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Haile Selassie

Haile Selassie I (Ge'ez: ቀዳማዊ ኀይለ ሥላሴ, romanized: Qädamawi Häylä Səllasé,[nb 2] born Lij Tafari Makonnen; 23 July 1892 – 27 August 1975)[3] was Emperor of Ethiopia from 1930 to 1974. He rose to power as Regent Plenipotentiary of Ethiopia (Enderase) for Empress Zewditu from 1916 until 1930. Haile Selassie is widely considered a defining figure in modern Ethiopian history, and the key figure of Rastafari, a religious movement in Jamaica that emerged shortly after he became emperor in the 1930s. Before he rose to power he defeated Ras Gugsa Wole Bitul (Nephew of Empress Taytu) of Begemidr (present Gondar) at the Battle of Anchem in 1928.[4][5] He was a member of the Solomonic dynasty, which claims to trace lineage to Emperor Menelik I, believed to be the son of King Solomon and Makeda, the Queen of Sheba.

Haile Selassie I
ቀዳማዊ ኀይለ ሥላሴ
Negusa Nagast
Haile Selassie in the full ceremonial dress uniform of a field marshal, 1970
Emperor of Ethiopia
Reign2 April 1930 – 2 May 1936[nb 1]
20 January 1941 –
12 September 1974
Coronation2 November 1930
PredecessorZewditu
SuccessorAmha Selassie
Prime Minister
Regent Plenipotentiary of Ethiopia
Reign27 September 1916 – 2 April 1930
PredecessorTessema Nadew
MonarchZewditu
SuccessorKirubel Abraham
BornTäfäri Mäkonnän
(1892-07-23)23 July 1892
Ejersa Goro, Hararghe, Ethiopian Empire
Died27 August 1975(1975-08-27) (aged 83)
Jubilee Palace, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Burial5 November 2000
SpouseMenen Asfaw
Issue
Names
Lij Tafari Makonnen
HouseHouse of Shewa
DynastySolomonic dynasty
FatherMakonnen Wolde Mikael
MotherYeshimebet Ali
ReligionEthiopian Orthodox Tewahedo
Signature
1st and 5th Chairperson of the Organisation of African Unity
In office
25 May 1963 – 17 July 1964
Succeeded byGamal Abdel Nasser
In office
5 November 1966 – 11 September 1967
Preceded byJoseph Arthur Ankrah
Succeeded byMobutu Sese Seko
Military career
AllegianceEthiopian Empire
Service/branch Army of the Ethiopian Empire
 Imperial Ethiopian Navy
Ethiopian Imperial Air Force
Years of service1930–1974
RankField Marshal
Commands heldCommander-in-chief
Battles/wars
See list

Haile Selassie attempted to modernise the country through a series of political and social reforms, including the introduction of the 1931 constitution, its first written constitution, and the abolition of slavery. He led the failed efforts to defend Ethiopia during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War and spent most of the period of Italian occupation exiled in England. In 1940, he traveled to the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan in order to assist in coordinating the anti-fascist struggle in Ethiopia and returned to his home country in 1941 after the East African campaign. He dissolved the Federation of Ethiopia and Eritrea, which was established by the UN General Assembly in 1950, and annexed Eritrea into Ethiopia as one of its provinces, while fighting to prevent secession.[6]

Haile Selassie's internationalist views led to Ethiopia becoming a charter member of the United Nations.[7] In 1963, he presided over the formation of the Organisation of African Unity, the precursor of the African Union and served as its first chairman. In 1974, he was overthrown in a military coup by a Marxist–Leninist junta, the Derg. Haile Selassie was assassinated on 27 August 1975.[8][9]

Among some members of the Rastafari movement, Haile Selassie is referred to as the returned messiah of the Bible, God incarnate. This distinction notwithstanding, he was a Christian and adhered to the tenets and liturgy of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.[10][11]

He has been criticised by some historians for his suppression of rebellions among the landed aristocracy (the mesafint), which consistently opposed his reforms; some critics have also criticised Ethiopia's failure to modernise rapidly enough.[12][13] During his rule the Harari people were persecuted and many left the Harari Region.[14][15] His administration was also criticised by human rights groups, such as Human Rights Watch, as autocratic and illiberal.[13][16] Although some sources state that late during his administration the Oromo language was banned from education, public speaking and use in administration,[17][18][19] there was never an official law or government policy that criminalised any language.[20][21][22] The Haile Selassie government relocated numerous Amharas into southern Ethiopia where they served in government administration, courts, and church.[23][24][25] Following the death of Hachalu Hundessa in June 2020, the Statue of Haile Selassie in Cannizaro Park, London was destroyed by Oromo protesters, and his father's equestrian monument in Harar was removed.[26][27][28]

Name edit

Haile Selassie was known as a child as Lij Tafari Makonnen (Ge'ez: ልጅ ተፈሪ መኮንን, romanized: Ləj Täfäri Mäkonnən). Lij is translated as "child" and serves to indicate that a youth is of noble blood. His given name Tafari means "one who is respected or feared." Like most Ethiopians, his personal name "Tafari" is followed by that of his father Makonnen and that of his grandfather Woldemikael. His name Haile Selassie was given to him at his infant baptism and adopted again as part of his regnal name in 1930.

