First Italo-Ethiopian War: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|1895–1896 war between the Ethiopia and Italy}} |
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{{about|the first Italian invasion of Ethiopia|the precedent undeclared war between Italy and Ethiopia during the Italian conquest of Eritrea|Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889|the second Italian invasion of Ethiopia|Second Italo-Ethiopian War}} |
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{{about|the war of 1895{{endash}}1896|the earlier, undeclared war between Italy and Ethiopia|Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889|other wars between Italy and Ethiopia|Italo-Ethiopian war (disambiguation)}} |
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{{short description|1895–1896 war between the Ethiopian Empire and the Kingdom of Italy}} |
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{{Infobox military conflict |
{{Infobox military conflict |
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| conflict = First Italo-Ethiopian War |
| conflict = First Italo-Ethiopian War |
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| partof = the [[Scramble for Africa]] |
| partof = the [[Scramble for Africa]] |
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| image |
| image = {{Multiple image |
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| border = infobox |
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| image_size = |
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| total_width = 300 |
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| caption = Clockwise from top left: Italian soldiers en route to [[Massawa]]; castle of [[Yohannes IV]] at [[Mek'ele]];<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ethiopiantreasures.co.uk/pages/mekele.htm|title=Ethiopian Treasures|work=ethiopiantreasures.co.uk|accessdate=3 October 2015}}</ref> Ethiopian cavalry at the [[Battle of Adwa]]; Italian prisoners are freed following the end of hostilities; [[Menelik II]] at Adwa; [[Makonnen Wolde Mikael|''Ras'' Makonnen]] leading Ethiopian troops in the [[Battle of Amba Alagi (1895)|Battle of Amba Alagi]] |
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| perrow = 2/2 |
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| date = 15 December 1894 – 23 October 1896 |
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| image1 = Menelik - Adoua-2 (cropped).jpg |
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| place = [[Italian Eritrea|Eritrea]] and [[Ethiopian Empire|Ethiopia]] |
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| image2 = Battaglia di Amba Alagi (1895) L'eroica morte del maggiore Toselli.jpg |
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| result = Ethiopian victory; [[Treaty of Addis Ababa]] |
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| image3= Combattimento di Debra Aila (1895).jpg |
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| combatant1 ={{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy}} |
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| image4= Baratieri 1.jpg |
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*{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Italian Eritrea|Eritrea]] |
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| image5= Adoua 1.jpg |
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| combatant2 = {{flagcountry|Ethiopian Empire|old}}<br />'''{{small|Support}}''':<br />{{flagcountry|Russian Empire|23px}}<ref name="auto1">{{Cite web|url=http://www.sworld.com.ua/index.php/ru/history/world-history-and-the-history-of-ukraine/768-vinogradova-kv|title=The activities of the officer the Kuban Cossack army N. S. Leontjev in the Italian-Ethiopic war in 1895–1896}}</ref><ref name="auto">{{cite web|url=http://www.linkethiopia.org/guide/pankhurst/medicine/medicine_6.html |title=Ethiopia's Historic Quest for Medicine, 6 |publisher=The Pankhurst History Library |first=Pankhurst |last=Richard |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111003141829/http://www.linkethiopia.org/guide/pankhurst/medicine/medicine_6.html |archivedate=2011-10-03 }}</ref><ref name="Robert G. Patman 2009">{{harvnb|Patman|2009|pages=27–30}}</ref> <br />{{flagcountry|French Third Republic|23px}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://libcom.org/library/soviet-appeasement-collective-security-italo-ethiopian-war-1935-1936|title=Soviet Appeasement, Collective Security, and the Italo-Ethiopian war of 1935 and 1936|website=libcom.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last= Thomas Wilson|first= Edward|date= 1974|title= Russia and Black Africa Before World War II|location= New York|publisher= |page=57-58 }}</ref><hr>Eritrean rebels |
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| image6 = Ras Mangascià ed i Suoi Seguaci (1895).jpg |
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| territory = Independence of Ethiopia confirmed;<br />Part of Tigray annexed to Italian Eritrea.{{sfn|Perham|1948|p=58}}{{sfn|Marcus|1995|p=175}} |
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}}Clockwise from top left: [[Menelik II]] at Adwa; The death of [[Pietro Toselli|Major Toselli]]; [[Oreste Baratieri]] in Eritrea; [[Ras Mengesha Yohannes|Ras Mengesha]] on horseback; Illustration of ''[[Vittorio Dabormida|Dabormida]]'s last rally''; Depiction of the [[Battle of Debra Ailà]]. |
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| commander1 = |
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| date = 13 January 1895 – 23 October 1896<br>({{Age in years, months, weeks and days|month1=12|day1=15 |year=1894|month2=10|day2=23|year2=1896}}) |
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{{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Umberto I of Italy|King Umberto I]]<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Francesco Crispi]]<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Antonio Starabba, Marchese di Rudinì|Antonio Starabba]]<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Oreste Baratieri]]<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Vittorio Dabormida]]{{KIA}}<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Giuseppe Arimondi]]{{KIA}}<br />{{nowrap|{{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} [[Matteo Albertone]]{{POW}}}} |
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| place = [[Italian Eritrea]] and [[Ethiopian Empire|Ethiopia]] |
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| commander2 ={{flagicon|Ethiopian Empire|old}} [[Menelik II|Emperor Menelik II]]<br />{{nowrap|{{flagicon|Ethiopian Empire|old}} [[Taytu Betul|Empress Taytu Betul]]}}<br />{{flagicon|Ethiopian Empire|old}} [[Ras Alula|Ras Alula Engida]]<br />{{flagicon|Ethiopian Empire|old}} [[Ras Makonnen]]<br />{{flagicon|Ethiopian Empire|old}} [[Mikael of Wollo|Ras Mikael]]<br />{{flagicon|Ethiopian Empire|old}} [[Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam|Tekle Haymanot]]<br />{{flagicon|Ethiopian Empire|old}} [[Bahta Hagos]]{{KIA}} |
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| result = Ethiopian victory |
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| strength1 = 18,000<ref name=vand>{{Harvnb|Vandervort|1998|p=160}}</ref>–25,000<ref name="historynet.com">{{Cite web|url=https://www.historynet.com/first-italo-abyssinian-war-battle-of-adowa.htm|title=First Italo-Abyssinian War: Battle of Adowa|date=June 12, 2006|website=HistoryNet}}</ref> |
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| combatant1 = [[Kingdom of Italy]] |
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| strength2 = 196,000<ref name="historynet.com" /> |
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| combatant2 = [[Ethiopian Empire]] |
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* 80,000–100,000 with firearms, rest with bows, spears and swords{{#tag:ref|According to [[Richard Pankhurst (academic)|Richard Pankhurst]], the Ethiopians were armed with approximately 100,000 rifles of which about half were "fast firing".<ref name=p190>{{harvnb|Pankhurst|2001|p=190}}</ref>|group=nb}} |
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| territory = Sovereignty of Ethiopia confirmed; [[Eritrea–Ethiopia border|border with Italian Eritrea]] delineated |
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| casualties1 = '''18,000 casualties:'''<br />7,500 Italians dead<ref name=batadw>{{cite book |last=Milkias |first=Paulos |chapter=The Battle of Adwa: The Historic Victory of Ethiopia over European Colonialism |chapter-url=https://books.google.ca/books?id=nljca_pOqrEC&pg=PA71&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false |editor1=Paulos Milkias |editor2=Getachew Metaferia |year=2005 |title=The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism |page=71 |isbn=978-0-87586-414-3}}</ref><ref name=Clodfelter>{{harvnb|Clodfelter|2017|p=202}}</ref><br />7,100 Eritreans dead<ref name=batadw /> 1,428 Italians Wounded<ref name=batadw /> 1,865 Italians Captured<ref name=batadw /><br /> |
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| commander1 = [[Francesco Crispi]]<br>[[Oreste Baratieri]]<br>[[Giuseppe Arimondi]]{{KIA}}<br>[[Giuseppe Galliano]]{{KIA}}<br>[[Pietro Toselli]]{{KIA}} |
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| casualties2 = '''17,000 casualties:'''<br />7,000 dead<ref name=batadw /><br />10,000 wounded<ref name=batadw /> |
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| commander2 = [[Menelik II]]<br>[[Taytu Betul]]<br>[[Ras Mengesha Yohannes|Mengesha Yohannes]]<br>[[Welle Betul]] |
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| strength1 = 35,000<ref>{{cite book |last1=Marcus |first1=Harold G. |title=A history of Ethiopia |date=22 February 2002 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=9780520224797 |pages=97 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q7AwDwAAQBAJ&q=history+of+ethiopia |quote=Baratieri had a relatively small army of 35,000 men, mostly Eritreans}}</ref>–43,700<ref>{{cite book |last1=Marcus |first1=Harold G. |title=The Life and Times of Menelik II: Ethiopia, 1844-1913 |pages=168 |quote=the general's army consisted of 29,700 Italians, 14,000 colonial soldiers, and 70 field pieces}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title="Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876-1896) |last=Caulk |first=Richard |year=2002 |pages=506 |place=Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden |quote=In all nearly 40,000 officers and men, 8,500 mules and 100,000 tons of material were scraped together for an expeditionary force}}</ref> |
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| strength2 = 80,000{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=168}}–125,000<ref name=p190>{{harvnb|Pankhurst|2001|p=190}}</ref> |
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| casualties1 = 9,313 killed{{efn|4,424 Italians<ref>{{cite book|title=I prigionieri di Menelik, 1896-1897 |last=Dominioni |first=Matteo |year=2021 |pages=Table 1 |place=Mimesis Edizioni}}</ref> and 4,889 Eritreans killed.<ref>{{cite book |title=Italian Colonialism in Eritrea 1882-1941 |last=Negash |first=Tekeste |year=1987 |pages=23 }}</ref>}}<br /> 1,428 wounded<ref name="books.google.com">{{cite book |title=The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against |pages=286 |isbn=9780875864150 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f71M3BC6TtIC&dq=Fitawrari+Gebeyehu&pg=PA127|last1=Milkias |first1=Paulos |last2=Metaferia |first2=Getachew |year=2005|publisher=Algora }}</ref><br> 3,865 captured<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Berkeley |first1=George |title=The Campaign of Adowa and the rise of Menelik |journal=The Geographical Journal |date=1903 |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=345 |doi=10.2307/1775411 |jstor=1775411 |bibcode=1903GeogJ..21..175B |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1954915 |quote=1,865 were Italians and 2,000 were Eritrean askari.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Sean|last=Mclachlan|page=20|title=Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896|date=20 September 2011 |publisher=Bloomsbury USA |isbn=978-1-84908-457-4}}</ref> |
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| casualties2 = ~10,000 killed<ref name=vand4>{{harvnb|Vandervort|1998|p=160}}</ref> |
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| width = 335px |
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| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox First Italo-Ethiopian War}} |
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{{Scramble for Africa}} |
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{{Campaignbox First Italo-Ethiopian War}} |
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{{Scramble for Africa}} |
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The '''First Italo-Ethiopian War''', also referred to as the '''First Italo-Abyssinian War''', or simply in Italy as the '''Abyssinian War''' ({{langx|it|Guerra d'Abissinia}}), was a war fought between [[Kingdom of Italy|Italy]] and [[Ethiopian Empire|Ethiopia]] from 1895 to 1896. It originated from the disputed [[Treaty of Wuchale]], which the Italians claimed turned Ethiopia into an Italian protectorate. Full-scale war broke out in 1895, with Italian troops from [[Italian Eritrea]] achieving initial successes against Tigrayan warlords at [[battle of Coatit|Coatit]], [[battle of Senafe|Senafe]] and [[Battle of Debra Ailà|Debra Ailà]], until they were reinforced by a large Ethiopian army led by Emperor [[Menelik II]].{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=167}} The Italian defeat came about after the [[Battle of Adwa]], where the [[Army of the Ethiopian Empire|Ethiopian army]] dealt the outnumbered [[Royal Italian Army|Italian soldiers]] and [[Royal Corps of Eritrean Colonial Troops|Eritrean askaris]] a decisive blow and forced their retreat back into Eritrea. The war concluded with the [[Treaty of Addis Ababa]]. Because this was one of the first decisive victories by African forces over a European colonial power,<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title=5 Fascinating Battles of the African Colonial Era|url=https://www.britannica.com/list/5-fascinating-battles-of-the-african-colonial-era|access-date=14 June 2020|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica}}</ref> this war became a preeminent symbol of [[pan-Africanism]] and secured Ethiopia's sovereignty until the [[Second Italo-Ethiopian War]] of 1935–37.<ref>Professor Kinfe Abraham, "The Impact of the Adowa Victory on The Pan-African and Pan-Black Anti-Colonial Struggle," Address delivered to The Institute of Ethiopian Studies, Addis Ababa University, 8 February 2006</ref> |
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The '''First Italo-Ethiopian War'''{{efn|also referred to as the '''First Italo-Abyssinian War'''; {{lang-it|Guerra d'Abissinia}}, lit. ''Abyssinian War''}} was fought between [[Kingdom of Italy|Italy]] and [[Ethiopian Empire|Ethiopia]] (supported by [[Russian Empire|Russia]] and [[French Third Republic|France]]) from 1895 to 1896. It originated from the disputed [[Treaty of Wuchale]] which, the Italians claimed, turned the country into an Italian protectorate. During the war, the Ethiopians were vastly numerically superior and armed with rifles supplied by Russia and France, who also provided military advisers and army training.<ref name="Robert G. Patman 2009" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://ic.galegroup.com/ic/suic/BiographiesDetailsPage/BiographiesDetailsWindow?failOverType=&query=&prodId=SUIC&windowstate=normal&contentModules=&display-query=&mode=view&displayGroupName=Biographies&limiter=&currPage=&disableHighlighting=false&displayGroups=&sortBy=&search_within_results=&p=SUIC&action=e&catId=&activityType=&scanId=&documentId=GALE%7CEJ2108101557&source=Bookmark&u=clov94514&jsid=51a203640e752f3531eac3c88ed17924|title=Menelik II|work=Gale|accessdate=30 August 2016}}</ref> In contrast, Italy was technologically superior but a mostly poor nation, and its force in Ethiopia equipped with antiquated weapons.<ref name=RRT>{{cite book|title=Ethiopia: the Land, Its People, History and Culture |first=Yohannes |last=Mekonnen |year=2013 |pages= 76–80|place=New Africa Press}}</ref> |
