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Diaspora Figures | HIM Menelik II
Menelik II of Ethiopia
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menelek_II_of_Ethiopia
Emperor
Menelik II, also known as Sahle Maryam of Shewa (August 17, 1844
– December 12, 1913), Conquering Lion of Judah, Elect of God,
King of Kings of Ethiopia was n?gusä nägäst of Ethiopia
from 1889 to his death.
The son of Negus Haile Melekot of Shoa (1847 -
1855), prince Sahle Maryam was born in 1844 in Ankober, Shoa and
as heir to the Shewan branch of the Solomonic Dynasty which claimed
male-line descent from King Solomon of ancient Israel, and the Queen
of Sheba. On the death of his father in 1855 he, just named as his
successor as king of Shewa by his father, was taken prisoner by
Emperor Tewodros II (Theodore II), a former minor noble originally
named Kassa of Qwara, who had usurped the Imperial throne from the
last Emperor of the elder Gondar branch of the Solomonic dynasty,
Emperor Yohannis III (John III) or from emperor Sahle Dengel. Young
Sahle Maryam of Shewa was imprisoned on Tewodros' mountain stronghold
of Magdala, but was treated well by the Emperor, even marrying Tewodros's
daughter Alitash. However, he eventually succeeded at escaping from
Magdala and abandoned his wife, returning to Shewa to reclaim his
ancestral crown and at once attacked the usurper claiming the Imperial
throne for himself as well. These campaigns were unsuccessful, and
he turned his arms to the west, east and south, and annexed much
territory to his kingdom, still, however, maintaining his claims
to the Imperial Crown of Ethiopia in addition to the royal one of
Shewa.
In 1883, Negus Sahle Maryam married Taytu Betul,
a noblewoman of Imperial blood, and a member of the leading families
of the regions of Semien, Gojjam and Begemder. Her uncle Dejazmatch
Wube Haile Maryam had been the ruler of Tigray and much of northern
Ethiopia. She had been married four times previously and exercised
considerable influence. Menelik and Taytu would have no children.
Menelik had, previous to this marriage, sired not only Zauditu (eventually
Empress of Ethiopia), but also another daughter, Shoaregga (who
married Ras Mikael of Wollo), and a son Prince Wossen Seged who
died in childhood. Menelek’s clemency to Ras Mangasha, whom
he compelled to submit and then made hereditary Prince of his native
Tigray, was ill repaid by a long series of revolts by that prince.
Note: It is disputed -by other claimants- but likely that Menelek
II's Tsehafi tezaz (prime minister) Gebreselassie was the Emperor's
biological son outside of marriage. Although his inclusion/exclusion
in the royal family tree remained controversial, he was given a
very preferential treatment by the Emperor and was also made the
prime minister of Abyssinia.
After the suicide of Tewodros II in 1868 following
his defeat at the hands of the British at Magdalla, Sahle Maryam
continued to struggle against the various other claimants to the
Imperial throne. The eventual successor, the Emperor Yohannis IV
(better known to Europeans as King John of Abyssinia) was however
able to better exert his claims due to the large number of weapons
left to him by the British whom he had aided against Tewodros. Being
again unsuccessful, Menelek resolved to await a more propitious
occasion; so, acknowledging the supremacy of Yohannes. In 1886 Menelik
married his daughter Zauditu to the Emperor’s son, the ras
Araya Selassie. Ras Araya Selassie died in May 1888 without any
issue by Zauditu of Shewa, and the Emperor Yohannis IV was killed
in a war against the dervishes at the battle of Gallabat (Matemma)
on May 10, 1889. The succession now lay between the late emperor’s
natural son, the ras Mangasha, and Sahle Maryam of Shewa, but the
latter was able to obtain the allegiance of a large majority of
the nobility on November 4, and consecrated and crowned as Emperor
Menelek II shortly afterwards. Menelek argued that while the family
of Yohannis IV claimed descent from King Solomon and the Queen of
Sheba through females of the dynasty, his own claim was based on
uninterrupted direct male lineage which made the claims of the House
of Shewa equal to those of the elder Gondar line of the dynasty.
