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Italian Eritrea

Italian Eritrea (Italian: Colonia Eritrea, "Colony of Eritrea") was a colony of the Kingdom of Italy in the territory of present-day Eritrea. The first Italian establishment in the area was the purchase of Assab by the Rubattino Shipping Company in 1869, which came under government control in 1882. Occupation of Massawa in 1885 and the subsequent expansion of territory would gradually engulf the region and in 1889 borders with the Ethiopian Empire were defined in the Treaty of Wuchale. In 1890 the Colony of Eritrea (Italian: Colonia Eritrea) was officially founded.

Colony of Eritrea
Colonia Eritrea (Italian)
1882–1936
StatusColony of Italy
CapitalAsmara
Common languagesItalian (official)
Italian Eritrean, Tigrinya, Tigre, Kunama, Nara, Saho, Bilen, Hejazi
Religion
Catholicism
Oriental Orthodoxy
Islam
King 
• 1882–1900
Umberto I
• 1900–1936
Victor Emmanuel III
Governor 
• 1890 (first)
Baldassarre Orero
• 1935–1936 (last)
Pietro Badoglio
Historical eraNew Imperialism
15 November 1869
• Government control
5 July 1882
5 February 1885
2 May 1889
• Colony of Eritrea
1 January 1890
1 June 1936
19 May 1941
10 February 1947
15 September 1952
CurrencyEritrean tallero
(1890–1921)
Italian lira
(1921–36)
Today part ofEritrea

In 1936 the region was integrated into Italian East Africa as the Eritrea Governorate. This would last until Italy's loss of the region in 1941, during the East African campaign of World War II. Italian Eritrea then came under British military administration, which in 1951 fell under United Nations supervision. In September 1952 it became an autonomous part of Ethiopia, until its independence in 1991.

History

Acquisition of Assab and creation of the colony

 
Giuseppe Sapeto, c. 1870

The leading figure of the early history of Italian enterprises in the Red Sea was Giuseppe Sapeto. When a young monk, preparing himself in Cairo for missionary work, he had been dispatched in 1837 into Abyssinia. Afterward, he became an active advocate of European penetration, initially encouraging the French to establish themselves in the area. After 1866, following the political unification of Italy, he sought to develop Italian influence instead. As the Suez Canal neared completion, he began to visualize the establishment of a coaling station and port of call for Italian steamships in the Red Sea. Sapeto won over the Italian minister for foreign affairs, and King Victor Emmanuel II, to whom he explained his ideas.

 
Italian settlement at Assab, 1880

In the autumn of 1869 he, together with Admiral Acton, was sent by the government to the Red Sea to choose a suitable port and arrange for its sale. This he did by paying a small deposit to the Danakil chiefs at Assab Bay in return for their promise to sell their territory to him on his return. Meanwhile, the government had been in touch with Raffaele Rubattino, whose company was planning to establish a steamship line through the newly opened Suez Canal and the Red Sea to India. It was agreed that the company would buy the territory in its own name and with its own funds, but should undertake to use it in the national interest. Sapeto returned to the Red Sea on behalf of the company, completed the purchase and bought more land to the south.

By March 1870, an Italian shipping company had thus become claimant to territory at the northern end of Assab Bay, a deserted but spacious bay about half-way between Annesley Bay to the north and Obock to the South.[1] However, the area, — which had been long dominated by the Ottoman Empire and Egypt[2]— was not settled by the Italians until 1880.[3] Two years later, Italy formally took possession of the nascent colony from its commercial owners.

Most of the western coast of the Red Sea was then formally claimed by the Khedivate of Egypt (under the notional rule of the Ottoman Turkish Empire, who held the eastern coast) but the region was thrown into chaos by major Egyptian defeats in the Ethio-Egyptian War and by the success of the Mahdi's uprising in the Sudan. In 1884, the British Hewett Treaty promised the Bogos—the highlands of modern Eritrea—and free access to the Massawan coast to Emperor Yohannes IV in exchange for his help evacuating garrisons from the Sudan;[4]

In the vacuum left by the Egyptian withdrawal, though, British diplomats were concerned about the rapid expansion of French Somaliland, France's colony along the Gulf of Tadjoura. Ignoring their treaty with Ethiopia, they openly encouraged Italy to expand north into Massawa, which was taken without a shot from its Egyptian garrison. Located on a coral island[5] surrounded by lucrative pearl-fishing grounds,[6] the superior port was fortified and made the capital of the Italian governor.[5] Assab, meanwhile, continued to find service as a coaling station.[7] As they were not a party to the Hewett Treaty, the Italians began restricting access to arms shipments and imposing customs duties on Ethiopian goods immediately.

In the disorder that followed the 1889 death of Emperor Yohannes IV, Gen. Oreste Baratieri occupied the highlands along the Eritrean coast and Italy proclaimed the establishment of a new colony of Eritrea (from the Latin name for the Red Sea), with capital Asmara in substitution of Massawa.[8]

In the Treaty of Wuchale (It. Uccialli) signed the same year, King Menelik of Shewa—a southern Ethiopian kingdom—recognized the Italian occupation of his rivals' lands of Bogos, Hamasien, Akkele Guzay, and Serae in exchange for guarantees of financial assistance and continuing access to European arms and ammunition. His subsequent victory over his rival kings and enthronement as Emperor Menelek II (r. 1889–1913) made the treaty formally binding upon the entire country.