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Full-scale war broke out in 1895, with Italian troops from [[Italian Eritrea]] having initial success until Ethiopian troops counterattacked Italian positions and besieged the Italian fort of [[Mekele]], forcing its surrender. Italian defeat came about after the [[Battle of Adwa]], where the Ethiopian army dealt the heavily outnumbered Italians and Eritrean [[Askari#Italian colonies|askaris]] a decisive blow and forced their retreat back into Eritrea. Some Eritreans, regarded as traitors by the Ethiopians, were also captured and mutilated.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/docannexe/image/14887/img-12.jpg|title=Photo of some of the Eritrean Ascari mutilated}}</ref> The war concluded with the [[Treaty of Addis Ababa]]. Though it was not the first African victory over Western colonists, this war became a pre-eminent symbol of the [[pan-Africanism]] and secured Ethiopia's sovereignty [[Second Italo-Ethiopian War|until 1936]].<ref>Professor Kinfe Abraham, "The Impact of the Adowa Victory on The Pan-African and Pan-Black Anti-Colonial Struggle," Address delivered to The Institute of Ethiopian Studies, Addis Ababa University, 8 February 2006</ref> |
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== Background == |
== Background == |
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{{See also|Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889}} |
{{See also|Ethiopian-Egyptian War|Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889|Italian Eritrea}} |
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The Khedive of Egypt [[Isma'il Pasha]], better known as |
The Khedive of Egypt [[Isma'il Pasha]], better known as Isma'il the Magnificent, had conquered Eritrea as part of his efforts to give Egypt an African empire.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Marsot |first1=Afaf |title=The Porte and Ismail Pasha's Quest for Autonomy |journal=Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt |year=1975 |volume=12 |issue=1975 |pages=89–96 |doi=10.2307/40000011 |jstor=40000011 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40000011 |access-date=23 December 2020}}</ref><ref name="Perry p196">{{harvnb|Perry|2005|p=196}}</ref> Isma'il had tried to follow up that conquest with Ethiopia, but the Egyptian attempts to conquer that realm ended in humiliating defeat in the [[Egyptian–Ethiopian War]]. After [[History of Egypt under the Muhammad Ali dynasty|Egypt's bankruptcy in 1876]]<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Atkins |first1=Richard |title=The Origins of the Anglo-French Condominium in Egypt, 1875-1876 |journal=The Historian |date=1974 |volume=36 |issue=2 |pages=264–282 |doi=10.1111/j.1540-6563.1974.tb00005.x |jstor=24443685 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/24443685 |access-date=23 December 2020}}</ref> followed by the [[Mahdist War|''Ansar'' revolt]] under the leadership of the [[Muhammad Ahmad|Mahdi]] in 1881, the Egyptian position in [[Eritrea]] was hopeless with the Egyptian forces cut off and unpaid for years. By 1884 the Egyptians began to pull out of both Sudan and Eritrea.<ref name="Perry p196" /> |
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Egypt had been very much in the French sphere of influence until 1882 when Britain occupied Egypt. A major goal of French foreign policy until 1904 was to diminish British power in Egypt and restore it to its place in the French sphere of influence, and in 1883 the French created the colony of [[French Somaliland]] which allowed for the establishment of a French naval base at Djibouti on the Red Sea.<ref name="Perry p196" /> The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 had turned the Horn of Africa into a very strategic region as a navy based in the Horn could interdict any shipping going up and down the Red Sea. By building naval bases on the Red Sea that could intercept British shipping in the Red Sea, the French hoped to reduce the value of the Suez Canal for the British, and thus lever them out of Egypt. A French historian in 1900 wrote: "The importance of Djibouti lies almost solely in the uniqueness of its geographic position, which makes it a port of transit and natural entrepôt for areas more infinitely more populated than its own territory...the rich provinces of central Ethiopia."<ref name="Marcus">{{Cite journal |jstor = 41965700|title = A Background to Direct British Diplomatic Involvement in Ethiopia, 1894–1896|journal = Journal of Ethiopian Studies|volume = 1|issue = 2|pages = 121–132|last1 = Marcus|first1 = Harold G.|year = 1963}}</ref> The British historian Harold Marcus noted that for the French: "Ethiopia represented the entrance to the Nile valley; if she could obtain hegemony over Ethiopia, her dream of a west to east French African empire would be closer to reality".<ref name="Marcus" /> In response, Britain consistently supported Italian ambitions in the Horn of Africa as the best way of keeping the French out.<ref name="Marcus" /> |
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On 3 June 1884, the [[Hewett Treaty]] was signed between Britain, Egypt and Ethiopia that allowed the Ethiopians to occupy parts of Eritrea and allowed the Ethiopian goods to pass in and out of [[Massawa]] duty-free.<ref name="Perry p196" /> From the viewpoint of Britain, it was highly undesirable that the French replace the Egyptians in Eritrea as that would allow the French to have more naval bases on the Red Sea that could interfere with British shipping using the Suez Canal, and as the British did not want the financial burden of ruling Eritrea, they looked for another power to replace the Egyptians.<ref name="Perry p196" /> The Hewett treaty seemed to suggest that Eritrea would fall into the Ethiopian sphere of influence as the Egyptians pulled out.<ref name="Perry p196" /> After initially encouraging the Emperor [[Yohannes IV]] to move into Eritrea to replace the Egyptians, London decided to have the Italians move into Eritrea.<ref name="Perry p196" /> In his history of Ethiopia, Augustus Wylde wrote: "England made use of King John [Emperor Yohannes] as long as he was of any service and then threw him over to the tender mercies of Italy...It is one of our worst bits of business out of the many we have been guilty of in Africa...one of the vilest bites of treachery".<ref name="Perry p196" /> After the French had unexpectedly made Tunis into their [[French protectorate of Tunisia|protectorate]] in 1881, outraging opinion in Italy over the so-called "''Schiaffo di Tunisi''" (the "slap of Tunis"), Italian foreign policy had been extremely anti-French, and from the British viewpoint the best way of ensuring the Eritrean ports on the Red Sea stayed out of French hands was by having the staunchly anti-French Italians move in. In 1882, Italy had joined the Triple Alliance, allying herself with Austria and Germany against France. |
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On 3 June 1884, the [[Hewett Treaty]] was signed between Britain, Egypt and Ethiopia that allowed the Ethiopians to occupy parts of the dissolved [[Habesh Eyalet]] which allowed Ethiopian goods to pass in and out of [[Massawa]] duty-free.<ref name="Perry p196" /> From the viewpoint of Britain, it was highly undesirable that the French replace the Egyptians in [[Massawa]] as that would allow the French to have more naval bases on the Red Sea that could interfere with British shipping using the Suez Canal, and as the British did not want the financial burden of ruling [[Massawa]], they looked for another power who would be interested in replacing the Egyptians.<ref name="Perry p196" /> The Hewett treaty seemed to suggest that [[Massawa]] would fall into the Ethiopian sphere of influence as the Egyptians pulled out.<ref name="Perry p196" /> After initially encouraging the Emperor [[Yohannes IV]] to move into [[Massawa]] to replace the Egyptians, London decided to have the Italians move into [[Massawa]].<ref name="Perry p196" /> In his history of Ethiopia, British historian Augustus Wylde wrote: "England made use of King John [Emperor Yohannes] as long as he was of any service and then threw him over to the tender mercies of Italy...It is one of our worst bits of business out of the many we have been guilty of in Africa...one of the vilest bites of treachery".<ref name="Perry p196" /> |
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On 5 February 1885 Italian troops landed at Massawa to replace the Egyptians.<ref name="Perry p196" /> The Italian government for its part was more than happy to embark upon an imperialist policy to distract its people from the failings in post ''Risorgimento'' Italy.<ref name="Perry p196" /> In 1861, the unification of Italy was supposed to mark the beginning of a glorious new era in Italian life, and many Italians were gravely disappointed to find that not much had changed in the new Kingdom of Italy with the vast majority of Italians still living in abject poverty. To compensate, a chauvinist mood was rampant amongst the upper classes in Italy with the newspaper ''Il Diritto'' writing in an editorial: "Italy must be ready. The year 1885 will decide her fate as a great power. It is necessary to feel the responsibility of the new era; to become again strong men afraid of nothing, with the sacred love of the fatherland, of all Italy, in our hearts".<ref name="Perry p196" /> On the Ethiopian side, the wars that Emperor Yohannes had waged first against the invading Egyptians in the 1870s and then more so against the Sudanese ''Mahdiyya'' state in the 1880s had been presented by him to his subjects as holy wars in defense of Orthodox Christianity against Islam, reinforcing the Ethiopian belief that their country was an especially virtuous and holy land.<ref name=Erlich>{{Cite journal |jstor = 41988228|title = Ethiopia and the Mahdiyya – You Call Me a Chicken?|journal = Journal of Ethiopian Studies|volume = 40|issue = 1/2|pages = 219–249|last1 = Erlich|first1 = Haggai|year = 2007}}</ref> The struggle against the ''Ansar'' from Sudan complicated Yohannes's relations with the Italians, whom he sometimes asked to provide him with guns to fight the ''Ansar'' and other times he resisted the Italians and proposed a truce with the ''Ansar''.<ref name=Erlich /> |
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On 5 February 1885, Italian troops landed at Massawa to replace the Egyptians.<ref name="Perry p196" /> The Italian government for its part was more than happy to embark upon an imperialist policy to distract its people from the failings in post ''[[Italian unification|Risorgimento]]'' Italy.<ref name="Perry p196" /> In 1861, the unification of Italy was supposed to mark the beginning of a glorious new era in Italian life, and many Italians were gravely disappointed to find that not much had changed in the new Kingdom of Italy with the vast majority of Italians still living in abject poverty. To compensate, a chauvinist mood was rampant among the upper classes in Italy with the newspaper ''Il Diritto'' writing in an editorial: "Italy must be ready. The year 1885 will decide her fate as a great power. It is necessary to feel the responsibility of the new era; to become again strong men afraid of nothing, with the sacred love of the fatherland, of all Italy, in our hearts".<ref name="Perry p196" /><ref name=Erlich>{{Cite journal |jstor = 41988228|title = Ethiopia and the Mahdiyya – You Call Me a Chicken?|journal = Journal of Ethiopian Studies|volume = 40|issue = 1/2|pages = 219–249|last1 = Erlich|first1 = Haggai|year = 2007}}</ref> The struggle against the ''Ansar'' from Sudan complicated Yohannes's relations with the Italians, whom he sometimes asked to provide him with guns to fight the ''Ansar'' and other times he resisted the Italians and proposed a truce with the ''Ansar''.<ref name=Erlich /> |
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On 18 January 1887, at a village named Saati, an advancing Italian Army detachment defeated the Ethiopians in a skirmish, but it ended with the numerically superior Ethiopians surrounding the Italians in Saati after they retreated in face of the enemy's numbers.<ref name="Perry p200">{{harvnb|Perry|2005|p=200}}</ref> Some 500 Italian soldiers under Colonel de Christoforis together with 50 Eritrean auxiliaries were sent to support the besieged garrison at Saati.<ref name="Perry p200" /> At Dogali on his way to Saati, de Christoforis was ambushed by an Ethiopian force under ''Ras'' Alula, whose men armed with spears skillfully encircled the Italians who retreated to one hill and then to another higher hill.<ref name="Perry p200" /> After the Italians ran out of ammunition, ''Ras'' Alula ordered his men to charge and the Ethiopians swiftly overwhelmed the Italians in an action that featured bayonets against spears.<ref name="Perry p200" /> The [[Battle of Dogali]] ended with the Italians losing 23 officers and 407 other ranks killed.<ref name="Perry p200" /> As a result of the defeat at Dogali, the Italians abandoned Saati and retreated back to the Red Sea coast.<ref name="Perry p201" /> Italians newspapers called the battle a "massacre" and excoriated the ''Regio Esercito '' for not assigning de Chistoforis enough ammunition.<ref name="Perry p201" /> Having, at first, encouraged Emperor Yohannes to move into Eritrea, and then having encouraged the Italians to also do so, London realised a war was brewing and decided to try to mediate, largely out of the fear that the Italians might actually lose.<ref name="Perry p196" /> |
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On 18 January 1887, at a village named Saati, an advancing Italian army detachment defeated the Ethiopians in a skirmish, but it ended with the numerically superior Ethiopians surrounding the Italians in Saati after they retreated in face of the enemy's numbers.<ref name="Perry p200">{{harvnb|Perry|2005|p=200}}</ref> Some 500 Italian soldiers under Colonel de Christoforis together with 50 Eritrean auxiliaries were sent to support the besieged garrison at Saati.<ref name="Perry p200" /> At Dogali on his way to Saati, de Christoforis was ambushed by an Ethiopian force under ''Ras'' Alula, whose men armed with spears skillfully encircled the Italians who retreated to one hill and then to another higher hill.<ref name="Perry p200" /> After the Italians ran out of ammunition, ''Ras'' Alula ordered his men to charge and the Ethiopians swiftly overwhelmed the Italians in an action that featured bayonets against spears.<ref name="Perry p200" /> The [[Battle of Dogali]] ended with the Italians losing 23 officers and 407 other ranks killed.<ref name="Perry p200" /> As a result of the defeat at Dogali, the Italians abandoned Saati and retreated back to the Red Sea coast.<ref name="Perry p201">{{harvnb|Perry|2005|p=201}}</ref> Italian newspapers called the battle a "massacre" and excoriated the ''Regio Esercito '' for not assigning de Chistoforis enough ammunition.<ref name="Perry p201" /> Having, at first, encouraged Emperor Yohannes to move into Eritrea, and then having encouraged the Italians to also do so, London realised a war was brewing and decided to try to mediate, largely out of the fear that the Italians might actually lose.<ref name="Perry p196" /> |
