Egyptian Muslims
had destroyed the neighboring Nile River valley's Christian
states in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Tenuous
relations with Christians in Western Europe and the
Byzantine Empire continued via the Coptic Church in Egypt.
The Coptic patriarchs in Alexandria were responsible for the
assignment of Ethiopian patriarchs--a church policy that
Egypt's Muslim rulers occasionally tried to use to their
advantage. For centuries after the Muslim conquests of the
early medieval period, this link with the Eastern churches
constituted practically all of Ethiopia's administrative
connection with the larger Christian world. A more direct if
less formal contact with the outside Christian world was
maintained through the Ethiopian Monophysite community in
Jerusalem and the visits of Ethiopian pilgrims to the Holy
Land. Ethiopian monks from the Jerusalem community attended
the Council of Florence in 1441 at the invitation of the
pope, who was seeking to reunite the Eastern and Western
churches. Westerners learned about Ethiopia through the
monks and pilgrims and became attracted to it for two main
reasons. First, many believed Ethiopia was the long-sought
land of the legendary Christian priest-king of the East,
Prester John. Second, the West viewed Ethiopia as a
potentially valuable ally in its struggle against Islamic
forces that continued to threaten southern Europe until the
Turkish defeat at the Battle of Lepanto in 1571. Portugal, the
first European power to circumnavigate Africa and enter the
Indian Ocean, displayed initial interest in this potential
ally by sending a representative to Ethiopia in 1493. The
Ethiopians, in turn, sent an envoy to Portugal in 1509 to
request a coordinated attack on the Muslims. Europe received
its first written accounts of the country from Father
Francisco Alvarez, a Franciscan who accompanied a Portuguese
diplomatic expedition to Ethiopia in the 1520s. His book,
The Prester John of the Indies, stirred further European
interest and proved a valuable source for future historians.
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 Grañ. Portuguese Roman
Catholic missionaries arrived in 1554. 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 least two emperors
in this period allegedly converted to Roman Catholicism. The
second of these, Susenyos (reigned 1607- 32), after a
particularly fierce battle between adherents of the two
faiths, abdicated in 1632 in favor of his son, Fasiladas
(reigned 1632-67), to spare the country further bloodshed.
The expulsion of the Jesuits and all Roman Catholic
missionaries followed. This religious controversy left a
legacy of deep hostility toward foreign Christians and
Europeans that continued into the twentieth century. It also
contributed to the isolation that followed for the next 200
years. Emperor Fasiladas
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 revived the practice of confining royal family members on
a remote mountaintop to lessen challenges to his rule and
distinguished himself by reconstructing the cathedral at
Aksum (destroyed by Grañ) and by establishing his
camp at Gonder--a locale that gradually developed into a
permanent capital and that became the cultural and political
center of Ethiopia during the Gonder period. Although the
Gonder period produced a flowering of architecture and art
that lasted more than a century, Gonder monarchs never
regained full control over the wealth and manpower that the
nobility had usurped during the long wars against
Grañ and then the Oromo. Many nobles, commanding the
loyalty of their home districts, had become virtually
independent, especially those on the periphery of the
kingdom. Moreover, during Fasiladas's reign and that of his
son Yohannis I (reigned 1667-82), there were substantial
differences between the two monastic orders of the Orthodox
Church concerning the proper response to the Jesuit
challenge to Monophysite doctrine on the nature of Christ.
The positions of the two orders were often linked to
regional opposition to the emperor, and neither Fasiladas
nor Yohannis was able to settle the issue without alienating
important components of the church. Iyasu I (reigned
1682-1706) was a celebrated military leader who excelled at
the most basic requirement of the warrior-king. He
campaigned constantly in districts on the south and
southeast of the kingdom and personally led expeditions to
Shewa and beyond, areas from which royal armies had long
been absent. Iyasu also attempted to mediate the doctrinal
quarrel in the church, but a solution eluded him. He
sponsored the construction of several churches, among them
Debre Birhan Selassie, one of the most beautiful and famous
of the churches in Gonder. Iyasu's reign
also saw the Oromo begin to play a role in the affairs of
the kingdom, especially in the military sense. Iyasu
co-opted some of the Oromo groups by enlisting them into his
army and by converting them to Christianity. He came
gradually to rely almost entirely upon Oromo units and led
them in repeated campaigns against their countrymen who had
not yet been incorporated into the Amhara-Tigray state.
Successive Gonder kings, particularly Iyasu II (reigned
1730-55), likewise relied upon Oromo military units to help
counter challenges to their authority from the traditional
nobility and for purposes of campaigning in farflung Oromo
territory. By the late eighteenth century, the Oromo were
playing an important role in political affairs as well. At
times during the first half of the nineteenth century, Oromo
was the primary language at court, and Oromo leaders came to
number among the highest nobility of the kingdom. During the reign
of Iyoas (reigned 1755-69), son of Iyasu II, the most
important political figure was Ras Mikael Sehul, a good
example of a great noble who made himself the power behind
the throne. Mikael's base was the province of Tigray, which
by now enjoyed a large measure of autonomy and from which
Mikael raised up large armies with which he dominated the
Gonder scene. In 1769 he demonstrated his power by ordering
the murder of two kings (Iyoas and Yohannis II) and by
placing Tekla Haimanot II (son of Yohannis II) on the
throne, a weak ruler who did Mikael's bidding. Mikael
continued in command until the early 1770s, when a coalition
of his opponents compelled him to retire to Tigray, where he
eventually died of old age. Mikael's brazen
murder of two kings and his undisguised role as kingmaker in
Gonder signaled the beginning of what Ethiopians have long
termed the Zemene Mesafint (Era of the Princes), a time when
Gonder kings were reduced to ceremonial figureheads while
their military functions and real power lay with powerful
nobles. During this time, traditionally dating from 1769 to
1855, the kingdom no longer existed as a united entity
capable of concerted political and military activity.
Various principalities were ruled by autonomous nobles, and
warfare was constant. The five-volume
work Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile by James
Bruce, the Scottish traveler who lived in Ethiopia from 1769
to 1772, describes some of the bloody conflicts and personal
rivalries that consumed the kingdom. During the most
confused period, around 1800, there were as many as six
rival emperors. Provincial warlords were masters of the
territories they controlled but were subject to raids from
other provinces. Peasants often left the land to become
soldiers or brigands. In this period, too, Oromo nobles,
often nominally Christian and in a few cases Muslim, were
among those who struggled for hegemony over the highlands.
The church, still riven by theological controversy,
contributed to the disunity that was the hallmark of the
Zemene Mesafint.
Library of Congress Country Study Contact with
European Christendom
The Gonder State
and the Ascendancy of the Nobility
Library of Congress Country Study
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