Photos Photos
has expanded considerably since 1952, when only 4 percent of the adult
population was literate. Since then, many Image Gallery have been opened, and
several teacher-training Image Gallery have graduated numerous teachers. A
major program to increase literacy was started in 1979; by the mid-1980s
about 63 percent of the adult population could read and write. Free
Photos exists from primary school through the college level, but
regular school facilities are available to only about one-third of the
children of school age. In the mid-1980s about 3.1 million students
attended about 9100 primary and secondary Image Gallery run by the government
and religious groups.
Aděs
Abeba University (1950) has branches in Awassa, Bahir Dar, Debra Zeit,
and Gonder. The Alemaya University of Agriculture was founded in 1962.
More than 20,000 students were enrolled in Photographs in
the late 1980s.
Ethiopia, formerly Abyssinia, republic in eastern Africa, bounded on the
northeast by Eritrea and Djibouti, on the east and southeast by Somalia,
on the southwest by Kenya, and on the west and northwest by Sudan. The
area of the country is 1,128,176 sq km (435,606 sq mi).
Land and Resources
The heart of Ethiopia is a high tableland, known as the Ethiopian
Plateau, covering more than one-half the total area of the country. The
plateau is split diagonally in a northeastern to southwestern direction
by the Rift Valley. Although the average elevation of the plateau is
about 1675 m (about 5500 ft), it is cut by many rivers and deep valleys,
some of which are 610 m (2000 ft) below the level of the plateau. The
area is capped by mountains, the highest of which is Ras Dashan (4620
m/15,157 ft). These heights and indentations occur in northern Ethiopia,
in the region surrounding Lake T'ana (the lake in which the Blue Nile
rises). The northeastern edges of the plateau are marked by steep
escarpments, which drop some 1220 m (about 4000 ft) or more to the
sunbaked coastal plain and the Denakil Desert. Along the western fringe
the plateau descends less abruptly to the desert of Sudan. Along the
southern and southwestern limits, the plateau lowers toward Lake Turkana
(also called Lake Rudolf).
Climate
The climate of Ethiopia varies mainly according to elevation. The
tropical zone below approximately 1830 m (approximately 6000 ft) has an
average annual temperature of about 27° C (about 80° F) and receives
less than about 510 mm (about 20 in) of rain annually. The subtropical
zone, which includes most of the highland plateau and is between about
1830 and 2440 m (about 6000 and 8000 ft) in elevation, has an average
temperature of about 22° C (about 72° F) with an annual rainfall ranging
from about 510 to 1525 mm (about 20 to 60 in). Above approximately 2440
m (approximately 8000 ft) is a temperate zone with an average
temperature of about 16° C (about 61° F) and an annual rainfall between
about 1270 and 1780 mm (about 50 and 70 in). The main rainy season
occurs between mid-June and September, followed by a dry season that may
be interrupted in February or March by a short rainy season.
Natural Resources
The resources of Ethiopia are primarily agricultural. The plateau area
is fertile and largely undeveloped. The wide range of soils, climate,
and elevations permits the production of a diversified range of
agricultural commodities. A variety of mineral deposits exist; iron,
copper, zinc, lead, potash (see POTASSIUM), gold, and platinum are the
principal ones that have been commercially exploited.
Plants and Animals
The great variations in elevation are directly reflected in the kind of
vegetation found in Ethiopia. The lower areas of the tropical zone have
sparse vegetation consisting of desert shrubs, thornbushes, and coarse
savanna grasses. In the valleys and ravines almost every form of African
vegetation grows in luxurious profusion. The temperate zone is largely
covered with grassland. Afro-alpine vegetation is found on the highest
slopes.
The larger species of African wildlife are native to most parts of the
country. These include the giraffe, leopard, hippopotamus, lion,
elephant, antelope, and rhinoceros. The lynx, jackal, hyena, and various
species of monkey are common. Birds of prey include the eagle, hawk, and
vulture. Heron, parrot, and such game birds as the snipe, partridge,
teal, pigeon, and bustard are found in abundance. Among the many
varieties of insects are the locust and tsetse fly.