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The British consul in Zanzibar, [[Gerald Portal]], was sent in 1887 to mediate between the Ethiopians and Italians before war broke out.<ref name="Perry p196" /> Portal set sail on an Egyptian ship, the ''Narghileh'', which he called a "small, dirty, greasy steamer bound for Jeddah, Suakin and Massawa, in which we very soon discovered that our traveling companions consisted of cockroaches and other smaller animals innumerable, a flock of sheep, a few cows, many cocks, hens, turkeys and geese, and a dozen of the evil-looking Greek adventurers who always appear like vultures around a dead carcass whenever there is a possibility of a campaign in North Africa."<ref name="Perry p197">{{harvnb|Perry|2005|p=197}}</ref> Portal upon meeting the Emperor Yohannes on 4 December 1887 presented him with gifts and a letter from Queen Victoria urging him to settle with the Italians.<ref name="Perry p199" /> Portal reported: "What might have been possible in August or September was impossible in December, when the whole of the immense available forces in the country were already under arms; and that there now remains no hope of a satisfactory adjustment of the difficulties between Italy and Abyssinia [Ethiopia] until the question of the relative supremacy of these two nations has been decided by an appeal to the fortunes of war...No one who has once seen the nature of the gorges, ravines and mountain passes near the Abyssinian frontier can doubt for a moment that any advance by a civilised army in the face of the hostile Abyssinian hordes would be accomplished at the price of a fearful loss of life on both sides. ... The Abyssinians are savage and untrustworthy, but they are also redeemed by the possession of an unbounded courage, by a disregard of death, and by a national pride which leads them to look down on every human being who has not had the good fortune to be born an Abyssinian".<ref name="Perry p199" /> Portal ended by writing that the Italians were making a mistake in preparing to go war against Ethiopia: "It is the old, old story, contempt of a gallant enemy because his skin happens to be chocolate or brown or black, and because his men have not gone through orthodox courses of field-firing, battalion drill, or 'autumn maneuvers'".<ref name="Perry p199">{{harvnb|Perry|2005|p=199}}</ref> |
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The defeat at Dogali made the Italians cautious for a moment, but on 10 March 1889, Emperor Yohannes died after being wounded in battle against the ''Ansar'' and on his deathbed admitted that ''Ras'' Mengesha, the supposed son of his brother, was actually his own son and asked that he succeed him.<ref name="Perry p201" /> The revelation that the emperor had slept with his brother's wife scandalised intensely Orthodox Ethiopia, and instead the ''Negus'' Menelik was proclaimed emperor on 26 March 1889.<ref name="Perry p201" /> ''Ras'' Mengesha, one of the most powerful Ethiopian noblemen, was unhappy about being by-passed in the succession and for a time allied himself with the Italians against the Emperor Menelik.<ref name="Perry p201" /> Under the feudal Ethiopian system, there was no standing army, and instead, the nobility raised up armies on behalf of the Emperor. In December 1889, the Italians advanced inland again and took the cities of Asmara and Keren |
The defeat at Dogali made the Italians cautious for a moment, but on 10 March 1889, Emperor Yohannes died after being wounded in battle against the ''Ansar'' and on his deathbed admitted that ''Ras'' Mengesha, the supposed son of his brother, was actually his own son and asked that he succeed him.<ref name="Perry p201" /> The revelation that the emperor had slept with his brother's wife scandalised intensely [[Ethiopian Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] Ethiopia, and instead the ''Negus'' [[Menelik II|Menelik was proclaimed emperor]] on 26 March 1889.<ref name="Perry p201" /> ''Ras'' Mengesha, one of the most powerful Ethiopian noblemen, was unhappy about being by-passed in the succession and for a time allied himself with the Italians against the [[Menelik II|Emperor Menelik]].<ref name="Perry p201" /> Under the feudal Ethiopian system, there was no standing army, and instead, the nobility raised up armies on behalf of the Emperor. In December 1889, the Italians advanced inland again and took the cities of Asmara and Keren.<ref name="Perry p201" /> |
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=== Outbreak of the war === |
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{{Main|Treaty of Wuchale}} |
{{Main|Treaty of Wuchale}} |
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On March |
On 25 March 1889, the [[Shewa]] ruler [[Menelik II]] declared himself Emperor of Ethiopia (or "Abyssinia", as it was commonly called in Europe at the time). Barely a month later, on 2 May he signed the [[Treaty of Wuchale]] with the Italians, which apparently gave them control over [[Italian Eritrea|Eritrea]], the [[Red Sea]] coast to the northeast of Ethiopia, in return for recognition of Menelik's rule, a sum of money and the provision of 30,000 rifles and 28 artillery cannons. |
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However, the bilingual treaty did not say the same thing in [[Italian language|Italian]] and [[Amharic language|Amharic]]; the Italian version did not give the Ethiopians the "significant autonomy" written into the Amharic translation.<ref name="Gardner">{{harvnb|Gardner|2015|p=107}}</ref> The |
However, the bilingual treaty did not say the same thing in [[Italian language|Italian]] and [[Amharic language|Amharic]]; the Italian version did not give the Ethiopians the "significant autonomy" written into the Amharic translation.<ref name="Gardner">{{harvnb|Gardner|2015|p=107}}</ref> The Italian text stated that Ethiopia must conduct its foreign affairs through Italy (making it an Italian [[protectorate]]), but the Amharic version merely stated that Ethiopia ''could'' contact foreign powers and conduct foreign affairs using the embassy of Italy. Italian diplomats, however, claimed that the original Amharic text included the clause and Menelik knowingly signed a modified copy of the Treaty.<ref>{{cite web |last=Pastoretto |first=Piero |title=Battaglia di Adua |url=http://www.arsmilitaris.org/pubblicazioni/ADUA/adua.htm |access-date=2006-06-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060531223251/http://www.arsmilitaris.org/pubblicazioni/ADUA/adua.htm |archive-date=May 31, 2006|language=it}}</ref> In October 1889, the Italians informed all of the other European governments because of the Treaty of Wuchale that Ethiopia was now an Italian protectorate and therefore the other European nations could not conduct diplomatic relations with Ethiopia.<ref name=Rubenson>{{Cite journal |jstor = 179872|title = The Protectorate Paragraph of the Wichale Treaty|journal = The Journal of African History|volume = 5|issue = 2|pages = 243–283|last1 = Rubenson|first1 = Sven|year = 1964|doi = 10.1017/S0021853700004837}}</ref> With the exceptions of the Ottoman Empire, which still maintained its claim to Eritrea, and Russia, which disliked the idea of an Orthodox nation being subjugated to a Roman Catholic nation, all of the European powers accepted the Italian claim to a protectorate.<ref name=Rubenson /> |
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The Italian claim that Menelik was aware of Article XVII turning his nation into an Italian protectorate seems unlikely given that the Emperor Menelik sent letters to Queen Victoria in late 1889 and was informed in the replies in early 1890 that Britain could not have diplomatic relations with Ethiopia on the account of Article XVII of the Treaty of Wuchale, a revelation that came as a great shock to the Emperor.<ref name=Rubenson /> The tone of Victoria's letter was polite. The Queen informed Menelik that the restrictions on the import of arms were no longer in force and to prove this mentioned that [[Ras Makonnen]] received permission "to pass two thousand rifles through [[Zeila]], return to Harar" i.e. from Italy. But on the question of further diplomatic contacts, she left no doubt in Menelik's mind: "We shall communicate to the Government of our Friend His Majesty the King of Italy copies of Your Majesty's letter and of our reply."<ref name=Rubenson /> |
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[[Francesco Crispi]], the Italian Prime Minister, was an ultra-imperialist who believed the newly unified Italian state required "the grandeur of a second Roman empire".<ref name="Perry p201"/> Crispi believed that the [[Horn of Africa]] was the best place for the Italians to start building the new colonial empire.<ref name="Perry p201" /> Because of the Ethiopian refusal to abide by the Italian version of the treaty and despite economic handicaps at home, the Italian government decided on a military solution to force Ethiopia to abide by the Italian version of the treaty. In doing so, they believed that they could exploit divisions within Ethiopia and rely on tactical and technological superiority to offset any inferiority in numbers. The efforts of Emperor Menelik, viewed as pro-French by London, to unify Ethiopia and thus bring the source of the [[Blue Nile]] under his control was perceived in Whitehall as a threat to their influence in Egypt.<ref name="Marcus">{{Cite journal |jstor = 41965700|title = A Background to Direct British Diplomatic Involvement in Ethiopia, 1894–1896|journal = Journal of Ethiopian Studies|volume = 1|issue = 2|pages = 121–132|last1 = Marcus|first1 = Harold G.|year = 1963}}</ref> As Menelik became increasingly successful in expanding Ethiopia, the [[Government of the United Kingdom|British government]] courted the Italians to counter Ethiopian expansion.<ref name="Marcus" /> |
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The only European ally of Ethiopia was [[Ethiopia-Russia relations|Russia]].<ref name="Robert G. Patman 2009">{{harvnb|Patman|2009|pages=27–30}}</ref><ref name="vestal">{{cite book|last=Vestal|first=Theodore M.|editor1=Paulos Milkias |editor2=Getachew Metaferia|title=The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nljca_pOqrEC&pg=PA26|year=2005|publisher=Algora|isbn=978-0-87586-414-3|pages=21–35|chapter=Reflections on the Battle of Adwa and its Significance for Today}}</ref><ref name=eribo>{{harvnb|Eribo|2001|p=55}}</ref> The Ethiopian emperor sent his first diplomatic mission to St. Petersburg in 1895. In June 1895, the newspapers in St. Petersburg wrote, "Along with the expedition, Menelik II sent his diplomatic mission to Russia, including his princes and his bishop". Many citizens of the capital came to meet the train that brought Prince Damto, General Genemier, Prince Belyakio, Bishop of Harer Gabraux Xavier and other members of the delegation to St. Petersburg. On the eve of war, an agreement providing military help for Ethiopia was concluded. Russia had been trying to gain a foothold in Ethiopia,<ref name="Burke1892">{{cite book|last=Burke|first=Edmund|title=The Annual Register of World Events: A Review of the Year|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OrEHAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA397|year=1892|publisher=Longmans, Green|series=Annual Register, New Series|volume=133|pages=397–399|chapter=East Africa}}</ref> and in 1894, after denouncing the Treaty of Wuchale in July, it received an Ethiopian mission in St. Petersburg and sent arms and ammunition to Ethiopia.<ref name="vestal"/> The Russian travel writer [[Alexander Bulatovich]] who went to Ethiopia to serve as a Red Cross volunteer with the Emperor Menelik made a point of emphasizing in his books that the Ethiopians converted to Christianity before any of the Europeans ever did, described the Ethiopians as a deeply religious people like the Russians, and argued the Ethiopians did not have the "low cultural level" of the other African peoples, making them equal to the Europeans.<ref>{{Cite journal |jstor = 20065745|title = Reading "Ethiopia through Russian Eyes": Political and Racial Sentiments in the Travel Writings of Alexander Bulatovich, 1896–1898|journal = History in Africa|volume = 32|pages = 281–294|last1 = Mirzeler|first1 = Mustafa Kemal|year = 2005|doi = 10.1353/hia.2005.0017|s2cid = 52044875|url = https://muse.jhu.edu/article/187888}}</ref> |
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The Italian claim that Menelik was aware of Article XVII turning his nation into an Italian protectorate seems unlikely given that the Emperor Menelik sent letters to Queen Victoria and Emperor Wilhelm II in late 1889 and was informed in the replies in early 1890 that neither Britain nor Germany could have diplomatic relations with Ethiopia on the account of Article XVII of the Treaty of Wuchale, a revelation that came as a great shock to the Emperor.<ref name=Rubenson /> Victoria's letter was polite whereas Wilhelm's letter was somewhat more rude, saying that King Umberto I was a great friend of Germany and Menelik's violation of the supposed Italian protectorate was a grave insult to Umberto, adding that he never wanted to hear from Menelik again.<ref name=Rubenson /> Moreover, Menelik did not know Italian and only signed the Amharic text of the treaty, being assured that there were no differences between the Italian and Amharic texts before he signed.<ref name=Rubenson /> The differences between the Italian and Amharic texts were due to the Italian minister in Addis Ababa, Count Pietro Antonelli, who had been instructed by his government to gain as much territory as possible in negotiating with the Emperor Menelik. However, knowing Menelik was now enthroned as the King of Kings and had a strong position, Antonelli was in the unenviable situation of negotiating a treaty that his own government might disallow. Therefore, he inserted the statement making Ethiopia give up its right to conduct its foreign affairs to Italy as a way of pleasing his superiors who might otherwise have fired him for only making small territorial gains.<ref name=Rubenson /> Antonelli was fluent in Amharic and given that Menelik only signed the Amharic text he could not have been unaware that the Amharic version of Article XVII only stated that the King of Italy places the services of his diplomats at the disposal of the Emperor of Ethiopia to represent him abroad if he so wished.<ref name=Rubenson /> When his subterfuge was exposed in 1890 with Menelik indignantly saying he would never sign away his country's independence to anybody, Antonelli who left Addis Ababa in mid 1890 resorted to racism, telling his superiors in Rome that as Menelik was a black man, he was thus intrinsically dishonest and it was only natural the Emperor would lie about the protectorate he supposedly willingly turned his nation into.<ref name=Rubenson /> |
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In 1893, judging that his power over Ethiopia was secure, Menelik repudiated the treaty; in response the Italians ramped up the pressure on his domain in a variety of ways, including the annexation of small territories bordering their original claim under the Treaty of Wuchale, and finally culminating with a military campaign and across the [[Mareb River]] into Tigray (on the [[Eritrea–Ethiopia border|border with Eritrea]]) in December 1894. The Italians expected disaffected potentates like Negus [[Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam]], [[Ras Mengesha Yohannes]], and the [[Aussa Sultanate|Sultan of Aussa]] to join them; instead, all of the Ethiopians flocked to the Emperor Menelik's side in a display of both nationalism and anti-Italian feeling, while other peoples of dubious loyalty (e.g. the Sultan of Aussa) were watched by Imperial garrisons.<ref>{{harvnb|Prouty|1986|p=143}}</ref> In June 1894, ''Ras'' Mengesha and his generals appeared in Addis Ababa carrying large stones which they dropped before the Emperor Menelik (a gesture that is a symbol of submission in Ethiopian culture).<ref name="Perry p201" /> There was overwhelming national unity in Ethiopia as various feuding noblemen rallied behind the emperor who insisted that Ethiopia, unlike the other African nations, would retain its freedom and not be subjugated by Italy.<ref name="Perry p201" /> |
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[[Francesco Crispi]], the Italian Prime Minister was an ultra-imperialist who believed the newly unified Italian state required "the grandeur of a second Roman empire".<ref name="Perry p201">{{harvnb|Perry|2005|p=201}}</ref> Crispi believed that the Horn of Africa was the best place for the Italians to start building the new Roman empire.<ref name="Perry p201" /> The American journalist James Perry wrote that "Crispi was a fool, a bigot and a very dangerous man".<ref name="Perry p201" /> Because of the Ethiopian refusal to abide by the Italian version of the treaty and despite economic handicaps at home, the Italian government decided on a military solution to force Ethiopia to abide by the Italian version of the treaty. In doing so, they believed that they could exploit divisions within Ethiopia and rely on tactical and technological superiority to offset any inferiority in numbers. The efforts of Emperor Menelik, viewed as pro-French in London, to unify Ethiopia and thus bring control source of the Blue Nile under his rule was perceived in Whitehall as a threat to keeping Egypt in the British sphere of influence.<ref name="Marcus" /> As Menelik became increasingly successful in unifying Ethiopia, London brought more pressure to bear on Rome for the Italians to move inland and conquer Ethiopia once and for all.<ref name="Marcus" /> |
