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Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889

The Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889 was an undeclared war between the Kingdom of Italy and the Ethiopian Empire occurring during the Italian colonization of Eritrea. The conflict ended with a treaty of friendship, which delimited the border between Ethiopia and Italian Eritrea but contained clauses whose different interpretations led to another Italo-Ethiopian war.

Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889

Illustration of the siege of Saati
Date24 January 1887 – 2 May 1889
Location
Result Compromise;[1] Treaty of Wuchale
Territorial
changes
Establishment of Italian Eritrea
Belligerents
 Kingdom of Italy  Ethiopian Empire
Commanders and leaders
A. A. di San Marzano
Tancredi Saletta
Antonio Baldissera
Oreste Baratieri
Yohannes IV
Ras Alula
Mengesha Yohannes
Casualties and losses
1,000+ dead 400+ dead

As the Mahdist uprising in the Sudan spilled over the frontier, Ethiopia was faced with a two-front war. The Emperor Yohannes IV also had to face internal resistance from his powerful vassals. King Menelik of Shewa even signed a treaty of neutrality with Italy in October 1887.

While there is universal agreement that the war began in January 1887, historians differ about when it ended.[2] Some limit the war to 1887,[3][4] others extend it down to the Treaty of Wuchale in 1889,[5][6][7] and others combine it with the Italo-Ethiopian War of 1895–1896 and treat a single conflict as occurring from 1887 until 1896.[8] The naming of the conflict also varies. It may be called the First Italo-Ethiopian War[5][9] and the war of 1895–1896 as the Second Italo-Ethiopian War.[2] Otherwise it may be identified solely by date.[4][6]

Italian historiography tends to group together all the fighting from 1885 until 1896. The original name for the fighting was Guerra d'Africa (African War),[10][11][12] a term which indicates the broad perceived scope of early Italian colonial ambitions. As the Italian historian Giuseppe Finaldi puts it, "The war is called the Guerra d'Africa, not the Guerra d'Eritrea or such like."[13]

Background

The first Italian colony in what was to become the colony of Eritrea was Assab Bay, purchased by Giuseppe Sapeto on behalf of the Società di Navigazione Rubattino (Rubattino Shipping Company) on 15 November 1869 from the brothers Ibrahim and Hassan Ben Ahmed for 6,000 Maria Theresa thalers.[14] The Suez Canal opened two days later. The deal was later finalised for 8,350 thalers and with the Sultan Abd Allah Sahim as a party. On 11 March 1870, Sapeto purchased the Bay of Buya from the same brothers and sultan.[15] Between 15 April 1870 and December 1879, however, Assab went unused by the company. The company offered it to the Italian government, which on 5 July 1882 passed a law making it Italy's first colony.[14]

The outbreak of the Mahdist uprising changed the political situation in the Horn of Africa. Egypt was unable to maintain its garrison in Massawa and, with British approval, an Italian Corpo Speciale per l'Africa (Special Corps for Africa), commanded by Colonel Tancredi Saletta, occupied it on 5 February 1885.[14]

Campaign

Dogali campaign

 
Italian painting of the battle of Dogali

Italian moves into the hinterland of Massawa.[Medri Bahri|Mareb Mellash]].

On 24[2] or 25 January 1887,Mesfun weldemichael attacked the Italian fort at Saati. In the ensuing skirmish, his troops were beaten back.[16] On 26 January, an Eritrean wariors of about 6,000 men[2] ambushed an Italian battalion sent to reinforce Saati and almost annihilated it at Dogali, 10 miles (16 km) west of Massawa.

The response to Dogali in Italy was immediate. The Italian parliament voted 5,000,000 lire for troops to reinforce Massawa.[17] An Italian force was sent to garrison.