Soils
The highland of Ethiopia is made up of folded and fractured crystalline
rocks capped by sedimentary limestone and sandstone and by thick layers
of volcanic lava. The torrential rains of the main rainy season cause
severe erosion, especially in areas where all natural vegetation has
been cleared. The rains also leach the highland soils of much fertility,
particularly those soils overlying crystalline rocks. The volcanic soils
of the highland are less readily leached and therefore are more fertile.
Population
Most of the inhabitants of Ethiopia support themselves through
agriculture, which is largely of a subsistence nature. The population is
concentrated heavily in the central plateau region, where agricultural
resources are most developed. The ethnic composition is extremely
diverse, as a result of racial and linguistic integration that began in
ancient times.
Population Characteristics
According to the 1984 census, Ethiopia had a population of 42,019,418.
The estimated population in 1993 was 51,070,000, yielding an overall
density of about 45 persons per sq km (about 117 per sq mi). The Amhara
(who founded the original nation), a highland people partly of Semitic
origin, and the related Tigreans constitute about 35 percent of the
total population. They occupy the Ethiopian highlands, especially north
of latitude 10° North and west of longitude 40° East, and the former
province of Shoa as far south as Adis Abeba, the capital. The Galla, a
pastoral and agricultural people living mainly in central and
southwestern Ethiopia, constitute about one-third of the population. The
Shangalla, a people found in the western part of the country from the
border of Eritrea to Lake Turkana, constitute a little more than 5
percent of the population. The Somali, who live in the east and
southeast, notably in the Ogaden region, are approximately equal in
number to the Shangalla. The Denakil inhabit the semidesert plains east
of the highlands. The nonindigenous population includes Yemenites,
Indians, Armenians, and Greeks.
Political Divisions
Formerly divided into 14 provinces, Ethiopia was reorganized as 24
administrative regions and 5 autonomous regions under the 1987
constitution. Each region has its own elected assembly. The province of
Eritrea became an independent republic in 1993.
Principal Cities
In 1984 Aděs Abeba, the capital, had a population of 1,423,111. Other
major cities include Dire Dawa (98,104), Gonder (68,958), and Dese
(68,848).
Religion
The Ethiopian Orthodox Union church, an autonomous Christian sect headed
by a patriarch and closely related to the Coptic church of Egypt, was
the state church of Ethiopia until 1974.
About one-half of the total population is Christian, and Christianity is
predominant in the northern provinces. All the southern regions have
Muslim majorities. The region of Gamu-Gofa and parts of the Sidamo and
Arusi regions contain considerable animist elements. The Falashas
practice a type of Judaism that probably dates back to contact with
early Arabian Jews.
Of the 70 or more languages spoken in Ethiopia, most belong to the
Semitic and Cushitic branches of the Afro-Asiatic family (see AFRICAN
LANGUAGES). The of the Ethiopian church liturgy, Gecez, gave
rise to the Semitic cluster of languages, Amharic, Tigrinya, and Tigre.
Amharic, the official of the country, is spoken by about 60
percent of the population. English and Arabic are also spoken by many
people.
Culture
The most significant area of Ethiopian culture is in the field of
literature, represented predominantly by translations from ancient
Greek, Arabic, and other languages into the ancient Gecez and modern
Amharic. Most of the works are theological or mythological in nature.
Secular literature is largely confined to history.
Ecclesiastical architecture is relatively rich because of the early
advent of Christianity in the country. Such structures and their
frescoes usually show both Byzantine and Coptic influences.
Of the folkart, silversmithing is remarkable for the imagination and the
skill it entails.
Economy
In the late 1980s Ethiopia was one of the world's poorest nations, with
a per-capita income averaging only $120 a year. Average life expectancy
at birth was only 47 years; the infant mortality rate was 135 per 1000
live births, and famine was a constant threat. The economy of Ethiopia
remains heavily dependent on the earnings of the agricultural sector.