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Menelik had spent much of his reign building up a vast arsenal of modern weapons and ammunition acquired though treaty negotiations and purchases from the Russians, French, British, and even the Italians.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Milkias |first1=Paulos |title=The Battle of Adwa Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism |date=2005 |pages=55 |publisher=Algora |isbn=978-0-87586-413-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pq1MBAAAQBAJ&dq=menelik+rifles&pg=PA96}}</ref> In 1884, Count {{Interlanguage link|Pietro Antonelli|it}}, the Italian envoy to [[Menelik II]], was able to import 50,000 Remington rifles and 10 million cartridges in exchange for 600 camels bearing gold, ivory and civet.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |year=1982 |title=History of Ethiopian towns from the mid 19th century to 1935 |page=296 |publisher=Steiner }}</ref> After Italian sources dried up Menelik strove to increase his other imports, in the few years preceding the war the arms trade expanded considerably. In November 1893, Menelik's Swiss friend and advisor, [[Alfred Ilg]], went to Paris where he traded gold and ivory for 80,000 [[Fusil Gras mle 1874]], 33 pieces of artillery and 5,000 artillery shells. Menelik had also purchased 15,000 quick-firing rifles left over from the [[Franco-Hova Wars]] from the French arms trader [[Léon Chefneux]]. By the end of 1894, 30,000 [[Berdan rifle]]s and loads of ammunition were imported from Russia, and at least 250,000 cartridges were imported from [[French Somaliland|French Djibouti]].<ref>Richard Caulk, ''"Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876–1896)'', p. 413</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Carmichael |first1=Tim |title=Approaching Ethiopian History Addis Abäba and Local Governance in Harär, C.1900 to 1950 |date=2001 |publisher=Michigan State University: Department of History |pages=38}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896 |first=Sean |last=McLachlan |year=2011 |page=35 |place=Osprey Publishing}}</ref> |
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There was a broader, European background as well: the [[Triple Alliance (1882)|Triple Alliance]] of Germany, [[Austria–Hungary]], and Italy was under some stress, with Italy being courted by England. Two secret Anglo-Italian protocols in 1891, left most of Ethiopia in Italy's sphere of influence.<ref name=nyt220735>{{cite news |last=Streit |first=Clarence K. |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1935/07/22/94637913.pdf |title=Britain Gave Italy Rights Under Secret Pact in 1891 To Rule Most of Ethiopia |newspaper=The New York Times |date=22 July 1935}}</ref> France, one of the members of the opposing [[Franco-Russian Alliance]], had its own claims on Eritrea and was bargaining with Italy over giving up those claims in exchange for a more secure position in Tunisia. Meanwhile, Russia was supplying weapons and other aid to Ethiopia.<ref name="Gardner" /> It had been trying to gain a foothold in Ethiopia,<ref name="Burke1892">{{cite book|last=Burke|first=Edmund|title=The Annual Register of World Events: A Review of the Year|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OrEHAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA397|year=1892|publisher=Longmans, Green|series=Annual Register, New Series|volume=133|pages=397-399|chapter=East Africa}}</ref> and in 1894, after denouncing the Treaty of Wuchale in July, it received an Ethiopian mission in St. Petersburg and sent arms and ammunition to Ethiopia.<ref name="vestal">{{cite book|last=Vestal|first=Theodore M.|editor1=Paulos Milkias |editor2=Getachew Metaferia|title=The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nljca_pOqrEC&pg=PA26|year=2005|publisher=Algora|isbn=978-0-87586-414-3|pages=21–35|chapter=Reflections on the Battle of Adwa and its Significance for Today}}</ref> This support continued after the war ended.<ref name=eribo>{{harvnb|Eribo|2001|p=55}}</ref> The Russian travel writer [[Alexander Bulatovich]] who went to Ethiopia to serve as a Red Cross volunteer with the Emperor Menelik made a point of emphasizing in his books that the Ethiopians converted to Christianity before any of the Europeans ever did, described the Ethiopians as a deeply religious people like the Russians, and argued the Ethiopians did not have the "low cultural level" of the other African peoples, making them equal to the Europeans.<ref>{{Cite journal |jstor = 20065745|title = Reading "Ethiopia through Russian Eyes": Political and Racial Sentiments in the Travel Writings of Alexander Bulatovich, 1896–1898|journal = History in Africa|volume = 32|pages = 281–294|last1 = Mirzeler|first1 = Mustafa Kemal|year = 2005|doi = 10.1353/hia.2005.0017}}</ref> Germany and Austria supported their ally in the Triple Alliance Italy while France and Russia supported Ethiopia. |
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==Course of the war== |
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[[File:Emperor Menelik II.png|left|thumb| |
[[File:Emperor Menelik II.png|left|thumb|250x250px|[[Emperor of Ethiopia|Emperor]] [[Menelik II]]]] |
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[[File:Oreste Baratieri.jpg|thumb|[[Oreste Baratieri]]| |
[[File:Oreste Baratieri.jpg|thumb|[[Oreste Baratieri]]|250x250px]] |
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In December 1894, [[Bahta Hagos]] led a rebellion against the Italians in [[Akkele Guzay]], claiming support of [[Ras Mengesha Yohannes]]. Units of General [[Oreste Baratieri]]'s army under Major [[Pietro Toselli]] crushed the rebellion and killed Bahta at the [[Battle of Halai]]. Baratieri suspected that Mengesha would invade Eritrea, and met him at the [[Battle of Coatit]] in January 1895. The victorious Italians chased the retreating Mengesha, defeating him again at the [[battle of Senafe]]. Baratieri promptly marched into Adigrat on March 8 and occupied [[Adwa]] on April 2. He issued a proclamation, annexing [[Tigray province]] into [[Italian Eritrea]], then moved into [[Mekelle]] and fortified an old church above the town's spur.{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=167}}<ref>{{harvnb|Berkeley|1969}}</ref> At this point, Emperor Menelik turned to [[France]], offering a treaty of alliance; the French response was to abandon the Emperor in order to secure Italian approval of the [[Treaty of Bardo]] which would secure French control of [[Tunisia]]. Virtually alone, on 17 September 1895, Emperor Menelik issued a proclamation calling up the men of Abyssinia to join his army at [[Were Ilu]].<ref>{{harvnb|Marcus|1995|p=160}}</ref> Leaders of every region in Ethiopia responded to Menelik's call to arms and would assemble an army of over 100,000 men before marching north to face the Italian invaders.{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=167}} |
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In 1893, judging that his power over Ethiopia was secure, Menelik repudiated the treaty; in response the Italians ramped up the pressure on his domain in a variety of ways, including the annexation of small territories bordering their original claim under the Treaty of Wuchale, and finally culminating with a military campaign and across the [[Mareb River]] into Tigray (on the border with Eritrea) in December 1894. The Italians expected disaffected potentates like Negus [[Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam]], [[Ras Mengesha Yohannes]], and the [[Aussa Sultanate|Sultan of Aussa]] to join them; instead, all of the ethnic Tigrayan or Amharic peoples flocked to the Emperor Menelik's side in a display of both nationalism and anti-Italian feeling, while other peoples of dubious loyalty (e.g. the Sultan of Aussa) were watched by Imperial garrisons.<ref>{{harvnb|Prouty|1986|p=143}}</ref> In June 1894, ''Ras'' Mengesha and his generals had appeared in Addis Ababa carrying large stones which they dropped before the Emperor Menelik (a gesture that is a symbol of submission in Ethiopian culture).<ref name="Perry p201" /> In Ethiopia, the popular saying at the time was: "Of a black snake's bite, you may be cured, but from the bite of a white snake, you will never recover."<ref name="Perry p201" /> There was an overwhelming national unity in Ethiopia as various feuding noblemen rallied behind the emperor who insisted that Ethiopia, unlike the other African nations, would retain its freedom and not be subjected to Italy.<ref name="Perry p201" /> The ethnic rivalries between the Tigrians and the Amhara that the Italians were counting upon did not prove to be a factor as Menelik pointed out that the Italians held all Ethnic [[Africans]], regardless of their individual ethnic backgrounds, in contempt, noting the segregation policies in Eritrea applied to all Ethnic Africans.<ref name="Perry p201" /> Further, Menelik had spent much of the previous four years building up a supply of modern weapons and ammunition, acquired from the French, British, and the Italians themselves, as the European colonial powers sought to keep each other's North African aspirations in check. They also used the Ethiopians as a proxy army against the Sudanese [[Mahdist Sudan|Mahdists]]. |
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The next clash came at [[Battle of Amba Alagi (1895)|Amba Alagi]] on 7 December 1895, when [[Ras Makonnen]] brought up his largely [[Shewa]]n army to the slopes of Amba Alagi in southern Tigray. They were confronted by Major [[Pietro Toselli]] with 2,000 Eritreans and local Tigrayan askaris that had joined the Italians for various reasons. Makonnen was joined by [[Ras Mengesha Yohannes]] and [[Welle Betul]], and together they overran the Italian positions on the natural fortress, killing Major Toselli and most of his men. General [[Giuseppe Arimondi]], who had just arrived to reinforce Toselli, was barely able to escape and retreated with 400 survivors to the unfinished Italian fort at [[Mekele]]. Arimondi left a small garrison of approximately 1,150 askaris and 200 Italians there, commanded by Major [[Giuseppe Galliano]], and took the bulk of his troops to [[Adigrat]], where General [[Oreste Baratieri]] was concentrating the Italian army.{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=167}} |
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In December 1894, [[Bahta Hagos]] led a rebellion against the Italians in [[Akkele Guzay]], claiming support of Mengesha. Units of General [[Oreste Baratieri]]'s army under Major [[Pietro Toselli]] crushed the rebellion and killed Bahta at the [[Battle of Halai]]. The Italian army then occupied the Tigrian capital, [[Adwa]]. Baratieri suspected that Mengesha would invade Eritrea, and met him at the [[Battle of Coatit]] in January 1895. The victorious Italians chased the retreating Mengesha, capturing weapons and important documents proving his complicity with Menelik. The victory in this campaign, along with previous victories against the Sudanese [[Muhammad Ahmad|Mahdists]], led the Italians to underestimate the difficulties to overcome in a campaign against Menelik.<ref>{{harvnb|Berkeley|1969}}</ref> At this point, Emperor Menelik turned to [[France]], offering a treaty of alliance; the French response was to abandon the Emperor in order to secure Italian approval of the [[Treaty of Bardo]] which would secure French control of [[Tunisia]]. Virtually alone, on 17 September 1895, Emperor Menelik issued a proclamation calling up the men of [[Shewa]] to join his army at [[Were Ilu]].<ref>{{harvnb|Marcus|1995|p=160}}</ref> |
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The first Ethiopian troops reached Mekele in the following days. Ras Makonnen surrounded the fort at [[Mekelle]] on 18 December. By the first days of January, Emperor [[Menelik II]], accompanied by his Queen [[Taytu Betul]], had led their massive imperial army into Tigray and joined [[Ras Makonnen]] at Mekele on 6 January 1896.<ref>{{harvnb|Prouty|1986|pp=144–151}}</ref> While Italian journalists filled sensational reports of their brave country holding out against "war-crazed black barbarians", Menelik had established contact with the Italian commander and gave him the opportunity to leave peacefully to [[Adigrat]]. The commander was defiant until the Ethiopians cut off the water supply to the fort and on January 21, with permission from the Italian high command, he agreed to surrender. Menelik allowed them to leave Mekelle with their weapons, and even provided the defeated Italians mules and pack animals to rejoin Baratieri. While some historians read this generous act as a sign that Emperor Menelik still hoped for a peaceful resolution to the war, Harold Marcus points out that this escort allowed him a tactical advantage: "Menelik craftily managed to establish himself in [[Hawzen|Hawzien]], at [[Gendepata]], near Adwa, where the mountain passes were not guarded by Italian fortifications."<ref>{{harvnb|Marcus|1995|p=167}}</ref>{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=168}} |
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As the Italians were poised to enter Ethiopian territory, the Ethiopians mobilised en masse all over the country.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.ethiopiancrown.org/adwa.htm |title = The Crown Council of Ethiopia}}</ref> Helping it was the newly updated imperial fiscal and taxation system. As a result, a hastily mobilised army of 196,000 men gathered from all parts of Abyssinia, more than half of whom were armed with modern rifles, rallied at [[Addis Ababa]] in support of the Emperor and defence of their country.<ref name="historynet.com" /> |
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Menelik decided against attacking the Italian headquarters at [[Adigrat]] and instead marched west towards the plateau of [[Adwa]]. Baratieri feared that the Emperor intended to invade Eritrea and hence abandoned his positions at Adigrat and moved towards the area. On February 28, 1896, Baratieri called an assembly of all his generals and informed them that their provisions would run out, and asked if the army should retreat back to [[Asmara]] or attack Menelik's army. All of his generals were opposed to retreat. Baratieri decided to rely on surprise by making up for his deficiency in manpower and issued a battle order on the next day.{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=169}} |
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The only European ally of Ethiopia was [[Ethiopia-Russia relations|Russia]].<ref name="Robert G. Patman 2009" /><ref name="vestal" /><ref name=eribo /> The Ethiopian emperor sent his first diplomatic mission to St. Petersburg in 1895. In June 1895, the newspapers in St. Petersburg wrote, "Along with the expedition, Menelik II sent his diplomatic mission to Russia, including his princes and his bishop". Many citizens of the capital came to meet the train that brought Prince Damto, General Genemier, Prince Belyakio, Bishop of Harer Gabraux Xavier and other members of the delegation to St. Petersburg. On the eve of war, an agreement providing military help for Ethiopia was concluded.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1895/feb/28/russian-mission-to-abyssinia |title=Russian mission to Abyssinia |date=28 February 1895}}</ref><ref name="abai">{{cite web |url=http://www.300.years.spb.ru/eng/3_spb_3.html?id=64 |title=Who Was Count Abai? |publisher=St.Petersburg: through centuries |access-date=2010-10-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716112407/http://www.300.years.spb.ru/eng/3_spb_3.html?id=64 |archive-date=2011-07-16 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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=== Battle of Adwa === |
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The next clash came at [[Battle of Amba Alagi (1895)|Amba Alagi]] on 7 December 1895, when Ethiopian soldiers overran the Italian positions dug in on the natural fortress, and forced the Italians to retreat back to Eritrea.{{Citation needed|date=March 2013}} The remaining Italian troops under General [[Giuseppe Arimondi]] reached the unfinished Italian fort at [[Mekele]]. Arimondi left there a small garrison of approximately 1,150 Askaris and 200 Italians, commanded by Major [[Giuseppe Galliano]], and took the bulk of his troops to [[Adigrat]], where [[Oreste Baratieri]], the Italian Commander, was concentrating the Italian Army. |
