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Amhara people

Amharas (Amharic: አማራ, romanizedĀmara;[11] Ge'ez: ዐምሐራ, romanized: ʾÄməḥära)[12] are a Semitic-speaking ethnic group which is indigenous to Ethiopia, traditionally inhabiting parts of the northwest Highlands of Ethiopia, particularly inhabiting the Amhara Region. According to the 2007 national census, Amharas numbered 19,867,817 individuals, comprising 26.9% of Ethiopia's population, and they are mostly Oriental Orthodox Christian (members of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church).[1]

Amharas
አማራ (Amharic)
ዐምሐራ (Ge'ez)
Regions with significant populations
 Ethiopia19,870,651 (2007)[1]
 United States195,260[2]
 Canada18,020[3][4][5]
 United Kingdom8,620[6]
 IsraelUnknown[7]
 Australia4,515[8]
 Finland1,515[9]
Languages
Amharic
Religion
Christianity (Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church) • Islam (Sunni) Judaism
Related ethnic groups
AgawArgobbaBeta IsraelGurageTigrayansTigrinyaZay • other Ethiosemitic and Cushitic peoples[10]

They are also found within the Ethiopian expatriate community, particularly in North America.[2][13] They speak Amharic, an Afro-Asiatic language of the Semitic branch which serves as the main and one of the five official languages of Ethiopia.[14] As of 2018, Amharic has over 32 million native speakers and 25 million second language speakers.[15]

The Amhara and neighboring groups in North and Central Ethiopia and Eritrea refer to themselves as "Habesha" Abyssinian) people.[16][17][18][19][20]

Origin

The earliest extants of the Amhara as a people, dates to the early 12th century in the middle of the Zagwe Dynasty, when the Amhara were recorded of being in conflict in the land of Wargih[21] against the Wärjih in 1128 AD.[22]

A non-contemporary 13th or 14th century hagiographical source from Saint Tekle Haymanot traces Amhara even further back to the mid 9th century AD as a location.[23]

Ethnogenesis

Amharic is a South Ethio-Semitic language, along with Gurage, Harari, and others.[24][25][26] Some time before the 1st century AD, the North and South branches of Ethio-Semitic diverged.[26][27] Due to the social stratification of the time, the Cushitic Agaw adopted the South Ethio-Semitic language and eventually absorbed the Semitic population.[28][29][30][31] Amharic thus developed with a Cushitic substratum and a Semitic superstratum.[32][33] The proto-Amhara, or the northernmost South Ethio-Semitic speakers, remained in constant contact with their North Ethio-Semitic neighbors, evidenced by linguistic analysis and oral traditions.[34][35] A 7th century southward shift of the center of gravity of the Kingdom of Aksum and the ensuing integration and Christianization of the proto-Amhara also resulted in a high prevalence of Geʽez sourced lexicon in Amharic.[36][37][38] By about the 9th century AD, there was a linguistically distinct ethnic group called the Amhara in the area between the Tekezé River and the valleys of the eastern tributaries of the Blue Nile.[39]

Etymology

The present name for the Amharic language and its speakers comes from the medieval province of Amhara. The latter enclave was located around Lake Tana at the headwaters of the Blue Nile, and included a slightly larger area than Ethiopia's present-day Amhara Region.[citation needed]

The further derivation of the name is debated. Popular etymology traces it to amari ("pleasing; beautiful; gracious") or mehare ("gracious"). Another popular etymology claims that it derives from Ge'ez ዐም (ʿam, "people") and ሐራ (ḥara, "free" or "soldier") although this has been dismissed by Donald Levine.[40] Getachew Mekonnen Hasen traces it to an ethnic name related to the Himyarites of ancient Yemen.[41]

History

 
Menelik II, king of Shewa

The province of "Amhara" was historically located in the modern province of Wollo (Bete Amhara), in the feudal era, the region which is now known as Amhara was composed of several provinces which had little or no autonomy, these provinces included Begemder, Gojjam, Wollo, Lasta, Shewa, Semien, Angot, and Fatagar.[42]

Evidence of a traceable Christian Axumite presence in Amhara dates back to at least the 9th century CE, when the Istifanos monastery was erected on Lake Hayq.[43] Several other sites and monuments indicate the presence of similar Axumite influences in the area, such as the Geta Lion statues, which are located 10 km south of Kombolcha, and they are believed to date back to the 3rd century CE, or they may even date back to pre-Axumite times.[44]

In 1998, ancient pieces of pottery were found around tombs in Atatiya in Southern Wollo, in Habru which is located to the south-east of Hayq, as well as to the north-east of Ancharo (Chiqa Beret). The decorations and symbols which are inscribed on the pottery substantiate the expansion of Aksumite civilization to the south of Angot.[45]

According to Karl Butzer "By 800, Axum had almost ceased to exist, and its demographic resources were barely adequate to stop the once tributary pastoralists of the border marches from pillaging the defenseless countryside." With some of the common people the elite abandoned Axum in favor of central Ethiopia.[46] Christian families gradually migrated southward into Amhara and northern Shewa. Population movement from the old provinces in the north into more fertile areas in the south seems to have been connected to the southward shift of the kingdom.[47]

The Amhara people are considered heirs of the Aksumsite Empire. They have preserved the oral and written cultural and religious traditions of the Ethiopian Empire.[48]

The Amhara nobles supported the Zagwe dynasty prince Lalibela in his power struggle against his brothers which led him to make Amharic Lessana Negus as well as fill the Amhara nobles in the top positions of his Kingdom.[49][50]

Solomonic Dynasty

Yekuno Amlak, a prince from Bete Amhara (lit: House of Amhara) claimed descent from Solomon,[51] and established the Solomonic Dynasty in 1270 AD.[52] Yekuno's rule was legitimatized by the Ethiopian Church, after he defeated the last ruler of the Zagwe dynasty at the Battle of Ansata.[53] The Solomonic dynasty governed the Ethiopian Empire for many centuries from 1270 AD onwards up until the deposing of Haile Selassie in 1974. The Amhara continuously ruled and formed the political core of the Ethiopian Empire, expanding its borders, its wealth and its international prestige, establishing several medieval royal sites and capitals such as Tegulet, Debre Berhan, Barara (located on Mount Entoto, in modern-day Addis Ababa),[54] Gonder, and Magdala.

The Amhara gained political dominance in the Horn of Africa through Amda Seyon's conquests of Muslim borderlands, which greatly expanded Ethiopian territory and power in the region that would be maintained for centuries after his death. Amda Seyon asserted the strength of the new Solomonic dynasty and therefore legitimized it. These expansions further provided for the spread of Christianity to frontier areas, sparking a long era of Christianization, Amharaization, and integration of previously Islamic areas.[55]

 
Lebna Dengel, nəgusä nägäst (Emperor) of Ethiopia and a member of the Solomonic dynasty

Beginning in the reign of Wedem Arad, and increasing during the early 15th century, the Emperors sought to make diplomatic contact with European kingdoms for the first time since the Aksumite period. A letter from King Henry IV of England to the Emperor of Abyssinia survives.[56] In 1428, Emperor Yeshaq sent two emissaries to Alfonso V of Aragon, who sent return emissaries who failed to complete the return trip.[57] The first continuous relationship with a European country began in 1508 with Portugal under Emperor Lebna Dengel, who had just inherited the throne from his father.[58] This proved to be an important development, for when the Empire was subjected to the attacks of the Ottoman Empire aligned Adal Sultanate, Portugal assisted the Ethiopian emperor in the Ethiopian–Adal War by sending weapons and 400 men, who helped his son Gelawdewos defeat Ahmad and re-establish his rule.[59]

The Amhara contributed numerous rulers over the centuries, including Haile Selassie,[60] whose father was both paternally and maternally Amhara of Solomonic descent.[61]

Social stratification

Within traditional Amharic society and that of other local Afro-Asiatic-speaking populations, there were four basic strata. According to the Donald Levine, these consisted of high-ranking clans, low-ranking clans, caste groups (artisans), and slaves.[62][63] Slaves or rather servants were at the bottom of the hierarchy, and were primarily drawn from the pagan Nilotic Shanqella and Oromo peoples.[64]

Also known as the barya (meaning "slave" in Amharic), they were captured during slave raids in Ethiopia's southern hinterland. War captives were another source of slaves, but the perception, treatment and duties of these prisoners was markedly different.[65] According to Levine, the widespread slavery in Greater Ethiopia formally ended in the 1930s, but former slaves, their offspring, and de facto slaves continued to hold similar positions in the social hierarchy.[66]

The separate Amhara caste system of people ranked higher than slaves was based on the following concepts: (1) endogamy, (2) hierarchical status, (3) restraints on commensality, (4) pollution concepts, (5) traditional occupation, and (6) inherited caste membership.[62][67] Scholars accept that there has been a rigid, endogamous and occupationally closed social stratification among the Amharas and other Afro-Asiatic-speaking Ethiopian ethnic groups. Some label it as an economically closed, endogamous class system with occupational minorities,[68][69] whereas others such as David Todd assert that this system can be unequivocally labelled as caste-based.[70][71][72]

Language

The Amhara speak "Amharic"("Amarigna", "Amarinya") as their mother tongue. Its native speakers account for 29.3% of the Ethiopian population.[73] It belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family, and is the largest member of the Ethiopian Semitic group.[74] As of 2018 it had more than 57 million speakers worldwide (32,345,260 native speakers plus 25,100,000 second language speakers),[15] making it the most commonly-spoken language in Ethiopia in terms of first- and second-language speakers, and the second most spoken Semitic language after Arabic.