On 1 November 1905, at the age of 13, Tafari was appointed by his father, as the Dejazmatch of Gara Mulatta (a region some twenty miles southwest of Harar).[29] The literal translation of Dejazmatch is "keeper of the door"; it is a title of nobility equivalent to a count.[30] On 27 September 1916, he was proclaimed Crown Prince and heir apparent to the throne (Alga Worrach),[31][32] and appointed Regent Plenipotentiary (Balemulu Silt'an Enderase).[31][33] On 11 February 1917, he was crowned Le'ul-Ras[34] and became known as Ras Tafari Makonnen listen. Ras is translated as "head"[35][32] and is a rank of nobility equivalent to a duke,[32][36] though it is often rendered in translation as "prince." Originally the title Le'ul, which means "Your Highness," was only ever used as a form of address;[37] however, in 1917 the title Le'ul-Ras replaced the senior office of Ras Bitwoded and so became the equivalent of a royal duke.[38][39] In 1928, Empress Zewditu planned on granting him the throne of Shewa; however, at the last moment opposition from certain provincial rulers caused a change and his title Negus or "King" was conferred without geographical qualification or definition.[40][41]

On 2 November 1930, after the death of Empress Zewditu, Tafari was crowned Negusa Nagast, literally King of Kings, rendered in English as "Emperor".[42] Upon his ascension, he took as his regnal name Haile Selassie I. Haile means in Ge'ez "Power of" and Selassie means trinity—therefore Haile Selassie roughly translates to "Power of the Trinity".[43] Haile Selassie's full title in office was "By the Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah, His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie I, King of Kings, Lord of Lords, Elect of God".[44][34][37][45][46][nb 3] This title reflects Ethiopian dynastic traditions, which hold that all monarchs must trace their lineage to Menelik I, who is described by the Kebra Nagast (a 14th-century CE national epic) as the son of the tenth-century BCE King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.[48]

To Ethiopians, Haile Selassie has been known by many names, including Janhoy ("His Majesty") Talaqu Meri ("Great Leader") and Abba Tekel ("Father of Tekel", his horse name).[47] The Rastafari movement employs many of these appellations, also referring to him as Jah, Jah Jah, Jah Rastafari, and HIM (the abbreviation of "His Imperial Majesty").[47]

Biography edit

Early life edit

Haile Selassie's royal line (through his father's mother) descended from the Shewan Amhara Solomonic King, Sahle Selassie.[49] He was born on 23 July 1892, in the village

 
Then Tafari Makonnen wearing a warrior's dress
 
Ras Makonnen Woldemikael and his son Lij Tafari Makonnen

of Ejersa Goro, in the Hararghe province of Ethiopia. Haile Selassie's mother was paternally of Oromo descent and maternally of Gurage heritage, while his father was maternally of Amhara descent but his paternal lineage remains disputed.[50][51][52] Haile Selassie's paternal grandfather belonged to a noble family from Shewa and was the governor of the districts of Menz and Doba, which are located in Semien Shewa.[53] His mother was Woizero ("Lady") Yeshimebet Ali Abba Jifar, daughter of a ruling chief from Were Ilu in Wollo province, Dejazmach Ali Abba Jifar.[54] Haile Selassie's father was Ras Makonnen Wolde Mikael, the grandson of King Sahle Selassie who was once the ruler of Shewa. He served as a general in the First Italo–Ethiopian War, playing a key role at the Battle of Adwa;[54] Haile Selassie was thus able to ascend to the imperial throne through his paternal grandmother, Woizero Tenagnework Sahle Selassie, who was an aunt of Emperor Menelik II and daughter of the Solomonic Amhara King of Shewa, Negus Sahle Selassie. As such, Haile Selassie claimed direct descent from Makeda, the Queen of Sheba, and King Solomon of ancient Israel.[55]

Ras Makonnen arranged for Tafari as well as his first cousin, Imru Haile Selassie, to receive instruction in Harar from Abba Samuel Wolde Kahin, an Ethiopian Capuchin friar, and from Dr. Vitalien, a surgeon from Guadeloupe. Tafari was named Dejazmach (literally "commander of the gate", roughly equivalent to "count")[56] at the age of 13, on 1 November 1905.[57][29] Shortly thereafter, his father Ras Makonnen died at Kulibi, in 1906.[58]