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The first Ethiopian troops reached Mekele in the following days. Ras Makonnen surrounded the fort at Mekele on 18 December, but the Italian Commander adroitly used promises of a negotiated surrender to prevent the Ras from attacking the fort. By the first days of January, Emperor Menelik, accompanied by his Queen [[Taytu Betul]], had led large forces into Tigray, and besieged the Italians for sixteen days (6–21 January 1896), making several unsuccessful attempts to carry the fort by storm, until the Italians surrendered with permission from the Italian Headquarters.{{Citation needed|date=March 2013}} Menelik allowed them to leave Mekele with their weapons, and even provided the defeated Italians mules and pack animals to rejoin Baratieri.<ref>{{harvnb|Prouty|1986|pp=144–151}}</ref> While some historians read this generous act as a sign that Emperor Menelik still hoped for a peaceful resolution to the war, Harold Marcus points out that this escort allowed him a tactical advantage: "Menelik craftily managed to establish himself in [[Hawzen|Hawzien]], at [[Gendepata]], near Adwa, where the mountain passes were not guarded by Italian fortifications."<ref>{{harvnb|Marcus|1995|p=167}}</ref> |
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Heavily outnumbered, Baratieri refused to engage, knowing that due to their lack of infrastructure the Ethiopians could not keep large numbers of troops in the field much longer. However, Baratieri also never knew about the true numerical strength of the Ethiopian army that was to face his army, so he rather further fortified his positions in the Tigray. But the Italian government of [[Francesco Crispi]] was unable to accept being stymied by non-Europeans. The prime minister specifically ordered Baratieri to advance deep into enemy territory and bring about a battle. |
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== Battle of Adwa == |
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{{Main|Battle of Adwa}} |
{{Main|Battle of Adwa}} |
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[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM De slag bij Adua TMnr 5956-2.jpg |thumb|Painting depicting the Battle of Adwa]] |
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The decisive battle of the war was the [[Battle of Adwa]] on March 1, 1896, which took place in the mountainous country north of the actual town of [[Adwa]] (or Adowa). The Italian army comprised four brigades totaling approximately 17,700 men, with fifty-six artillery pieces; the Ethiopian army comprised several brigades numbering between 73,000 and 120,000 men (80–100,000 with firearms: according to [[Richard Pankhurst (academic)|Richard Pankhurst]], the Ethiopians were armed with approximately 100,000 rifles of which about half were [[Quick-firing gun|quick-firing]]),<ref name="p190" /> with almost fifty artillery pieces. General Oreste Baratieri underestimated the size of the Ethiopian force, predicating that Menelik could only field 30,000 men;{{sfn|Perry|2005|p=205}} also, the Ethiopians were better armed, being equipped with thousands of modern rifles and Hotchkiss artillery guns together with ammunition and shells which were superior to the Italian rifles and artillery.{{sfn|Perry|2005|p=205}} Menelik had ensured that his infantry and artillerymen were properly trained in their use, giving the Ethiopians a crucial advantage as the Hotchkiss artillery could fire more rapidly than the Italian artillery.{{sfn|Perry|2005|p=205}} |
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On the night of 29 February and the early morning of 1 March, three Italian brigades advanced separately towards Adwa over narrow mountain tracks, while a fourth remained camped. However, the three leading Italian brigades had become separated during their overnight march and by dawn were spread across several miles of very difficult terrain. Unbeknownst to General Baratieri, Emperor Menelik knew his troops had exhausted the ability of the local peasants to support them and had planned to break camp the next day. The Emperor had risen early when spies from [[Ras Alula]] brought him news that the Italians were advancing. The Emperor summoned the separate armies of his nobles and with the Empress [[Taytu Betul]] beside him, ordered his forces forward.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/file%20uploads%20/sean_mclachlan_armies_of_the_adowa_campaign_1896book4you.pdf |title=Sean McLachlan, page 15 "Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896: The Italian Disaster in Ethiopia" |access-date=2 March 2019 |archive-date=16 May 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180516155451/http://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/file%20uploads%20/sean_mclachlan_armies_of_the_adowa_campaign_1896book4you.pdf |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Lewis-117">Lewis, ''Fashoda'', p. 117.</ref> |
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The decisive battle of the war was the [[Battle of Adwa]] on March 1, 1896, which took place in the mountainous country north of the actual town of [[Adwa]] (or Adowa). The Italian army comprised four brigades totaling approximately 17,700 men, with fifty-six artillery pieces; the Ethiopian army comprised several brigades numbering between 73,000 and 120,000 men (80–100,000 with firearms: according to [[Richard Pankhurst (academic)|Richard Pankhurst]], the Ethiopians were armed with approximately 100,000 rifles of which about half were [[Quick-firing gun|quick-firing]]),<ref name="p190" /> with almost fifty artillery pieces. |
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The Italian forces were hit by wave after wave of attacks, until Menelik released his reserve of 25,000 men, which overran an Italian brigade. Another brigade was cut off, and destroyed by a cavalry charge. The last two brigades were destroyed piecemeal in a devastating rout. By noon, the Italian survivors were in full retreat.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/file%20uploads%20/sean_mclachlan_armies_of_the_adowa_campaign_1896book4you.pdf |title=Sean McLachlan, page 15 "Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896: The Italian Disaster in Ethiopia" |access-date=2 March 2019 |archive-date=16 May 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180516155451/http://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/file%20uploads%20/sean_mclachlan_armies_of_the_adowa_campaign_1896book4you.pdf |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Pankhurst-1998">{{harvnb|Pankhurst|2001|pp=191–192}}</ref> |
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While Menelik's victory was in a large part due to the sheer force of numbers, his troops were well-armed because of his careful preparations. The Ethiopian army only had a feudal system of organisation but proved capable of properly executing the strategic plan drawn up in Menelik's headquarters. However, the Ethiopian army also had its problems. The first was the quality of its arms, as the Italian and British colonial authorities could sabotage the transportation of 30,000–60,000 modern [[Mosin–Nagant]] rifles and [[Berdan rifles]] from Russia into landlocked Ethiopia.{{Citation needed|date=March 2013}} Secondly, the Ethiopian army's feudal organisation meant that nearly the entire force was composed of peasant militia. Russian military experts advising Menelik II suggested a full-contact battle with Italians, to neutralise the Italian fire superiority, instead of engaging in a campaign of harassment designed to nullify problems with arms, training, and organisation.<ref name="abai" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tvoros.ru/proza/kazaki-u-imperatora-menelika-vtorogo.html|title=Cossacks of the emperor Menelik II|work=tvoros.ru|accessdate=3 October 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150716233744/http://www.tvoros.ru/proza/kazaki-u-imperatora-menelika-vtorogo.html|archive-date=2015-07-16|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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[[File:Italian prisoners Ethiopia 1897.jpg|thumb|Italian prisoners of war waiting for repatriation]] |
[[File:Italian prisoners Ethiopia 1897.jpg|thumb|Italian prisoners of war waiting for repatriation]] |
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Some Russian councillors of Menelik II and a team of fifty Russian volunteers participated in the battle, among them [[Nikolay Leontiev]], an officer of the Kuban Cossack army.<ref name="auto1" /> Russian support for Ethiopia also led to a Russian Red Cross mission, which arrived in Addis Ababa some three months after Menelik's Adwa victory.<ref name="auto" /> |
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George Berkeley records that the Italian casualties were 6,133 men killed: 261 officers, 2,918 white NCOs and privates, 954 permanently missing, and about 2,000 ascari. Another 1,428 were wounded – 470 Italians (including 31 officers) and 958 ascari. With 1,865 Italians and 1,000–2,000 ascaris taken prisoner.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Berkeley |first1=George |title=The Campaign of Adowa and the rise of Menelik |journal=The Geographical Journal |date=1903 |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=345|doi=10.2307/1775411 |jstor=1775411 |bibcode=1903GeogJ..21..175B |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1954915 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Sean|last=Mclachlan|page=22|title=Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896|date=20 September 2011 |publisher=Bloomsbury USA |isbn=978-1-84908-457-4}}</ref> Richard Caulk estimates that the number of Italians killed were 300 officers, 4,600 Italian rank and 1,000 askari for a total of 5,900 dead. As well as and 1,000 of those who escaped wounded and at least 2,000 captured. Citing contemporary figures, Caulk records Ethiopian losses to be 3,886 killed and 6,000 wounded.<ref name=JHY>{{cite book|title="Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876-1896) |last=Caulk |first=Richard |year=2002 |pages=563, 566–567 |place=Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden}}</ref> Whereas Berkeley estimates Ethiopian losses to be 7,000 killed and 10,000 wounded.<ref name="Uhlig-109">von Uhlig, ''Encyclopaedia'', p. 109.</ref><ref name = "Pankhurst-1998"/> In their flight to Eritrea, the Italians left behind all of their artillery and 11,000 rifles, as well as most of their transport.<ref name="Pankhurst-1998"/> As Paul B. Henze notes, "Baratieri's army had been completely annihilated while Menelik's was intact as a fighting force and gained thousands of rifles and a great deal of equipment from the fleeing Italians."{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=170}} 800 captured [[Eritrean Ascari]], regarded as traitors by the Ethiopians, had their right hands and left feet amputated, some were even castrated.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/docannexe/image/14887/img-12.jpg|title=Photo of some of the Eritrean Ascari mutilated|access-date=3 March 2019|archive-date=23 September 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180923235457/https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/docannexe/image/14887/img-12.jpg|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Sean|last=McLachlan|page=23|title=Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896|date=20 September 2011 |publisher=Bloomsbury USA |isbn=978-1-84908-457-4}}</ref> The Italian prisoners were generally treated better. Although, about 70 Italian prisoners were massacred in retaliation for the death of [[Bashah Aboye]], the officer responsible for the massacre was supposedly imprisoned by Menelik.<ref>{{cite book |last=Ilg |first=Alfred |author-link=Alfred Ilg |editor-last=Tafla |editor-first=Bairu |date=2000 |title=Ethiopian records of the Menilek era: selected Amharic documents from the Nachlass of Alfred Ilg, 1884-1900 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r7mKpjg0RDwC&dq=abboyye+adwa&pg=PA460 |work=Äthiopistische Forschungen |volume=54 |location=Wiesbaden |publisher=Otto Harrassowitz Verlag |page=460 |isbn=9783447042581 |issn=0170-3196}}</ref><ref>Richard Caulk, ''"Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876–1896)'', p. 568</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Sean|last=McLachlan|page=23|title=Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896|date=20 September 2011 |publisher=Bloomsbury USA |isbn=978-1-84908-457-4}}</ref> |
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The Italians suffered about 7,000 killed and 1,500 wounded in the battle and subsequent retreat back into Eritrea, with 3,000 taken prisoner; Ethiopian losses have been estimated around 4,000 killed and 8,000 wounded.<ref name="Uhlig-109">von Uhlig, ''Encyclopaedia'', p. 109.</ref><ref name="Pankhurst-1998">{{harvnb|Pankhurst|2001|pp=191–192}}</ref> In addition, 2,000 Eritrean [[Askari]]s were killed or captured. Italian prisoners were treated as well as possible under difficult circumstances, but 800 captured Askaris, regarded as traitors by the Ethiopians, had their right hands and left feet amputated.<ref>Augustus B. Wylde, ''Modern Abyssinia'' (London: Methuen, 1901), p. 213</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/docannexe/image/14887/img-12.jpg|title=Photo of some of the Eritrean Askaris mutilated}}</ref> Menelik, knowing that the war was very unpopular in Italy with the Italian Socialists in particular condemning the policy of the Crispi government, chose to be a magnanimous victor, making it clear that he saw a difference between the Italian people and Crispi.<ref name="Marcus" /> |
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== Outcome and consequences == |
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== National unity created by Menelik II == |
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{{Main|Treaty of Addis Ababa}} |
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{{unreferenced section|date=April 2019}} |
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The Italian telegraph lines brought news of the disaster to Italy and the world almost immediately. Italy was shaken by political crisis and popular demonstrations. Riots broke out in several Italian cities, and within two weeks, Crispi was forced to resign amidst Italian disenchantment with "foreign adventures".<ref name="vand5">{{harvnb|Vandervort|1998|p=164}}</ref> Soon after the battle, [[Menelik II]] later sent a message to [[Antonio Baldissera]] informing him that he would conclude peace if Italy publicly renounced their protectorate claim over Ethiopia. Baldissera agreed to accept only if Ethiopia agreed to not accept protection from any other European powers. At this Italian arrogance, Menelik broke off talks and withdrew his original offer. Upon returning to his capital at [[Addis Ababa]], Menelik secured the [[Treaty of Addis Ababa]] in October, which delineated the borders of Eritrea and forced Italy to recognize "absolutely and without any reserve" the independence of Ethiopia.{{sfn|Henze|2000|p=170}} |
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{{more citations needed|section|date=April 2019}} |
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The Russian support for Ethiopia led to a Russian Red Cross mission, though conceived as a medical support for the Ethiopian troops it arrived too late for the actual fighting. The mission arrived in Addis Ababa some three months after Menelik's victory at Adwa.<ref name="auto">{{cite web|url=http://www.linkethiopia.org/guide/pankhurst/medicine/medicine_6.html |title=Ethiopia's Historic Quest for Medicine, 6 |publisher=The Pankhurst History Library |first=Pankhurst |last=Richard |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111003141829/http://www.linkethiopia.org/guide/pankhurst/medicine/medicine_6.html |archive-date=2011-10-03}}</ref> Owing to Russia's diplomatic support of her fellow Orthodox nation, Russia's prestige greatly increased in Ethiopia. The adventuresome Seljan brothers, [[Mirko and Stjepan Seljan|Mirko and Stjepan]], who were actually Catholic Croats, were warmly welcomed when they arrived in Ethiopia in 1899 when they misinformed their hosts by saying they were Russians.<ref>{{Cite journal |jstor = 41757592|title = The Seljan Brothers and the Expansionist Policies of Emperor Minïlik II of Ethiopia|journal = International Journal of Ethiopian Studies|volume = 5|issue = 2|pages = 79–90|last1 = Molvaer|first1 = Reidulf K.|year = 2010}}</ref> |
