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	<title>Africa &#8211; Precision Background Screening</title>
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		<title>History of Ethiopia</title>
		<link>https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/history-of-ethiopia/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 11 Nov 2021 21:44:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Precision Background Screening]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Why Background Screening]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Africa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ethiopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>

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				<description><![CDATA[<p>Ethiopia boasts one of the oldest and most colourful histories of any African kingdom. In Prehistory, it was the home of the earliest hominids on this earth. Its traditional history stretches back to the time of King Solomon. Few know</p>
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<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img src="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Ethiopia-Map-1024x849.gif" alt="Map of Ethiopia" class="wp-image-1813" srcset="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Ethiopia-Map-1024x849.gif 1024w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Ethiopia-Map-300x249.gif 300w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Ethiopia-Map-768x637.gif 768w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Ethiopia-Map-1536x1274.gif 1536w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /></figure>



<p>Ethiopia boasts one of the oldest and most colourful histories of any African kingdom. In Prehistory, it was the home of the earliest hominids on this earth. Its traditional history stretches back to the time of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon">King Solomon</a>.</p>



<p>Few know much of the mighty
Axumite Empire that grew up in the north of the country after the birth of
Christ and which was a major trading centre for some seven hundred years.
Neither have many people heard of the awe-inspiring rock-hewn churches that
were constructed during the Middle Ages in Lalibela high on the Ethiopian <a href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plateau">plateau</a>.</p>



<p>Since that time, the country
has had very varied fortunes in all sorts of ways.</p>



<p>With frequent incursions from
neighbouring lands and particularly from the influences of Islam, social and
political development was somewhat piecemeal for a long time, with notable
periods of relative peace and stability such as that provided by the rule of
King Fasiledes in the 17th century in Gondar.</p>



<p>It was the Emperor Tewodros
who was to make real progress with his vision of a united Ethiopia in the 19th
century until his unfortunate demise following the arrival of British troops
under Robert Napier in 1868.</p>



<p>Ethiopia’s history in the
20th century is really fascinating, with great leaders such as Emperor Menelik
and Emperor Haile Selassie, with dramatic events such as the Italian occupation
before the Second World War, and with political turmoil provided by seventeen
years of Communist government and the following decade of uneasy movement
towards democracy.</p>



<p><strong>Prehistory</strong></p>



<p>Ethiopia is situated at the
north end of the great African Rift Valley and has been the site of some amazing
archaeological finds in recent years.</p>



<p>In 1974, the archaeologist
Donald Johansen was working near Hadar in the north-east of Ethiopia and
discovered the human skeleton of a female dating back 3.2 million years, a
member of the group Australopithecus afarensis. This female was named <a href="https://www.cmnh.org/lucy">‘Lucy’</a> by the digging team as the Beatles’
hit “Lucy in the sky with diamonds” was playing in the camp at the time. To the
Ethiopians, however, she is known as ‘dinkenesh’ or ‘birkenesh’ meaning
‘wonderful’. The skeleton is now on view on the ground floor of the National
Museum just above Arat Kilo in Addis Ababa.</p>



<p>Other more recent finds near
Hadar have served to confirm this part of the Rift Valley as a major site of
early man’s development.</p>



<p>We know that the Ancient
Egyptians traded in the Land of Punt for such commodities as gold, myrrh and
ivory and this is thought to have been situated in the Horn of Africa of which
Ethiopia is a part.</p>



<p>Local tradition has the Queen
of Sheba as an Ethiopian queen who travelled to King Solomon in Jerusalem.
Their child, Menelik, was to be the first in the Solomonic line of Ethiopian
emperors, eventually culminating with Emperor Haile Selassie in the 20th
century. Tradition also says that Menelik brought the Ark of the Covenant from
Jerusalem to Ethiopia and that it still exists under close guard in the St Mary
Zion chapel in Axum.</p>



<p>Before the birth of Christ
was developed the language of Ge’ez, a kind of Latin and a forerunner of
today’s lingua franca Amharic. Ge’ez is still spoken by priests today.</p>



<p><strong>Axumite Empire</strong></p>



<p>The north of Ethiopia was to
be of world importance as an influential trading centre during the first seven
centuries after the birth of Christ.</p>



<p>Centring on the city of Axum,
today an important city on the Historic Route, and strategically situated near
to the bottom of the Red Sea, it was a vital commercial crossroads between
Egypt and the Mediterranean and the eastern countries of India and Ceylon.
Exotic trade flourished in this richly fertile and agricultural area.</p>



<p>Exports from Axum included
ivory, animal skins, rhino horn and frankincense. Imports came from India,
Arabia and Egypt and included wine, olive oil, iron and glassware. During the
great years of the Axumite Empire, coinage in bronze, silver and gold was
produced, immense stone monuments were erected and Christianity was to
introduced to Ethiopia.</p>



<p><strong>Middle Ages</strong></p>



<p>By the early 12th century,
the importance of Axum had declined and the capital of Ethiopia had shifted to
near present day Lalibela, high up on the central plateau.</p>