Once established, however, Menelik took a dim view towards Italian involvement with local leaders in his northern province of Tigray;[9] while the Italians, for their part, felt bound to involvement given the regular Tigrayan raiding of tribes within their colony's protectorate[6] and the Tigrayan leaders themselves continued to claim the provinces now held by Italy. Negotiations with the French over a railway brought things to a head: the Italian—but not Amharic—version of the Treaty of Wuchale had prohibited Ethiopia with foreign negotiations except through Italy, effectively making the realm an Italian protectorate. Secure both domestically and militarily (thanks to arms shipments via French Djibouti and Harar), Menelik denounced the treaty in whole and the ensuing war, culminating in Italy's disastrous defeat at Adwa, ended their hopes of annexing Ethiopia for a time.

During the late twentieth century Assab would become Ethiopia's main port, but it was long overshadowed by nearby Djibouti, whose railway (completed to Dire Dawa in 1902) permitted it to quickly supplant traditional caravan-based routes to Assab[6] and Zeila.[10][11][12] Massawa remained the primary port for most of northern Ethiopia, but its relatively high customs dues, dependence on caravans, and political antagonism limited the volume on its trade with Ethiopia.[6]

Seeking to develop their own lands, the Italian government launched the first development projects in the new colony in the late 1880s. The Eritrean Railway was completed to Saati in 1888[13] and reached Asmara in the highlands in 1911.[14]

 
Map showing in red the new roads (like the "Imperial road", and those in construction in 1941) created by the Italians in Eritrea and AOI

The Asmara–Massawa Cableway (dismantled by the British as war reparations in World War II) was the longest line in the world during its time. Italian administration of Eritrea also brought improvements in the medical and agricultural sectors of Eritrean society. Despite an imposition of racial laws, all urban Eritreans had access to modern sanitation and hospital services.

The Italians also employed local Eritreans in public service, particularly the police and public works departments. In a region marked by cultural, linguistic, and religious diversity, a succession of Italian governors maintained a notable degree of unity and public order.

Nicknamed Colonia Primogenita ("First-born Colony") in contrast to the newer and less-developed territories of Italian Somaliland and Libya,[15] Eritrea boasted a larger native Italian settlement than the other lands. The first few dozen families were sponsored by the Italian government around the start of the 20th century and settled around Asmara and Massawa.

The Italian-Eritrean community then grew from around 4,000 during World War I to nearly 100,000 at the beginning of World War II.[16] While tolerating Islamic adherence, the Italians endorsed a huge expansion of Catholicism in Eritrea and constructed many churches in the highlands around Asmara and Keren, centered on the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary in the capital.

By the early 1940s, Catholicism was the declared religion of around 28% of the colony's population, while Christianity was the religion of more than half the Eritreans.[17][18]

Fascist Era

 
1922 map showing Italian Eritrea
 
Fiat Tagliero Building, Gas Station in Art deco style of Italian Asmara
 
Church of Our Lady of the Rosary in Asmara, built in 1923
 
Governor's Palace, built in 1940 (current Presidential Palace)

Benito Mussolini's rise to power in Italy in 1922 brought profound changes to the colonial government in Eritrea. After il Duce declared the birth of Italian Empire in May 1936, Italian Eritrea (enlarged with northern Ethiopia's regions) and Italian Somaliland were merged with the just conquered Ethiopia in the new Italian East Africa (Africa Orientale Italiana) administrative territory. This Fascist period was characterized by imperial expansion in the name of a "new Roman Empire".

Eritrea was chosen by the Italian government to be the industrial center of Italian East Africa:[19]

After the establishment of new transportation and communication methods in the country, the Italians also started to set up new factories, which in turn made due contribution in enhancing trade activities. The newly opened factories produced buttons, cooking oil, and pasta, construction materials, packing meat, tobacco, hide and other household commodities. In the year 1939, there were around 2,198 factories and most of the employees were Eritrean citizens, some even moved from the villages to work in the factories. The establishment of industries also made an increase in the number of both Italians and Eritreans residing in the cities. The number of Italians residing in the country increased from 4,600 to 75,000 in five years; and with the involvement of Eritreans in the industries, trade and fruit plantation was expanded across the nation, while some of the plantations were owned by Eritreans.[20]

The capital of Eritrea experienced a huge increase in population: in 1935 there were only 4,000 Italians and 12,000 Eritreans; in 1938 there were 48,000 Italians and 36,000 Eritreans. Historian Gian Luca Podesta wrote that practically Asmara has become an Italian city ("in pratica Asmara era diventata una citta' italiana").[21]

The Italian government continued to implement agricultural reforms but primarily on farms owned by Italian colonists (exports of coffee boomed in the 1930s). In the area of Asmara, there were in 1940 more than 2,000 small and medium-sized industrial companies, which were concentrated in the areas of construction, mechanics, textiles, food processing and electricity. Consequently, the standard of living in Eritrea in 1939 was considered among the best on the continent for both the local Eritreans and the Italian settlers.[22]