Governorship edit

 
Dejazmatch Tafari, as governor of Harar

Tafari assumed the titular governorship of Selale in 1906, a realm of marginal importance,[59] but one that enabled him to continue his studies.[57] In 1907, he was appointed governor over part of the province of Sidamo. It is alleged that during his late teens, Haile Selassie was married to Woizero Altayech, and that from this union, his daughter Princess Romanework was born.[60]

Following the death of his brother Yelma in 1907, the governorate of Harar was left vacant,[59] and its administration was left to Menelik's loyal general, Dejazmach Balcha Safo. Balcha Safo's administration of Harar was ineffective, and so during the last illness of Menelik II, and the brief reign of Empress Taytu Betul, Tafari was made governor of Harar in 1910[58] or 1911.[61]

On 3 August 1911, he married Menen Asfaw of Ambassel, niece of the heir to the throne Lij Iyasu.

Regency edit

The extent to which Tafari Makonnen contributed to the movement that would come to depose Lij Iyasu has been discussed extensively,

particularly in Haile Selassie's own detailed account of the matter. Iyasu was the designated but uncrowned emperor of Ethiopia from 1913 to 1916. Iyasu's reputation for scandalous behavior and a disrespectful attitude towards the nobles at the court of his grandfather, Menelik II,[62] damaged his reputation. Iyasu's flirtation with Islam was considered treasonous among the Ethiopian Orthodox Christian leadership of the empire. On 27 September 1916, Iyasu was deposed.[63]

Contributing to the movement that deposed Iyasu were conservatives such as Fitawrari Habte Giyorgis, Menelik II's longtime Minister of War. The movement to depose Iyasu preferred Tafari, as he attracted support from both progressive and conservative factions. Ultimately, Iyasu was deposed on the grounds of conversion to Islam.[35][63] In his place, the daughter of Menelik II (the aunt of Iyasu) was named Empress Zewditu, while Tafari was elevated to the rank of Ras and was made heir apparent and Crown Prince. In the power arrangement that followed, Tafari accepted the role of Regent Plenipotentiary (Balemulu 'Inderase)[nb 4] and became the de facto ruler of the Ethiopian Empire (Mangista Ityop'p'ya). Zewditu would govern while Tafari would administer.[66] While Iyasu had been deposed on 27 September 1916, on 8 October he managed to escape into the Ogaden Desert and his father, Negus Mikael of Wollo, had time to come to his aid.[67] On 27 October, Negus Mikael and his army met an army under Fitawrari Habte Giyorgis loyal to Zewditu and Tafari. During the Battle of Segale, Negus Mikael was defeated and captured. Any chance that Iyasu would regain the throne was ended, and he went into hiding. On 11 January 1921, after avoiding capture for about five years, Iyasu was taken into custody by Gugsa Araya Selassie.

On 11 February 1917, the coronation for Zewditu took place. She pledged to rule justly through her Regent, Tafari. While Tafari was the more visible of the two, Zewditu was far from an honorary ruler. Her position required that she arbitrate the claims of competing factions. In other words, she had the last word. Tafari carried the burden of daily administration, but, because his position was relatively weak, this was often an exercise in futility. Initially his personal army was poorly equipped, his finances were limited, and he had little leverage to withstand the combined influence of the Empress, the Minister of War, or the provincial governors.[67]

 
Haile Selassie in 1924 at the International Labour Organization

During his Regency, the new Crown Prince developed the policy of cautious modernisation initiated by Menelik II. Also, during this time, he survived the 1918 flu pandemic, having come down with the illness.[68] He secured Ethiopia's admission to the League of Nations in 1923 by promising to eradicate slavery; each emperor since Tewodros II had issued proclamations to halt slavery,[69] but without effect: the internationally scorned practice persisted well into Haile Selassie's reign with an estimated 2 million slaves in Ethiopia in the early 1930s.[70][71]

Travel abroad edit

In 1924, Ras Tafari toured Europe and the Middle East visiting Jerusalem, Alexandria, Paris, Luxembourg, Brussels, Amsterdam, Stockholm, London, Geneva, Gibraltar and Athens. With him on his tour was a group that included Ras Seyum Mangasha of western Tigray Province; Ras Hailu Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam province; Ras Mulugeta Yeggazu of Illubabor Province; Ras Makonnen Endelkachew; and Blattengeta Heruy Welde Sellasie. The primary goal of the trip to Europe was for Ethiopia to gain access to the sea. In Paris, Tafari was to find out from the French Foreign Ministry (Quai d'Orsay) that this goal would not be realised.[72] However, failing this, he and his retinue inspected schools, hospitals, factories, and churches. Although patterning many reforms after European models, Tafari remained wary of European pressure. To guard against economic imperialism, Tafari required that all enterprises have at least partial local ownership.[73] Of his modernisation campaign, he remarked, "We need European progress only because we are surrounded by it. That is at once a benefit and a misfortune."[74]