Most of the Ethiopian Jewish communities in Ethiopia and Israel speak Amharic.[7] Many followers of the Rastafari movement learn Amharic as a second language, as they consider it to be a sacred language.[75]

Amharic is the working language of the federal authorities of the Ethiopian government, and one of the five official languages of Ethiopia. It was for some time also the sole language of primary school instruction, but has been replaced in many areas by regional languages such as Oromo and Tigrinya. Nevertheless, Amharic is still widely used as the working language of Amhara Region, Benishangul-Gumuz Region, Gambela Region and Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region.[76] The Amharic language is transcribed using a script (Fidal) which is slightly modified from the Ethiopic or Ge'ez script, an abugida.

Religion

 
Crowds gather at the Fasilides' Bath in Gondar to celebrate Timkat – the Epiphany for the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.

For centuries, the predominant religion of the Amhara has been Christianity, with the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church playing a central role in the culture of the country. According to the 2007 census, 82.5% of the population of the Amhara Region was Ethiopian Orthodox; 17.2% of it was Muslim, 0.2% of it was Protestant (see P'ent'ay) and 0.5% of it was Jewish (see Beta Israel).[77]

The Ethiopian Orthodox Church maintains close links with the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria. Easter and Epiphany are the most important celebrations, marked with services, feasting and dancing. There are also many feast days throughout the year, when only vegetables or fish may be eaten.

Marriages are often arranged, with men marrying in their late teens or early twenties.[78] Traditionally, girls were married as young as 14, but in the 20th century, the minimum age was raised to 18, and this was enforced by the Imperial government. After a church wedding, divorce is frowned upon.[78] Each family hosts a separate wedding feast after the wedding.

Upon childbirth, a priest will visit the family to bless the infant. The mother and child remain in the house for 40 days after birth for physical and emotional strength. The infant will be taken to the church for baptism at 40 days (for boys) or 80 days (for girls).[79]

Culture

 
An example of Ge'ez taken from a 15th-century Ethiopian Coptic prayer book

Literature

Surviving Amharic literary works dates back to the 14th century, when songs and poems were composed.[80] In the 17th century Amharic became the first African language to be translated into Latin[81] when Ethiopian priest and lexicographer Abba Gorgoryos (1595–1658) in 1652 AD made a European voyage to Thuringia in Germany. Gorgoryos along with his colleague and friend Hiob Ludolf co-authored the earliest grammar book of the Amharic language, an Amharic-Latin dictionary, as well as contributing to Ludolf's book "A History of Ethiopia".[82][83]

Modern literature in Amharic however, started two centuries later than in Europe, with the Amharic fiction novel Ləbb Wälläd Tarik, published in Rome in 1908, and widely considered the first novel in Amharic, by Afäwarq Gäbrä Iyäsus.[84] Since then countless literature in Amharic has been published and many modern-day writers in Amharic translate their work into English for commercial reasons.[85]

Music

Up until the mid 20th century, Amharic music consisted mainly of religious and secular folk songs and dances.[86]Qañat Amhara secular folk music developed in the countryside[87] through the use of traditionel instruments such as the masenqo, a one-string bowed lute; the krar, a six-string lyre; and the washint flute played by the local village musicians called the Azmaris,[88] and the peasantry dancing the Eskista; the most well known Amharan folk dance.[89] The begena, a large ten-string lyre; is an important instrument solely devoted to the spiritual part of Amhara music.[90] Other instruments includes the Meleket wind instrument, and the Kebero and Negarit drums.

From the 1950s onward foreign influence i.e. foreign educated Ethiopians and the availability of larger quantities of new instruments led to new genre's of Amharic music and ushered in the 1960s and 1970s Golden Age of Ethiopian music.[91][92] The popular Ethio-Jazz genre pioneered by Mulatu Astatke was created from the Tizita qañat of the Amhara combined with the use of Western instruments.[93] Saxophone legend Getatchew Mekurya instrumentalized the Amhara war cry Shellela into an genre in the 1950s before joining the Ethio-Jazz scene later in his career.[94][95] Other Amharic artists from the Golden age such as Asnaketch Worku, Bahru Kegne, Kassa Tessema and Mary Armede were renowned for their mastery of traditionel instruments.

The political turmoil during the Derg regime (1974-1991) led to censorship of music; night life came to a standstill through government imposed curfews and the curbing of musical performances. Notable Ethiopian musicians were jailed including those of Amhara descent such as Ayalew Mesfin and Telela Kebede.[96][97] A revival of Qene; Amharic poetic songs which uses double entendre known as sam-enna warq (wax and gold) was used for subversive dialogue and resistance to state censorship. Thousands of Ethiopians including musicians migrated during this period to form communities in different countries.[98][99]

Amharic songs of resistance against the autocratic EPRDF regime led by the TPLF (1991-2018) continued; with prevailing themes being rampant corruption, economic favoritism, excessive emphasis on ethnic identity and its ability to undermine national unity. Amharic musicians; such as Getish Mamo, Nhatty Man, Teddy Afro and others turned to the old tradition of sam-enna warq and used layered expression to evade skirt stringent censorship and oppresive laws (such as the anti-terror law) while reminding the people of their similarities and the importance of maintaining solidarity.[100]

On June 2022 Teddy Afro bashed Abiy Ahmed and his regime in a critical new song (Na'et), following the Gimbi massacre. In his song he tries to vent the suppressed public anger and indignation, the swelling public resentment to the chaos in the country.[101]

Art

 
A mural depicting Saint George in the church of Debre Berhan Selassie in Gondar.

Amhara art is typified by religious paintings. One of the notable features of these is the large eyes of the subjects, who are usually biblical figures. It is usually oil on canvas or hide, some surviving from the Middle Ages. The Amhara art includes weaved products embellished with embroidery. Works in gold and silver exist in the form of filigree jewelry and religious emblems.[citation needed]

Kinship and marriage

The Amhara culture recognizes kinship, but unlike other ethnic groups in the Horn of Africa region, it has a relatively lesser role. Household relationships are primary, and the major economic, political and cultural functions are not based on kin relationships among the Amharas. Rather abilities of the individual matter. For example, states Donald Levine, the influence of clergy among the Amhara has been based on "ritual purity, doctrinal knowledge, ability to perform miracles and capacity to provide moral guidance".[17]: 120  The social relationships in the Amhara culture are predominantly based on hierarchical patterns and individualistic associations.[17]: 123 

Family and kin relatives are often involved in arranging semanya (eighty bond marriage, also called kal kidan), which has been most common and allows divorce.[102] Other forms of marriage include qurban, which is solemnized in church, where divorce is forbidden, and usually observed among the orthodox priests.[103][104] Patrilineal descent is the norm.[103] While the wife had no inheritance rights, in case a child was conceived during the temporary damoz marriage, the child could make a claim a part of the father's property.[104][105]

Cuisine

Amhara cuisine consists of various vegetable or spicy meat side dishes and entrées, usually a wat, or thick stew, served atop injera, a large sourdough flatbread made of teff flour in the shape of pancakes usually of about 30 to 45 cm in diameter. When eating traditional injera dishes in groups, it's normally it eaten from a mesob (shared food basket), with each person breaking off pieces of injera flatbread using only the right hand, from the side nearest them and dipping it into stew in the center of the basket. There is also a great variety of vegetarian stews such as lentils, ground split peas, grains, accompanied by injera and/or bread.[106][107]

Amharas adhering to any of the Abrahmic religions do not eat pork or shellfish of any kind for religious reasons. Amhara Orthodox Christians do not consume meat and dairy products (i.e. egg, butter, milk, and cheese) during specific fasting periods, and on every Wednesdays and Fridays except the 50 days between Easter and Pentecost. On all other days meat and dairy products are allowed. A variety of vegan dishes are consumed during fasting periods.[106][107]

Ethiopia is a Buna (coffee) exporter, but also has a very large domestic consumer base. During social gatherings Amharas drink Buna in a unique and traditional way known as a coffee ceremony. First the coffee is roasted, then ground and placed in a Jebena (coffee pot) with boiling water. When ready it is then served to people in little cups, up to three times per ceremony.[106][107]

The ceremony is typically performed by the woman of the household, or the female host and is considered an honor. Amhara women dress up for the occasion in a kemis, a traditional dress. Other locally produced beverages are tella (beer) and tej (honey wine), which are served and drunk on major religious festivals, Saints Days and weddings.[106][107]