Participation by the mass of the populace in the monetary economy is
limited; much trading is conducted by barter in local markets. The
estimated annual budget in the late 1980s included $1.4 billion in
revenues, $1.2 billion in current expenditures, and $700 million in
development spending.
Agriculture
Traditional agriculture by primitive methods, including the raising of
livestock, is the most characteristic form of Ethiopian economic
activity. Commercial estates, which are run by the government, supply
coffee, cotton, sugar, fruit, and vegetables to the nation's processing
industries and for export. Pulses (chickpeas, lentils, haricot beans)
and oilseeds are also grown on a commercial scale. The most important
food crops grown primarily for local consumption are cereal grains.
Periodic droughts have greatly reduced agricultural output and forced
Ethiopia to import basic foodstuffs, while civil war has disrupted the
food distribution system.
Despite a government program of diversification, coffee remains the most
important commodity on which the economy of Ethiopia depends. About
one-fourth of the population is engaged in its production.
In the late 1980s the livestock population included about 31 million
cattle, 23.4 million sheep, 17.5 million goats, 57 million poultry
birds, and smaller numbers of horses, mules, donkeys, and camels. About
one-third of the cattle are oxen used for heavy labor. Sheep and goats
are raised primarily for skins and meat.
Mining
Although many mineral deposits exist in Ethiopia, thick layers of
volcanic lava cover the older ore-bearing rock and render exploitation
difficult. Outcroppings of iron, copper, zinc, and lead have been mined
since ancient times. Small quantities of manganese ore, gold, and
platinum are mined, and deposits of petroleum and natural gas have been
found. About 135,000 metric tons of salt were mined annually in the late
1980s. Ethiopia also has considerable untapped deposits of high-quality
potash.
Manufacturing
Manufacturing is primarily oriented toward the processing of
agricultural commodities. The textile industry ranks second to food
processing. During the 1960s the gross annual value of manufactured
products was accelerated considerably. The industrial base was broadened
by the establishment of various metalworking industries and factories
for the production of consumer goods and industrial commodities. The
principal manufacturing center is Aděs Abeba.
Energy
Ethiopia has great potential for producing hydroelectricity, and in the
late 1980s about 80 percent of its relatively small yearly electricity
output was generated by hydroelectric facilities. In the same period the
country had a total installed electricity generating capacity of some
363,000 kilowatts, and annual production was about 810 million
kilowatt-hours.
Currency and Banking
The Ethiopian birr is issued by the National Bank of Ethiopia (4.9215
Ethiopian birr equal U.S.$1; 1993). Other banks in the country include
the Commercial Bank of Ethiopia and the Agricultural and Industrial
Development Bank.
Trade
Ethiopia is primarily an exporter of agricultural products and an
importer of consumer and capital goods. In the late 1980s exports
amounted to about $429 million, and imports were valued at about $956
million. Coffee accounts for more than 55 percent of all exports and is
the most valuable foreign-exchange earner. Other important exports are
pulses, hides and skins, and oilseeds. Leading trade partners include
the United States, Germany, and Japan.
Transportation and Communications
The Ethiopian terrain makes land travel difficult. Because many areas
are inaccessible by road and others are inadequately served by surface
transportation, air transport is of great importance. A government-owned
airline company, Ethiopian Airlines, handles both domestic and
international air service. International airports serve Aděs Abeba, Dire
Dawa, and Jimma. The capital is connected by rail with the port of
Djibouti, on an inlet of the Gulf of Aden. Ethiopia has about 39,480 km
(about 24,530 mi) of roads, of which about 20 percent are paved.
Construction of a highway linking Aděs Abeba with Nairobi, the capital
of Kenya, was completed in the 1970s.
In the late 1980s Ethiopia had about 137,300 telephones; an estimated 2
million radio receivers and 40,000 television sets were in use. The
Voice of Revolutionary Ethiopia makes radio broadcasts daily in Amharic,
Arabic, Somali, English, and French. Television broadcasting is
government controlled.
