Ethiopia:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
The
Trials of the Christian Kingdom and the Decline of Imperial
Power
From the
mid-fifteenth through the mid-seventeenth century, Christian
Ethiopians were confronted by the aggressiveness of the
Muslim states, the far-reaching migrations of the Oromo, and
the efforts of the Portuguese--who had been summoned to aid
in the fight against the forces of Islam--to convert them
from Monophysite Christianity to Roman Catholicism. The
effects of the Muslim and Oromo activities and of the civil
strife engendered by the Portuguese left the empire much
weakened by the mid-seventeenth century. One result was the
emergence of regional lords essentially independent of the
throne, although in principle subject to it..
Growth
of Regional Muslim States
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 peoples east and south of the highlands had
embraced Islam, and some had established powerful sultanates
(or shaykhdoms). One of these was the sultanate of Ifat in
the northeastern Shewan foothills, and another was centered
in the Islamic city of Harer farther east. In the lowlands
along the Red Sea were two other important Muslim
peoples--the Afar and the Somali. As mentioned previously,
Ifat posed a major threat to the Christian kingdom, but it
was finally defeated by Amda Siyon in the mid-fourteenth
century after a protracted struggle. During this conflict,
Ifat was supported by other sultanates and by Muslim
pastoralists, but for the most part, the Islamicized peoples
inhabited small, independent states and were divided by
differences in language and culture. Many of them spoke
Cushitic languages, unlike the Semitic speakers of Harer.
Some were sedentary cultivators and traders, while others
were pastoralists. Consequently, unity beyond a single
campaign or even the coordination of military activities was
difficult to sustain.
Their
tendency toward disunity notwithstanding, the Muslim forces
continued to pose intermittent threats to the Christian
kingdom. By the late fourteenth century, descendants of the
ruling family of Ifat had moved east to the area around
Harer and had reinvigorated the old Muslim sultanate of
Adal, which became the most powerful Muslim entity in the
Horn of Africa. Adal came to control the important trading
routes from the highlands to the port of Zeila, thus posing
a threat to Ethiopia's commerce and, when able, to christian
control of the highlands.
Although
the Christian state was unable to impose its rule over the
Muslim states to the east, it was strong enough to resist
Muslim incursions through the fourteenth century and most of
the fifteenth. As the long reign of Zara Yakob came to an
end, however, the kingdom again experienced succession
problems. It was the monarchs' practice to marry several
wives, and each sought to forward the cause of her sons in
the struggle for the throne. In those cases where the sons
of the deceased king were too young to take office, there
could also be conflict within the council of advisers at
court. In a polity that had been held together primarily by
a strong warrior king, one or more generations of dynastic
conflict could lead to serious internal and external
problems. Only the persistence of internal conflicts among
Muslims generally and within the sultanate of Adal in
particular prevented a Muslim onslaught. Through the first
quarter of the sixteenth century, relations between
Christian and Muslim powers took the form of raids and
counterraids. Each side sought to claim as many slaves and
as much booty as possible, but neither side attempted to
bring the other firmly under its rule.
By the
second decade of the sixteenth century, however, a young
soldier in the Adali army, Ahmad ibn Ibrahim 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 status of a religious
leader. Ahmad, who came to be called Grañ (the
"Lefthanded") by his Christian enemies, rallied the
ethnically diverse Muslims, including many Afar and Somali,
in a jihad intended to break Christian power. In 1525
Grañ led his first expedition against a Christian
army and over the next two or three years continued to
attack Ethiopian territory, burning churches, taking
prisoners, and collecting booty. At the Battle of Shimbra
Kure in 1529, according to historian Taddesse Tamrat, "Imam
Ahmad broke the backbone of Christian resistance against his
offensives." The emperor, Lebna Dengel (reigned 1508-40),
was unable to organize an effective defense, and in the
early 1530s Grañ's armies penetrated the heartland of
the Ethiopian state--northern Shewa, Amhara, and Tigray,
devastating the countryside and thereafter putting much of
what had been the Christian kingdom under the rule of Muslim
governors.
It was
not until 1543 that the emperor Galawdewos (reigned
1540-49), joining with a small number of Portuguese soldiers
requested earlier by Lebna Dengel, defeated the Muslim
forces and killed Grañ. The death of the charismatic
Grañ 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 the Muslims back and regained control
of the highlands. Ethiopians had suffered extraordinary
material and moral losses during the struggle against
Grañ, and it would be decades or even centuries
before they would recover fully. The memory of the bitter
war against Grañ remains vivid even today.
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Ethiopia:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Amhara
Ascendancy
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