In 1889, at the time when he was claiming the
throne against Mangasha, Menelek signed at Wuchale in Wollo province
(Uccialli in the Italian version), a treaty with Italy acknowledging
the establishment of the new Italian Colony of Eritrea with its
seat at Asmara. This colony had previously been part of the northern
Tigrayan territories from which ras Mangasha had generated support,
and the establishment of the Italian colony weakend the Ras. However,
it was soon found that the Italian version of one of the articles
of the treaty placed the Ethiopian Empire under Italian domination,
while the Amharic version did not. Menelek denounced it, and after
negotiations failed, abrogated it, leading Italy to declare war
and invade from Eritrea. After defeating the Italians at Amba-Alagi
and Mekele, he inflicted an even greater defeat on them, in the
battle of Adowa on March 1, 1896, forcing them to capitulate. A
treaty was signed recognizing the absolute independence of Ethiopia.
Menelek II's French sympathies were shown in a
reported official offer of treasure towards payment of the indemnity
at the close of the Franco-Prussian War, and in February 1897 he
concluded a commercial treaty with France on very favorable terms.
He also gave assistance to French officers who sought to reach the
upper Nile from Ethiopia, there to join forces with the Marchand
Mission; and Ethiopian armies were sent towards the Nile, but withdrew
when the Fashoda Crisis between France and the United Kingdom cooled
off. A British mission under Sir Rennell Rodd in May 1897, however,
was cordially received, and Menelek agreed to a settlement of the
Somali boundaries, to keep open to British commerce the caravan
route between Zaila and Harrar, and to prevent the transit of munitions
of war to the Mahdists, whom he proclaimed enemies of Ethiopia.
In the following year the Sudan was reconquered
by an Anglo-Egyptian army and thereafter cordial relations between
Menelek and the British authorities were established. In 1889 and
subsequent years, Menelek sent forces to co-operate with the British
troops engaged against a Somali mullah, Mohammed bin Abdullah.
Menelek had in 1898 crushed a rebellion by Ras
Mangasha (who died in 1906) and he directed his efforts henceforth
to the consolidation of his authority, and in a certain degree,
to the opening up of his country to western civilization. He had
granted in 1894 a concession for the building of a railway to his
capital from the French port of Jibuti, but, alarmed by a claim
made by France in 1902 to the control of the line in Ethiopian territory,
he stopped for four years the extension of the railway beyond Dire
Dawa. When in 1906 France, the United Kingdom and Italy came to
an agreement on the subject, granting control to a joint venture
corporation, Menelek officially reiterated his full sovereign rights
over the whole of his empire.
In May 1909 the emperor’s grandson Lij Iyasu
(or Lij Yasu) by his late daughter Shoaregga, then a lad of thirteen,
was married to Romanework Mangasha (b. 1902), granddaughter of the
Emperor Yohannis IV by his natural son ras Mangasha, and was also
the niece of Empress Taytu. Two days later Iyasu was publicly proclaimed
at Addis Ababa as Menelek’s successor. At that time the emperor
was seriously ill and as his ill-health continued, a council of
regency — from which the empress was excluded — was
formed in March 1910. Lij Iyasu's marriage to Romanework Mangasha
was dissolved, and he married Seble Wongel Hailu, daughter of ras
Hailu, and granddaughter of Negus Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam. Emperor
Menelek II died on December 12th, 1913 of a stroke and is buried
at the Baeta Le Mariam Monastery Church of Addis Ababa.
During the late 1890's Menelek was told of the
'new' method of executing crimnals was using electric chairs and
he ordered 3 for his kingdom. Unfortunately he forgot that electricity
had yet to be introduced into his country. But instead of wasting
his investment, Menelek had another idea. He used an electric chair
as his throne!
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