Mussolini's government considered the colony as a strategic base for future aggrandizement and ruled accordingly, using Eritrea as a base to launch its 1935–1936 campaign to conquer and colonize Ethiopia. Even in World War II the Italians used Eritrea to attack Sudan and occupy the Kassala area. Indeed, the best Italian colonial troops were the Eritrean Ascari, as stated by Italian Marshall Rodolfo Graziani and legendary officer Amedeo Guillet.[23] Furthermore, after World War I, service with the Ascari become the main source of paid employment for the indigenous male population of Italian Eritrea. During the expansion required by the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1936, 40% of eligible Eritreans were enrolled in these colonial troops.[24]

According to the Italian census of 1939 the city of Asmara had a population of 98,000, of which 53,000 were Italians. This fact made Asmara the main "Italian town" of the Italian empire in Africa. Furthermore, because of the Italian architecture of the city, Asmara was called Piccola Roma (Little Rome).[25] The total number of Italians in all of Eritrea was 75,000 in that year.[26]

Asmara was known to be an exceptionally modern city, not only because of its architecture, but Asmara also had more traffic lights than Rome did when the city was being built. The city incorporates many features of a planned city. Indeed, Asmara was an early example of an ideal modern city created by architects, an idea which was introduced into many cities across the world, such as Brasilia, but which was not altogether popular. Features include designated city zoning and planning, wide treed boulevards, political areas and districts and space and scope for development. Asmara was not built for the Eritreans however; the Italians built it primarily for themselves and made the city a typical Italian city with even its own car race (called the Asmara circuit).

The city has been regarded as "New Rome" due to its quintessential Italian touch, not only for the architecture but also for the wide streets, piazzas and coffee bars. While the boulevards are lined with palms and indigenous shiba'kha trees, there are numerable pizzerias and coffee bars, serving cappuccinos and lattes, as well as ice cream parlours.

Many industrial investments were endorsed by the Italians in the area of Asmara and Massawa, but the beginning of World War II stopped the blossoming industrialization of Eritrea.[27]

British Military Administration and the end of the colony

British Military Administration in Eritrea
1941–1952
 
Flag
GovernmentMilitary administration
Military Administrator 
• 1941–1942
William Platt
• 1942–1944
Stephen Longrigg
• 1944–1945
Charles McCarthy
• 1945–1946
John Benoy
• 1946–1951
Francis Drew
UN High Commissioner 
• 1951–1952
Eduardo Anze Matienzo
Chief Administrator 
• 1951–1952
Duncan Cumming
History 
19 May 1941
10 February 1947
• UN supervision
19 February 1951
15 September 1952
Currencypound

When the Allies captured Italian-held Eritrea in January 1941, most of the infrastructure and the industrial areas were extremely damaged and the remaining ones (like the Asmara-Massawa Cableway) were successively removed and sent toward India and Kenya as war reparations.[28]

The following Italian guerrilla war was supported by many Eritrean colonial troops (like the "hero" of Eritrean independence, Hamid Idris Awate)[29] until the Italian armistice in September 1943. Eritrea was placed under British military administration after the Italian surrender in World War II. After the defeat of Italy, there were 70,000 Italian settlers in Eritrea.[30] The British military administration arrested and deported substantial numbers of the settler population as they were implicated with the Italian fascist regime.[30] Some settlers were involved in confrontations with Eritreans.[30]

The Italians in Eritrea started to move away from the country after the defeat of the Kingdom of Italy by the Allies, and by the time of the British census of 1949 Asmara had only 17,183 Italian Eritreans of a total population of 127,579. Most Italian settlers left for Italy, with others to United States, Middle East, and Australia.

The British maintained initially the Italian administration of Eritrea, but the country soon started to be involved in a violent process of independence (from the British in the late forties and after 1952 from the Ethiopians, who annexed Eritrea in that year).

During the last years of World War II some Italian Eritreans like Dr. Vincenzo DiMeglio defended politically the presence of Italians in Eritrea and successively promoted the independence of Eritrea.[31] He went to Rome to participate in a Conference for the independence of Eritrea, promoted by the Vatican.

After the war Di Meglio was named Director of the "Comitato Rappresentativo Italiani dell' Eritrea" (CRIE). In 1947 he supported the creation of the "Associazione Italo-Eritrei" and the "Associazione Veterani Ascari", in order to get alliance with the Eritreans favorable to Italy in Eritrea.[32]

As a result of these creations, he cofounded the "Partito Eritrea Pro Italia" (Party of Shara Italy) in September 1947, an Eritrean political party favorable to the Italian presence in Eritrea that obtained more than 200,000 inscriptions of membership in one single month.

Indeed, the Italian Eritreans strongly rejected the Ethiopian annexation of Eritrea after the war: the "Party of Shara Italy" was established in Asmara in 1947 and the majority of the members were former Italian soldiers with many Eritrean Ascari (the organization was even backed up by the government of Italy).

The main objective of this party was Eritrean freedom, but they had a pre-condition that stated that before independence the country should be governed by Italy for at least 15 years.

With the Peace Treaty of 1947 Italy officially accepted the end of the colony. As a consequence the Italian community started to disappear, mainly after the Ethiopian government took control of Eritrea.

However some Italo-Eritrean were welcomed by the Ethiopian government, like the brothers Italo Vassalo and Luciano Vassalo, champions of football who won the 1962 African Cup of Nations.