Italian reinforcements and alliance with Shewa

On 2 June 1887, the Italian parliament voted a further 200,000,000 lire for troops, ammunition and supplies to be sent to Massawa.[17] During the summer, an expeditionary force of 20,000 men was assembled in Italy. It landed in Massawa during November.[16]

With Yohannes weakened, Menelik of Shewa and King Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam entered into an alliance against him. In retaliation, the emperor crossed into Gojjam in early August 1887 and devastated it.[16] The following month, he ordered Menelik to bar communications with Assab through Aussa.[5] In response, Menelik sent letters to both the emperor and the Italians offering to mediate, as he had done after Dogali.[18]

Already in late August 1887, Menelik had received the Italian diplomat Pietro Antonelli in Shewa to negotiate an alliance against Yohannes. Italy requested a small piece of territory in the interior in which to garrison their troops during the summer. Antonelli also gave Menelik Italy's justifications for a punitive expedition to avenge Dogali. On 19 September, Antonelli proposed a treaty of neutrality with Shewa in exchange for munitions. A draft of this treaty survives.[5][18] Nevertheless, in early October 1887, Yohannes wrote to Matewos, bishop of Shewa, who was with the Shewan court at Mount Entoto, that he was determined to go to war against Italy.[5]

On 20 October 1887, however, Menelik signed a secret treaty with Antonelli guaranteeing his neutrality in return for arms.[18] Within six months he was to receive 5,000 Remington rifles. In the treaty, Italy renounced any intention of annexing Ethiopian territory.[5]

Campaign of Ras Alula

In September 1887, Alula invaded Damot with a Tigrayan army. With their ras away, the Tigrayan chiefs made contact with the Italians. On 11 November 1887, Gerald Portal, the British consul at Cairo, met Alula at Asmara. He then met Yohannes encamped by Lake Ashangi on 7 December. He conveyed to the emperor his government's opinion that the attack on Saati had been "unjust" and urged that Alula be removed as governor of Mareb Mellash.[16] Yohannes refused to concede anything to the Italians: "If they cannot live there [at Massawa] without Saati, let them go."[16] He also defended Ras Alula, saying that "[he] did no wrong; the Italians came into the province under his governorship and he fought them, just as you [the British] would fight the Abyssinians [Ethiopians] if they came to England."[16]

By January 1888, the Italians had moved two brigades up to Dogali. Yohannes mobilised for war.[16] In December 1887,[18] he had ordered Menelik to guard Wollo and Begemder, while Ras Mikael brought up 25,000 Oromo cavalry to Tigray. Facing a Mahdist invasion in the west, Yohannes abandoned his campaign in March.[16] Paul Henze suggests that "personal antipathy to Islam and desire to see the Mahdist rebellion contained must ... have carried weight in his decision to give priority to the war against the Mahdists over defense against Italian encroachment."[19] In February–March 1888 Menelik, on Yohannes' orders, marched his army west to Gondar to defend it from the Mahdists.[18] He did not arrive in time and Gondar was sacked.[16]

With Yohannes out of the fighting against Italy, Alula withdrew to Asmara in early April 1888 and retreated to Adwa on 23 April. Although Asmara was left undefended, the Italians did not move on it.[16] In May 1888, the Italian expeditionary force in the north withdrew, having never progressed far from the coast. The rifles promised to Menelik in the treaty of October arrived in Assab that same month, but were withheld. In order to free up the weapons, Menelik signed a second treaty with Antonelli in early July 1888.[18] He also made an alliance with Tekle Haymanot against Yohannes, who ravaged Gojjam in early August. The emperor was joined by Alula in September. The Italian then supplied the promised arms to Menelik in case the emperor followed through on his threat to invade Shewa. With Ethiopia on the verge of civil war, the Italians occupied Keren on 6 February 1889. Dejazmach Dabbab Araya, governor of Akele Guzay, occupied Asmara on 9 February 1889 on his own initiative.[16]

Treaty of Wuchale

In the vacuum that followed the death of Yohannes IV in the Battle of Gallabat against the Mahdists on 10/11 March 1889, General Oreste Baratieri occupied the highlands along the Eritrean coast and Italy proclaimed the establishment of the new colony of Italian Eritrea.[20] The Italian possession of maritime areas previously claimed by Ethiopia was formalized on 2 May 1889 with the signing of the Treaty of Wuchale with the new emperor, Menelik of Shewa. It was a compromise: while Ethiopia had been successful in the field, the Italians had managed to occupy territory and retreat in an orderly way. They retained their acquisitions on the Red Sea.[2] Menelik 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.[20]

Casualties

Both sides had taken large losses. Sources about the Italian casualties reported 430 killed at Dogali[4] and 1,000 overall,[2] while the Ethiopians suffered perhaps as little as 400 overall[2] or as much as 730 at Dogali alone.[21]

