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Dawit II

Dawit II (Ge'ez: ዳዊት; c. 1496 – 2 September 1540), also known by the macaronic name Wanag Segad (ወናግ ሰገድ, to whom the lions bow), better known by his birth name Lebna Dengel (Amharic: ልብነ ድንግል, essence of the virgin), was Emperor of Ethiopia from 1508 to 1540, whose political center and palace was in Shewa.[1]

Dawit II
ዳዊት
Negusa Nagast
Contemporary portrait of a young Lebna Dengel by Cristofano dell'Altissimo
Emperor of Ethiopia
Reign13 August 1507 – 2 September 1540 (1507-08-13 – 1540-09-02)
Coronation13 May 1508
PredecessorNa'od
SuccessorGelawdewos
RegentEmpress Eleni
Bornc. 1496
Shewa, Ethiopian Empire
Died2 September 1540(1540-09-02) (aged 43–44)
Debre Damo, Tigray Province, Ethiopian Empire
Burial
Abba Aragwi Monastery
SpouseSeble Wongel
Issue
  • Fiqtor Lebna Dengal
  • Gelawdewos
  • Yakob
  • Menas
  • Walatta Hanna
  • Amata Giyorgis
  • Sabana Giyorgis
  • Walatta Kidusan
  • Tewdada
Names
Lebna Dengel
DynastyHouse of Solomon
FatherNa'od
MotherNa'od Mogesa

A male line descendant of the medieval Amhara kings, and thus a member of the House of Solomon, he was the son of Emperor Na'od and Empress Na'od Mogesa. The important victory over the Adal's Emir Mahfuz may have given Dawit the appellation "Wanag Segad," which is a combination of Geʽez and the Harari terms.[2]

Biography

Early reign

In contrast to previous emperors, Dawit had only one wife, Seble Wongel, whom he married around 1512–13. The couple had eight children: four sons and four daughters.[3] Taking only one wife throughout his life was seen as a Christian act that fit with the ideals of the Church.[4]

Although she was well into her seventies, the Empress Mother Eleni stepped in to act as her step-great-grandson's regent until 1516, when he came of age. During this time, she was aware that the neighboring Muslim states were benefitting from the assistance of other, larger Muslim countries like the Ottoman Empire.

Eleni sought to neutralize this advantage by dispatching the Ethiopian Armenian Mateus to Portugal to ask for assistance. However, the Portuguese response did not arrive in Ethiopia until much later, when an embassy led by Dom Rodrigo de Lima arrived at Massawa on 9 April 1520. Traversing the Ethiopian highlands, they did not reach Dawit's camp until 19 October of that year. Francisco Álvares provides us a description of the Emperor:

In age, complexion, and stature, he is a young man, not very black. His complexion might be chestnut or bay, not very dark in colour; he is very much a man of breeding, of middling stature; they said that he was twenty-three years of age, and he looks like that, his face is round, the eyes large, the nose high in the middle, and his beard is beginning to grow. In presence and state he fully looks like the great lord that he is.[5]

A follower of his late father, the monk Gebre Andrias slayed Emir Mahfuz of Adal in 1517 about the same time a Portuguese fleet attacked Zeila, a Muslim stronghold, and burned it. In 1523, Dawit campaigned amongst the Gurage near Lake Zway. Contemporaries concluded that the Muslim threat to Ethiopia was finally over, so when the diplomatic mission from Portugal arrived at last, Dawit denied that Mateus had the authority to negotiate treaties, ignoring Eleni's counsels. After a stay of six years, the Portuguese at last set sail and left a governing class who thought they were securely in control of the situation. As Paul B. Henze notes, "They were mistaken."[6] According to Ethiopian chronicles, two decades into Dawit's ascension, a young man by the name Ahmed Ibrahim had rebelled against the Adal leaders and spread terror in the region. Dawit sent his general Delghan into Adal to confront him however the Abyssinian army was defeated at the Battle of Hubat by Ahmed's warriors.[7]

 
Stamp depicting Lebna Dengel and his army

Ethiopian–Adal war

With the death of Sultan Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad in 1520, a young general and imam, Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi, consolidated his hold on the Adal Sultanate, making his candidate Umar Din sultan. Shortly before this, the Ottoman Empire had conquered Mamluk Egypt and were looking to expand into the red sea region. The Ethiopians had previously stolen firearms from the Mamluks during the reign of Yeshaq I but had not put them to use. In the 1520s, Emperor Lebna Dengel bought two swivel-guns from the Portuguese, as well as fourteen muskets acquired from Turks, he was thus ill equipped for the Ottoman backed invasion in 1527 which included thousands of Turkish and Arab flintlocks and matchlocks. The Imam crossed the Awash River and entered Fatagar in 1528, looting and burning the town of Badeqe before Dawit could arrive with his army. He began to withdraw, retreating across the Samara, a tributary of the Awash.