 
Vincenzo di Meglio (second from right) at the 1949 Conference for Eritrean independence in the Vatican
 
Modern downtown Asmara, called Piccola Roma, featuring Italian-style buildings

See also

References

  1. ^ Agatha Ramm, "Great Britain and the Planting of Italian Power in the Red Sea, 1868-1885", The English Historical Review, Vol. 59, No. 234 (May, 1944), p. 214–215.
  2. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Egypt: Section III: History" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 90–119.
  3. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Eritrea" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 747.
  4. ^ Wylde, Augustus B. Modern Abyssinia, pp. 35 ff. Methuen (London), 1901.
  5. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Massawa" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 864–865.
  6. ^ a b c d Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Eritrea: Agriculture and Trade" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 746.
  7. ^ Ullendorff, Edward. The Ethiopians: An Introduction to Country and People 2nd ed., p. 90. Oxford University Press (London), 1965. ISBN 0-19-285061-X.
  8. ^ Asmara italiana
  9. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Abyssinia" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 94.
  10. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Abyssinia: Trade and Currency" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 87.
  11. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Zaila" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 950.
  12. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Somaliland: French Somaliland" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 382–383.
  13. ^ Cf. engineer Emilio Olivieri's report on the construction of the Massawa–Saati Railway 2013-10-12 at the Wayback Machine (1888), hosted at Ferrovia Eritrea. (in Italian)
  14. ^ "Eritrean Railway 2008-02-03 at the Wayback Machine" at Ferrovia Eritrea. (in Italian)
  15. ^ "The beginning of the Italian colony of Eritrea: Assab" (in Italian)
  16. ^ "Italian emigration to Eritrea". (in Italian)
  17. ^ Bandini, Franco. Gli italiani in Africa, storia delle guerre coloniali 1882-1943, "Eritrea". (in Italian)
  18. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-01. Retrieved 2017-08-01.
  19. ^ Italian industries in colonial Eritrea 2009-04-29 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Administrator, shabait. "Italian administration in Eritrea -". www.shabait.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  21. ^ Barbot, Michela; Caracausi, Andrea; Lanaro, Paola (8 April 2018). Lo sguardo della storia economica sull'edilizia urbana. Croma - Università Roma TRE. ISBN 9788883681073. Retrieved 8 April 2018 – via Google Books.
  22. ^ "Ompekning pågår - FS Data". alenalki.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  23. ^ Amedeo Guillet in Eritrea 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ Ascari: the brave Italian soldiers of color[permanent dead link]
  25. ^ Italian architectural planification of Asmara (in Italian) p. 64-66
  26. ^ Italians in 1939 Eritrea 2009-02-20 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ Italian industries and companies in Eritrea 2009-04-29 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Encyclopedia of African History: A - G.. 1. Taylor & Francis. 8 April 2018. ISBN 9781579582456. Retrieved 8 April 2018 – via Google Books.
  29. ^ Rosselli, Alberto. Storie Segrete. Operazioni sconosciute o dimenticate della seconda guerra mondiale. second chapter
  30. ^ a b c Ertola, Emanuele (2023). "Blowing Against the Winds of Change: Settlers Facing Decolonization in Eritrea, 1941–52". Journal of Contemporary History. 58: 71–91. doi:10.1177/00220094221136817. ISSN 0022-0094. S2CID 253497031.
  31. ^ Franco Bandini. Gli italiani in Africa, storia delle guerre coloniali 1882-1943 p. 67
  32. ^ "Nuova pagina 1". www.ilcornodafrica.it. Retrieved 8 April 2018.

Bibliography

  • Archivio Storico Diplomatico (1975), (in Italian), vol. 1: Eritrea, Etiopia, Somalia (1857-1939), Rome: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, archived from the original on 2017-12-12, retrieved 2017-08-07
  • Archivio Storico Diplomatico (1977), (in Italian), Rome: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, archived from the original on 2017-12-12, retrieved 2017-08-07
  • Bandini, Franco. Gli italiani in Africa, storia delle guerre coloniali 1882-1943. Longanesi. Milano, 1971.
  • Bereketeab, R. Eritrea: The making of a Nation. Uppsala University. Uppsala, 2000.
  • Lowe, C.J. Italian Foreign Policy 1870-1940. Routledge. 2002.
  • Maravigna, Pietro. Come abbiamo perduto la guerra in Africa. Le nostre prime colonie in Africa. Il conflitto mondiale e le operazioni in Africa Orientale e in Libia. Testimonianze e ricordi. Tipografia L'Airone. Roma, 1949.
  • Negash, Tekeste. Italian colonialism in Eritrea 1882-1941 (Politics, Praxis and Impact). Uppsala University. Uppsala, 1987.
  • Podesta, Gian Luca et al. Lo sguardo della storia economica sull'edilizia urbana. Volume 4. Chapter: "Le citta dell'impero". Publisher Croma - Università Roma TRE. Roma, 2009. ISBN 888368107X
  • Rosselli, Alberto. Storie Segrete. Operazioni sconosciute o dimenticate della seconda guerra mondiale. Iuculano Editore. Pavia, 2007
  • Mauri, Arnaldo. Eritrea's early stages in monetary and banking development, International Review of Economics, Vol. LI, N°. 4, 2004.
  • Tuccimei, Ercole. La Banca d'Italia in Africa, Foreword by Arnaldo Mauri, Collana storica della Banca d'Italia, Laterza, Bari, 1999.