Throughout Tafari's travels in Europe, the Levant, and Egypt, he and his entourage were greeted with enthusiasm and fascination. Seyum Mangasha accompanied him and Hailu Tekle Haymanot who, like Tafari, were sons of generals who contributed to the victorious war against Italy a quarter-century earlier at the Battle of Adwa.[75] Another member of his entourage, Mulugeta Yeggazu, actually fought at Adwa as a young man. The "Oriental Dignity" of the Ethiopians[76] and their "rich, picturesque court dress"[77] were sensationalised in the media; among his entourage he even included a pride of lions, which he distributed as gifts to President Alexandre Millerand and Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré of France, to King George V of the United Kingdom, and to the Zoological Garden (Jardin Zoologique) of Paris, France.[75] As one historian noted, "Rarely can a tour have inspired so many anecdotes".[75] In return for two lions, the United Kingdom presented Tafari with the imperial crown of Emperor Tewodros II for its safe return to Empress Zewditu. The crown had been taken by General Sir Robert Napier during the 1868 Expedition to Abyssinia.[78]

In this period, the Crown Prince visited the Armenian monastery of Jerusalem. There, he adopted 40 Armenian orphans (አርባ ልጆች Arba Lijoch, "forty children"), who had lost their parents during the Armenian Genocide. Tafari arranged for the musical education of the youths, and they came to form the imperial brass band.[79]

King and Emperor edit

 
Selassie signing into law an act of the Ethiopian Parliament in 1969

Tafari's authority was challenged in 1928 when Dejazmach Balcha Safo went to Addis Ababa with a sizeable armed force. When Tafari consolidated his hold over the provinces, many of Menelik's appointees refused to abide by the new regulations. Balcha Safo, the governor (Shum) of coffee-rich Sidamo Province, was particularly troublesome. The revenues he remitted to the central government did not reflect the accrued profits and Tafari recalled him to Addis Ababa. The old man came in high dudgeon and, insultingly, with a large army.[nb 5] The Dejazmatch paid homage to Empress Zewditu, but snubbed Tafari.[80][81] On 18 February, while Balcha Safo and his personal bodyguard[nb 6] were in Addis Ababa, Tafari had Ras Kassa Haile Darge buy off his army and arranged to have him displaced as the Shum of Sidamo Province[82] by Birru Wolde Gabriel who himself was replaced by Desta Damtew.[67]

Even so, the gesture of Balcha Safo empowered Empress Zewditu politically and she attempted to have Tafari tried for treason. He was tried for his benevolent dealings with Italy including a 20-year peace accord that was signed on 2 August.[57] In September, a group of palace reactionaries including some courtiers of the empress, made a final bid to get rid of Tafari. The attempted coup d'état was tragic in its origins and comic in its end. When confronted by Tafari and a company of his troops, the ringleaders of the coup took refuge on the palace grounds in Menelik's mausoleum. Tafari and his men surrounded them only to be surrounded themselves by the personal guard of Zewditu. More of Tafari's khaki clad soldiers arrived and decided the outcome in his favor with superiority of arms.[83] Popular support, as well as the support of the police,[80] remained with Tafari. Ultimately, the Empress relented, and, on 7 October 1928, she crowned Tafari as Negus (Amharic: "King").

 
Coronation of Emperor Haile Selassie I on November 2, 1930

The crowning of Tafari as King was controversial. He occupied the same territory as the empress rather than going off to a regional kingdom of the empire. Two monarchs, even with one being the vassal and the other the emperor (in this case empress), had never occupied the same location as their seat in Ethiopian history. Conservatives agitated to redress this perceived insult to the crown's dignity, leading to the rebellion of Ras Gugsa Welle. Gugsa Welle was the husband of the empress and the Shum of Begemder Province. In early 1930, he raised an army and marched it from his governorate at Gondar towards Addis Ababa. On 31 March 1930, Gugsa Welle was met by forces loyal to Negus Tafari and was defeated at the Battle of Anchem. Gugsa Welle was killed in action.[84] News of Gugsa Welle's defeat and death had hardly spread through Addis Ababa when the empress died suddenly on 2 April 1930. Although it was long rumored that the empress was poisoned upon her husband's defeat,[85] or alternately that she died from shock upon hearing of the death of her estranged yet beloved husband,[86] it has since been documented that the Empress succumbed to paratyphoid fever and complications from diabetes after the Orthodox clergy imposed strict rules concerning her diet against her physicians' orders with regards to Lent.[87][88]