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Menelik was a well respected ruler whose lineage was allegedly traced back to [[Solomon|King Solomon]] and the [[Queen of Sheba]]. He used that status and its power to peacefully create alliances and to conquer those who opposed him. He was such a skillful negotiator that he was able to unify almost all of the Northern, Western, and Central territories peacefully. He made [[Ras Mengesha Yohannes]] the prince of Tigray, and along with the threat of the Italians, convinced him to join him. Menelik not only conquered large groups of people like the Oromo, Guarage, and Wolayta, he also managed to incorporate leaders from those groups into his own government, and war council. Whether conquered peacefully or militarily, almost all groups had a voice under Menelik. |
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From 1888 to 1892, one third of the Ethiopian population died from what would become known as [[Famines in Ethiopia|The Great Famine]]. On the heels of this disaster, Menelik used his relationship with the Europeans to help modernise Ethiopia. The Europeans soon flooded the Ethiopian economy looking for business opportunities. Meanwhile, Menelik established the first national bank, a national currency, a postal system, railroads, modern roads, and electricity. The bank and currency unified the people economically and helped establish economic stability. The railways, roads, and postal system connected the people and tribes as a nation as well as physically. Possibly his greatest achievement in creating a national identity was through the creation of [[Addis Ababa]]. This was an important psychological component in the establishment of a nation. It provided a metaphorical ‘head’ for the nation. It became permanent location for the entire country to look upon for support and for guidance. |
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== Outcome and consequences == |
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Menelik retired in good order to his capital, [[Addis Ababa]], and waited for the fallout of the victory to hit Italy. Riots broke out in several Italian cities, and within two weeks, the Crispi government collapsed amidst Italian disenchantment with "foreign adventures".<ref name=vand4>{{harvnb|Vandervort|1998|p=164}}</ref> |
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Following this victory, the European powers moved rapidly to adjust relations with the Ethiopian Empire. Delegations from the United Kingdom and France—whose colonial possessions lay next to Ethiopia—soon arrived in the Ethiopian capital to negotiate their own treaties with this newly proven power. Quickly taking advantage of the Italian defeat, French influence increased markedly and France became one of the most influential European powers in [[Menelik II|Menelik]]'s court.<ref name="Marcus" /> In December 1896, a French diplomatic mission in Addis Ababa arrived and on 20 March 1897 signed a treaty that was described as "''véritable traité d'alliance''.<ref name="Marcus" /> In turn, the increase in French influence in Ethiopia led to fears in London that the French would gain control of the Blue Nile and would be able to "lever" the British out of Egypt.<ref name="Marcus" /> On the eve of the Battle of Adwa, two Sudanese envoys from the [[Mahdist State|''Mahdiyya'' state]] arrived at Menelik's camp in Adwa to discuss concentrated action against the Italians, in July 1896 an Ethiopian envoy was present at [[Abdallahi ibn Muhammad]]'s court in [[Omdurman]].<ref name="Marcus" /> The British, fearing that Menelik would support the Mahdist revolt, sent a diplomatic mission to Ethiopia and on 14 May 1897 signed the [[Anglo-Ethiopian Treaty of 1897]] where Menelik assured the British that he would not support the Mahdists and declared the Mahdists as the enemy of his country. In December 1897, [[Ras Makonnen]] led an expedition against the Mahdists to seize the gold producing region of [[Benishangul-Gumuz Region|Benishangul-Gumuz]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Oliver |first1=Ronald |title=The Cambridge History of Africa: Volume 6 |page=663 |publisher=Cambridge University Press}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Milkias |first1=Paulos |title=The Battle of Adwa Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism |date=2005 |publisher=B&T Database Management |pages=121 |isbn=9780875864150 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f71M3BC6TtIC&q=pg=PA118}}</ref> |
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In 1935, Italy launched a [[Second Italo-Ethiopian War|second invasion]], which |
In 1935, Italy launched a [[Second Italo-Ethiopian War|second invasion]], which ended in 1937 with an Italian victory and the annexation of Ethiopia to [[Italian East Africa]]. Ethiopia was occupied by Italy until the Italians were driven out in 1941 by the Ethiopian [[Arbegnoch]], patriots with assistance from the [[British Empire]] during World War II.<ref name=Stanton>{{harvnb|Stanton|Ramsamy|Seybolt|2012|p=308}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |title=The Ethiopians: A History |publisher=[[BlackwellPublishers]] |year=1998 |isbn=0-631-22493-9 |edition=2nd |location=Great Britain |pages=243–249 |language=English}}</ref> |
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== Gallery == |
== Gallery == |
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<gallery> |
<gallery> |
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File:Leontiev Nikolay.jpg|Russian military officer [[Nikolay Leontiev]] with a member of the [[Military history of Ethiopia|Ethiopian military]] |
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File:Adoua 1.jpg|[[Battle of Adwa]] |
File:Adoua 1.jpg|[[Battle of Adwa]] |
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File:Battle of Adwa Tapestry Closeup.png|An Ethiopian painting commemorating the Battle of Adwa |
File:Battle of Adwa Tapestry Closeup.png|An Ethiopian painting commemorating the Battle of Adwa |
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File:Two Italian soldiers survivors Battle of Adua.jpg|Two [[Italian diaspora|Italian]] soldiers captured and held captive after the Battle of Adwa |
File:Two Italian soldiers survivors Battle of Adua.jpg|Two [[Italian diaspora|Italian]] soldiers captured and held captive after the Battle of Adwa |
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</gallery> |
</gallery> |
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== See also == |
== See also == |
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* [[Ethiopia–Italy relations]] |
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* [[British Expedition to Abyssinia]] (1868) |
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* [[Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889]] |
* [[Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889]] |
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* [[Second Italo-Ethiopian War]] |
* [[Second Italo-Ethiopian War]] |
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* [[Italian Empire]] |
* [[Italian Empire]] |
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* [[Military history of Ethiopia]] |
* [[Military history of Ethiopia]] |
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* [[Military history of Italy]] |
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== Notes == |
== Notes == |
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|title=Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 |
|title=Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8urEDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA202 |
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|publisher=McFarland & Company |
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* {{cite book |
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|last1=Henze |
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|first1=Paul B. |
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|title=Layers of Time: A History of Ethiopia |
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|date=2000 |
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Latest revision as of 19:20, 20 December 2024
First Italo-Ethiopian War | |||||||||
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Part of the Scramble for Africa | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Kingdom of Italy | Ethiopian Empire | ||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Francesco Crispi Oreste Baratieri Giuseppe Arimondi † Giuseppe Galliano † Pietro Toselli † |
Menelik II Taytu Betul Mengesha Yohannes Welle Betul | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
35,000[1]–43,700[2][3] | 80,000[4]–125,000[5] | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
9,313 killed[a] 1,428 wounded[8] 3,865 captured[9][10] | ~10,000 killed[11] |
The First Italo-Ethiopian War, also referred to as the First Italo-Abyssinian War, or simply in Italy as the Abyssinian War (Italian: Guerra d'Abissinia), was a war fought between Italy and Ethiopia from 1895 to 1896. It originated from the disputed Treaty of Wuchale, which the Italians claimed turned Ethiopia into an Italian protectorate. Full-scale war broke out in 1895, with Italian troops from Italian Eritrea achieving initial successes against Tigrayan warlords at Coatit, Senafe and Debra Ailà, until they were reinforced by a large Ethiopian army led by Emperor Menelik II.[12] The Italian defeat came about after the Battle of Adwa, where the Ethiopian army dealt the outnumbered Italian soldiers and Eritrean askaris a decisive blow and forced their retreat back into Eritrea. The war concluded with the Treaty of Addis Ababa. Because this was one of the first decisive victories by African forces over a European colonial power,[13] this war became a preeminent symbol of pan-Africanism and secured Ethiopia's sovereignty until the Second Italo-Ethiopian War of 1935–37.[14]
Background
[edit]The Khedive of Egypt Isma'il Pasha, better known as Isma'il the Magnificent, had conquered Eritrea as part of his efforts to give Egypt an African empire.[15][16] Isma'il had tried to follow up that conquest with Ethiopia, but the Egyptian attempts to conquer that realm ended in humiliating defeat in the Egyptian–Ethiopian War. After Egypt's bankruptcy in 1876[17] followed by the Ansar revolt under the leadership of the Mahdi in 1881, the Egyptian position in Eritrea was hopeless with the Egyptian forces cut off and unpaid for years. By 1884 the Egyptians began to pull out of both Sudan and Eritrea.[16]
On 3 June 1884, the Hewett Treaty was signed between Britain, Egypt and Ethiopia that allowed the Ethiopians to occupy parts of the dissolved Habesh Eyalet which allowed Ethiopian goods to pass in and out of Massawa duty-free.[16] From the viewpoint of Britain, it was highly undesirable that the French replace the Egyptians in Massawa as that would allow the French to have more naval bases on the Red Sea that could interfere with British shipping using the Suez Canal, and as the British did not want the financial burden of ruling Massawa, they looked for another power who would be interested in replacing the Egyptians.[16] The Hewett treaty seemed to suggest that Massawa would fall into the Ethiopian sphere of influence as the Egyptians pulled out.[16] After initially encouraging the Emperor Yohannes IV to move into Massawa to replace the Egyptians, London decided to have the Italians move into Massawa.[16] In his history of Ethiopia, British historian Augustus Wylde wrote: "England made use of King John [Emperor Yohannes] as long as he was of any service and then threw him over to the tender mercies of Italy...It is one of our worst bits of business out of the many we have been guilty of in Africa...one of the vilest bites of treachery".[16]
On 5 February 1885, Italian troops landed at Massawa to replace the Egyptians.[16] The Italian government for its part was more than happy to embark upon an imperialist policy to distract its people from the failings in post Risorgimento Italy.[16] In 1861, the unification of Italy was supposed to mark the beginning of a glorious new era in Italian life, and many Italians were gravely disappointed to find that not much had changed in the new Kingdom of Italy with the vast majority of Italians still living in abject poverty. To compensate, a chauvinist mood was rampant among the upper classes in Italy with the newspaper Il Diritto writing in an editorial: "Italy must be ready. The year 1885 will decide her fate as a great power. It is necessary to feel the responsibility of the new era; to become again strong men afraid of nothing, with the sacred love of the fatherland, of all Italy, in our hearts".[16][18] The struggle against the Ansar from Sudan complicated Yohannes's relations with the Italians, whom he sometimes asked to provide him with guns to fight the Ansar and other times he resisted the Italians and proposed a truce with the Ansar.[18]
On 18 January 1887, at a village named Saati, an advancing Italian army detachment defeated the Ethiopians in a skirmish, but it ended with the numerically superior Ethiopians surrounding the Italians in Saati after they retreated in face of the enemy's numbers.[19] Some 500 Italian soldiers under Colonel de Christoforis together with 50 Eritrean auxiliaries were sent to support the besieged garrison at Saati.[19] At Dogali on his way to Saati, de Christoforis was ambushed by an Ethiopian force under Ras Alula, whose men armed with spears skillfully encircled the Italians who retreated to one hill and then to another higher hill.[19] After the Italians ran out of ammunition, Ras Alula ordered his men to charge and the Ethiopians swiftly overwhelmed the Italians in an action that featured bayonets against spears.[19] The Battle of Dogali ended with the Italians losing 23 officers and 407 other ranks killed.[19] As a result of the defeat at Dogali, the Italians abandoned Saati and retreated back to the Red Sea coast.[20] Italian newspapers called the battle a "massacre" and excoriated the Regio Esercito for not assigning de Chistoforis enough ammunition.[20] Having, at first, encouraged Emperor Yohannes to move into Eritrea, and then having encouraged the Italians to also do so, London realised a war was brewing and decided to try to mediate, largely out of the fear that the Italians might actually lose.[16]
The defeat at Dogali made the Italians cautious for a moment, but on 10 March 1889, Emperor Yohannes died after being wounded in battle against the Ansar and on his deathbed admitted that Ras Mengesha, the supposed son of his brother, was actually his own son and asked that he succeed him.[20] The revelation that the emperor had slept with his brother's wife scandalised intensely Orthodox Ethiopia, and instead the Negus Menelik was proclaimed emperor on 26 March 1889.[20] Ras Mengesha, one of the most powerful Ethiopian noblemen, was unhappy about being by-passed in the succession and for a time allied himself with the Italians against the Emperor Menelik.[20] Under the feudal Ethiopian system, there was no standing army, and instead, the nobility raised up armies on behalf of the Emperor. In December 1889, the Italians advanced inland again and took the cities of Asmara and Keren.[20]
Outbreak of the war
[edit]On 25 March 1889, the Shewa ruler Menelik II declared himself Emperor of Ethiopia (or "Abyssinia", as it was commonly called in Europe at the time). Barely a month later, on 2 May he signed the Treaty of Wuchale with the Italians, which apparently gave them control over Eritrea, the Red Sea coast to the northeast of Ethiopia, in return for recognition of Menelik's rule, a sum of money and the provision of 30,000 rifles and 28 artillery cannons.