References

  1. ^ Sarkees & Wayman (2010), p. 262: "The conclusion of the war is coded as a compromise because Italy failed to defeat Ethiopia but was able to withdraw effectively while maintaining its colony in Eritrea".
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Sarkees & Wayman (2010), pp. 261–262.
  3. ^ Gleditsch (2004), p. 238.
  4. ^ a b c Clodfelter (2017), p. 202, calls it the Italian–Abyssinian War.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Caulk (2002), pp. 77–79.
  6. ^ a b Phillips & Axelrod (2005), p. 619.
  7. ^ Kohn (2007), p. 263.
  8. ^ Jaques (2007), p. l.
  9. ^ Singer & Small (1994) call it the "first" Italo-Ethiopian war and classify it as an "imperial" and "extra-systemic" war because although Ethiopia was an independent power at the time, it was not part of the international system of states.
  10. ^ Piccinini (1887–1888).
  11. ^ Gorra (1895).
  12. ^ Battaglia (1958).
  13. ^ Finaldi (2009), pp. 297–298.
  14. ^ a b c Tripodi (1999), pp. 15–.
  15. ^ Shinn & Ofcansky (2013), p. 361.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Henze (2000), pp. 157–159.
  17. ^ a b Gabre-Selassie (2005), p. 96.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Caulk (2002), p. 33.
  19. ^ Henze (2000), p. 159.
  20. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Abyssinia" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 93–94.
  21. ^ Erlich (1973), p. 191.

Sources

  • Battaglia, Roberto (1958). La prima guerra d'Africa. Milan.
  • Caulk, Richard Alan (2002). "Between the Jaws of Hyenas": A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia, 1876–1896. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.
  • Clodfelter, Micheal (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures (4th ed.). McFarland.
  • Cucca, Carlo (1887). "La guerra in Africa, all'Asmara". Bollettino della Società Africana d'Italia. 6: 252–258.
  • Erlich, Haggai (1973). A Political Biography of Ras Alula 1875–1897 (PhD thesis). University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies.
  • Finaldi, Giuseppe Maria (2009). Italian National Identity in the Scramble for Africa: Italy's African Wars in the Era of Nation-Building, 1870–1900. Bern: Peter Lang.
  • Finaldi, Giuseppe Maria (2011). "Italo‐Abyssinian Wars (1887–1896, 1935–1936)". The Encyclopedia of War. Wiley. doi:10.1002/9781444338232.wbeow311. ISBN 9781405190374.
  • Gabre-Selassie, Zewde (2005). "Continuity and Discontinuity in Menelik's Foreign Policy". In Paulos Milkias; Getachew Metaferia (eds.). The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism. New York: Algora.
  • Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede (2004). "A Revised List of Wars between and within Independent States, 1816–2002". International Interactions. 30 (3): 231–262. doi:10.1080/03050620490492150. S2CID 145015824.
  • Gorra, Oreste (1895). Guerra d'Africa, 1895. Rome: Perino.
  • Henze, Paul B. (2000). Layers of Time: A History of Ethiopia. New York: Palgrave.
  • Jaques, Tony (2007). Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty-First Century. Vol. 1. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
  • Kohn, George Childs (2007) [1986]. Dictionary of Wars (3rd ed.). New York: Facts on File.
  • Labanca, Nicola (1993). In marcia verso Adua. Giulio Einaudi.
  • Marcus, Harold G. (1995). The Life and Times of Menelik II, Ethiopia, 1844–1913. Lawrenceville, NJ: Red Sea Press.
  • Pakenham, Thomas (1991). The Scramble for Africa: White Man's Conquest of the Dark Continent from 1876 to 1912. Random House.
  • Phillips, Charles; Axelrod, Alan (2005). Encyclopedia of Wars. New York: Facts on File.
  • Piccinini, Giuseppe (1887–1888). Guerra d'Africa. 4 vols. Rome: Perino.
  • Sarkees, Meredith Reid; Wayman, Frank Whelon (2010). Resort to War: A Data Guide to Inter-State, Extra-state, Intra-State, and Non-State Wars, 1816–2007. Washington, D.C.: CQ Press.
  • Shinn, David H.; Ofcansky, Thomas P. (2013). Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia. Scarecrow Press.
  • Singer, J. David; Small, Melvin (1994). Correlates of War Project: International and Civil War Data, 1816–1992 (PDF). Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.
  • Tripodi, Paolo (1999). "An Historical Perspective on Italian Colonialism". The Colonial Legacy in Somalia. Rome and Mogadishu: From Colonial Administration to Operation Restore Hope. Macmillan and St. Martin's Press. pp. 9–48.

