In the
mid-sixteenth century, its political and military
organization already weakened by the Muslim assault, the
Christian kingdom began to be pressured on the south and
southeast by movements of the Oromo (called Galla by the
Amhara). These migrations also affected the Sidama, Muslim
pastoralists in the lowlands, and Adal. At this time, the
Oromo, settled in far southern Ethiopia, were an egalitarian
pastoral people divided into a number of competing segments
or groups but sharing a type of age-set system1
of social organization called the gada
system,2 which was ideally suited for warfare.
Their predilection toward warfare, apparently combined with
an expanding population of both people and cattle, led to a
long-term predatory expansion at the expense of their
neighbors after about 1550. Unlike the highland Christians
or on occasion the lowland Muslims, the Oromo were not
concerned with establishing an empire or imposing a
religious system. In a series of massive but uncoordinated
movements during the second half of the sixteenth century,
they penetrated much of the southern and northern highlands
as well as the lowlands to the east, affecting Christians
and Muslims equally. These
migrations also profoundly affected the Oromo. Disunited in
the extreme, they attacked and raided each other as readily
as neighboring peoples in their quest for new land and
pastures. As they moved farther from their homeland and
encountered new physical and human environments, entire
segments of the Oromo population adapted by changing their
mode of economic life, their political and social
organization, and their religious adherence. Many mixed with
the Amhara (particularly in Shewa), became Christians, and
eventually obtained a share in governing the kingdom. In
some cases, royal family members came from the union of
Amhara and Oromo elements. In other cases, Oromo, without
losing their identity, became part of the nobility. But no
matter how much they changed, Oromo groups generally
retained their language and sense of local identity. So
differentiated and dispersed had they become, however, that
few foreign observers recognized the Oromo as a distinct
people until the twentieth century. In a more
immediate sense, the Oromo migration resulted in a weakening
of both Christian and Muslim power and drove a wedge between
the two faiths along the eastern edge of the highlands. In
the Christian kingdom, Oromo groups infiltrated large areas
in the east and south, with large numbers settling in Shewa
and adjacent parts of the central highlands. Others
penetrated as far north as eastern Tigray. The effect of the
Oromo migrations was to leave the Ethiopian state fragmented
and much reduced in size, with an alien population in its
midst. Thereafter, the Oromo played a major role in the
internal dynamics of Ethiopia, both assimilating and being
assimilated as they were slowly incorporated into the
Christian kingdom. In the south, the Sidama fiercely
resisted the Oromo, but, as in the central and northern
highlands, they were compelled to yield at least some
territory. In the east, the Oromo swept up to and even
beyond Harer, dealing a devastating blow to what remained of
Adal and contributing in a major way to its
decline. 1
The age-set system comprised several named sets (or groups)
of men, each of which consists of those initiated in a given
period. Each set passes through a series of age- grades,
taking on the rights, duties, and activities specific to the
grade. In Ethiopia such a system coexists with a
generation-set system in some ethnic groups, e.g., the
gada system (q.v.) among the Oromo. 2
Gada was an Oromo term used to refer to a system that
groups persons (invariably males) of the same generation
(rather than age) into sets. The sets are ordered
hierarchically and assigned a range of social, military,
political, and ritual rights and responsibilities.
Generation-set systems are found in varying forms among the
Oromo and other groups, e.g., the Konso and
Sidama. Trials
of the Christian
Kingdom
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with European Christendom
Library of Congress Country Study Oromo
Migrations and Their Impact
Notes
Library of Congress Country Study
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