Nature of Amhara ethnicity

Mackonen Michael (2008)[108] noted that the Amhara identity is claimed to be composed of multiple ethnicities by some, whereas others "reject this concept and argue that Amhara exists as a distinctive ethnic group with a specific located boundary". He further noted that "although people from the Ethiopian highland areas think of themselves as Amharas, the Northern Shoans specifically call themselves Amhara. That is why the Oromo and Tigrian discourse associate the Northern Shoans as oppressive‐Amharas."[109]

According to Gideon P. E. Cohen, writing in 2000, there is some debate about "whether the Amhara can legitimately be regarded as an ethnic group, [...] given their distribution throughout Ethiopia, and the incorporative capacity of the group that has led to the inclusion of individuals from a wide range of ethnic or linguistic backgrounds".[110] Similarly, Tezera Tazebew notes that "the early 1990s was marked by debates, both popular and scholarly, on the (non-)existence of Amhara as a distinct ethnic group", giving the debate between the academic Mesfin Woldemariam and president of the Transitional Government of Ethiopia Meles Zenawi in July 1991 as an example.[111]

Due to large amounts of assimilation into the northern Amhara culture after Ethiopian imperial expansion, Siegfried Pausewang concluded in 2005 that "the term Amhara relates in contemporary Ethiopia to two different and distinct social groups. The ethnic group of the Amhara, mostly a peasant population, is different from a mixed group of urban people coming from different ethnic background, who have adopted Amharic as a common language and identify themselves as Ethiopians".[112]

In a 2017 article, historian Brian J. Yates notes that some "scholars and politicians have attempted to sketch out what an Amhara is, but there are considerable divergences on the nature of this identity. Some argue that it is a cultural identity; however, much of the scholarship indicates that it is solely a class-based identity, devoid of ethnicity".[113]

Solomon Gashaw asserts that "there is no intra-Amhara ethnic consciousness, except among northern settlers in southern Ethiopia". He notes that most Amharic-speaking people identify by their place of birth. He asks, "what is Amhara domination?", answering: "It is a linguistic and cultural domination by a multi-ethnic group who speak Amharic".[114]

Writing in 1998, Tegegne Teka wrote that "the Amhara do not possess what people usually refer to as objective ethnic markers: common ancestry, territory, religion and shared experience except the language. The Amhara have no claims to a common ancestry. They do not share the same sentiments and they have no mutual interests based on shared understandings. It is, therefore, difficult to conclude that the Amhara belong to an ethnic group. But this does not mean that there is no Amhara identity".[115]

According to ethnographer Donald Levine, writing in 2003 and citing Christopher Clapham, "Only in the last quarter of the 20th cent. has the term [Amhara] come to be a common ethnic appellation, comparable to the way in which Oromo has become generalized to cover peoples who long knew themselves primarily as Boorana (Boräna), Guğği, Mäč̣č̣a and the like. Even so, Amharic-speaking Šäwans still feel themselves closer to non-Amharic-speaking Šäwans than to Amharic-speakers from distant regions like Gondär and there are few members of the Šäwan nobility who do not have Oromo genealogical links".[116] According to Takkele Taddese, Amharic-speakers tend to be a "supra-ethnic group" composed of "fused stock".[117] Taddese describes the Amhara as follows:

The Amhara can thus be said to exist in the sense of being a fused stock, a supra-ethnically conscious ethnic Ethiopian serving as the pot in which all the other ethnic groups are supposed to melt. The language, Amharic, serves as the center of this melting process although it is difficult to conceive of a language without the existence of a corresponding distinct ethnic group speaking it as a mother tongue. The Amhara does not exist, however, in the sense of being a distinct ethnic group promoting its own interests and advancing the Herrenvolk philosophy and ideology as has been presented by the elite politicians. The basic principle of those who affirm the existence of the Amhara as a distinct ethnic group, therefore, is that the Amhara should be dislodged from the position of supremacy and each ethnic group should be freed from Amhara domination to have equal status with everybody else. This sense of Amhara existence can be viewed as a myth.[117]

Ethnic consciousness in the past

In the 17th century, Abyssinian traveler Abba Gorgoryos states the following in a letter to his German friend Hiob Ludolf:

As to my origins, do not imagine, my friend, that they are humble, for I am of the House of Amhara which is a respected tribe; from it come the heads of the Ethiopian people, the governors, the military commanders, the judges and the advisers of the King of Ethiopia who appoint and dismiss, command and rule in the name of the King, his governors, and grandees. "[118]

The rise of ethnic consciousness and nationalism

Zola Moges notes the emergence of Amhara nationalism and ethnic consciousness with origins in the early 1990s but taking clearer shape with the establishment of the National Movement of Amhara in 2018. Moges writes that a "younger generation has adopted its 'Amharaness'; but most ordinary people are yet to fully embrace it, not least because of the lack of any effectively articulated ideological foundation or priorities and the absence of any 'tailor-made' solutions to the challenges facing them".[119]

Amanuel Tesfaye writes that: "While the older Amhara population still detest ethnic identification and ethnic forms of political organization, preferring pan-Ethiopian nationalism, the young have no problem pronouncing their Amhara identity, advocating for the protection and advancement of the rights and interests of their ethnic kin within the framework of the multi-nation state, and organizing politically along that particular ethnic identity".[120]

Notable Amharas

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Wolf Leslau and Thomas L. Kane (collected and edited), Amharic Cultural Reader. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 2001. ISBN 3-447-04496-9.
  • Donald N. Levine, Wax & Gold: Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopian Culture (Chicago: University Press, 1972) ISBN 0-226-45763-X

External links

  • Lemma, Marcos (MD, PhD). . Ethiomedia.com. Archived from the original on 28 March 2005. Retrieved 28 February 2005.
  • People of Africa, Amhara Culture and History