External links

  • Website with photos of Italian Asmara
  • Postcards of Italian Asmara
  • Detailed map of Eritrea in 1936 (click on the sections to enlarge)[permanent dead link]

italian, eritrea, italian, colonia, eritrea, colony, eritrea, colony, kingdom, italy, territory, present, eritrea, first, italian, establishment, area, purchase, assab, rubattino, shipping, company, 1869, which, came, under, government, control, 1882, occupati. Italian Eritrea Italian Colonia Eritrea Colony of Eritrea was a colony of the Kingdom of Italy in the territory of present day Eritrea The first Italian establishment in the area was the purchase of Assab by the Rubattino Shipping Company in 1869 which came under government control in 1882 Occupation of Massawa in 1885 and the subsequent expansion of territory would gradually engulf the region and in 1889 borders with the Ethiopian Empire were defined in the Treaty of Wuchale In 1890 the Colony of Eritrea Italian Colonia Eritrea was officially founded Colony of EritreaColonia Eritrea Italian 1882 1936Flag Coat of armsStatusColony of ItalyCapitalAsmaraCommon languagesItalian official Italian Eritrean Tigrinya Tigre Kunama Nara Saho Bilen HejaziReligionCatholicismOriental OrthodoxyIslamKing 1882 1900Umberto I 1900 1936Victor Emmanuel IIIGovernor 1890 first Baldassarre Orero 1935 1936 last Pietro BadoglioHistorical eraNew Imperialism Purchase of Assab15 November 1869 Government control5 July 1882 Expansion into Eritrea5 February 1885 Treaty of Wuchale2 May 1889 Colony of Eritrea1 January 1890 Part of Italian East Africa1 June 1936 British occupation19 May 1941 Relinquished by Italy10 February 1947 End of British occupation15 September 1952CurrencyEritrean tallero 1890 1921 Italian lira 1921 36 Preceded by Succeeded byMedri BahriEthiopian Empire Italian East AfricaToday part ofEritreaIn 1936 the region was integrated into Italian East Africa as the Eritrea Governorate This would last until Italy s loss of the region in 1941 during the East African campaign of World War II Italian Eritrea then came under British military administration which in 1951 fell under United Nations supervision In September 1952 it became an autonomous part of Ethiopia until its independence in 1991 Contents 1 History 1 1 Acquisition of Assab and creation of the colony 1 2 Fascist Era 1 3 British Military Administration and the end of the colony 2 See also 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 External linksHistory EditAcquisition of Assab and creation of the colony Edit See also Italo Ethiopian War of 1887 1889 Giuseppe Sapeto c 1870 The leading figure of the early history of Italian enterprises in the Red Sea was Giuseppe Sapeto When a young monk preparing himself in Cairo for missionary work he had been dispatched in 1837 into Abyssinia Afterward he became an active advocate of European penetration initially encouraging the French to establish themselves in the area After 1866 following the political unification of Italy he sought to develop Italian influence instead As the Suez Canal neared completion he began to visualize the establishment of a coaling station and port of call for Italian steamships in the Red Sea Sapeto won over the Italian minister for foreign affairs and King Victor Emmanuel II to whom he explained his ideas Italian settlement at Assab 1880 In the autumn of 1869 he together with Admiral Acton was sent by the government to the Red Sea to choose a suitable port and arrange for its sale This he did by paying a small deposit to the Danakil chiefs at Assab Bay in return for their promise to sell their territory to him on his return Meanwhile the government had been in touch with Raffaele Rubattino whose company was planning to establish a steamship line through the newly opened Suez Canal and the Red Sea to India It was agreed that the company would buy the territory in its own name and with its own funds but should undertake to use it in the national interest Sapeto returned to the Red Sea on behalf of the company completed the purchase and bought more land to the south By March 1870 an Italian shipping company had thus become claimant to territory at the northern end of Assab Bay a deserted but spacious bay about half way between Annesley Bay to the north and Obock to the South 1 However the area which had been long dominated by the Ottoman Empire and Egypt 2 was not settled by the Italians until 1880 3 Two years later Italy formally took possession of the nascent colony from its commercial owners Most of the western coast of the Red Sea was then formally claimed by the Khedivate of Egypt under the notional rule of the Ottoman Turkish Empire who held the eastern coast but the region was thrown into chaos by major Egyptian defeats in the Ethio Egyptian War and by the success of the Mahdi s uprising in the Sudan In 1884 the British Hewett Treaty promised the Bogos the highlands of modern Eritrea and free access to the Massawan coast to Emperor Yohannes IV in exchange for his help evacuating garrisons from the Sudan 4 In the vacuum left by the Egyptian withdrawal though British diplomats were concerned about the rapid expansion of French Somaliland France s colony along the Gulf of Tadjoura Ignoring their treaty with Ethiopia they openly encouraged Italy to expand north into Massawa which was taken without a shot from its Egyptian garrison Located on a coral island 5 surrounded by lucrative pearl fishing grounds 6 the superior port was fortified and made the capital of the Italian governor 5 Assab meanwhile continued to find service as a coaling station 7 As they were not a party to the Hewett Treaty the Italians began restricting access to arms shipments and imposing customs duties on Ethiopian goods immediately In the disorder that followed the 1889 death of Emperor Yohannes IV Gen Oreste Baratieri occupied the highlands along the Eritrean coast and Italy proclaimed the establishment of a new colony of Eritrea from the Latin name for the Red Sea with capital Asmara in substitution of Massawa 8 In the Treaty of Wuchale It Uccialli signed the same year King Menelik of Shewa a southern