The Imam's followers were accustomed to making lightning raids on Ethiopian territory, swiftly attacking and quickly returning home; they had no experience in pitched battles, and Ahmad Gragn struggled with numerous desertions.[8]

The Emperor Dawit caught up with Imam Ahmad Gragn's forces, and they engaged in battle on either 7 or 9 March 1529, at the Battle of Shimbra Kure, but failed to destroy the Imam's army. Arab Faqīh states that many Somali on the left flank retreated from the battlefield, with the Ethiopians pursuing them and killing a large number of their men, but that the Adalites (Harla/Harari) on the right flank managed to hold their ground.[9] While not a clear victory for the Imam, this battle still proved to the Imam's followers that they could fight and defeat the Ethiopian army.

Imam Ahmad Gragn spent the next two years preoccupied beyond the Awash, but returned to attack Ethiopia in 1531, where he scattered the army under the general Eslamu by firing the first cannon in the Horn of Africa. Dawit was forced to withdraw into the Ethiopian highlands and fortify the passes into Bet Amhara ("the House of Amhara"), leaving the territories to the east and south under the protection of his general Wasan Sagad. However, Wasan Sagad was slain near Mount Busat while fighting Ura'i Utman on 29 July (5 Nahase 1524 A.M.) and his army scattered.

The Imam surprised the Emperor at the Battle of Amba Sel on 27 October, where the Emperor was almost captured, a reversal, in the words of R.S. Whiteway, that left Lebna Dengel "never in a position to offer a pitched battle to his enemies."[10] The Imam's followers poured into Bet Amhara, pillaging every church they found, including Mekane Selassie, Atronsa Maryam, Debre Nagwadgwad and Ganata Giyorgis. Emperor Dawit fell back behind the Abay River to the relative security of Gojjam. Only their failure to capture the royal compound at Amba Geshen slowed the Muslims down.

In April 1533, Ahmad once again assembled his troops at Debre Berhan to conquer—or at least ravage—the northern regions of Tigray, Begemder, and Gojjam.

Both Ethiopia and Dawit suffered heavily from these assaults. The monastery of Debre Libanos was burned,[11] and the establishments on the islands of Lake Tana looted.[12] Dawit's eldest son Fiqtor was killed at Zara in Wag by a lieutenant of Ahmad on 7 April 1537; another son, Menas, was captured on 19 May 1539, and later sent to Yemen. Amba Geshen fell to another assault in January 1540, the royal prisoners interred there were slaughtered with their guards and the royal treasury looted.

Later life

 
Late-16th century portrait

During the years he lived as an outlaw in his own realm constantly hounded by Imam Ahmed's soldiers the Malassay,[13] Dawit came to see Queen Eleni's wisdom in reaching out to Europe for help, and he dispatched João Bermudes, who had arrived in Ethiopia with Dom Rodrigo de Lima, to ask for it once again. However, this help in the form of Cristóvão da Gama and his picked troop of 400 did not reach Ethiopia until after Dawit had died at the mountain-top Debre Damo monastery on 2 September 1540.

The Ethiopian historian Taddesse Tamrat writes, "The Muslim occupation of the Christian highlands under Ahmad Gragn lasted for little more than ten years, between 1531 and 1543. But the amount of destruction brought about in these years can only be estimated in terms of centuries."[14]

Dawit was succeeded by his son Gelawdewos, as his son Menas had been captured by Ahmad a year before Dawit died. His release wasn't secured until 1543, when Queen Seble Wongel exchanged him for the captured son of Bati del Wambara and Ahmed after the Battle of Wayna Daga.[15]

One of Dawit II's younger sons, Yaqob, is said to have stayed behind to hide in the province of Menz in Shewa. Yaqob's grandson Susenyos I defeated his various second cousins in 1604 to become Emperor and started the Gondar line of the Solomonic dynasty. Another grandson started the Shewan line of the Solomonic dynasty.