italo, ethiopian, 1887, 1889, undeclared, between, kingdom, italy, ethiopian, empire, occurring, during, italian, colonization, eritrea, conflict, ended, with, treaty, friendship, which, delimited, border, between, ethiopia, italian, eritrea, contained, clause. The Italo Ethiopian War of 1887 1889 was an undeclared war between the Kingdom of Italy and the Ethiopian Empire occurring during the Italian colonization of Eritrea The conflict ended with a treaty of friendship which delimited the border between Ethiopia and Italian Eritrea but contained clauses whose different interpretations led to another Italo Ethiopian war Italo Ethiopian War of 1887 1889Illustration of the siege of SaatiDate24 January 1887 2 May 1889LocationEritreaResultCompromise 1 Treaty of WuchaleTerritorialchangesEstablishment of Italian EritreaBelligerents Kingdom of Italy Ethiopian EmpireCommanders and leadersA A di San MarzanoTancredi Saletta Antonio Baldissera Oreste BaratieriYohannes IV Ras Alula Mengesha YohannesCasualties and losses1 000 dead400 dead As the Mahdist uprising in the Sudan spilled over the frontier Ethiopia was faced with a two front war The Emperor Yohannes IV also had to face internal resistance from his powerful vassals King Menelik of Shewa even signed a treaty of neutrality with Italy in October 1887 While there is universal agreement that the war began in January 1887 historians differ about when it ended 2 Some limit the war to 1887 3 4 others extend it down to the Treaty of Wuchale in 1889 5 6 7 and others combine it with the Italo Ethiopian War of 1895 1896 and treat a single conflict as occurring from 1887 until 1896 8 The naming of the conflict also varies It may be called the First Italo Ethiopian War 5 9 and the war of 1895 1896 as the Second Italo Ethiopian War 2 Otherwise it may be identified solely by date 4 6 Italian historiography tends to group together all the fighting from 1885 until 1896 The original name for the fighting was Guerra d Africa African War 10 11 12 a term which indicates the broad perceived scope of early Italian colonial ambitions As the Italian historian Giuseppe Finaldi puts it The war is called the Guerra d Africa not the Guerra d Eritrea or such like 13 Contents 1 Background 2 Campaign 2 1 Dogali campaign 2 2 Italian reinforcements and alliance with Shewa 2 3 Campaign of Ras Alula 3 Treaty of Wuchale 4 Casualties 5 References 6 SourcesBackground EditThe first Italian colony in what was to become the colony of Eritrea was Assab Bay purchased by Giuseppe Sapeto on behalf of the Societa di Navigazione Rubattino Rubattino Shipping Company on 15 November 1869 from the brothers Ibrahim and Hassan Ben Ahmed for 6 000 Maria Theresa thalers 14 The Suez Canal opened two days later The deal was later finalised for 8 350 thalers and with the Sultan Abd Allah Sahim as a party On 11 March 1870 Sapeto purchased the Bay of Buya from the same brothers and sultan 15 Between 15 April 1870 and December 1879 however Assab went unused by the company The company offered it to the Italian government which on 5 July 1882 passed a law making it Italy s first colony 14 The outbreak of the Mahdist uprising changed the political situation in the Horn of Africa Egypt was unable to maintain its garrison in Massawa and with British approval an Italian Corpo Speciale per l Africa Special Corps for Africa commanded by Colonel Tancredi Saletta occupied it on 5 February 1885 14 Campaign EditDogali campaign Edit Main article Battle of Dogali Italian painting of the battle of Dogali Italian moves into the hinterland of Massawa Medri Bahri Mareb Mellash On 24 2 or 25 January 1887 Mesfun weldemichael attacked the Italian fort at Saati In the ensuing skirmish his troops were beaten back 16 On 26 January an Eritrean wariors of about 6 000 men 2 ambushed an Italian battalion sent to reinforce Saati and almost annihilated it at Dogali 10 miles 16 km west of Massawa The response to Dogali in Italy was immediate The Italian parliament voted 5 000 000 lire for troops to reinforce Massawa 17 An Italian force was sent to garrison Italian reinforcements and alliance with Shewa Edit On 2 June 1887 the Italian parliament voted a further 200 000 000 lire for troops ammunition and supplies to be sent to Massawa 17 During the summer an expeditionary force of 20 000 men was assembled in Italy It landed in Massawa during November 16 With Yohannes