Modern Ethiopia
is the product of many millennia of interaction among
peoples in and around the Ethiopian highlands region. From
the earliest times, these groups combined to produce a
culture that at any given time differed markedly from that
of surrounding peoples. The evolution of this early
"Ethiopian" culture was driven by a variety of ethnic,
linguistic, and religious groups. One of the most
significant influences on the formation and evolution of
culture in northern Ethiopia consisted of migrants from
Southwest Arabia. They arrived during the first millennium
B.C. and brought Semitic speech, writing, and a distinctive
stone-building tradition to northern Ethiopia. They seem to
have contributed directly to the rise of the Aksumite
kingdom, a trading state that prospered in the first
centuries of the Christian era and that united the shores of
the southern Red Sea commercially and at times politically.
It was an Aksumite king who accepted Christianity in the
mid-fourth century, a religion that the Aksumites bequeathed
to their successors along with their concept of an
empire-state under centralized rulership. The establishment
of what became the Ethiopian Orthodox Church was critical in
molding Ethiopian culture and identity. The spread of Islam
to the coastal areas of the Horn of Africa in the eighth
century, however, led to the isolation of the highlands from
European and Middle Eastern centers of Christendom. The
appearance of Islam was partly responsible for what became a
long-term rivalry between Christians and Muslims--a rivalry
that exacerbated older tensions between highlanders and
lowlanders and agriculturalists and pastoralists that have
persisted to the present day. Kingship and
Orthodoxy, both with their roots in Aksum, became the
dominant institutions among the northern Ethiopians in the
post-Aksumite period. In the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, a dynasty known as the Zagwe ruled from their
capital in the northern highlands. The Zagwe era is one of
the most artistically creative periods in Ethiopian history,
involving among other things the carving of a large number
of rock-hewn churches. The Zagwe
heartland was well south of the old Aksumite domain, and the
Zagwe interlude was but one phase in the long-term southward
shift of the locus of political power. The successors of the
Zagwe after the mid-thirteenth century--the members of the
so-called "Solomonic" dynasty-- located themselves in the
central highlands and involved themselves directly in the
affairs of neighboring peoples still farther south and
east. In these regions,
the two dominant peoples of what may be termed the
"Christian kingdom of Ethiopia," the Amhara of the central
highlands and the Tigray of the northern highlands,
confronted the growing power and confidence of Muslim
peoples who lived between the eastern edge of the highlands
and the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. In religious and ethnic
conflicts that reached their climax in the midsixteenth
century, the Amhara and Tigray turned back a determined
Muslim advance with Portuguese assistance, but only after
the northern highlands had been overrun and devastated. The
advent of the Portuguese in the area marked the end of the
long period of isolation from the rest of Christendom that
had been near total, except for contact with the Coptic
Church of Egypt. The Portuguese, however, represented a
mixed blessing, for with them they brought their
religion--Roman Catholicism. During the early seventeenth
century, Jesuit and kindred orders sought to impose
Catholicism on Ethiopia, an effort that led to civil war and
the expulsion of the Catholics from the kingdom. By the
mid-sixteenth century, the Oromo people of southwestern
Ethiopia had begun a prolonged series of migrations during
which they overwhelmed the Muslim states to the east and
began settling in the central highlands. A profound
consequence of the far-flung settlement of the Oromo was the
fusion of their culture in some areas with that of the
heretofore dominant Amhara and Tigray. The period of
trials that resulted from the Muslim invasions, the Oromo
migrations, and the challenge of Roman Catholicism had drawn
to a close by the middle of the seventeenth century. During
the next two-and-one-half centuries, a reinvigorated
Ethiopian state slowly reconsolidated its control over the
northern highlands and eventually resumed expansion to the
south, this time into lands occupied by the
Oromo. By the
mid-nineteenth century, the Ethiopian state under Emperor
Tewodros II (reigned 1855-68) found itself beset by a number
of problems, many of them stemming from the expansion of
European influence in northeastern Africa. Tewodros's
successors, Yohannis IV (reigned 1872-89) and Menelik II
(reigned 1889-1913), further expanded and consolidated the
state, fended off local enemies, and dealt with the
encroachments of European powers, in particular Italy,
France, and Britain. Italy posed the greatest threat, having
begun to colonize part of what would become its future
colony of Eritrea in the mid-1880s. To one of
Menelik's successors, Haile Selassie I (reigned 1930-74),
was left the task of dealing with resurgent Italian
expansionism. The disinclination of the world powers,
especially those in the League of Nations, to counter
Italy's attack on Ethiopia in 1935 was in many ways a
harbinger of the indecisiveness that would lead to World War
II. In the early years of the war, Ethiopia was retaken from
the Italians by the British, who continued to dominate the
country's external affairs after the war ended in 1945. A
restored Haile Selassie attempted to implement reforms and
modernize the state and certain sectors of the economy. For
the most part, however, mid-twentieth century Ethiopia
resembled what could loosely be termed a "feudal"
society. The later years
of Haile Selassie's rule saw a growing insurgency in
Eritrea, which had been federated with and eventually
annexed by the Ethiopian government following World War II.
This insurgency, along with other internal pressures,
including severe famine, placed strains on Ethiopian society
that contributed in large part to the 1974 military
rebellion that ended the Haile Selassie regime and, along
with it, more than 2,000 years of imperial rule. The most
salient results of the coup d'état were the eventual
emergence of Lieutenant Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam as
head of state and the reorientation of the government and
national economy from capitalism to Marxism. A series of
crises immediately consumed the revolutionary regime. First,
domestic political violence erupted as groups maneuvered to
take control of the revolution. Then, the Eritrean
insurgency flared at the same time that an uprising in the
neighboring region of Tigray began. In mid-1977 Somalia,
intent upon wresting control of the Ogaden region from
Ethiopia and sensing Addis Ababa's distractions, initiated a
war on Ethiopia's eastern frontier. Mengistu, in need of
military assistance, turned to the Soviet Union and its
allies, who supplied vast amounts of equipment and thousands
of Cuban combat troops, which enabled Ethiopia to repulse
the Somali invasion. Misery mounted
throughout Ethiopia in the 1980s. Recurrent drought and
famine, made worse in the north by virtual civil war, took
an enormous human toll, necessitating the infusion of
massive amounts of international humanitarian aid. The
insurgencies in Eritrea, Tigray, and other regions
intensified until by the late 1980s they threatened the
stability of the regime. Drought, economic mismanagement,
and the financial burdens of war ravaged the economy. At the
same time, democratic reform in Eastern Europe and the
Soviet Union threatened to isolate the revolutionary
government politically, militarily, and economically from
its allies.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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