amhara, people, amharas, amharic, አማራ, romanized, Āmara, ዐምሐራ, romanized, ʾÄməḥära, semitic, speaking, ethnic, group, which, indigenous, ethiopia, traditionally, inhabiting, parts, northwest, highlands, ethiopia, particularly, inhabiting, amhara, region, accor. Amharas Amharic አማራ romanized Amara 11 Ge ez ዐምሐራ romanized ʾAmeḥara 12 are a Semitic speaking ethnic group which is indigenous to Ethiopia traditionally inhabiting parts of the northwest Highlands of Ethiopia particularly inhabiting the Amhara Region According to the 2007 national census Amharas numbered 19 867 817 individuals comprising 26 9 of Ethiopia s population and they are mostly Oriental Orthodox Christian members of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church 1 Amharasአማራ Amharic ዐምሐራ Ge ez Yekuno Amlak founder of the Ethiopian EmpireRegions with significant populations Ethiopia19 870 651 2007 1 United States195 260 2 Canada18 020 3 4 5 United Kingdom8 620 6 IsraelUnknown 7 Australia4 515 8 Finland1 515 9 LanguagesAmharicReligionChristianity Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church Islam Sunni JudaismRelated ethnic groupsAgaw Argobba Beta Israel Gurage Tigrayans Tigrinya Zay other Ethiosemitic and Cushitic peoples 10 They are also found within the Ethiopian expatriate community particularly in North America 2 13 They speak Amharic an Afro Asiatic language of the Semitic branch which serves as the main and one of the five official languages of Ethiopia 14 As of 2018 Amharic has over 32 million native speakers and 25 million second language speakers 15 The Amhara and neighboring groups in North and Central Ethiopia and Eritrea refer to themselves as Habesha Abyssinian people 16 17 18 19 20 Contents 1 Origin 1 1 Ethnogenesis 1 2 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Solomonic Dynasty 2 2 Social stratification 3 Language 4 Religion 5 Culture 5 1 Literature 5 2 Music 5 3 Art 5 4 Kinship and marriage 5 5 Cuisine 6 Nature of Amhara ethnicity 6 1 Ethnic consciousness in the past 6 2 The rise of ethnic consciousness and nationalism 7 Notable Amharas 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksOrigin EditThe earliest extants of the Amhara as a people dates to the early 12th century in the middle of the Zagwe Dynasty when the Amhara were recorded of being in conflict in the land of Wargih 21 against the Warjih in 1128 AD 22 A non contemporary 13th or 14th century hagiographical source from Saint Tekle Haymanot traces Amhara even further back to the mid 9th century AD as a location 23 Ethnogenesis Edit Amharic is a South Ethio Semitic language along with Gurage Harari and others 24 25 26 Some time before the 1st century AD the North and South branches of Ethio Semitic diverged 26 27 Due to the social stratification of the time the Cushitic Agaw adopted the South Ethio Semitic language and eventually absorbed the Semitic population 28 29 30 31 Amharic thus developed with a Cushitic substratum and a Semitic superstratum 32 33 The proto Amhara or the northernmost South Ethio Semitic speakers remained in constant contact with their North Ethio Semitic neighbors evidenced by linguistic analysis and oral traditions 34 35 A 7th century southward shift of the center of gravity of the Kingdom of Aksum and the ensuing integration and Christianization of the proto Amhara also resulted in a high prevalence of Geʽez sourced lexicon in Amharic 36 37 38 By about the 9th century AD there was a linguistically distinct ethnic group called the Amhara in the area between the Tekeze River and the valleys of the eastern tributaries of the Blue Nile 39 Etymology Edit The present name for the Amharic language and its speakers comes from the medieval province of Amhara The latter enclave was located around Lake Tana at the headwaters of the Blue Nile and included a slightly larger area than Ethiopia s present day Amhara Region citation needed The further derivation of the name is debated Popular etymology traces it to amari pleasing beautiful gracious or mehare gracious Another popular etymology claims that it derives from Ge ez ዐም ʿam people and ሐራ ḥara free or soldier although this has been dismissed by Donald Levine 40 Getachew Mekonnen Hasen traces it to an ethnic name related to the Himyarites of ancient Yemen 41 History EditMain articles History of Ethiopia Solomonic dynasty and Ethiopian Empire Menelik II king of Shewa The province of Amhara was historically located in the modern province of Wollo Bete Amhara in the feudal era the region which is now known as Amhara was composed of several provinces which had little or no autonomy these provinces included Begemder Gojjam Wollo Lasta Shewa Semien Angot and Fatagar 42 Evidence of a traceable Christian Axumite presence in Amhara dates back to at least the 9th century CE when the Istifanos monastery was erected on Lake Hayq 43 Several other sites and monuments indicate the presence of similar Axumite influences in the area such as the Geta Lion statues which are located 10 km south of Kombolcha and they are believed to date back to the 3rd century CE or they may even date back to pre Axumite times 44 In 1998 ancient pieces of pottery were found around tombs in Atatiya in Southern Wollo in Habru which is located to the south east of Hayq as well as to the north east of Ancharo Chiqa Beret The decorations and symbols which are inscribed on the pottery substantiate the expansion of Aksumite civilization to the south of Angot 45 According to Karl Butzer By 800 Axum had almost ceased to exist and its demographic resources were barely adequate to stop the once tributary pastoralists of the border marches from pillaging the defenseless countryside With some of the common people the elite abandoned Axum in favor of central Ethiopia 46 Christian families gradually migrated southward into Amhara and northern Shewa Population movement from the old provinces in the north into more fertile areas in the south seems to have been connected to the southward shift of the kingdom 47 The Amhara people are considered heirs of the Aksumsite Empire They have preserved the oral and written cultural and religious traditions of the Ethiopian Empire 48 The Amhara nobles supported the Zagwe dynasty prince Lalibela in his power struggle against his brothers which led him to make Amharic Lessana Negus as well as fill the Amhara nobles in the top positions of his Kingdom 49 50 Solomonic Dynasty Edit Yekuno Amlak a prince from Bete Amhara lit House of Amhara claimed descent from Solomon 51 and established the Solomonic Dynasty in 1270 AD 52 Yekuno s rule was legitimatized by the Ethiopian Church after he defeated the last ruler of the Zagwe dynasty at the Battle of Ansata 53 The Solomonic dynasty governed the Ethiopian Empire for many centuries from 1270 AD onwards up until the deposing of Haile Selassie in 1974 The Amhara continuously ruled and formed the political core of the Ethiopian Empire expanding its borders its wealth and its international prestige establishing several medieval royal sites and capitals such as Tegulet Debre Berhan Barara located on Mount Entoto in modern day Addis Ababa 54 Gonder and Magdala The Amhara gained political dominance in the Horn of Africa through Amda Seyon s conquests of Muslim borderlands which greatly expanded Ethiopian territory and power in the region that would be maintained for centuries after his death Amda Seyon asserted the strength of the new Solomonic dynasty and therefore legitimized it These expansions further provided for the spread of Christianity to frontier areas sparking a long era of Christianization Amharaization and integration of previously Islamic areas 55 Lebna Dengel negusa nagast Emperor of Ethiopia and a member of the Solomonic dynasty Beginning in the reign of Wedem Arad and increasing during the early 15th century the Emperors sought to make diplomatic contact with European kingdoms for the first time since the Aksumite period A letter from King Henry IV of England to the Emperor of Abyssinia survives 56 In 1428 Emperor Yeshaq sent two emissaries to Alfonso V of Aragon who sent return emissaries who failed to complete the return trip 57 The first continuous relationship with a European country began in 1508 with Portugal under Emperor Lebna Dengel who had just inherited the throne from his father 58 This proved to be an important development for when the Empire was subjected to the attacks of the Ottoman Empire aligned Adal Sultanate Portugal assisted the Ethiopian emperor in the Ethiopian Adal War by sending weapons and 400 men who helped his son Gelawdewos defeat Ahmad and re establish his rule 59 Tewodros II negusa nagast The Amhara contributed numerous rulers over the centuries including Haile Selassie 60 whose father was both paternally and maternally Amhara of Solomonic descent 61 Social stratification Edit Further information Caste systems in Africa Within traditional Amharic society and that of other local Afro Asiatic speaking populations there were four basic strata According to the Donald Levine these consisted of high ranking clans low ranking clans caste groups artisans and slaves 62 63 Slaves or rather servants were at the bottom of the hierarchy and were primarily drawn from the pagan Nilotic Shanqella and Oromo peoples 64 Also known as the barya meaning slave in Amharic they were captured during slave raids in Ethiopia s southern hinterland War captives were another source of slaves but the perception treatment and duties of these prisoners was markedly different 65 According to Levine the widespread slavery in Greater Ethiopia formally ended in the 1930s but former slaves their offspring and de facto slaves continued to hold similar positions in the social hierarchy 66 The separate Amhara caste system of people ranked higher than slaves was based on the following concepts 1 endogamy 2 hierarchical status 3 restraints on commensality 4 pollution concepts 5 traditional occupation and 6 inherited caste membership 62 67 Scholars accept that there has been a rigid endogamous and occupationally closed social stratification among the Amharas and other Afro Asiatic speaking Ethiopian ethnic groups Some label it as an economically closed endogamous class system with occupational minorities 68 69 whereas others such as David Todd assert that this system can be unequivocally labelled as caste based 70 71 72 Language EditMain article Amharic The Amhara speak Amharic Amarigna Amarinya as their mother tongue Its native speakers account for 29 3 of the Ethiopian population 73 It belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afro Asiatic language family and is the largest member of the Ethiopian Semitic group 74 As of 2018 it had more than 57 million speakers worldwide 32 345 260 native speakers plus 25 100 000 second language speakers 15 making it the most commonly spoken language in Ethiopia in terms of first and second language speakers and the second most spoken Semitic language after Arabic Most of the Ethiopian Jewish communities in Ethiopia and Israel speak Amharic 7 Many followers of the Rastafari movement learn Amharic as a second language as they consider it to be a sacred language 75 Amharic is the working language of the federal authorities of the Ethiopian government and one of the five official languages of Ethiopia It was for some time also the sole language of primary school instruction but has been replaced in many areas by regional languages such as Oromo and Tigrinya Nevertheless Amharic is still widely used as the working language of Amhara Region Benishangul Gumuz Region Gambela Region and Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples Region 76 The Amharic language is transcribed using a script Fidal which is slightly modified from the Ethiopic or Ge ez script an abugida Religion Edit Crowds gather at the Fasilides Bath in Gondar to celebrate Timkat the Epiphany for the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church For centuries the predominant religion of the Amhara has been Christianity with the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church playing a central role in the culture of the country According to the 2007 census 82 5 of the population of the Amhara Region was Ethiopian Orthodox 17 2 of it was Muslim 0 2 of it was Protestant see P ent ay and 0 5 of it was Jewish see Beta Israel 77 The Ethiopian Orthodox Church maintains close links with the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria Easter and Epiphany are the most important celebrations marked with services feasting and dancing There are also many feast days throughout the year when only vegetables or fish may be eaten Marriages are often arranged with men marrying in their late teens or early twenties 78 Traditionally girls were married as young as 14 but in the 20th century the minimum age was raised to 18 and this was enforced by the Imperial government After a church wedding divorce is frowned upon 78 Each family hosts a separate wedding feast after the wedding Upon childbirth a priest will visit the family to bless the infant The mother and child remain in the house for 40 days after birth for physical and emotional strength The infant will be taken to the church for baptism at 40 days for boys or 80 days for girls 79 Culture Edit An example of Ge ez taken from a 15th century Ethiopian Coptic prayer book Literature Edit Main article List of Amharic writers Surviving Amharic literary works dates back to the 14th century when songs and poems were composed 80 In the 17th century Amharic became the first African language to be translated into Latin 81 when Ethiopian priest and lexicographer Abba Gorgoryos 1595 1658 in 1652 AD made a European voyage to Thuringia in Germany Gorgoryos along with his colleague and friend Hiob Ludolf co authored the earliest grammar book of the Amharic language an Amharic Latin dictionary as well as contributing to Ludolf s book A History of Ethiopia 82 83 Modern literature in Amharic however started two centuries later than in Europe with the Amharic fiction novel Lebb Wallad Tarik published in Rome in 1908 and widely considered the first novel in Amharic by Afawarq Gabra Iyasus 84 Since then countless literature in Amharic has been published and many modern day writers in Amharic translate their work into English for commercial reasons 85 Abba Gorgoryos Afawarq Gabra Iyasus Heruy Wolde Selassie Kebede Michael Getatchew Haile Tsegaye Gabre Medhin Asfa Wossen AsserateMusic Edit Main article List of musicians using Amharic vocals Up until the mid 20th century Amharic music consisted mainly of religious and secular folk songs and dances 86 Qanat Amhara secular folk music developed in the countryside 87 through the use of traditionel instruments such as the masenqo a one string bowed lute the krar a six string lyre and the washint flute played by the local village musicians called the Azmaris 88 and the peasantry dancing the Eskista the most well known Amharan folk dance 89 The begena a large ten string lyre is an important instrument solely devoted to the spiritual part of Amhara music 90 Other instruments includes the Meleket wind instrument and the Kebero and Negarit drums From the 1950s onward foreign influence i e foreign educated Ethiopians and the availability of larger quantities of new instruments led to new genre s of Amharic music and ushered in the 1960s and 1970s Golden Age of Ethiopian music 91 92 The popular Ethio Jazz genre pioneered by Mulatu Astatke was created from the Tizita qanat of the Amhara combined with the use of Western instruments 93 Saxophone legend Getatchew Mekurya instrumentalized the Amhara war cry Shellela into an genre in the 1950s before joining the Ethio Jazz scene later in his career 94 95 Other Amharic artists from the Golden age such as Asnaketch Worku Bahru Kegne Kassa Tessema and Mary Armede were renowned for their mastery of traditionel instruments The political turmoil during the Derg regime 1974 1991 led to censorship of music night life came to a standstill through government imposed curfews and the curbing of musical performances Notable Ethiopian musicians were jailed including those of Amhara descent such as Ayalew Mesfin and Telela Kebede 96 97 A revival of Qene Amharic poetic songs which uses double entendre known as sam enna warq wax and gold was used for subversive dialogue and resistance to state censorship Thousands of Ethiopians including musicians migrated during this period to form communities in different countries 98 99 Amharic songs of resistance against the autocratic EPRDF regime led by the TPLF 1991 2018 continued with prevailing themes being rampant corruption economic favoritism excessive emphasis on ethnic identity and its ability to undermine national unity Amharic musicians such as Getish Mamo Nhatty Man Teddy Afro and others turned to the old tradition of sam enna warq and used layered expression to evade skirt stringent censorship and oppresive laws such as the anti terror law while reminding the people of their similarities and the importance of maintaining solidarity 100 On June 2022 Teddy Afro bashed Abiy Ahmed and his regime in a critical new song Na et following the Gimbi massacre In his song he tries to vent the suppressed public anger and indignation the swelling public resentment to the chaos in the country 101 Getatchew Mekurya 1935 2016 Tilahun Gessesse 1940 2009 Alemayehu Eshete 1941 2021 Mulatu Astatke 1943 present Alemu Aga 1950 present Aster Aweke 1959 present Teddy Afro 1976 present Zeritu Kebede 1984 present Art Edit A mural depicting Saint George in the church of Debre Berhan Selassie in Gondar Amhara art is typified by religious paintings One of the notable features of these is the large eyes of the subjects who are usually biblical figures It is usually oil on canvas or hide some surviving from the Middle Ages The Amhara art includes weaved products embellished with embroidery Works in gold and silver exist in the form of filigree jewelry and religious emblems citation needed Kinship and marriage Edit The Amhara culture recognizes kinship but unlike other ethnic groups in the Horn of Africa region it has a relatively lesser role Household relationships are primary and the major economic political and cultural functions are not based on kin relationships among the Amharas Rather abilities of the individual matter For example states Donald Levine the influence of clergy among the Amhara has been based on ritual purity doctrinal knowledge ability to perform miracles and capacity to provide moral guidance 17 120 The social relationships in the Amhara culture are predominantly based on hierarchical patterns and individualistic associations 17 123 Family and kin relatives are often involved in arranging semanya eighty bond marriage also called kal kidan which has been most common and allows divorce 102 Other forms of marriage include qurban which is solemnized in church where divorce is forbidden and usually observed among the orthodox priests 103 104 Patrilineal descent is the norm 103 While the wife had no inheritance rights in case a child was conceived during the temporary damoz marriage the child could make a claim a part of the father s property 104 105 Cuisine Edit Main articles Ethiopian cuisine and Wat food Amhara cuisine consists of various vegetable or spicy meat side dishes and entrees usually a wat or thick stew served atop injera a large sourdough flatbread made of teff flour in the shape of pancakes usually of about 30 to 45 cm in diameter When eating traditional injera dishes in groups it s normally it eaten from a mesob shared food basket with each person breaking off pieces of injera flatbread using only the right hand from the side nearest them and dipping it into stew in the center of the basket There is also a great variety of vegetarian stews such as lentils ground split peas grains accompanied by injera and or bread 106 107 Amharas adhering to any of the Abrahmic religions do not eat pork or shellfish of any kind for religious reasons Amhara Orthodox Christians do not consume meat and dairy products i e egg butter milk and cheese during specific fasting periods and on every Wednesdays and Fridays except the 50 days between Easter and Pentecost On all other days meat and dairy products are allowed A variety of vegan dishes are consumed during fasting periods 106 107 Ethiopia is a Buna coffee exporter but also has a very large domestic consumer base During social gatherings Amharas drink Buna in a unique and traditional way known as a coffee ceremony First the coffee is roasted then ground and placed in a Jebena coffee pot with boiling water When ready it is then served to people in little cups up to three times per ceremony 106 107 The ceremony is typically performed by the woman of the household or the female host and is considered an honor Amhara women dress up for the occasion in a kemis a traditional dress Other locally produced beverages are tella beer and tej honey wine which are served and drunk on major religious festivals Saints Days and weddings 106 107 Doro WotA stew dish served with beef lamb