Government
Between 1974 and 1987, Ethiopia was governed by the Provisional Military
Administrative Council (PMAC), also known as the Dirgue, made up of
about 80 people, most of whom were members of the armed forces or
police. The council came to power following the deposition of Emperor
Haile Selassie I on September 12, 1974, when it suspended the revised
constitution of 1955 and disbanded the bicameral Parliament. In March
1975 it abolished the hereditary monarchy. The council was headed by a
chairman, who was the country's chief government official.
A program published by the council in late 1974 called for the state to
play a leading role in the country's economy and in establishing a
specifically Ethiopian type of socialism. It also called for the
establishment of a single, all-embracing political party. The Union of
Ethiopian Marxist-Leninist Organizations was created in 1977 as the sole
legal party but was disbanded soon after. In September 1984 the Workers
party, a Communist organization, was established as the nation's only
legal political group. A new constitution in 1987 established a republic
headed by a president, who was indirectly elected to a five-year term by
the National Shengo, a unicameral assembly.
In 1991 the Marxist government was ousted by two allied rebel movements,
the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front and the Eritrean
People's Liberation Front. Under a provisional charter, an 87-member
elected Council of Representatives chose a president to govern Ethiopia,
pending general elections in 1993. A separate government was established
in Eritrea, and the province was recognized as an independent republic
in May 1993.
Judiciary
The PMAC and, subsequently, the 1987 constitution retained aspects of
the imperial judicial system, including a supreme court, a high court,
and various provincial and regional courts. Under the PMAC a special
military tribunal was established to try government officials accused of
corruption or abuse of power.
Defense
In the late 1980s the Ethiopian army had 313,000 members; the air force,
4000; and the navy, 1800. Incorporated in the army is the People's
Militia, with about 150,000 members. In the late 1970s and in the 1980s
Ethiopia received military equipment from the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR) to use in fighting rebel forces; Cuban troops were
stationed in Ethiopia from 1977 until 1989.
History
During the 1st millennium BC, Semitic people from Sheba (Saaba) crossed
the Red Sea and conquered the Hamite on the coast of what was eventually
to become the Ethiopian Empire. By the 2nd century AD the victors had
established the kingdom of Aksum. The kingdom was ruled by the Solomonid
dynasty, so called because the kings claimed direct descent from the
biblical king Solomon and the queen of Sheba. Aksum converted to
Christianity, belonging to the same tradition as the Coptic Christians
of Egypt. It flourished for a while, but beginning in about the 7th
century the kingdom declined as the Solomonids lost control of section
after section of their realm. Early in the 10th century the Solomonid
dynasty was overthrown and replaced by the Zagwe dynasty, the ruling
family of a region on the central plateau known as Lasta. Regaining
control of the country around or after 1260, the Solomonids gradually
succeeded in reasserting their authority over much of Ethiopia, although
Muslims retained control of the coastal area and the southeast. During
the reign (1434-1468) of Zara Yakub, the administration of the Ethiopian
church, which had become divided by factionalism, was reformed, and
religious doctrines were codified. At about this time a political system
emerged that lasted until the middle of the 20th century. It was
characterized by absolutist monarchs who exacted military service in
return for grants of land.