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia of Christianity in the Global South. Rowman & Littlefield. June 2018. p. 266. ISBN 9781442271579.
  2. ^ Akyeampong, Emmanuel K.; Gates, Henry Louis Jr. (2012). Dictionary of African Biography. OUP USA. p. 482. ISBN 978-0-19-538207-5.
  3. ^ Molvaer, Reidulf K. (1998). "The Tragedy of Emperor Libne-Dingil of Ethiopia (1508-1540)". Northeast African Studies. 5 (2): 44. doi:10.1353/nas.1998.0011. S2CID 143584847.
  4. ^ Beyene, Solomon Gebreyes (2016). The Chronicle of King Gälawdewos (1540–1559): A Critical Edition with Annotated Translation (PhD). University of Hamburg. p. 184.
  5. ^ Francisco Alvarez, The Prester John of the Indies translated by C. F. Beckingham and G. W. B. Huntingford (Cambridge: Hakluyt Society, 1961), p. 304.
  6. ^ Paul B. Henze, Layers of Time, A History of Ethiopia (New York: Palgrave, 2000), p. 85.
  7. ^ Budge, E.A (1828). History Of Ethiopia Nubia And Abyssinia. pp. 327–328.
  8. ^ As described by Sihab ad-Din Ahmad bin 'Abd al-Qader, Futuh al-Habasa: The conquest of Ethiopia, translated by Paul Lester Stenhouse with annotations by Richard Pankhurst (Hollywood: Tsehai, 2003), pp. 68–70.
  9. ^ bin 'Abd al-Qader arabfaqīh, Sihab ad-Din (30 January 2005). Futuh al-Habasha: The conquest of Ethiopia translated by Paul Lester Stenhouse. Tsehai Pub and Distributors. p. 81-82. ISBN 0972317252.
  10. ^ R.S. Whiteway, The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543, 1902 (Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint Limited, 1967), p. xxxvi.
  11. ^ Futuh, pp. 186–193.
  12. ^ Futuh, pp. 381–384.
  13. ^ Molvaer, Reidulf (1998). "The Tragedy of Emperor Libne-Dingil of Ethiopia (1508-1540)". Northeast African Studies. Michigan State University Press. 5 (2): 32. doi:10.1353/nas.1998.0011. JSTOR 41931161. S2CID 143584847.
  14. ^ Taddesse Tamrat, Church and State in Ethiopia (1270–1527) (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972), p. 301.
  15. ^ Castanhoso, Miguel de (1902). Whiteway, R.S. (ed.). The Portuguese expedition to Abyssinia in 1541-1543 as narrated by Castanhoso. London: Redford Press. p. xxxiv. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of Ethiopia
1508–1540
Succeeded by