<p>Of this period we know
comparatively little, and yet it is from this time that dates one of the most
extraordinary archaeological sites in the world, the rock-hewn churches of
Lalibela.</p>



<p>Legend has it that King Lalibela
himself travelled to Jerusalem and so wondered at the buildings he saw there
that he determined to create an Ethiopian Jerusalem high in the Lasta
Mountains.</p>



<p>These amazing churches attest
to an epoch in Ethiopian history which must have known immense technical skill
and competence and yet of which we have almost no written record. Tradition
tells us that the world’s greatest craftsmen toiled during the day to create
these monuments while bands of angels took over to continue the work by night!</p>



<p>It was also during the Middle
Ages in Europe that the name of Prester John came to be associated with
Ethiopia at the royal courts. This legendary priest apparently ruled over a
land full of riches and luxury where precious gems and all manner of exotic
items were plentiful. It is thought that the first Portuguese expeditions to
Ethiopia in the 16th century and the even earlier travels of the Knights
Templar might well have been inspired by the idea of discovering Prester John’s
kingdom.</p>



<p><strong>17<sup>th</sup> Century</strong></p>



<p>The years leading up to the
17th century were to see all manner of religious challenges from outside the
country, notably from the Moslems under Mohammed Gragn the Left-Handed in the
1530s and, more peaceably, from the Jesuits in the early 1600s. At the same
time, the Oromos from Kenya and the south of the country were making strong
incursions into the Ethiopian empire.</p>



<p>Ethiopia was in need of a
strong emperor and found one in Emperor Fasiledes who took over from his father
Susenyos in 1632 and, in 1636, founded his new capital in Gondar near Lake
Tana. The city of Gondar was the first permanent capital and was to flourish
until the early 19th century.</p>



<p>Emperor Fasiledes was to
bring a period of stability to Ethiopia and Gondar was to become a
sophisticated and artistic city with its central Royal Enclosure of magnificent
castles started by Fasiledes and continued by ensuing monarchs.</p>



<p><strong>19<sup>th</sup> Century</strong></p>



<p>In 1855, an unusual character
who had once lived as a bandit had himself crowned as Emperor Tewodros and set
out to unify his large and disparate country. He showed himself to be a very
capable and creative monarch and he chose the mountain of Maqdala as his royal
base.</p>



<p>He planned a system of roads
across the country, encouraged land reform, established a national army and
promoted Amharic as his country’s lingua franca. He was a reforming monarch who
took great pride in his country, his people and in himself.</p>



<p>He sought British and other
European support for his reforms and, when this was not forthcoming, he
imprisoned two British ambassadors who were at his court at that time.</p>



<p>When Queen Victoria learned
of this, she sent Sir Robert Napier with an army of soldiers, elephants and
camels to achieve a rescue. Tewodros’s reforming zeal had made him unpopular
with local chieftains and they supported Napier’s contingent and swelled its
numbers.</p>



<p>As Napier and his men
approached the summit of Maqdala in 1868, Tewodros, still refusing to submit,
shot himself in the mouth. Maqdala was razed to the ground and the British
troops returned triumphantly to England taking with them many hundreds of royal
artefacts and manuscripts.</p>



<p><strong>20<sup>th</sup> Century</strong></p>



<p>The 20th century was to be a
period of great positive development as well as great trauma and anguish for
Ethiopia.</p>



<p>In the late 1800s, there were
to be threats and incursions from both the Italians (with a great and memorable
victory for the Ethiopians over the Italian troops at Adwa in 1896) and the
Dervishes from the Sudan (with another Ethiopian victory in 1889).</p>



<p>It was to be Emperor Menelik
II who was to take Ethiopia into the modern world of the 20th century. He chose
the site for his new capital of Addis Ababa – his ‘New Flower’ – and set to
creating a modern country with electricity, telephones, schools, hospitals and
a railway.</p>



<p>In world terms, it was to be <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Haile-Selassie-I">Emperor Haile Selassie</a>, crowned in 1930, who was to make
Ethiopia a known world power.</p>



<p>He held his country together
as a nation through the Italian occupation from 1936 to 1941, made good
relations with European monarchs and statesmen, and spoke up boldly for his
people in the League of Nations.</p>



<p>He survived as monarch until
1974 when he was overthrown and murdered by the Derg, the Communist regime
under the military colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam, and Ethiopia was plunged into
a stagnating 17 years of oppressive and repressive dictatorship.</p>



<p>The great famines of 1972-4
and 1984-5 were to bring the country to its knees and to bring it also to the
concern of the entire world thanks to resounding media coverage.</p>



<p>In 1991, Mengistu was at last
driven out of the country, the Communist regime fell and the long journey
towards democracy was started. After a period of transitional government under
Meles Zenawi, the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia was proclaimed in
1995 and elections were held with Meles Zenawi being re-elected to leadership.
This progress continues strongly today.</p>



<p>The three-year border dispute
with Eritrea that erupted in 1998 did little to help the economic stability of
either country but, with the help of UN peace-keeping forces, this problem
seems to be resolving itself and Ethiopia looks forward to a period of strong
economic development and growth.</p>



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