However, the bilingual treaty did not say the same thing in Italian and Amharic; the Italian version did not give the Ethiopians the "significant autonomy" written into the Amharic translation.[21] The Italian text stated that Ethiopia must conduct its foreign affairs through Italy (making it an Italian protectorate), but the Amharic version merely stated that Ethiopia could contact foreign powers and conduct foreign affairs using the embassy of Italy. Italian diplomats, however, claimed that the original Amharic text included the clause and Menelik knowingly signed a modified copy of the Treaty.[22] In October 1889, the Italians informed all of the other European governments because of the Treaty of Wuchale that Ethiopia was now an Italian protectorate and therefore the other European nations could not conduct diplomatic relations with Ethiopia.[23] With the exceptions of the Ottoman Empire, which still maintained its claim to Eritrea, and Russia, which disliked the idea of an Orthodox nation being subjugated to a Roman Catholic nation, all of the European powers accepted the Italian claim to a protectorate.[23]
The Italian claim that Menelik was aware of Article XVII turning his nation into an Italian protectorate seems unlikely given that the Emperor Menelik sent letters to Queen Victoria in late 1889 and was informed in the replies in early 1890 that Britain could not have diplomatic relations with Ethiopia on the account of Article XVII of the Treaty of Wuchale, a revelation that came as a great shock to the Emperor.[23] The tone of Victoria's letter was polite. The Queen informed Menelik that the restrictions on the import of arms were no longer in force and to prove this mentioned that Ras Makonnen received permission "to pass two thousand rifles through Zeila, return to Harar" i.e. from Italy. But on the question of further diplomatic contacts, she left no doubt in Menelik's mind: "We shall communicate to the Government of our Friend His Majesty the King of Italy copies of Your Majesty's letter and of our reply."[23]
Francesco Crispi, the Italian Prime Minister, was an ultra-imperialist who believed the newly unified Italian state required "the grandeur of a second Roman empire".[20] Crispi believed that the Horn of Africa was the best place for the Italians to start building the new colonial empire.[20] Because of the Ethiopian refusal to abide by the Italian version of the treaty and despite economic handicaps at home, the Italian government decided on a military solution to force Ethiopia to abide by the Italian version of the treaty. In doing so, they believed that they could exploit divisions within Ethiopia and rely on tactical and technological superiority to offset any inferiority in numbers. The efforts of Emperor Menelik, viewed as pro-French by London, to unify Ethiopia and thus bring the source of the Blue Nile under his control was perceived in Whitehall as a threat to their influence in Egypt.[24] As Menelik became increasingly successful in expanding Ethiopia, the British government courted the Italians to counter Ethiopian expansion.[24]
The only European ally of Ethiopia was Russia.[25][26][27] The Ethiopian emperor sent his first diplomatic mission to St. Petersburg in 1895. In June 1895, the newspapers in St. Petersburg wrote, "Along with the expedition, Menelik II sent his diplomatic mission to Russia, including his princes and his bishop". Many citizens of the capital came to meet the train that brought Prince Damto, General Genemier, Prince Belyakio, Bishop of Harer Gabraux Xavier and other members of the delegation to St. Petersburg. On the eve of war, an agreement providing military help for Ethiopia was concluded. Russia had been trying to gain a foothold in Ethiopia,[28] and in 1894, after denouncing the Treaty of Wuchale in July, it received an Ethiopian mission in St. Petersburg and sent arms and ammunition to Ethiopia.[26] The Russian travel writer Alexander Bulatovich who went to Ethiopia to serve as a Red Cross volunteer with the Emperor Menelik made a point of emphasizing in his books that the Ethiopians converted to Christianity before any of the Europeans ever did, described the Ethiopians as a deeply religious people like the Russians, and argued the Ethiopians did not have the "low cultural level" of the other African peoples, making them equal to the Europeans.[29]
In 1893, judging that his power over Ethiopia was secure, Menelik repudiated the treaty; in response the Italians ramped up the pressure on his domain in a variety of ways, including the annexation of small territories bordering their original claim under the Treaty of Wuchale, and finally culminating with a military campaign and across the Mareb River into Tigray (on the border with Eritrea) in December 1894. The Italians expected disaffected potentates like Negus Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam, Ras Mengesha Yohannes, and the Sultan of Aussa to join them; instead, all of the Ethiopians flocked to the Emperor Menelik's side in a display of both nationalism and anti-Italian feeling, while other peoples of dubious loyalty (e.g. the Sultan of Aussa) were watched by Imperial garrisons.[30] In June 1894, Ras Mengesha and his generals appeared in Addis Ababa carrying large stones which they dropped before the Emperor Menelik (a gesture that is a symbol of submission in Ethiopian culture).[20] There was overwhelming national unity in Ethiopia as various feuding noblemen rallied behind the emperor who insisted that Ethiopia, unlike the other African nations, would retain its freedom and not be subjugated by Italy.[20]
Menelik had spent much of his reign building up a vast arsenal of modern weapons and ammunition acquired though treaty negotiations and purchases from the Russians, French, British, and even the Italians.[31] In 1884, Count Pietro Antonelli , the Italian envoy to Menelik II, was able to import 50,000 Remington rifles and 10 million cartridges in exchange for 600 camels bearing gold, ivory and civet.[32] After Italian sources dried up Menelik strove to increase his other imports, in the few years preceding the war the arms trade expanded considerably. In November 1893, Menelik's Swiss friend and advisor, Alfred Ilg, went to Paris where he traded gold and ivory for 80,000 Fusil Gras mle 1874, 33 pieces of artillery and 5,000 artillery shells. Menelik had also purchased 15,000 quick-firing rifles left over from the Franco-Hova Wars from the French arms trader Léon Chefneux. By the end of 1894, 30,000 Berdan rifles and loads of ammunition were imported from Russia, and at least 250,000 cartridges were imported from French Djibouti.[33][34][35]
Course of the war
[edit]In December 1894, Bahta Hagos led a rebellion against the Italians in Akkele Guzay, claiming support of Ras Mengesha Yohannes. Units of General Oreste Baratieri's army under Major Pietro Toselli crushed the rebellion and killed Bahta at the Battle of Halai. Baratieri suspected that Mengesha would invade Eritrea, and met him at the Battle of Coatit in January 1895. The victorious Italians chased the retreating Mengesha, defeating him again at the battle of Senafe. Baratieri promptly marched into Adigrat on March 8 and occupied Adwa on April 2. He issued a proclamation, annexing Tigray province into Italian Eritrea, then moved into Mekelle and fortified an old church above the town's spur.[12][36] At this point, Emperor Menelik turned to France, offering a treaty of alliance; the French response was to abandon the Emperor in order to secure Italian approval of the Treaty of Bardo which would secure French control of Tunisia. Virtually alone, on 17 September 1895, Emperor Menelik issued a proclamation calling up the men of Abyssinia to join his army at Were Ilu.[37] Leaders of every region in Ethiopia responded to Menelik's call to arms and would assemble an army of over 100,000 men before marching north to face the Italian invaders.[12]
The next clash came at Amba Alagi on 7 December 1895, when Ras Makonnen brought up his largely Shewan army to the slopes of Amba Alagi in southern Tigray. They were confronted by Major Pietro Toselli with 2,000 Eritreans and local Tigrayan askaris that had joined the Italians for various reasons. Makonnen was joined by Ras Mengesha Yohannes and Welle Betul, and together they overran the Italian positions on the natural fortress, killing Major Toselli and most of his men. General Giuseppe Arimondi, who had just arrived to reinforce Toselli, was barely able to escape and retreated with 400 survivors to the unfinished Italian fort at Mekele. Arimondi left a small garrison of approximately 1,150 askaris and 200 Italians there, commanded by Major Giuseppe Galliano, and took the bulk of his troops to Adigrat, where General Oreste Baratieri was concentrating the Italian army.[12]
The first Ethiopian troops reached Mekele in the following days. Ras Makonnen surrounded the fort at Mekelle on 18 December. By the first days of January, Emperor Menelik II, accompanied by his Queen Taytu Betul, had led their massive imperial army into Tigray and joined Ras Makonnen at Mekele on 6 January 1896.[38] While Italian journalists filled sensational reports of their brave country holding out against "war-crazed black barbarians", Menelik had established contact with the Italian commander and gave him the opportunity to leave peacefully to Adigrat. The commander was defiant until the Ethiopians cut off the water supply to the fort and on January 21, with permission from the Italian high command, he agreed to surrender. Menelik allowed them to leave Mekelle with their weapons, and even provided the defeated Italians mules and pack animals to rejoin Baratieri. While some historians read this generous act as a sign that Emperor Menelik still hoped for a peaceful resolution to the war, Harold Marcus points out that this escort allowed him a tactical advantage: "Menelik craftily managed to establish himself in Hawzien, at Gendepata, near Adwa, where the mountain passes were not guarded by Italian fortifications."[39][4]
Menelik decided against attacking the Italian headquarters at Adigrat and instead marched west towards the plateau of Adwa. Baratieri feared that the Emperor intended to invade Eritrea and hence abandoned his positions at Adigrat and moved towards the area. On February 28, 1896, Baratieri called an assembly of all his generals and informed them that their provisions would run out, and asked if the army should retreat back to Asmara or attack Menelik's army. All of his generals were opposed to retreat. Baratieri decided to rely on surprise by making up for his deficiency in manpower and issued a battle order on the next day.[40]
Battle of Adwa
[edit]The decisive battle of the war was the Battle of Adwa on March 1, 1896, which took place in the mountainous country north of the actual town of Adwa (or Adowa). The Italian army comprised four brigades totaling approximately 17,700 men, with fifty-six artillery pieces; the Ethiopian army comprised several brigades numbering between 73,000 and 120,000 men (80–100,000 with firearms: according to Richard Pankhurst, the Ethiopians were armed with approximately 100,000 rifles of which about half were quick-firing),[5] with almost fifty artillery pieces. General Oreste Baratieri underestimated the size of the Ethiopian force, predicating that Menelik could only field 30,000 men;[41] also, the Ethiopians were better armed, being equipped with thousands of modern rifles and Hotchkiss artillery guns together with ammunition and shells which were superior to the Italian rifles and artillery.[41] Menelik had ensured that his infantry and artillerymen were properly trained in their use, giving the Ethiopians a crucial advantage as the Hotchkiss artillery could fire more rapidly than the Italian artillery.[41]
On the night of 29 February and the early morning of 1 March, three Italian brigades advanced separately towards Adwa over narrow mountain tracks, while a fourth remained camped. However, the three leading Italian brigades had become separated during their overnight march and by dawn were spread across several miles of very difficult terrain. Unbeknownst to General Baratieri, Emperor Menelik knew his troops had exhausted the ability of the local peasants to support them and had planned to break camp the next day. The Emperor had risen early when spies from Ras Alula brought him news that the Italians were advancing. The Emperor summoned the separate armies of his nobles and with the Empress Taytu Betul beside him, ordered his forces forward.[42][43]
The Italian forces were hit by wave after wave of attacks, until Menelik released his reserve of 25,000 men, which overran an Italian brigade. Another brigade was cut off, and destroyed by a cavalry charge. The last two brigades were destroyed piecemeal in a devastating rout. By noon, the Italian survivors were in full retreat.[44][45]
George Berkeley records that the Italian casualties were 6,133 men killed: 261 officers, 2,918 white NCOs and privates, 954 permanently missing, and about 2,000 ascari. Another 1,428 were wounded – 470 Italians (including 31 officers) and 958 ascari. With 1,865 Italians and 1,000–2,000 ascaris taken prisoner.[46][47] Richard Caulk estimates that the number of Italians killed were 300 officers, 4,600 Italian rank and 1,000 askari for a total of 5,900 dead. As well as and 1,000 of those who escaped wounded and at least 2,000 captured. Citing contemporary figures, Caulk records Ethiopian losses to be 3,886 killed and 6,000 wounded.[48] Whereas Berkeley estimates Ethiopian losses to be 7,000 killed and 10,000 wounded.[49][45] In their flight to Eritrea, the Italians left behind all of their artillery and 11,000 rifles, as well as most of their transport.[45] As Paul B. Henze notes, "Baratieri's army had been completely annihilated while Menelik's was intact as a fighting force and gained thousands of rifles and a great deal of equipment from the fleeing Italians."[50] 800 captured Eritrean Ascari, regarded as traitors by the Ethiopians, had their right hands and left feet amputated, some were even castrated.[51][52] The Italian prisoners were generally treated better. Although, about 70 Italian prisoners were massacred in retaliation for the death of Bashah Aboye, the officer responsible for the massacre was supposedly imprisoned by Menelik.[53][54][55]