dawit, ዳዊት, 1496, september, 1540, also, known, macaronic, name, wanag, segad, ወናግ, ሰገድ, whom, lions, better, known, birth, name, lebna, dengel, amharic, ልብነ, ድንግል, essence, virgin, emperor, ethiopia, from, 1508, 1540, whose, political, center, palace, shewa, . Dawit II Ge ez ዳዊት c 1496 2 September 1540 also known by the macaronic name Wanag Segad ወናግ ሰገድ to whom the lions bow better known by his birth name Lebna Dengel Amharic ልብነ ድንግል essence of the virgin was Emperor of Ethiopia from 1508 to 1540 whose political center and palace was in Shewa 1 Dawit II ዳዊትNegusa NagastContemporary portrait of a young Lebna Dengel by Cristofano dell AltissimoEmperor of EthiopiaReign13 August 1507 2 September 1540 1507 08 13 1540 09 02 Coronation13 May 1508PredecessorNa odSuccessorGelawdewosRegentEmpress EleniBornc 1496 Shewa Ethiopian EmpireDied2 September 1540 1540 09 02 aged 43 44 Debre Damo Tigray Province Ethiopian EmpireBurialAbba Aragwi MonasterySpouseSeble WongelIssueFiqtor Lebna DengalGelawdewosYakobMenasWalatta HannaAmata GiyorgisSabana GiyorgisWalatta KidusanTewdadaNamesLebna DengelDynastyHouse of SolomonFatherNa odMotherNa od MogesaA male line descendant of the medieval Amhara kings and thus a member of the House of Solomon he was the son of Emperor Na od and Empress Na od Mogesa The important victory over the Adal s Emir Mahfuz may have given Dawit the appellation Wanag Segad which is a combination of Geʽez and the Harari terms 2 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early reign 1 2 Ethiopian Adal war 1 3 Later life 2 ReferencesBiography EditEarly reign Edit In contrast to previous emperors Dawit had only one wife Seble Wongel whom he married around 1512 13 The couple had eight children four sons and four daughters 3 Taking only one wife throughout his life was seen as a Christian act that fit with the ideals of the Church 4 Although she was well into her seventies the Empress Mother Eleni stepped in to act as her step great grandson s regent until 1516 when he came of age During this time she was aware that the neighboring Muslim states were benefitting from the assistance of other larger Muslim countries like the Ottoman Empire Eleni sought to neutralize this advantage by dispatching the Ethiopian Armenian Mateus to Portugal to ask for assistance However the Portuguese response did not arrive in Ethiopia until much later when an embassy led by Dom Rodrigo de Lima arrived at Massawa on 9 April 1520 Traversing the Ethiopian highlands they did not reach Dawit s camp until 19 October of that year Francisco Alvares provides us a description of the Emperor In age complexion and stature he is a young man not very black His complexion might be chestnut or bay not very dark in colour he is very much a man of breeding of middling stature they said that he was twenty three years of age and he looks like that his face is round the eyes large the nose high in the middle and his beard is beginning to grow In presence and state he fully looks like the great lord that he is 5 A follower of his late father the monk Gebre Andrias slayed Emir Mahfuz of Adal in 1517 about the same time a Portuguese fleet attacked Zeila a Muslim stronghold and burned it In 1523 Dawit campaigned amongst the Gurage near Lake Zway Contemporaries concluded that the Muslim threat to Ethiopia was finally over so when the diplomatic mission from Portugal arrived at last Dawit denied that Mateus had the authority to negotiate treaties ignoring Eleni s counsels After a stay of six years the Portuguese at last set sail and left a governing class who thought they were securely in control of the situation As Paul B Henze notes They were mistaken 6 According to Ethiopian chronicles two decades into Dawit s ascension a young man by the name Ahmed Ibrahim had rebelled against the Adal leaders and spread terror in the region Dawit sent his general Delghan into Adal to confront him however the Abyssinian army was defeated at the Battle of Hubat by Ahmed s warriors 7 Stamp depicting Lebna Dengel and his army Ethiopian Adal war Edit Main article Ethiopian Adal war With the death of Sultan Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad in 1520 a young general and imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi consolidated his hold on the Adal Sultanate making his candidate Umar Din sultan Shortly before this the Ottoman Empire had conquered Mamluk Egypt and were looking to expand into the red sea region The Ethiopians had previously stolen firearms from the Mamluks during the reign of Yeshaq I but had not put them to use In the 1520s Emperor Lebna Dengel bought two swivel guns from the Portuguese as well as fourteen muskets acquired from Turks he was thus ill equipped for the Ottoman backed invasion in 1527 which included thousands of Turkish and Arab flintlocks and matchlocks The Imam crossed the Awash River and entered Fatagar in 1528 looting and burning the town of Badeqe before Dawit could arrive with his army He began to withdraw retreating across the Samara a tributary of the Awash The Imam s followers were accustomed to making lightning raids on Ethiopian territory swiftly attacking and quickly returning home they had no experience in pitched battles and Ahmad Gragn struggled with numerous desertions 8 The Emperor Dawit caught up with Imam Ahmad Gragn s forces and they engaged in battle on either 7 or 9 March 1529 at the Battle of Shimbra Kure but failed to destroy the Imam s army Arab Faqih states that many Somali on the left flank retreated from the battlefield with the