European Influence
When Muslims from Harar invaded Ethiopia beginning about 1527, the
emperor, as the ruler was now called, asked the Portuguese for
assistance, and with their help the Ethiopians defeated the Muslims in
1542. In 1557, Jesuit missionaries arrived, but their ongoing attempts
to convert the Ethiopian emperors from Coptic Christianity to Roman
Catholicism were largely unsuccessful, and provoked social and political
unrest from those who felt the Coptic Church was the backbone of an
independent Ethiopian culture. In 1632, following a period of turbulence
and dynastic confusion, Fasiladas became emperor. He was succeeded by
his son, Johannes I, in 1637. The 17th century was one of artistic
renaissance for Ethiopian culture, as it was exposed to styles of
expression from western Europe and the Muslim world. This was especially
true during the reign of Johannes' son, Iyasus I, also known as Iyasus
the Great. After succeeding to the crown in 1682, Iyasus became known as
a lover of the arts, as well as a modernizer and brilliant military
tactician. His reign saw the construction of some of Ethiopia's most
beautiful religious architecture as well as the re-establishment of
governmental authority over several provinces in the south that had
succumbed to Muslim and tribal encroachment. After the death of Iyasus
in 1706, Ethiopia entered another prolonged period of dynastic confusion
and decline, during which the country fractured into separate regions.
The only unifying force that remained throughout this period was the
Ethiopian church. Gaining the support of high church officials, a
successful brigand from the northwestern frontier, Ras Kassa, had
himself crowned Emperor Theodore II in 1855, after having defeated a
number of petty feudal-type rulers who controlled various sections of
the country. Later, when Theodore imprisoned some British officials for
conspiring against him, the British dispatched an expeditionary force to
Ethiopia, and the emperor committed suicide in 1868 rather than be taken
prisoner. After a four-year struggle for the throne by various
claimants, Dejaz Kassai, governor of the province of Tigre, succeeded,
with British aid, in being crowned Johannes IV, emperor of Ethiopia.
In the 1870s the main external enemy of the empire, which was still
little more than a collection of semi-independent states, was Egypt. In
1875 the Egyptian khedive Ismail Pasha extended Egyptian protection to
the Muslim ruler of Harar and launched an attack on Ethiopia from both
the north and the east. John IV successfully halted the Egyptian
invasion, but the continued occupation by Egypt of the Red Sea and
Somali ports severely curtailed the supply of arms and other goods to
Ethiopia. Johannes was killed defending his western frontier against the
Sudanese in 1889. He was succeeded by Menelik II, who established a new
capital at Aděs Abeba and succeeded in uniting the provinces of Tigre
and Amhara with Shoa.
The Italo-Ethiopian Wars
With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, the Red Sea coast had become
increasingly attractive to the European powers as an object for
colonization. Italy focused its attention on Ethiopia, seizing Assab in
1872 and Massawa in 1885. In 1889 Menelik and the Italians signed the
Treaty of Wichale (Ucciali). The treaty was one of friendship and
cooperation, but the Amharic and Italian versions of it differed, and
the Italians claimed that it made all of Ethiopia their protectorate. As
a result, war broke out between Italy and Ethiopia in 1895, and Italian
forces were decisively defeated at Adwa (Adowa) the following year.
Italy was forced to recognize the independence of Ethiopia, and
Menelik's present-day boundaries. The successor of Menelik, Emperor Lij
Iyasu (reigned 1913-1916), was deposed in favor of his aunt, crowned
Empress Zauditu. Ras Tafari Makonnen, her cousin, was selected as heir
apparent; he succeeded to the throne as Haile Selassie I. In 1931 he
granted Ethiopia its first constitution.
With the rise of the dictator Benito Mussolini, Italian designs toward
Ethiopia were revived, and in October 1935 Italy invaded the country. An
attempt by the League of Nations to halt the conquest failed. Aděs Abeba
fell to the invaders, and in May 1936 Mussolini proclaimed Italy's King
Victor Emmanuel III emperor of Ethiopia. Haile Selassie was forced to
flee the country and take refuge in England, but he was restored to the
throne by British and Ethiopian forces in 1941.
The Later Reign of Haile Selassie
According to the terms of the Allied peace treaty with Italy, signed in
1947, agreement was to be reached within a year on the disposition of
the former Italian colonies of Eritrea, Italian Somaliland, and Libya.
In the absence of such an agreement, however, the decision was left to
the United Nations (UN). The UN General Assembly voted for the
federation of Eritrea with Ethiopia, to be completed by September 1952.