 
Bank note of the Emperor, as head of state

Upon Zewditu's death, Tafari himself rose to emperor and was proclaimed Neguse Negest ze-'Ityopp'ya, "King of Kings of Ethiopia". He was crowned on 2 November 1930, at Addis Ababa's Cathedral of St. George. The coronation was by all accounts "a most splendid affair",[89] and it was attended by royals and dignitaries from all over the world. Among those in attendance were The Duke of Gloucester (King George V's son), Marshal Louis Franchet d'Espèrey of France, and the Prince of Udine representing King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy. Special Ambassador Herman Murray Jacoby attended the coronation as the personal representative of President Herbert Hoover.[90][91][92][93] Other emissaries from Egypt, Turkey, Sweden, Belgium, and Japan were also present.[89] British author Evelyn Waugh was also present, penning a contemporary report on the event, and American travel lecturer Burton Holmes shot the only known film footage of the event.[94][95] One newspaper report suggested that the celebration had incurred a cost in excess of $3,000,000.[96] Many of those in attendance received lavish gifts;[97] in one instance, the Christian emperor even sent a gold-encased Bible to an American bishop who had not attended the coronation, but who had dedicated a prayer to the emperor on the day of the coronation.[98]

 
Cover of Time magazine, 3 November 1930

Haile Selassie introduced Ethiopia's first written constitution on 16 July 1931,[99] providing for a bicameral legislature.[100] The constitution kept power in the hands of the nobility, but it did establish democratic standards among the nobility, envisaging a transition to democratic rule: it would prevail "until the people are in a position to elect themselves."[100] The constitution limited the succession to the throne to the descendants of Haile Selassie, a point that met with the disapprobation of other dynastic princes, including the princes of Tigrai and even the emperor's loyal cousin, Ras Kassa Haile Darge.

In 1932, the Sultanate of Jimma was formally absorbed into Ethiopia following the death of Sultan Abba Jifar II of Jimma.

Conflict with Italy edit

Ethiopia became the target of renewed Italian imperialist designs in the 1930s. Benito Mussolini's Fascist regime was keen to avenge the military defeats Italy had suffered to Ethiopia in the First Italo-Abyssinian War, and to efface the failed attempt by "liberal" Italy to conquer the country, as epitomised by the defeat at Adwa.[101][102][103] A conquest of Ethiopia could also empower the cause of fascism and embolden its empire's rhetoric.[103] Ethiopia would also provide a bridge between Italy's Eritrean and Italian Somaliland possessions. Ethiopia's position in the League of Nations did not dissuade the Italians from invading in 1935; the "collective security" envisaged by the League proved useless, and a scandal erupted when the Hoare-Laval Pact revealed that Ethiopia's League allies were scheming to appease Italy.[104]

 
Haile Selassie at the League of Nations appealing Italy's invasion in 1936

Mobilisation edit

Following 5 December 1934 Italian invasion of Ethiopia at Welwel, Ogaden Province, Haile Selassie joined his northern armies and set up headquarters at Desse in Wollo province. He issued his mobilization order on 3 October 1935:

If you withhold from your country Ethiopia the death from cough or head-cold of which you would otherwise die, refusing to resist (in your district, in your patrimony, and in your home) our enemy who is coming from a distant country to attack us, and if you persist in not shedding your blood, you will be rebuked for it by your Creator and will be cursed by your offspring. Hence, without cooling your heart of accustomed valour, there emerges your decision to fight fiercely, mindful of your history that will last far into the future… If on your march you touch any property inside houses or cattle and crops outside, not even grass, straw, and dung excluded, it is like killing your brother who is dying with you… You, countryman, living at the various access routes, set up a market for the army at the places where it is camping and on the day your district-governor will indicate to you, lest the soldiers campaigning for Ethiopia's liberty should experience difficulty. You will not be charged excise duty, until the end of the campaign, for anything you are marketing at the military camps: I have granted you remission… After you have been ordered to go to war, but are then idly missing from the campaign, and when you are seized by the local chief or by an accuser, you will have punishment inflicted upon your inherited land, your property, and your body; to the accuser I shall grant a third of your property…

On 19 October 1935, Haile Selassie gave more precise orders for his army to his Commander-in-Chief, Ras Kassa:

  1. When you set up tents, it is to be in caves and by trees and in a wood, if the place happens to be adjoining to these―and separated in the various platoons. Tents are to be set up at a distance of 30 cubits from each other.
  2. When an aeroplane is sighted, one should leave large open roads and wide meadows and march in valleys and trenches and by zigzag routes, along places that have trees and woods.
  3. When an aeroplane comes to drop bombs, it will not suit it to do so unless it comes down to about 100 metres; hence when it flies low for such action, one should fire a volley with a good and very long gun and then quickly disperse. When three or four bullets have hit it, the aeroplane is bound to fall down. But let only those fire who have been ordered to shoot with a weapon that has been selected for such firing, for if everyone shoots who possesses a gun, there is no advantage in this except to waste bullets and to disclose the men's whereabouts.
  4. Lest the aeroplane, when rising again, should detect the whereabouts of those who are dispersed, it is well to remain cautiously scattered as long as it is still fairly close. In time of war it suits the enemy to aim his guns at adorned shields, ornaments, silver and gold cloaks, silk shirts, and similar things. Whether one possesses a jacket or not, it is best to wear a narrow-sleeved shirt with faded colours. When we return, with God's help, you can wear your gold and silver decorations then. Now it is time to go and fight. We offer you all these words of advice in the hope that no great harm should befall you through lack of caution. At the same time, We are glad to assure you that in time of war. We are ready to shed Our blood in your midst for the sake of Ethiopia's freedom…"[105]
 
Haile Selassie in 1934

Compared to the Ethiopians, the Italians had an advanced, modern military that included a large air force. The Italians would also come to employ chemical weapons extensively throughout the conflict, even targeting Red Cross field hospitals in violation of the Geneva Conventions.[106]

Progress of the war edit

Starting in early October 1935, the Italians invaded Ethiopia. But, by November, the pace of invasion had slowed appreciably, and Haile Selassie's northern armies were able to launch what was known as the "Christmas Offensive". During this offensive, the Italians were forced back in places and put on the defensive. In early 1936, the First Battle of Tembien stopped the progress of the Ethiopian offensive and the Italians were ready to continue their offensive. Following the defeat and destruction of the northern Ethiopian armies at the Battle of Amba Aradam, the Second Battle of Tembien, and the Battle of Shire, Haile Selassie took the field with the last Ethiopian army on the northern front. On 31 March 1936, he launched a counterattack against the Italians himself at the Battle of Maychew in southern Tigray. The emperor's army was defeated and retreated in disarray. As Haile Selassie's army withdrew, the Italians attacked from the air along with rebellious Raya and Azebo tribesmen on the ground, who were armed and paid by the Italians.[107]

Haile Selassie made a solitary pilgrimage to the churches at Lalibela, at considerable risk of capture, before returning to his capital.[108] After a stormy session of the council of state, it was agreed that because Addis Ababa could not be defended, the government would relocate to the southern town of Gore, and that in the interest of preserving the Imperial house, the emperor's wife Menen Asfaw and the rest of the imperial family should immediately depart for French Somaliland, and from there continue on to Jerusalem.[109][110][111]

Exile debate edit

 
The Emperor arrives in Jerusalem. May 1936

After further debate as to whether Haile Selassie should go to Gore or accompany his family into exile, it was agreed that he should leave Ethiopia with his family and present the case of Ethiopia to the League of Nations at Geneva. The decision was not unanimous and several participants, including the nobleman Blatta Tekle Wolde Hawariat, strenuously objected to the idea of an Ethiopian monarch fleeing before an invading force.[112] Haile Selassie appointed his cousin Ras Imru Haile Selassie as Prince Regent in his absence, departing with his family for French Somaliland on 2 May 1936.

On 5 May, Marshal Pietro Badoglio led Italian troops into Addis Ababa, and Mussolini declared Ethiopia an Italian province. Victor Emanuel III was proclaimed as the new Emperor of Ethiopia. On the previous day, the Ethiopian exiles had left French Somaliland aboard the British cruiser HMS Enterprise. They were bound for Jerusalem in the British Mandate of Palestine, where the Ethiopian imperial family maintained a residence. The family disembarked at Haifa and then went on to Jerusalem. Once there, Haile Selassie and his retinue prepared to make their case at Geneva. The choice of Jerusalem was highly symbolic, since the Solomonic Dynasty claimed descent from the House of David. Leaving the Holy Land, Haile Selassie and his entourage sailed aboard the British cruiser HMS Capetown for Gibraltar, where he stayed at the Rock Hotel. From Gibraltar, the exiles were transferred to an ordinary liner. By doing this, the United Kingdom government was spared the expense of a state reception.[113]

Collective security and the League of Nations, 1936 edit

Mussolini invaded Ethiopia and promptly declared his own "Italian Empire". After the League of Nations afforded Haile Selassie the opportunity to address the assembly, Italy withdrew its League delegation, on 12 May 1936.[114] It was in this context that Haile Selassie walked into the hall of the League of Nations, introduced by the President of the Assembly as "His Imperial Majesty, the Emperor of Ethiopia" (Sa Majesté Imperiale, l'Empereur d'Éthiopie). The introduction caused a great many Italian journalists in the galleries to erupt into jeering, heckling, and whistling. As it turned out, they had earlier been issued whistles by Mussolini's son-in-law, Count Galeazzo Ciano.[115] The Romanian delegate and former League president, Nicolae Titulescu, famously jumped to his feet in response and cried "To the door with the savages!", and the offending journalists were removed from the hall. Haile Selassie waited calmly for the hall to be cleared, and responded "majestically"[116] with a speech considered by some among the most stirring of the 20th century, and a possible warning for future generations.[117][118]