Ethiopians pursuing them and killing a large number of their men but that the Adalites Harla Harari on the right flank managed to hold their ground 9 While not a clear victory for the Imam this battle still proved to the Imam s followers that they could fight and defeat the Ethiopian army Imam Ahmad Gragn spent the next two years preoccupied beyond the Awash but returned to attack Ethiopia in 1531 where he scattered the army under the general Eslamu by firing the first cannon in the Horn of Africa Dawit was forced to withdraw into the Ethiopian highlands and fortify the passes into Bet Amhara the House of Amhara leaving the territories to the east and south under the protection of his general Wasan Sagad However Wasan Sagad was slain near Mount Busat while fighting Ura i Utman on 29 July 5 Nahase 1524 A M and his army scattered The Imam surprised the Emperor at the Battle of Amba Sel on 27 October where the Emperor was almost captured a reversal in the words of R S Whiteway that left Lebna Dengel never in a position to offer a pitched battle to his enemies 10 The Imam s followers poured into Bet Amhara pillaging every church they found including Mekane Selassie Atronsa Maryam Debre Nagwadgwad and Ganata Giyorgis Emperor Dawit fell back behind the Abay River to the relative security of Gojjam Only their failure to capture the royal compound at Amba Geshen slowed the Muslims down In April 1533 Ahmad once again assembled his troops at Debre Berhan to conquer or at least ravage the northern regions of Tigray Begemder and Gojjam Both Ethiopia and Dawit suffered heavily from these assaults The monastery of Debre Libanos was burned 11 and the establishments on the islands of Lake Tana looted 12 Dawit s eldest son Fiqtor was killed at Zara in Wag by a lieutenant of Ahmad on 7 April 1537 another son Menas was captured on 19 May 1539 and later sent to Yemen Amba Geshen fell to another assault in January 1540 the royal prisoners interred there were slaughtered with their guards and the royal treasury looted Later life Edit Late 16th century portrait During the years he lived as an outlaw in his own realm constantly hounded by Imam Ahmed s soldiers the Malassay 13 Dawit came to see Queen Eleni s wisdom in reaching out to Europe for help and he dispatched Joao Bermudes who had arrived in Ethiopia with Dom Rodrigo de Lima to ask for it once again However this help in the form of Cristovao da Gama and his picked troop of 400 did not reach Ethiopia until after Dawit had died at the mountain top Debre Damo monastery on 2 September 1540 The Ethiopian historian Taddesse Tamrat writes The Muslim occupation of the Christian highlands under Ahmad Gragn lasted for little more than ten years between 1531 and 1543 But the amount of destruction brought about in these years can only be estimated in terms of centuries 14 Dawit was succeeded by his son Gelawdewos as his son Menas had been captured by Ahmad a year before Dawit died His release wasn t secured until 1543 when Queen Seble Wongel exchanged him for the captured son of Bati del Wambara and Ahmed after the Battle of Wayna Daga 15 One of Dawit II s younger sons Yaqob is said to have stayed behind to hide in the province of Menz in Shewa Yaqob s grandson Susenyos I defeated his various second cousins in 1604 to become Emperor and started the Gondar line of the Solomonic dynasty Another grandson started the Shewan line of the Solomonic dynasty References Edit Encyclopedia of Christianity in the Global South Rowman amp Littlefield June 2018 p 266 ISBN 9781442271579 Akyeampong Emmanuel K Gates Henry Louis Jr 2012 Dictionary of African Biography OUP USA p 482 ISBN 978 0 19 538207 5 Molvaer Reidulf K 1998 The Tragedy of Emperor Libne Dingil of Ethiopia 1508 1540 Northeast African Studies 5 2 44 doi 10 1353 nas 1998 0011 S2CID 143584847 Beyene Solomon Gebreyes 2016 The Chronicle of King Galawdewos 1540 1559 A Critical Edition with Annotated Translation PhD University of Hamburg p 184 Francisco Alvarez The Prester John of the Indies translated by C F Beckingham and G W B Huntingford Cambridge Hakluyt Society 1961 p 304 Paul B Henze Layers of Time A History of Ethiopia New York Palgrave 2000 p 85 Budge E A 1828 History Of Ethiopia Nubia And Abyssinia pp 327 328 As described by Sihab ad Din Ahmad bin Abd al Qader Futuh al Habasa The conquest of Ethiopia translated by Paul Lester Stenhouse with annotations by Richard Pankhurst Hollywood Tsehai 2003 pp 68 70 bin Abd al Qader arabfaqih Sihab ad Din 30 January 2005 Futuh al Habasha The conquest of Ethiopia translated by Paul Lester Stenhouse Tsehai Pub and Distributors p 81 82 ISBN 0972317252 R S Whiteway The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 1902 Nendeln Liechtenstein Kraus Reprint Limited 1967 p xxxvi Futuh pp 186 193 Futuh pp 381 384 Molvaer Reidulf 1998 The Tragedy of Emperor Libne Dingil of Ethiopia 1508 1540 Northeast African Studies Michigan State University Press 5 2 32 doi 10 1353 nas 1998 0011 JSTOR 41931161 S2CID 143584847 Taddesse Tamrat Church and State in Ethiopia 1270 1527 Oxford Clarendon Press 1972 p 301 Castanhoso Miguel de 1902 Whiteway R S ed The Portuguese expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as narrated by Castanhoso London Redford Press p xxxiv Retrieved 11 June 2020 Regnal titlesPreceded byNa od Emperor of Ethiopia1508 1540 Succeeded byGelawdewos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dawit II amp oldid 1145769718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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