weakened Menelik of Shewa and King Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam entered into an alliance against him In retaliation the emperor crossed into Gojjam in early August 1887 and devastated it 16 The following month he ordered Menelik to bar communications with Assab through Aussa 5 In response Menelik sent letters to both the emperor and the Italians offering to mediate as he had done after Dogali 18 Already in late August 1887 Menelik had received the Italian diplomat Pietro Antonelli in Shewa to negotiate an alliance against Yohannes Italy requested a small piece of territory in the interior in which to garrison their troops during the summer Antonelli also gave Menelik Italy s justifications for a punitive expedition to avenge Dogali On 19 September Antonelli proposed a treaty of neutrality with Shewa in exchange for munitions A draft of this treaty survives 5 18 Nevertheless in early October 1887 Yohannes wrote to Matewos bishop of Shewa who was with the Shewan court at Mount Entoto that he was determined to go to war against Italy 5 On 20 October 1887 however Menelik signed a secret treaty with Antonelli guaranteeing his neutrality in return for arms 18 Within six months he was to receive 5 000 Remington rifles In the treaty Italy renounced any intention of annexing Ethiopian territory 5 Campaign of Ras Alula Edit In September 1887 Alula invaded Damot with a Tigrayan army With their ras away the Tigrayan chiefs made contact with the Italians On 11 November 1887 Gerald Portal the British consul at Cairo met Alula at Asmara He then met Yohannes encamped by Lake Ashangi on 7 December He conveyed to the emperor his government s opinion that the attack on Saati had been unjust and urged that Alula be removed as governor of Mareb Mellash 16 Yohannes refused to concede anything to the Italians If they cannot live there at Massawa without Saati let them go 16 He also defended Ras Alula saying that he did no wrong the Italians came into the province under his governorship and he fought them just as you the British would fight the Abyssinians Ethiopians if they came to England 16 By January 1888 the Italians had moved two brigades up to Dogali Yohannes mobilised for war 16 In December 1887 18 he had ordered Menelik to guard Wollo and Begemder while Ras Mikael brought up 25 000 Oromo cavalry to Tigray Facing a Mahdist invasion in the west Yohannes abandoned his campaign in March 16 Paul Henze suggests that personal antipathy to Islam and desire to see the Mahdist rebellion contained must have carried weight in his decision to give priority to the war against the Mahdists over defense against Italian encroachment 19 In February March 1888 Menelik on Yohannes orders marched his army west to Gondar to defend it from the Mahdists 18 He did not arrive in time and Gondar was sacked 16 With Yohannes out of the fighting against Italy Alula withdrew to Asmara in early April 1888 and retreated to Adwa on 23 April Although Asmara was left undefended the Italians did not move on it 16 In May 1888 the Italian expeditionary force in the north withdrew having never progressed far from the coast The rifles promised to Menelik in the treaty of October arrived in Assab that same month but were withheld In order to free up the weapons Menelik signed a second treaty with Antonelli in early July 1888 18 He also made an alliance with Tekle Haymanot against Yohannes who ravaged Gojjam in early August The emperor was joined by Alula in September The Italian then supplied the promised arms to Menelik in case the emperor followed through on his threat to invade Shewa With Ethiopia on the verge of civil war the Italians occupied Keren on 6 February 1889 Dejazmach Dabbab Araya governor of Akele Guzay occupied Asmara on 9 February 1889 on his own initiative 16 Treaty of Wuchale EditIn the vacuum that followed the death of Yohannes IV in the Battle of Gallabat against the Mahdists on 10 11 March 1889 General Oreste Baratieri occupied the highlands along the Eritrean coast and Italy proclaimed the establishment of the new colony of Italian Eritrea 20 The Italian possession of maritime areas previously claimed by Ethiopia was formalized on 2 May 1889 with the signing of the Treaty of Wuchale with the new emperor Menelik of Shewa It was a compromise while Ethiopia had been successful in the field the Italians had managed to occupy territory and