Ethiopian kingdom recognized the Italian occupation of his rivals lands of Bogos Hamasien Akkele Guzay and Serae in exchange for guarantees of financial assistance and continuing access to European arms and ammunition His subsequent victory over his rival kings and enthronement as Emperor Menelek II r 1889 1913 made the treaty formally binding upon the entire country Once established however Menelik took a dim view towards Italian involvement with local leaders in his northern province of Tigray 9 while the Italians for their part felt bound to involvement given the regular Tigrayan raiding of tribes within their colony s protectorate 6 and the Tigrayan leaders themselves continued to claim the provinces now held by Italy Negotiations with the French over a railway brought things to a head the Italian but not Amharic version of the Treaty of Wuchale had prohibited Ethiopia with foreign negotiations except through Italy effectively making the realm an Italian protectorate Secure both domestically and militarily thanks to arms shipments via French Djibouti and Harar Menelik denounced the treaty in whole and the ensuing war culminating in Italy s disastrous defeat at Adwa ended their hopes of annexing Ethiopia for a time During the late twentieth century Assab would become Ethiopia s main port but it was long overshadowed by nearby Djibouti whose railway completed to Dire Dawa in 1902 permitted it to quickly supplant traditional caravan based routes to Assab 6 and Zeila 10 11 12 Massawa remained the primary port for most of northern Ethiopia but its relatively high customs dues dependence on caravans and political antagonism limited the volume on its trade with Ethiopia 6 Seeking to develop their own lands the Italian government launched the first development projects in the new colony in the late 1880s The Eritrean Railway was completed to Saati in 1888 13 and reached Asmara in the highlands in 1911 14 Map showing in red the new roads like the Imperial road and those in construction in 1941 created by the Italians in Eritrea and AOI The Asmara Massawa Cableway dismantled by the British as war reparations in World War II was the longest line in the world during its time Italian administration of Eritrea also brought improvements in the medical and agricultural sectors of Eritrean society Despite an imposition of racial laws all urban Eritreans had access to modern sanitation and hospital services The Italians also employed local Eritreans in public service particularly the police and public works departments In a region marked by cultural linguistic and religious diversity a succession of Italian governors maintained a notable degree of unity and public order Nicknamed Colonia Primogenita First born Colony in contrast to the newer and less developed territories of Italian Somaliland and Libya 15 Eritrea boasted a larger native Italian settlement than the other lands The first few dozen families were sponsored by the Italian government around the start of the 20th century and settled around Asmara and Massawa The Italian Eritrean community then grew from around 4 000 during World War I to nearly 100 000 at the beginning of World War II 16 While tolerating Islamic adherence the Italians endorsed a huge expansion of Catholicism in Eritrea and constructed many churches in the highlands around Asmara and Keren centered on the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary in the capital By the early 1940s Catholicism was the declared religion of around 28 of the colony s population while Christianity was the religion of more than half the Eritreans 17 18 Fascist Era Edit 1922 map showing Italian Eritrea Fiat Tagliero Building Gas Station in Art deco style of Italian Asmara Church of Our Lady of the Rosary in Asmara built in 1923 Governor s Palace built in 1940 current Presidential Palace Benito Mussolini s rise to power in Italy in 1922 brought profound changes to the colonial government in Eritrea After il Duce declared the birth of Italian Empire in May 1936 Italian Eritrea enlarged with northern Ethiopia s regions and Italian Somaliland were merged with the just conquered Ethiopia in the new Italian East Africa Africa Orientale Italiana administrative territory This Fascist period was characterized by imperial expansion in the name of a new Roman Empire Eritrea was chosen by the Italian government to be the industrial center of Italian East Africa 19 After the establishment of new transportation and communication methods in the country the Italians also started to set up new factories which in turn made due contribution in enhancing trade activities The newly opened factories produced buttons cooking oil and pasta construction materials packing meat tobacco hide and other household commodities In the year 1939 there were around 2 198 factories and most of the employees were Eritrean citizens some even moved from the villages to work in the factories The establishment of industries also made an increase in the number of both Italians and Eritreans residing in the cities The number of Italians residing in the country increased from 4 600 to 75 000 in five years and with the involvement of Eritreans in the industries trade and fruit plantation was expanded across the nation while some of the plantations were owned by Eritreans 20 The capital of Eritrea experienced a huge increase in population in 1935 there were only 4 000 Italians and 12 000 Eritreans in 1938 there were 48 000 Italians and 36 000 Eritreans Historian Gian Luca Podesta wrote that practically Asmara has become an Italian city in pratica Asmara era diventata una citta italiana 21 The Italian government continued to implement agricultural reforms but primarily on farms owned by Italian colonists exports of coffee boomed in the 1930s In the area of Asmara there were in 1940 more than 2 000 small and medium sized industrial companies which were concentrated in the areas of construction mechanics textiles food processing and electricity Consequently the standard of living in Eritrea in 1939 was considered among the best on the continent for both the local