chicken eggs and variety of vegetables on top of Injera flatbread Gored goredA spicy raw beef dish seasoned with a variety of spices TibsGrilled beef with tomato onions and green peper There are several variations of Tibs dishes fulBeans with variety of vegetables feta cheese and bread flavored with Berbere spice and olive oil Misir WotMisir Wot is a Lentil stew served with a variety of vegetables there are several variations This example is served potatoes beets apple salad paprika and rice atop of injera A popular vegan dish TejHoney Wine BunaAmhara coffee culture amp hospitality Young woman in traditional wear serving coffee Nature of Amhara ethnicity EditThis section needs to be updated The reason given is the rise of Amhara ethnic nationalism and the resultant growth of ethnic identification See Talk Amhara people for discussion on this topic Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2020 Mackonen Michael 2008 108 noted that the Amhara identity is claimed to be composed of multiple ethnicities by some whereas others reject this concept and argue that Amhara exists as a distinctive ethnic group with a specific located boundary He further noted that although people from the Ethiopian highland areas think of themselves as Amharas the Northern Shoans specifically call themselves Amhara That is why the Oromo and Tigrian discourse associate the Northern Shoans as oppressive Amharas 109 According to Gideon P E Cohen writing in 2000 there is some debate about whether the Amhara can legitimately be regarded as an ethnic group given their distribution throughout Ethiopia and the incorporative capacity of the group that has led to the inclusion of individuals from a wide range of ethnic or linguistic backgrounds 110 Similarly Tezera Tazebew notes that the early 1990s was marked by debates both popular and scholarly on the non existence of Amhara as a distinct ethnic group giving the debate between the academic Mesfin Woldemariam and president of the Transitional Government of Ethiopia Meles Zenawi in July 1991 as an example 111 Due to large amounts of assimilation into the northern Amhara culture after Ethiopian imperial expansion Siegfried Pausewang concluded in 2005 that the term Amhara relates in contemporary Ethiopia to two different and distinct social groups The ethnic group of the Amhara mostly a peasant population is different from a mixed group of urban people coming from different ethnic background who have adopted Amharic as a common language and identify themselves as Ethiopians 112 In a 2017 article historian Brian J Yates notes that some scholars and politicians have attempted to sketch out what an Amhara is but there are considerable divergences on the nature of this identity Some argue that it is a cultural identity however much of the scholarship indicates that it is solely a class based identity devoid of ethnicity 113 Solomon Gashaw asserts that there is no intra Amhara ethnic consciousness except among northern settlers in southern Ethiopia He notes that most Amharic speaking people identify by their place of birth He asks what is Amhara domination answering It is a linguistic and cultural domination by a multi ethnic group who speak Amharic 114 Writing in 1998 Tegegne Teka wrote that the Amhara do not possess what people usually refer to as objective ethnic markers common ancestry territory religion and shared experience except the language The Amhara have no claims to a common ancestry They do not share the same sentiments and they have no mutual interests based on shared understandings It is therefore difficult to conclude that the Amhara belong to an ethnic group But this does not mean that there is no Amhara identity 115 According to ethnographer Donald Levine writing in 2003 and citing Christopher Clapham Only in the last quarter of the 20th cent has the term Amhara come to be a common ethnic appellation comparable to the way in which Oromo has become generalized to cover peoples who long knew themselves primarily as Boorana Borana Guggi Mac c a and the like Even so Amharic speaking Sawans still feel themselves closer to non Amharic speaking Sawans than to Amharic speakers from distant regions like Gondar and there are few members of the Sawan nobility who do not have Oromo genealogical links 116 According to Takkele Taddese Amharic speakers tend to be a supra ethnic group composed of fused stock 117 Taddese describes the Amhara as follows The Amhara can thus be said to exist in the sense of being a fused stock a supra ethnically conscious ethnic Ethiopian serving as the pot in which all the other ethnic groups are supposed to melt The language Amharic serves as the center of this melting process although it is difficult to conceive of a language without the existence of a corresponding distinct ethnic group speaking it as a mother tongue The Amhara does not exist however in the sense of being a distinct ethnic group promoting its own interests and advancing the Herrenvolk philosophy and ideology as has been presented by the elite politicians The basic principle of those who affirm the existence of the Amhara as a distinct ethnic group therefore is that the Amhara should be dislodged from the position of supremacy and each ethnic group should be freed from Amhara domination to have equal status with everybody else This sense of Amhara existence can be viewed as a myth 117 Ethnic consciousness in the past Edit In the 17th century Abyssinian traveler Abba Gorgoryos states the following in a letter to his German friend Hiob Ludolf As to my origins do not imagine my friend that they are humble for I am of the House of Amhara which is a respected tribe from it come the heads of the Ethiopian people the governors the military commanders the judges and the advisers of the King of Ethiopia who appoint and dismiss command and rule in the name of the King his governors and grandees 118 The rise of ethnic consciousness and nationalism Edit Zola Moges notes the emergence of Amhara nationalism and ethnic consciousness with origins in the early 1990s but taking clearer shape with the establishment of the National Movement of Amhara in 2018 Moges writes that a younger generation has adopted its Amharaness but most ordinary people are yet to fully embrace it not least because of the lack of any effectively articulated ideological foundation or priorities and the absence of any tailor made solutions to the challenges facing them 119 Amanuel Tesfaye writes that While the older Amhara population still detest ethnic identification and ethnic forms of political organization preferring pan Ethiopian nationalism the young have no problem pronouncing their Amhara identity advocating for the protection and advancement of the rights and interests of their ethnic kin within the framework of the multi nation state and organizing politically along that particular ethnic identity 120 Notable Amharas EditAba Gorgorios 121 Catholic priest Abebe Aregai Prime Minister Abebe Bikila Olympic athlete gold medalist 122 Abuna Basilios First Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahido Church Abuna Theophilos Second Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahido Church Abune Petros 123 patriot Afevork Ghevre Jesus 124 Ethiopian writer Afewerk Tekle Honorable Laureate Maitre Artiste Aklilu Habte Wold Prime Minister Alemayehu Eshete Ethiopian singer Alemu Aga musician singer and master of the Begena Amanuel Gebremichael Amda Seyon I 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Andualem Aragie Vice President and Press Secretary for the Ethiopian based Unity for Democracy and Justice Asnaketch Worku Ethiopian singer Asrat Woldeyes 125 Surgeon Aster Aweke Ethiopian singer Berhaneyesus Demerew Souraphiel Ethiopian Catholic cardinal Head of the Ethiopian Catholic Church Baeda Maryam I 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Bakaffa 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Belay Zeleke 126 patriot Dawit I 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Dawit II 123 127 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Dawit III 128 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Ejigayehu Shibabaw better known as Gigi Ethiopian singer Eleni Gebre Medhin prominent female Ethiopian economist Emahoy Tsegue Maryam Guebrou Ethiopian nun known for her piano playing and compositions Eskender 129 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Fasilides 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Gebre Hanna dabtara renowned in Amharic oral tradition Gedion Zelalem Gelawdewos 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Gelila Bekele 130 131 International model Getatchew Haile 132 philologist Getatchew Mekurya Legendary Ethiopian Jazz Saxophonist Haddis Alemayehu Foreign Minister and Novelist Haile Gebrselassie renowned world Athlete Haile Gerima Award winning writer producer amp director Haile Selassie 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Heruy Wolde Selassie Foreign Minister Iyasu I 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Iyasu II 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Kebede Michael 133 Ethiopian writer Liya Kebede International supermodel Makonnen Wolde Mikael Military officer diplomat court official Makonnen Endelkachew Prime Minister Menas of Ethiopia 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Menelik II 134 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Menen Asfaw Empress of Ethiopia reign between 2 November 1930 15 February 1962 Mesfin Woldemariam author Sakharov prize winning human rights activist and politician Mulatu Astatke 135 musician father of Ethio jazz Muluken Melesse Music Artist Na od 123 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Newaya Krestos 123 136 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Newaya Maryam 137 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Sarsa Dengel 138 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Seifu Mikael diplomat governor Simegnew Bekele Chief Project Manager of the GERD Susenyos I Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire 139 Tekle Hawariat Tekle Mariyam pioneer of Ethiopian and African theater Telela Kebede Ethiopian singer Temesgen Tiruneh Director general of National Intelligence and Security Service Tewodros II 140 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire The Weeknd Ethiopian Canadian R amp B artist Wolde Giorgis Wolde Yohannes Minister of the pen Workneh Eshete surgeon and diplomat Yaqob 141 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Yekuno