Although fluent in French, the League's working language, Haile Selassie chose to deliver his historic speech in his native Amharic. He asserted that, because his "confidence in the League was absolute", his people were now being slaughtered. He pointed out that the same European states that found in Ethiopia's favor at the League of Nations were refusing Ethiopia credit and matériel while aiding Italy, which was employing chemical weapons on military and civilian targets alike:

It was at the time when the operations for the encircling of Makale were taking place that the Italian command, fearing a rout, followed the procedure [that] it is now my duty to denounce to the world. Special sprayers were installed on board aircraft so that they could vapourise, over vast areas of territory, a fine, death-dealing rain. Groups of nine, fifteen, eighteen aircraft followed one another so that the fog issuing from them formed a continuous sheet. It was thus that, as from the end of January 1936, soldiers, women, children, cattle, rivers, lakes, and pastures were drenched continually with this deadly rain. In order to kill off systematically all living creatures, in order to more surely poison waters and pastures, the Italian command made its aircraft pass over and over again. That was its chief method of warfare.[119]

Noting that his own "small people of 12 million inhabitants, without arms, without resources" could never withstand an attack by a large power such as Italy, with its 42 million people and "unlimited quantities of the most death-dealing weapons", he contended that the aggression threatened all small states, and that all small states were in effect reduced to vassal states in the absence of collective action. He admonished the League that "God and history will remember your judgment.":[120]

It is collective security: it is the very existence of the League of Nations. It is the confidence that each State is to place in international treaties… In a word, it is international morality that is at stake. Have the signatures appended to a Treaty value only in so far as the signatory Powers have a personal, direct and immediate interest involved?

At the beginning of 1936 Time had named him "Man of the Year" for 1935[121] and his June 1936 speech made the emperor an icon for anti-fascists around the world. He failed, however, to get what he most needed: the League agreed to only partial and ineffective sanctions on Italy. Only six nations in 1937 did not recognise Italy's occupation: China, New Zealand, the Soviet Union, the Republic of Spain, Mexico and the United States.[102] It is often said one of the many reasons the League of Nations effectively collapsed was due to its failure to condemn Italy's invasion of Abyssinia.[122] Despite this international praise, Selassie was left without much-needed military equipment. Upon his return to Ethiopia, it was primarily his military cunning and strategy that led him to defeat Italy. For example, Ethiopian troops were able to successfully raid Italian weapons stores and used pack animals to carry artillery over rugged terrain in order to position themselves to ambush Italian troops in areas they were not prepared to fight.[123]

Exile edit

 
Haile Selassie in 1942

Haile Selassie spent his exile years (1936–41) in Bath, England, in Fairfield House, which he bought. The emperor and Kassa Haile Darge took morning walks together behind the 14-room Victorian house's high walls. Haile Selassie's favorite reading was "diplomatic history." But most of his serious hours were occupied with the 90,000-word story of his life that he was laboriously writing in Amharic.[124]

Prior to Fairfield House, he briefly stayed at Warne's Hotel in Worthing[125] and in Parkside, Wimbledon.[126] A bust of Haile Selassie by Hilda Seligman stood in nearby Cannizaro Park to commemorate this time, and was a popular place of pilgrimage for London's Rastafari community, until it was destroyed by protestors on 30 June 2020.[127] Haile Selassie stayed at the Abbey Hotel in Malvern in the 1930s, and his granddaughters and daughters of court officials were educated at Clarendon School for Girls in North Malvern. During his time in Malvern, he attended services at Holy Trinity Church, in Link Top. A blue plaque, commemorating his stay in Malvern, was unveiled on Saturday, 25 June 2011. As part of the ceremony, a delegation from the Rastafari movement gave a short address and a drum recital.[128][129][130]

Haile Selassie's activity in this period was focused on countering Italian propaganda as to the state of Ethiopian resistance and the legality of the occupation.[131] He spoke out against the desecration of houses of worship and historical artifacts (including the theft of a 1,600-year-old imperial obelisk), and condemned the atrocities suffered by the Ethiopian civilian population.[132] He continued to plead for League intervention and to voice his certainty that "God's judgment will eventually visit the weak and the mighty alike",[133] though his attempts to gain support for the struggle against Italy were largely unsuccessful until Italy entered World War II on the German side in June 1940.[134]

The emperor's pleas for international support did take root in the United States, particularly among African-American organisations sympathetic to the Ethiopian cause.[135] In 1937, Haile Selassie was to give a Christmas Day radio address to the American people to thank his supporters when his taxi was involved in a traffic accident, leaving him with a fractured knee.[136] Rather than canceling the radio broadcast, he delivered the address, in which he linked Christianity and goodwill with the Covenant of the League of Nations, and asserted that "War is not the only means to stop war":[136]

With the birth of the Son of God, an unprecedented, an unrepeatable, and a long-anticipated phenomenon occurred. He was born in a stable instead of a palace, in a manger instead of a crib. The hearts of the Wise men were struck by fear and wonder due to His Majestic Humbleness. The kings prostrated themselves before Him and worshipped Him. 'Peace be to those who have good will'. This became the first message.