Outcome and consequences
[edit]The Italian telegraph lines brought news of the disaster to Italy and the world almost immediately. Italy was shaken by political crisis and popular demonstrations. Riots broke out in several Italian cities, and within two weeks, Crispi was forced to resign amidst Italian disenchantment with "foreign adventures".[56] Soon after the battle, Menelik II later sent a message to Antonio Baldissera informing him that he would conclude peace if Italy publicly renounced their protectorate claim over Ethiopia. Baldissera agreed to accept only if Ethiopia agreed to not accept protection from any other European powers. At this Italian arrogance, Menelik broke off talks and withdrew his original offer. Upon returning to his capital at Addis Ababa, Menelik secured the Treaty of Addis Ababa in October, which delineated the borders of Eritrea and forced Italy to recognize "absolutely and without any reserve" the independence of Ethiopia.[50]
The Russian support for Ethiopia led to a Russian Red Cross mission, though conceived as a medical support for the Ethiopian troops it arrived too late for the actual fighting. The mission arrived in Addis Ababa some three months after Menelik's victory at Adwa.[57] Owing to Russia's diplomatic support of her fellow Orthodox nation, Russia's prestige greatly increased in Ethiopia. The adventuresome Seljan brothers, Mirko and Stjepan, who were actually Catholic Croats, were warmly welcomed when they arrived in Ethiopia in 1899 when they misinformed their hosts by saying they were Russians.[58]
Following this victory, the European powers moved rapidly to adjust relations with the Ethiopian Empire. Delegations from the United Kingdom and France—whose colonial possessions lay next to Ethiopia—soon arrived in the Ethiopian capital to negotiate their own treaties with this newly proven power. Quickly taking advantage of the Italian defeat, French influence increased markedly and France became one of the most influential European powers in Menelik's court.[24] In December 1896, a French diplomatic mission in Addis Ababa arrived and on 20 March 1897 signed a treaty that was described as "véritable traité d'alliance.[24] In turn, the increase in French influence in Ethiopia led to fears in London that the French would gain control of the Blue Nile and would be able to "lever" the British out of Egypt.[24] On the eve of the Battle of Adwa, two Sudanese envoys from the Mahdiyya state arrived at Menelik's camp in Adwa to discuss concentrated action against the Italians, in July 1896 an Ethiopian envoy was present at Abdallahi ibn Muhammad's court in Omdurman.[24] The British, fearing that Menelik would support the Mahdist revolt, sent a diplomatic mission to Ethiopia and on 14 May 1897 signed the Anglo-Ethiopian Treaty of 1897 where Menelik assured the British that he would not support the Mahdists and declared the Mahdists as the enemy of his country. In December 1897, Ras Makonnen led an expedition against the Mahdists to seize the gold producing region of Benishangul-Gumuz.[59][60]
In 1935, Italy launched a second invasion, which ended in 1937 with an Italian victory and the annexation of Ethiopia to Italian East Africa. Ethiopia was occupied by Italy until the Italians were driven out in 1941 by the Ethiopian Arbegnoch, patriots with assistance from the British Empire during World War II.[61][62]
Gallery
[edit]-
An Ethiopian painting commemorating the Battle of Adwa
-
Two Italian soldiers captured and held captive after the Battle of Adwa
See also
[edit]- Ethiopia–Italy relations
- Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889
- Second Italo-Ethiopian War
- Italian Empire
- Military history of Ethiopia
- Military history of Italy
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Marcus, Harold G. (22 February 2002). A history of Ethiopia. University of California Press. p. 97. ISBN 9780520224797.
Baratieri had a relatively small army of 35,000 men, mostly Eritreans
- ^ Marcus, Harold G. The Life and Times of Menelik II: Ethiopia, 1844-1913. p. 168.
the general's army consisted of 29,700 Italians, 14,000 colonial soldiers, and 70 field pieces
- ^ Caulk, Richard (2002). "Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876-1896). Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden. p. 506.
In all nearly 40,000 officers and men, 8,500 mules and 100,000 tons of material were scraped together for an expeditionary force
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Henze 2000, p. 168.
- ^ a b Pankhurst 2001, p. 190
- ^ Dominioni, Matteo (2021). I prigionieri di Menelik, 1896-1897. Mimesis Edizioni. pp. Table 1.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Negash, Tekeste (1987). Italian Colonialism in Eritrea 1882-1941. p. 23.
- ^ Milkias, Paulos; Metaferia, Getachew (2005). The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against. Algora. p. 286. ISBN 9780875864150.
- ^ Berkeley, George (1903). "The Campaign of Adowa and the rise of Menelik". The Geographical Journal. 21 (2): 345. Bibcode:1903GeogJ..21..175B. doi:10.2307/1775411. JSTOR 1775411.
1,865 were Italians and 2,000 were Eritrean askari.
- ^ Mclachlan, Sean (20 September 2011). Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896. Bloomsbury USA. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-84908-457-4.
- ^ Vandervort 1998, p. 160
- ^ a b c d Henze 2000, p. 167.
- ^ "5 Fascinating Battles of the African Colonial Era". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
- ^ Professor Kinfe Abraham, "The Impact of the Adowa Victory on The Pan-African and Pan-Black Anti-Colonial Struggle," Address delivered to The Institute of Ethiopian Studies, Addis Ababa University, 8 February 2006
- ^ Marsot, Afaf (1975). "The Porte and Ismail Pasha's Quest for Autonomy". Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt. 12 (1975): 89–96. doi:10.2307/40000011. JSTOR 40000011. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Perry 2005, p. 196
- ^ Atkins, Richard (1974). "The Origins of the Anglo-French Condominium in Egypt, 1875-1876". The Historian. 36 (2): 264–282. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1974.tb00005.x. JSTOR 24443685. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
- ^ a b Erlich, Haggai (2007). "Ethiopia and the Mahdiyya – You Call Me a Chicken?". Journal of Ethiopian Studies. 40 (1/2): 219–249. JSTOR 41988228.
- ^ a b c d e Perry 2005, p. 200
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Perry 2005, p. 201
- ^ Gardner 2015, p. 107
- ^ Pastoretto, Piero. "Battaglia di Adua" (in Italian). Archived from the original on May 31, 2006. Retrieved 2006-06-04.
- ^ a b c d Rubenson, Sven (1964). "The Protectorate Paragraph of the Wichale Treaty". The Journal of African History. 5 (2): 243–283. doi:10.1017/S0021853700004837. JSTOR 179872.
- ^ a b c d e f Marcus, Harold G. (1963). "A Background to Direct British Diplomatic Involvement in Ethiopia, 1894–1896". Journal of Ethiopian Studies. 1 (2): 121–132. JSTOR 41965700.
- ^ Patman 2009, pp. 27–30
- ^ a b Vestal, Theodore M. (2005). "Reflections on the Battle of Adwa and its Significance for Today". In Paulos Milkias; Getachew Metaferia (eds.). The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism. Algora. pp. 21–35. ISBN 978-0-87586-414-3.
- ^ Eribo 2001, p. 55
- ^ Burke, Edmund (1892). "East Africa". The Annual Register of World Events: A Review of the Year. Annual Register, New Series. Vol. 133. Longmans, Green. pp. 397–399.
- ^ Mirzeler, Mustafa Kemal (2005). "Reading "Ethiopia through Russian Eyes": Political and Racial Sentiments in the Travel Writings of Alexander Bulatovich, 1896–1898". History in Africa. 32: 281–294. doi:10.1353/hia.2005.0017. JSTOR 20065745. S2CID 52044875.
- ^ Prouty 1986, p. 143
- ^ Milkias, Paulos (2005). The Battle of Adwa Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism. Algora. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-87586-413-6.
- ^ Pankhurst, Richard (1982). History of Ethiopian towns from the mid 19th century to 1935. Steiner. p. 296.
- ^ Richard Caulk, "Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876–1896), p. 413
- ^ Carmichael, Tim (2001). Approaching Ethiopian History Addis Abäba and Local Governance in Harär, C.1900 to 1950. Michigan State University: Department of History. p. 38.
- ^ McLachlan, Sean (2011). Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896. Osprey Publishing. p. 35.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Berkeley 1969
- ^ Marcus 1995, p. 160
- ^ Prouty 1986, pp. 144–151
- ^ Marcus 1995, p. 167
- ^ Henze 2000, p. 169.
- ^ a b c Perry 2005, p. 205.
- ^ "Sean McLachlan, page 15 "Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896: The Italian Disaster in Ethiopia"" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 May 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- ^ Lewis, Fashoda, p. 117.
- ^ "Sean McLachlan, page 15 "Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896: The Italian Disaster in Ethiopia"" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 May 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- ^ a b c Pankhurst 2001, pp. 191–192
- ^ Berkeley, George (1903). "The Campaign of Adowa and the rise of Menelik". The Geographical Journal. 21 (2): 345. Bibcode:1903GeogJ..21..175B. doi:10.2307/1775411. JSTOR 1775411.
- ^ Mclachlan, Sean (20 September 2011). Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896. Bloomsbury USA. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-84908-457-4.
- ^ Caulk, Richard (2002). "Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876-1896). Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden. pp. 563, 566–567.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ von Uhlig, Encyclopaedia, p. 109.
- ^ a b Henze 2000, p. 170.
- ^ "Photo of some of the Eritrean Ascari mutilated". Archived from the original on 23 September 2018. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ McLachlan, Sean (20 September 2011). Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896. Bloomsbury USA. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-84908-457-4.
- ^ Ilg, Alfred (2000). Tafla, Bairu (ed.). Ethiopian records of the Menilek era: selected Amharic documents from the Nachlass of Alfred Ilg, 1884-1900. Vol. 54. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 460. ISBN 9783447042581. ISSN 0170-3196.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - ^ Richard Caulk, "Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876–1896), p. 568
- ^ McLachlan, Sean (20 September 2011). Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896. Bloomsbury USA. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-84908-457-4.
- ^ Vandervort 1998, p. 164
- ^ Richard, Pankhurst. "Ethiopia's Historic Quest for Medicine, 6". The Pankhurst History Library. Archived from the original on 2011-10-03.
- ^ Molvaer, Reidulf K. (2010). "The Seljan Brothers and the Expansionist Policies of Emperor Minïlik II of Ethiopia". International Journal of Ethiopian Studies. 5 (2): 79–90. JSTOR 41757592.
- ^ Oliver, Ronald. The Cambridge History of Africa: Volume 6. Cambridge University Press. p. 663.
- ^ Milkias, Paulos (2005). The Battle of Adwa Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism. B&T Database Management. p. 121. ISBN 9780875864150.
- ^ Stanton, Ramsamy & Seybolt 2012, p. 308
- ^ Pankhurst, Richard (1998). The Ethiopians: A History (2nd ed.). Great Britain: BlackwellPublishers. pp. 243–249. ISBN 0-631-22493-9.
- Bibliography
- Berkeley, George (1969). Reprint (ed.). The campaign of Adowa and the rise of Menelik. Negro University Press. ISBN 978-1-56902-009-8.
- Clodfelter, Micheal (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 (4th ed.). McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-7470-7.
- Eribo, Festus (2001). In Search of Greatness: Russia's Communications with Africa and the World. Ablex Publishing. ISBN 978-1-56750-532-0.
- Gardner, Hall (2015). The Failure to Prevent World War I: The Unexpected Armageddon. Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-4724-3058-8.
- Henze, Paul B. (2000). Layers of Time: A History of Ethiopia. Hurst & Company. ISBN 1850653933.
- Jonas, Raymond (2011). The Battle of Adwa: African Victory in the Age of Empire. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-06279-5.
- Marcus, Harold G. (1995). The Life and Times of Menelik II: Ethiopia 1844–1913. Red Sea Press. ISBN 978-1-56902-010-4.
- Pankhurst, Richard (2001). The Ethiopians: A History. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-22493-8.
- Patman, Robert G. (2009). The Soviet Union in the Horn of Africa: The Diplomacy of Intervention and Disengagement. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-10251-3.
- Perry, James M. (2005). Arrogant Armies: Great Military Disasters and the Generals Behind Them. Castle Books. ISBN 978-0-7858-2023-9.
- Prouty, Chris (1986). Empress Taytu and Menilek II: Ethiopia 1883–1910. Red Sea Press.
- Stanton, Andrea L.; Ramsamy, Edward; Seybolt, Peter J. (2012). Cultural Sociology of the Middle East, Asia, and Africa: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publications. p. 308. ISBN 978-1-4129-8176-7.
- Vandervort, Bruce (1998). Wars of Imperial Conquest in Africa, 1830–1914. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33383-4.
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