Amlak 142 5 founder of the Solomonic Dynasty Yeshaq I 143 Emperor of the Ethiopian Empire Yetnebersh Nigussie is a renowned lawyer and disability rights activist from Amhara Saint Bete Amhara Wello now Amhara regional state Ethiopia Yidnekatchew Tessema 4th President of CAF Zara Yaqob 142 6 Emperor of the Ethiopian EmpireSee also EditAmhara genocide Amhara Region coup d etat attempt Fano Habesha people History of EthiopiaReferences Edit a b Central Statistical Agency Ethiopia Table 2 2 Percentage Distribution of Major Ethnic Groups 2007 PDF Summary and Statistical Report of the 2007 Population and Housing Census Results United Nations Population Fund p 16 Archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2009 Retrieved 29 October 2014 a b United States Census Bureau 2009 2013 Detailed Languages Spoken at Home and Ability to Speak English for the Population 5 Years and Over 2009 2013 USCB 30 November 2016 lt https www census gov data tables 2013 demo 2009 2013 lang tables html gt Statistics Canada 2011 Census of Population Statistics Canada Catalogue no 98 314 XCB2011032 Anon 2016 2011 Census of Canada Topic based tabulations Detailed Mother Tongue 232 Knowledge of Official Languages 5 Age Groups 17A and Sex 3 for the Population Excluding Institutional Residents of Canada and Forward Sortation Areas 2011 Census online Www12 statcan gc ca Available at lt http www12 statcan gc ca census recensement 2011 dp pd tbt tt Rp eng cfm LANG E amp APATH 3 amp DETAIL 0 amp DIM 0 amp FL A amp FREE 0 amp GC 0 amp GID 0 amp GK 0 amp GRP 1 amp PID 103001 amp PRID 10 amp PTYPE 101955 amp S 0 amp SHOWALL 0 amp SUB 0 amp Temporal 2011 amp THEME 90 amp VID 0 amp VNAMEE amp VNAMEF gt Accessed 2 December 2016 Immigrant languages in Canada 2016 Immigrant languages in Canada ONLINE Available at https www12 statcan gc ca census recensement 2011 as sa 98 314 x 98 314 x2011003 2 eng cfm Accessed 13 December 2016 pp 25 2015 United Kingdom Available at https www ethnologue com country GB Accessed 30 November 2016 a b Teferra Anbessa 2018 Hebraized Amharic in Israel In Hary Benjamin Bunin Benor Sarah eds Languages in Jewish Communities Past and Present Berlin Walter De Gruyter pp 489 519 ISBN 9781501512988 Australian Bureau of Statistics 2014 The People of Australia Statistics from the 2011 Census Cat no 2901 0 ABS 30 November 2016 lt https www border gov au ReportsandPublications Documents research people australia 2013 statistics pdf Archived 17 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine gt Kieli sukupuolen mukaan maakunnittain ja kunnittain 1990 2017 Archived from the original on 26 June 2018 Retrieved 24 January 2019 Joireman Sandra F 1997 Institutional Change in the Horn of Africa The Allocation of Property Rights and Implications for Development Universal Publishers p 1 ISBN 1581120001 The Horn of Africa encompasses the countries of Ethiopia Eritrea Djibouti and Somalia These countries share similar peoples languages and geographical endowments Following the BGN PCGN romanization employed for Amharic geographic names in British and American English Zegeye Abebe 15 October 1994 Ethiopia in Change British Academic Press p 13 ISBN 9781850436447 Olson James 1996 The Peoples of Africa Greenwood Publishing Group p 27 ISBN 9780313279188 Shaban Abdurahman One to five Ethiopia gets four new federal working languages Africa News a b Amharic Prunier Gerard Ficquet Eloi 2015 Understanding contemporary Ethiopia London Hurst amp Company p 39 OCLC 810950153 a b c Levine Donald N 2000 Greater Ethiopia The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226475615 Retrieved 28 December 2016 Marvin Lionel Bender 1976 Language in Ethiopia Oxford University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 19 436102 6 Henze Paul B 1985 Rebels and Separatists in Ethiopia Regional Resistance to a Marxist Regime Rand p 8 ISBN 978 0 8330 0696 7 Goitom M 2017 Unconventional Canadians Second generation Habesha Youth and Belonging in Toronto Canada Global Social Welfare 4 4 179 190 IL SULTANATO DELLO SCIOA NEL SECOLO XIII page 10 Enrico Cerulli 1941 Taddesse Tamrat Church and State in Ethiopia Oxford Clarendon Press 1972 p 81 The Life of Takla Haymanot in the Version of Dabra Libanos and the Miracles of Takla Haymanot in the Version of Dabra Libanos and the Book of the Riches of Kings Translated by E A Wallis Budge London 1906 Meyer Ronny 2011 Amharic In Weninger Stefan ed The Semitic Languages An International Handbook Walter De Gruyter pp 1178 1212 ISBN 9783110251586 Edzard Lutz 2019 Amharic In John Huehnergard Naʽama Pat El eds The Semitic Languages London Routledge pp 202 226 a b Hetzron Robert 1972 Ethiopian Semitic Studies in Classification Manchester University Press p 36 ISBN 9780719011238 Fage J D Oliver Roland Anthony 1975 The Cambridge History of Africa From c 500 B C to A D 1050 Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 9780521209816 Hetzron Robert 1972 Ethiopian Semitic Studies in Classification Manchester University Press pp 36 87 88 ISBN 9780719011238 Appleyard David Amharic History and dialectology of Amharic Encyclopedia Aethopica Vol 1 p 235 Butts Aaron Michael 2015 Semitic languages in contact Leiden Boston Brill pp 18 21 ISBN 9789004300156 OCLC 1083204409 Amhara Definition History amp Culture Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 19 April 2022 Hetzron Robert 1972 Ethiopian Semitic Studies in Classification Manchester University Press p 88 ISBN 9780719011238 Demeke Girma 2014 The Origin of Amharic The Red Sea Press pp 45 52 ISBN 978 1 56902 379 2 OCLC 824502290 Prunier Gerard Ficquet Eloi eds 2015 Understanding Contemporary Ethiopia Monarchy Revolution and the Legacy of Meles Zenawi London C Hurst amp Co p 19 ISBN 9781849042611 Hetzron Robert 1972 Ethiopian Semitic Studies in Classification Manchester University Press p 124 ISBN 9780719011238 Demeke Girma 2014 The Origin of Amharic The Red Sea Press pp 15 133 138 ISBN 978 1 56902 379 2 OCLC 824502290 Butts Aaron Michael 2015 Semitic languages in contact Leiden Boston Brill p 22 ISBN 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280596 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 280596 S2CID 162374800 Retrieved 21 August 2022 Fage J D Oliver Roland Anthony 1975 The Cambridge History of Africa From c 500 B C to A D 1050 Cambridge University Press p 101 ISBN 978 0 521 20981 6 Danver Steven L 10 March 2015 Native Peoples of the World An Encyclopedia of Groups Cultures and Contemporary Issues Routledge p 15 ISBN 978 1 317 46400 6 Mohammad Hassan The Oromo of Ethiopia pp 3 Demeke Girma A 2014 The Origin of Amharic The Red Sea Press p 53 ISBN 978 1 56902 379 2 OCLC 824502290 Pankhurst Richard 1986 Fear God Honor the King The Use of Biblical Allusions in Ethiopian Historical Literature Part I Northeast African Studies 8 1 11 30 JSTOR 43660191 Retrieved 12 June 2021 Zagwe dynasty Ethiopian history Ethiopia the Zagwe and Solomonic dynasties Pankhurst R and Breternitz H 2009 Barbara the Royal City of 15th and Early 16th Century Ethiopia Medieval and Other Early Settlements Between Wechecha Range and Mt Yerer Results from a Recent Survey Annales d Ethiopie 24 1 p 210 Joanna Mantel Niecko and Denis Nosnitsin cAmda Ṣeyon I in Siegbert Uhlig Encyclopaedia Aethiopica A C Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag 2003 p 228 Ian Mortimer The Fears of Henry IV 2007 p 111 ISBN 1 84413 529 2 Beshah pp 13 4 Beshah p 25 Beshah pp 45 52 Kjetil Tronvoll Ethiopia a new start Minority Rights Group 2000 Peter Woodward Conflict and peace in the Horn of Africa federalism and its alternatives Dartmouth Pub Co 1994 p 29 a b Levine Donald N 2014 Greater Ethiopia The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society University of Chicago Press pp 56 57 ISBN 978 0 226 22967 6 Hoben Allan 1970 Social Stratification in Traditional Amhara Society In Arthur Tuden and Leonard Plotnicov ed Social stratification in Africa New York The Free Press pp 210 211 187 221 ISBN 978 0029327807 Keller Edmond J 1991 Revolutionary Ethiopia from empire to people s republic Bloomington Indiana University Press p 160 OCLC 1036800537 Abir Mordechai 1968 Ethiopia the era of the princes the challenge of Islam and re unification of the Christian Empire 1769 1855 Praeger pp 57 60 ISBN 9780582645172 There was a clear distinction between red and black slaves Hamitic and negroid respectively the Shanqalla negroids were far cheaper as they were destined mostly for hard work around the house and in the field While in the houses of the brokers the red slaves were on the whole well treated Levine Donald N 2014 Greater Ethiopia The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society University of Chicago Press pp 56 175 ISBN 978 0 226 22967 6 Eike Haberland 1979 Special Castes in Ethiopia in Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Ethiopian Studies Editor Robert Hess University of Illinois Press OCLC 7277897 pp 129 132 also see pp 134 135 145 147 Amnon Orent 1979 From the Hoe to the Plow in Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Ethiopian Studies Editor Robert Hess University of Illinois Press OCLC 7277897 p 188 Quote the Mano who are potters and leather craftsmen and considered unclean in the usual northern or Amhara understanding of caste distinction and the Manjo the traditional hunters and eaters of unclean foods hippopotamus monkey and crocodile Tibebu Teshale 1995 The Making of Modern Ethiopia 1896 1974 The Red Sea Press pp 67 70 ISBN 978 1 56902 001 2 Quote Interestingly enough while slaves and ex slaves could integrate into the larger society with relative ease this was virtually impossible for the occupational minorities castes up until very recently in a good many cases to this day Christopher R Hallpike 2012 Original 1968 The status of craftsmen among the Konso of south west Ethiopia Africa Volume 38 Number 3 Cambridge University Press pp 258 259 267 Quote Weavers tend to be the least and tanners the most frequently despised In many cases such groups are said to have a different more negroid appearance than their superiors There are some instances where these groups have a religious basis as with the Moslems and Falashas in Amhara areas We frequently find that the despised classes are forbidden to own land or have anything to do with agricultural activities or with cattle Commensality and marriage with their superiors seem also to be generally forbidden them Todd David M 1977 Caste in Africa Africa Cambridge University Press 47 4 398 412 doi 10 2307 1158345 JSTOR 1158345 S2CID 