Eritreans and the Italian settlers 22 Mussolini s government considered the colony as a strategic base for future aggrandizement and ruled accordingly using Eritrea as a base to launch its 1935 1936 campaign to conquer and colonize Ethiopia Even in World War II the Italians used Eritrea to attack Sudan and occupy the Kassala area Indeed the best Italian colonial troops were the Eritrean Ascari as stated by Italian Marshall Rodolfo Graziani and legendary officer Amedeo Guillet 23 Furthermore after World War I service with the Ascari become the main source of paid employment for the indigenous male population of Italian Eritrea During the expansion required by the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1936 40 of eligible Eritreans were enrolled in these colonial troops 24 According to the Italian census of 1939 the city of Asmara had a population of 98 000 of which 53 000 were Italians This fact made Asmara the main Italian town of the Italian empire in Africa Furthermore because of the Italian architecture of the city Asmara was called Piccola Roma Little Rome 25 The total number of Italians in all of Eritrea was 75 000 in that year 26 Asmara was known to be an exceptionally modern city not only because of its architecture but Asmara also had more traffic lights than Rome did when the city was being built The city incorporates many features of a planned city Indeed Asmara was an early example of an ideal modern city created by architects an idea which was introduced into many cities across the world such as Brasilia but which was not altogether popular Features include designated city zoning and planning wide treed boulevards political areas and districts and space and scope for development Asmara was not built for the Eritreans however the Italians built it primarily for themselves and made the city a typical Italian city with even its own car race called the Asmara circuit The city has been regarded as New Rome due to its quintessential Italian touch not only for the architecture but also for the wide streets piazzas and coffee bars While the boulevards are lined with palms and indigenous shiba kha trees there are numerable pizzerias and coffee bars serving cappuccinos and lattes as well as ice cream parlours Many industrial investments were endorsed by the Italians in the area of Asmara and Massawa but the beginning of World War II stopped the blossoming industrialization of Eritrea 27 British Military Administration and the end of the colony Edit British Military Administration in Eritrea1941 1952 FlagGovernmentMilitary administrationMilitary Administrator 1941 1942William Platt 1942 1944Stephen Longrigg 1944 1945Charles McCarthy 1945 1946John Benoy 1946 1951Francis DrewUN High Commissioner 1951 1952Eduardo Anze MatienzoChief Administrator 1951 1952Duncan CummingHistory Established19 May 1941 Italian renunciation of claims to Eritrea10 February 1947 UN supervision19 February 1951 Eritrean Autonomous State15 September 1952CurrencypoundPreceded by Succeeded by Italian East Africa Federation of Ethiopia and Eritrea When the Allies captured Italian held Eritrea in January 1941 most of the infrastructure and the industrial areas were extremely damaged and the remaining ones like the Asmara Massawa Cableway were successively removed and sent toward India and Kenya as war reparations 28 The following Italian guerrilla war was supported by many Eritrean colonial troops like the hero of Eritrean independence Hamid Idris Awate 29 until the Italian armistice in September 1943 Eritrea was placed under British military administration after the Italian surrender in World War II After the defeat of Italy there were 70 000 Italian settlers in Eritrea 30 The British military administration arrested and deported substantial numbers of the settler population as they were implicated with the Italian fascist regime 30 Some settlers were involved in confrontations with Eritreans 30 The Italians in Eritrea started to move away from the country after the defeat of the Kingdom of Italy by the Allies and by the time of the British census of 1949 Asmara had only 17 183 Italian Eritreans of a total population of 127 579 Most Italian settlers left for Italy with others to United States Middle East and Australia The British maintained initially the Italian administration of Eritrea but the country soon started to be involved in a violent process of independence from the British in the late forties and after 1952 from the Ethiopians who annexed Eritrea in that year During the last years of World War II some Italian Eritreans like Dr Vincenzo DiMeglio defended politically the presence of Italians in Eritrea and successively promoted the independence of Eritrea 31 He went to Rome to participate in a Conference for the independence of Eritrea promoted by the Vatican After the war Di Meglio was named Director of the Comitato Rappresentativo Italiani dell Eritrea CRIE In 1947 he supported the creation of the Associazione Italo Eritrei and the Associazione Veterani Ascari in order to get alliance with the Eritreans favorable to Italy in Eritrea 32 As a result of these creations he cofounded the Partito Eritrea Pro Italia Party of Shara Italy in September 1947 an Eritrean political party favorable to the Italian presence in Eritrea that obtained more than 200 000 inscriptions of membership in one single month Indeed the Italian Eritreans strongly rejected the Ethiopian annexation of Eritrea after the war the Party of Shara Italy was established in Asmara in 1947 and the majority of the members were former Italian soldiers with many Eritrean Ascari the organization was even backed up by the government of Italy The main objective of this party was Eritrean freedom but they had a pre condition that stated that before independence the country should be governed by Italy for at least 15 years With the Peace Treaty of 1947 Italy officially accepted the end of the colony As a consequence the Italian community started to disappear mainly after the Ethiopian government took control of Eritrea However some Italo Eritrean were welcomed by the Ethiopian