retreat in an orderly way They retained their acquisitions on the Red Sea 2 Menelik 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 20 Casualties EditBoth sides had taken large losses Sources about the Italian casualties reported 430 killed at Dogali 4 and 1 000 overall 2 while the Ethiopians suffered perhaps as little as 400 overall 2 or as much as 730 at Dogali alone 21 References Edit Sarkees amp Wayman 2010 p 262 The conclusion of the war is coded as a compromise because Italy failed to defeat Ethiopia but was able to withdraw effectively while maintaining its colony in Eritrea a b c d e f g Sarkees amp Wayman 2010 pp 261 262 Gleditsch 2004 p 238 a b c Clodfelter 2017 p 202 calls it the Italian Abyssinian War a b c d e f Caulk 2002 pp 77 79 a b Phillips amp Axelrod 2005 p 619 Kohn 2007 p 263 Jaques 2007 p l Singer amp Small 1994 call it the first Italo Ethiopian war and classify it as an imperial and extra systemic war because although Ethiopia was an independent power at the time it was not part of the international system of states Piccinini 1887 1888 Gorra 1895 Battaglia 1958 Finaldi 2009 pp 297 298 a b c Tripodi 1999 pp 15 Shinn amp Ofcansky 2013 p 361 a b c d e f g h i j k Henze 2000 pp 157 159 a b Gabre Selassie 2005 p 96 a b c d e f Caulk 2002 p 33 Henze 2000 p 159 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Abyssinia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 93 94 Erlich 1973 p 191 Sources EditBattaglia Roberto 1958 La prima guerra d Africa Milan Caulk Richard Alan 2002 Between the Jaws of Hyenas A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia 1876 1896 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag Clodfelter Micheal 2017 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 4th ed McFarland Cucca Carlo 1887 La guerra in Africa all Asmara Bollettino della Societa Africana d Italia 6 252 258 Erlich Haggai 1973 A Political Biography of Ras Alula 1875 1897 PhD thesis University of London School of Oriental and African Studies Finaldi Giuseppe Maria 2009 Italian National Identity in the Scramble for Africa Italy s African Wars in the Era of Nation Building 1870 1900 Bern Peter Lang Finaldi Giuseppe Maria 2011 Italo Abyssinian Wars 1887 1896 1935 1936 The Encyclopedia of War Wiley doi 10 1002 9781444338232 wbeow311 ISBN 9781405190374 Gabre Selassie Zewde 2005 Continuity and Discontinuity in Menelik s Foreign Policy In Paulos Milkias Getachew Metaferia eds The Battle of Adwa Reflections on Ethiopia s Historic Victory Against European Colonialism New York Algora Gleditsch Kristian Skrede 2004 A Revised List of Wars between and within Independent States 1816 2002 International Interactions 30 3 231 262 doi 10 1080 03050620490492150 S2CID 145015824 Gorra Oreste 1895 Guerra d Africa 1895 Rome Perino Henze Paul B 2000 Layers of Time A History of Ethiopia New York Palgrave Jaques Tony 2007 Battles and Sieges A Guide to 8 500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty First Century Vol 1 Westport CT Greenwood Press Kohn George Childs 2007 1986 Dictionary of Wars 3rd ed New York Facts on File Labanca Nicola 1993 In marcia verso Adua Giulio Einaudi Marcus Harold G 1995 The Life and Times of Menelik II Ethiopia 1844 1913 Lawrenceville NJ Red Sea Press Pakenham Thomas 1991 The Scramble for Africa White Man s Conquest of the Dark Continent from 1876 to 1912 Random House Phillips Charles Axelrod Alan 2005 Encyclopedia of Wars New York Facts on File Piccinini Giuseppe 1887 1888 Guerra d Africa 4 vols Rome Perino Sarkees Meredith Reid Wayman Frank Whelon 2010 Resort to War A Data Guide to Inter State Extra state Intra State and Non State Wars 1816 2007 Washington D C CQ Press Shinn David H Ofcansky Thomas P 2013 Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia Scarecrow Press Singer J David Small Melvin 1994 Correlates of War Project International and Civil War Data 1816 1992 PDF Ann Arbor MI Inter university Consortium for Political and Social Research Tripodi Paolo 1999 An Historical Perspective on Italian Colonialism The Colonial Legacy in Somalia Rome and Mogadishu From Colonial Administration to Operation Restore Hope Macmillan and St Martin s Press pp 9 48 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Italo Ethiopian War of 1887 1889 amp oldid 1135602728, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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