In 1955 Haile Selassie issued a revised constitution, which was a
half-hearted attempt to move the country into the 20th century. For
example, it gave certain limited powers to the Parliament. Progressive
elements in the country, however, felt it was insufficient. After an
unsuccessful attempt by members of the imperial guard to overthrow Haile
Selassie in December 1960, the emperor increased government efforts
toward economic development and social reform.
As the 1960s progressed, Haile Selassie became increasingly preoccupied
with foreign affairs. In 1963 he played a leading role in the formation
of the Organization of African Unity, which located its secretariat at
Aděs Abeba. During the following year a long-standing border dispute
between Ethiopia and the Somali Republic erupted into armed warfare. A
truce, agreed to in March, established a demilitarized zone along the
border, but hostilities recurred sporadically. Trouble also arose in
1965 with Sudan, which Ethiopia accused of abetting an Eritrean
independence movement. The conflict intensified when 7000 Eritreans fled
to Sudan in 1967 because of Ethiopian military reprisals against the
secessionists. In December 1970 the government declared a state of siege
in parts of Eritrea. The move failed, however, to end the guerrilla
warfare.
In the early 1970s Haile Selassie continued to play a major role in
international affairs, helping to mediate disputes between Sénégal and
Guinea, Tanzania and Uganda, and northern and southern Sudan.
Nevertheless, he largely ignored urgent domestic problems: the great
inequality in the distribution of wealth, rural underdevelopment,
corruption in government, rampant inflation, unemployment, and a severe
drought in the north during 1972-1975.
The Mengistu Regime
In February 1974 students, workers, and soldiers began a series of
strikes and demonstrations that culminated on September 12, 1974, with
the deposition of Haile Selassie by members of the armed forces. A group
called the Provisional Military Administrative Council, or the Dirgue,
was established to run the country, and in late 1974 it issued a program
calling for the establishment of a state-controlled socialist economy.
In early 1975 all agricultural land was nationalized, and much of it was
soon parceled out in small plots to individuals. In March 1975 the
monarchy was abolished, and Ethiopia became a republic.
During 1976-1977 Lieutenant Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam emerged as the
country's chief political figure; his position was consolidated in early
1977 when several top leaders of the Dirgue were killed, reportedly on
his orders. But Mengistu's regime continued to be strongly opposed by
students, by several political factions, and by two secessionist
movements—in the Ogaden region of southwestern Ethiopia and in Eritrea.
In the Ogaden, Somali-speaking inhabitants sought to unite the largely
barren region with adjacent Somalia. The long-standing conflict
escalated in mid-1977, and, with considerable help from Somalia, the
secessionists soon won control of most of the Ogaden. The Ethiopian
government subsequently received large-scale military aid (including
troops from Cuba and advisers from the USSR), which enabled it to make
gains against the rebels, but resistance to its authority continued.
Meanwhile, a government program to reduce poverty and boost economic
growth was stalled by recurrent drought and consequent famine. In
September 1984, Ethiopia became a Communist state, with Mengistu as
secretary-general of the newly established Workers party. The nation
changed its name to the People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia in
1987, under a new constitution that ostensibly established a civilian
government; the national legislature elected Mengistu president. The
protracted civil war and the government's mistrust of Westerners
hampered worldwide efforts to provide food and medical aid to the
beleaguered country throughout the 1980s.
As the 1990s began, a drastic cutback in Soviet aid left Mengistu's
government vulnerable. Two allied rebel movements, the Ethiopian
People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), based in Tigre, and the
separatist Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF) gained control of
the northern provinces in 1990. In May 1991, Mengistu fled to Zimbabwe;
more than 14,000 Ethiopian Jews, or Falashas, were airlifted out of Aděs
Abeba by Israel just before the rebel forces entered the city. The EPRDF,
led by Meles Zenawi, set up a national transitional government. The EPLF
established a provisional government in Eritrea. After voters approved
secession in 1993, Eritrea declared its independence, and Ethiopia
recognized the new government.