government like the brothers Italo Vassalo and Luciano Vassalo champions of football who won the 1962 African Cup of Nations Vincenzo di Meglio second from right at the 1949 Conference for Eritrean independence in the Vatican Modern downtown Asmara called Piccola Roma featuring Italian style buildingsSee also Edit Eritrea portalItalian Eritreans Italian Colonial Empire Eritrea Governorate Italian Asmara Cinema Impero Asmara President s Office Fiat Tagliero Building Vincenzo Di Meglio Eritrean Ascari Roman Catholicism in Eritrea Linea dell Impero Asmara circuitReferences Edit Agatha Ramm Great Britain and the Planting of Italian Power in the Red Sea 1868 1885 The English Historical Review Vol 59 No 234 May 1944 p 214 215 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Egypt Section III History Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 90 119 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Eritrea Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 747 Wylde Augustus B Modern Abyssinia pp 35 ff Methuen London 1901 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Massawa Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 864 865 a b c d Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Eritrea Agriculture and Trade Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 746 Ullendorff Edward The Ethiopians An Introduction to Country and People 2nd ed p 90 Oxford University Press London 1965 ISBN 0 19 285061 X Asmara italiana Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Abyssinia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 94 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Abyssinia Trade and Currency Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 87 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Zaila Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 950 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Somaliland French Somaliland Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 382 383 Cf engineer Emilio Olivieri s report on the construction of the Massawa Saati Railway Archived 2013 10 12 at the Wayback Machine 1888 hosted at Ferrovia Eritrea in Italian Eritrean Railway Archived 2008 02 03 at the Wayback Machine at Ferrovia Eritrea in Italian The beginning of the Italian colony of Eritrea Assab in Italian Italian emigration to Eritrea in Italian Bandini Franco Gli italiani in Africa storia delle guerre coloniali 1882 1943 Eritrea in Italian 1931 Italian census page 38 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 01 Retrieved 2017 08 01 Italian industries in colonial Eritrea Archived 2009 04 29 at the Wayback Machine Administrator shabait Italian administration in Eritrea www shabait com Retrieved 8 April 2018 Barbot Michela Caracausi Andrea Lanaro Paola 8 April 2018 Lo sguardo della storia economica sull edilizia urbana Croma Universita Roma TRE ISBN 9788883681073 Retrieved 8 April 2018 via Google Books Ompekning pagar FS Data alenalki com Retrieved 8 April 2018 Amedeo Guillet in Eritrea Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Ascari the brave Italian soldiers of color permanent dead link Italian architectural planification of Asmara in Italian p 64 66 Italians in 1939 Eritrea Archived 2009 02 20 at the Wayback Machine Italian industries and companies in Eritrea Archived 2009 04 29 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of African History A G 1 Taylor amp Francis 8 April 2018 ISBN 9781579582456 Retrieved 8 April 2018 via Google Books Rosselli Alberto Storie Segrete Operazioni sconosciute o dimenticate della seconda guerra mondiale second chapter a b c Ertola Emanuele 2023 Blowing Against the Winds of Change Settlers Facing Decolonization in Eritrea 1941 52 Journal of Contemporary History 58 71 91 doi 10 1177 00220094221136817 ISSN 0022 0094 S2CID 253497031 Franco Bandini Gli italiani in Africa storia delle guerre coloniali 1882 1943 p 67 Nuova pagina 1 www ilcornodafrica it Retrieved 8 April 2018 Bibliography EditArchivio Storico Diplomatico 1975 Inventario dell Archivio Storico del Ministero Africa Italiana in Italian vol 1 Eritrea Etiopia Somalia 1857 1939 Rome Ministry of Foreign Affairs archived from the original on 2017 12 12 retrieved 2017 08 07 Archivio Storico Diplomatico 1977 Inventario dell Archivio Eritrea 1880 1945 in Italian Rome Ministry of Foreign Affairs archived from the original on 2017 12 12 retrieved 2017 08 07 Bandini Franco Gli italiani in Africa storia delle guerre coloniali 1882 1943 Longanesi Milano 1971 Bereketeab R Eritrea The making of a Nation Uppsala University Uppsala 2000 Lowe C J Italian Foreign Policy 1870 1940 Routledge 2002 Maravigna Pietro Come abbiamo perduto la guerra in Africa Le nostre prime colonie in Africa Il conflitto mondiale e le operazioni in Africa Orientale e in Libia Testimonianze e ricordi Tipografia L Airone Roma 1949 Negash Tekeste Italian colonialism in Eritrea 1882 1941 Politics Praxis and Impact Uppsala University Uppsala 1987 Podesta Gian Luca et al Lo sguardo della storia economica sull edilizia urbana Volume 4 Chapter Le citta dell impero Publisher Croma Universita Roma TRE Roma 2009 ISBN 888368107X Rosselli Alberto Storie Segrete Operazioni sconosciute o dimenticate della seconda guerra mondiale Iuculano Editore Pavia 2007 Mauri Arnaldo Eritrea s early stages in monetary and banking development International Review of Economics Vol LI N 4 2004 Tuccimei Ercole La Banca d Italia in Africa Foreword by Arnaldo Mauri Collana storica della Banca d Italia Laterza Bari 1999 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Italian occupation of Eritrea Old photos of Italian Eritrea Website with photos of Italian Asmara Postcards of Italian Asmara Website with documents maps and photos of the Italians in Eritrea in Italian Detailed map of Eritrea in 1936 click on the sections to enlarge permanent dead link 1941 1951 The difficult years in Italian showing the end of Italian Eritrea Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Italian Eritrea amp oldid 1135380568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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