All Africa in one Country
Formerly the capital city of the Zagwe Dynasty under the name of Roha, Lalibela was renamed in honor of king Lalibela a notable king of the medieval dynasty. Legend has it that the King received his name when his mother saw him surrounded by a dense swarm of bees in his cradle and prophetically named him ‘Lalibela’ or the ‘bees recognize his sovereignty.’
Lalibela undertook the construction of the churches soon after he was crowned king. According to the legend the construction of the amazing rock hewn churches had angelic help.
The 11 churches at Lalibela are found a short distance away from the town on the South and North sides of a stream known as the Jordan River. It takes one full day to explore the churches which are grouped in to three but for people having more time spending two nights is wise to explore the churches in detail and also include the surrounding churches.
The lower valley of the Omo is currently believed by some to have been a crossroads for thousands of years as various cultures and ethnic groups migrated around the region to this day, the people of the Lower Valley of the Omo, including the Mursi, Suri, Nyangatom, Dizi, Me'en, Aari, Arbore, Bodi,Dassenech, Dorze, Hamar, Karo&Konso are studied for their diversity
The entire Omo river basin is also important geologically and archaeologically. Several hominid fossils and archaeological localities, dating to the Pliocene and Pleistocene, have been excavated by French and American teams. Fossils belonging to the genera Australopithecine and Homo have been found at several archaeological sites, as well as tools made from quartzite, the oldest of which date back to about 2.4 million years ago. Because of this, the site was designated a UNESCOWorld Heritage Site in 1980.
Harar was formally founded in 1520 when Amir Abu Beker Mohammed moved his capital from an older settlement nearby. The Amir was assassinated five years later by Ahmed ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi (Ahmed Gragn) who launched a jihad war against the Christian empire in 1530-32 through his death in 1543.
After his death a war impoverished Harar was isolated by the advanced of the Oromo tribes leading Gragn’s nephew and successor, Nur ibn al – Wazir Mu jahid, to erect strong encircling walls which remain as a dominant feature of the city.
In the following centuries Harar become an important trading centre with its own currency. The city particularly engaged in trade with Arabia, Egypt and India. The city was and still is famous for handicraft and also as a centre for Islamic learning and scholarship.
Harar ceased to be an independent city in 1875 when the Egyptians, determined to establish an East Africa Empire killed the Amir at the time Abdal Shakur. By 1887 the Egyptian occupation was over and an Amir who had managed to take over for a brief time was defeated by Emperor Menelik integrating the city into Ethiopia.
But the Egyptian occupation lasted only a decade, after which another Amir Abdullahi took over only to be defeated later by Menelik in 1887, after which Harar become an integral part of Ethiopia. In the period that followed many foreigners would settle in Harar, among them the famous French poet Arthur Rimbaud, who spent some of his last years in the city.
Menelik installed his cousin Ras Makonnen’s, a progressive best remembered for being the father of Emperor Haile Selassie as governor of Harar. In the early 20th century the thriving trade that had been an important element of the city’s identity was affected when the construction of the Djibouti-Addis Ababa Railways by passed Harar and established a station in Dire Dawa.
There are thirty – seven islands about on the 3600 square kilo meter surface of Ethiopia’s largest body of water, Lake Tana. Some twenty of these islands shelter churches and monasteries of significant historical and cultural interests. The buildings are decorated with unique traditional religious artwork. The Tana islands have served as the repositories for innumerable treasures over the centuries and currently house many ancient relics including the crowns and clothes of ancient kings as well as various icons.
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