite, organised by the
UN. The Muslims were unhappy about the federation and so in 1962 the federation
was dissolved and the province was annexed by Haile Selassie. The consequence
of this was the outbreak of guerrilla warfare, the Muslims against the
Christians.
The Eritreans regarded the annexation as tantamount to being colonised
by another African nation and there were many years of inconclusive fighting
which also led to mutiny and made more people aware of the revolutionary
current which was sweeping through Ethiopian society. This was one of the
principle factors leading to Haile Selassie's downfall.
Haile Selassie was respected as an African statesman and as a key person
in the construction of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU). Wealth
went to nobility and the church. Many thousands of people died due to famine
and
the war in Eritrea.
In 1974 amid a wave of demonstrations, mutinies and uprisings, Haile Selassie
was deposed and held under armed guard in his palace. He died several months
later.
Ethiopia was then plunged into a social revolution and a group of junior
army officers imposed a military dictatorship. The leader was Mengistu
Haile Miriam. He threw out Americans and then instituted a number of radical
reforms.
He jailed the opposition; many people were massacred by vigilante groups;
opposition arose everywhere; the Eritreans stepped up the guerrilla campaign
and the Somalis decided that the time was right to press their claims over
the Ogaden desert and invaded in force.
By 1978 the Somalis had managed to overrun Jijiga which was an important
Ethiopian military base and were threatening to take areas through which
the vital railway ran.
The military regime in Addis Ababa was at a point of collapse but then
the Russian and Cuban troops intervened with the help from Moscow, Mengistu
was
able to turn the Somalis back across the border.
Mengistu's policies included creating 'people's committees' called Kebeles
which controlled the everyday lives of the people in great detail. Large
numbers of people were forcibly moved around the country in an attempt
to counter famine. Conscription into the army eventually called on ever
man
from 18 to 70 years old.
Mengistu found himself with a discontented population, frequent famine,
war in Eritrea, Ogaden and Tigray. Finally, in 1991, when the rebel forces
were
about to seize Addis, Mengistu hastily left the country for Zimbabwe.
A
new government was led by Meles Zenawi who set out a policy to pursue
multi-party democracy. Eritrea became independent led by Isaias Afwerki,
a friend of Zenawi.
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