144428371 Dave Todd 1978 The origins of outcastes in Ethiopia reflections on an evolutionary theory Abbay Volume 9 pp 145 158 Levine Donald N 2014 Greater Ethiopia The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society University of Chicago Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 226 22967 6 Quote As Herbert Lewis has observed if the term caste can be used for any social formation outside of the Indian context it can be applied as appropriately to those Ethiopian groups otherwise known as submerged classes pariah groups and outcastes as to any Indian case Lewis Herbert S 2006 Historical problems in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Wiley Blackwell 96 2 504 511 doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1962 tb50145 x S2CID 83677517 Quote p 509 In virtually every Cushitic group there are endogamous castes based on occupational specialization such caste groups are also found to some extent among the Ethiopian Semites Finneran Niall 2007 The Archaeology of Ethiopia London Routledge pp 14 15 ISBN 978 1 136 75552 1 Quote Ethiopia has until fairly recently been a rigid feudal society with finely grained perceptions of class and caste Central Statistical Agency 2010 Population and Housing Census 2007 Report National ONLINE Available at http catalog ihsn org index php catalog 3583 download 50086 Accessed 13 December 2016 Amharic language Ethnologue 19 February 1999 Bernard Collins The Abyssinians Interview Archived 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Published 4 November 2011 by Jah Rebel Retrieved 4 May 2013 Danver Steven Laurence Native Peoples of the World 1st ed Armonk NY Sharpe Reference an imprint of M E Sharpe Inc 2013 Print FDRE States Basic Information Amhara Population Archived from the original on 24 May 2011 Retrieved 26 March 2006 a b African Marriage ritual Archived from the original on 7 May 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2011 The World and Its Peoples Africa North and East Part 2 Volume 23 Greystone Press 1967 p 300 Retrieved 17 February 2017 Amharic language Ludolf Hiob 1682 A New History of Ethiopia Being a Full and Accurate Description of the Kingdom of Abyssinia Vulgarly Though Erroneously Called the Empire of Prester John Translated by J P Gent London Samuel Smith Booksellers Uhlig Siegbert 2005 Gorgoryos In Encyclopaedia Aethiopica D Ha Vol 2 edited by Siegbert Uhlig 855 856 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Stammerjohann Harro 2 June 2009 Lexicon Grammaticorum A bio bibliographical companion to the history of linguistics ISBN 9783484971127 Admassu Yonas 2003 Afawarq Gabra Iyasus In Encyclopaedia Aethiopica A C Vol 1 edited by Siegbert Uhlig 122 124 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag Aregahegne Assefa May 1981 The Origin and Development Amharic Literatuhe Thesis Addis Ababa University Shelemay pp 355 356 Weisser Stephanie Falceto Francis 2013 Investigating qәnәt in Amhara secular music An acoustic and historical study Annales d Ethiopie 28 1 299 322 doi 10 3406 ethio 2013 1539 Kebede Ashenafi January 1975 The Azmari Poet Musician of Ethiopia The Musical Quarterly 61 1 47 57 doi 10 1093 mq lxi 1 47 Uhlig Siegbert 2017 Ethiopia history culture and challenges Munster East Lansing Michigan State University Press p 207 OCLC 978295392 FNRS Universite Libre de Bruxelles CiteSeerX 10 1 1 569 2160 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kay Kaufman Shelemay Ethiopia Empire and Revolution www afropop org Archived from the original on 14 February 2007 Retrieved 11 January 2022 Samuel Yirga Ushers in a Golden Age of Ethiopian Music NPR org How Ethiopian jazz got its unique sound 18 July 2018 Uhlig Siegbert 2006 Proceedings of the XVth International Conference of Ethiopian Studies Hamburg July 20 25 2003 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz p 185 OCLC 71298502 Getatchew Mekuria leeuw der leeuwen Shelemay 2022 Sing and Sing On Sentinel Musicians and the Making of the Ethiopian American Diaspora Line up Jong De Elizabeth Holly 2011 Continuity and change Some aspects of Ethiopian music in Australia Ethiopian Music Brilliant Ethiopia Onyebadi Uche 2019 Music and messaging in the African political arena Hershey PA IGI Global pp 12 17 OCLC 1080436962 Teddy Afro bashes government with a critical new single 23 June 2022 W A Shack 1974 Ethnographic Survey of Africa International African Institute pp 33 35 ISBN 978 0 85302 040 0 a b Amhara people Encyclopaedia Britannica 2015 a b Levinson David 1995 Encyclopedia of World Cultures Africa and the Middle East G K Hall p 19 ISBN 978 0 8161 1815 1 Quote Temporary marriage damoz obliges the husband to pay housekeeper s wages for a period stated in advance The contract although oral was before witnesses and was therefore enforceable by court order The wife had no right of inheritance but if children were conceived during the contract period they could make a claim for part of the father s property should he die Weissleder W 2008 Amhara Marriage The Stability of Divorce Canadian Review of Sociology Wiley Blackwell 11 1 67 85 doi 10 1111 j 1755 618x 1974 tb00004 x a b c d Ethiopian Treasures Culture Ethiopian Treasures a b c d Albala Ken 2011 Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia ISBN 9780313376269 Michael Mackonen 2008 Who is Amhara African Identities 6 4 393 404 doi 10 1080 14725840802417943 S2CID 144828563 Michael Mackonen 1 November 2008 Who is Amhara African Identities 6 4 393 404 doi 10 1080 14725840802417943 ISSN 1472 5843 S2CID 144828563 Retrieved 28 June 2021 Cohen Gideon P E 2000 Language and Ethnic Boundaries Perceptions of Identity Expressed through Attitudes towards the Use of Language Education in Southern Ethiopia Northeast African Studies 7 3 189 206 doi 10 1353 nas 2005 0004 JSTOR 41931261 S2CID 144103747 Tazebew Tezera 2021 Amhara nationalism The empire strikes back African Affairs 120 479 297 313 doi 10 1093 afraf adaa029 Pausewang Siegfried 2005 The two faced Amhara identity Scrinium 1 1 273 286 doi 10 1163 18177565 90000138 Yates Brian J 2017 Ethnicity as a Hindrance for Understanding Ethiopian History An Argument Against an Ethnic Late Nineteenth Century History in Africa 44 101 131 doi 10 1017 hia 2016 13 S2CID 164336903 Gashaw Solomon 1993 Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict in Ethiopia In Young Crawford ed The Rising Tide of Cultural Pluralism The Nation State at Bay Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press pp 138 157 ISBN 9780299138844 Teka Tegegne 1998 Amhara ethnicity in the making In Salih M A Mohamed Markakis John eds Ethnicity and the State in Eastern Africa Uppsala Nordiska Afrikaininstutet pp 116 126 ISBN 978 9171064189 Levine Donald N 2003 Amhara In von Uhlig Siegbert ed Encyclopaedia Aethiopica A C pp 230 232 a b Taddese Takkele 1994 Do the Amhara Exist as a Distinct Ethnic Group In Marcus Harold G ed New Trends in Ethiopian Studies Papers of the 12th International Conference of Ethiopian Studies Vol II Lawrenceville NJ Red Sea Press pp 168 186 ISBN 978 1569020159 Richard Pankhurst Travelers in Ethiopia p 59 Moges Zola 1 September 2020 Shaping Amhara nationalism for a better Ethiopia Ethiopia Insight Retrieved 28 November 2020 Tesfaye Amanuel 4 May 2018 Commentary The Birth of Amhara Nationalism Causes Aspirations and Potential Impacts Addis Standard Retrieved 25 June 2021 Belcher Laura 2012 Abyssinia s Samuel Johnson Ethiopian Thought in the Making of an English Author p 114 Rambali Paul 2007 Barefoot Runner The Life of Marathon Champion Abebe Bikila Serpent s Tail a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Tolossa Fikre April 1993 Amhara Contributions to Ethiopian Civilization Ethiopian Review Retrieved 13 December 2020 Abbay Alemseged 1998 Identity Jilted Or Re imagining Identity The Divergent Paths of the Eritrean and Tigrayan Nationalist Struggles p 46 Barder Brian 25 May 1999 Asrat Woldeyes The Guardian Retrieved 9 February 2015 Administrator Belay Zeleke Archived from the original on 13 January 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2015 Lebna Dengel Ethiopian Ruler epicworldhistory blogspot nl Graca John V Da 18 June 1985 Heads of State and Government Springer ISBN 9781349079995 via Google Books Hubert Jules Deschamps sous la direction Histoire generale de l Afrique noire de Madagascar et de ses archipels Tome I Des origines a 1800 p 406 P U F Paris 1970 Gelila Bekele Ethiopia Interview with Model Gelila Bekele www amharictube com Archived from the original on 7 January 2017 Retrieved 6 January 2017 Model Gelila Bekele Interview VIDEO in Amharic Ethiopiaforums com 11 November 2010 Senamirmir Projects Interview with Dr Getatchew Haile Retrieved 9 February 2015 Fantahun Arefayne 2015 Intellectual Outlook of Kebede Michael Foster Mary Rubinstein Robert 1986 Peace and War Cross Cultural Perspectives p 137 Kubik Gerhard 2017 Jazz Transatlantic p 64 James Bruce Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile 1805 edition vol 3 pp 93f J Spencer Trimingham Islam in Ethiopia Oxford Geoffrey Cumberlege for the University Press 1952 p 74 Gordon Howard 2011 Be Not Thy Father s Son p 128 Vitae Sanctorum Indigenarum I Acta S Walatta Petros Ii Miracula S Zara Baruk edited by Carlo Conti Rossini and C Jaeger Louvain L Durbecq 1954 pg 62 Young John 1997 Peasant Revolution in Ethiopia The Tigray People s Liberation Front 1975 1991 p 44 Stewart John 2006 African States and Rulers 3rd ed Jefferson NC USA McFarland amp Company p 93 ISBN 978 0786425624 a b Shinn David H Ofcansky Thomas P 2013 Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia 2nd ed Plymouth UK Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0810871946 Kessler David F 1996 The Falashas A Short History of the Ethiopian Jews London Frank Cass p 94 ISBN 9780714646466 OCLC 33078505 Further reading EditWolf Leslau and Thomas L Kane collected and edited Amharic Cultural Reader Wiesbaden Harrassowitz 2001 ISBN 3 447 04496 9 Donald N Levine Wax amp Gold Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopian Culture Chicago University Press 1972 ISBN 0 226 45763 XExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amhara people Lemma Marcos MD PhD Who ruled Ethiopia The myth of Amara domination Ethiomedia com Archived from the original on 28 March 2005 Retrieved 28 February 2005 People of Africa Amhara Culture and History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amhara people amp oldid 1132670234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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