...Although the toils of wise people may earn them respect, it is a fact of life that the spirit of the wicked continues to cast its shadow on this world. The arrogant are seen visibly leading their people into crime and destruction. The laws of the League of Nations are constantly violated and wars and acts of aggression repeatedly take place… So that the spirit of the cursed will not gain predominance over the human race whom Christ redeemed with his blood, all peace-loving people should cooperate to stand firm in order to preserve and promote lawfulness and peace.[136]

During this period, Haile Selassie suffered several personal tragedies. His two sons-in-law, Ras Desta Damtew and Dejazmach Beyene Merid, were both executed by the Italians.[133] The emperor's daughter, Princess Romanework, wife of Dejazmach Beyene Merid, was herself taken into captivity with her children, and she died in Italy in 1941.[137] His daughter Tsehai died during childbirth shortly after the restoration in 1942.[138]

After his return to Ethiopia, he donated Fairfield House to the city of Bath as a residence for the aged.[139] In 2019 two further blue plaques commemorating his residence at Fairfield and his visits to nearby Weston-super-Mare were unveiled by his grandson.[140]

1940s and 1950s edit

 
Meeting with Crown Prince Akihito and his wife Princess Michiko in 1955
 
Haile Selassie with Brigadier Daniel Sandford (left) and Colonel Wingate (right) in Dambacha Fort, after its capture, 15 April 1941

British forces, which consisted primarily of Ethiopian-backed African and South African colonial troops under the "Gideon Force" of Colonel Orde Wingate, coordinated the military effort to liberate Ethiopia. The emperor himself issued several imperial proclamations in this period, demonstrating that, while authority was not divided up in any formal way, British military might and the emperor's populist appeal could be joined in the concerted effort to liberate Ethiopia.[134]

On 18 January 1941, during the East African Campaign, Haile Selassie crossed the border between Sudan and Ethiopia near the village of Um Iddla. The standard of the Lion of Judah was raised again. Two days later, he and a force of Ethiopian patriots joined Gideon Force, which was already in Ethiopia and preparing the way.[141] Italy was defeated by a force of the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth of Nations, Free France, Free Belgium, and Ethiopian patriots. On 5 May 1941, Haile Selassie entered Addis Ababa and personally addressed the Ethiopian people, exactly five years after the fascist forces entered Addis Ababa:

Today is the day on which we defeated our enemy. Therefore, when we say let us rejoice with our hearts, let not our rejoicing be in any other way but in the spirit of Christ. Do not return evil for evil. Do not indulge in the atrocities [that] the enemy has been practicing in his usual way, even to the last.

Take care not to spoil the good name of Ethiopia by acts [that] are worthy of the enemy. We shall see that our enemies are disarmed and sent out the same way they came. As Saint George who killed the dragon is the Patron Saint of our army as well as of our allies, let us unite with our allies in everlasting friendship and amity in order to be able to stand against the godless and cruel dragon [that] has newly risen and [that] is oppressing [hu]mankind.[142]

On 27 August 1942, Haile Selassie confirmed the legal basis for the abolition of slavery that had been enacted by Italy throughout the empire and imposed severe penalties, including death, for slave trading.[143] After World War II, Ethiopia became a charter member of the United Nations. In 1948, the Ogaden, a region disputed with both Italian Somaliland and British Somaliland, was granted to Ethiopia.[144] On 2 December 1950, the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 390 (V), establishing the federation of Eritrea (the former Italian colony) into Ethiopia.[145]

 
Queen Elizabeth II with Emperor Haile Selassie heading towards to Buckingham Palace in 1954

Eritrea was to have its own constitution, which would provide for ethnic, linguistic, and cultural balance, while Ethiopia was to manage its finances, defense, and foreign policy.[145]

Despite his centralisation policies that had been made before World War II, Haile Selassie still found himself unable to push for all the programmes he wanted. In 1942, he attempted to institute a progressive tax scheme, but this failed due to opposition from the nobility, and only a flat tax was passed; in 1951, he agreed to reduce this as well.[146] Ethiopia was still "semi-feudal",[147] and the emperor's attempts to alter its social and economic form by reforming its modes of taxation met with resistance from the nobility and clergy, which were eager to resume their privileges in the post-war era.[146] Where Haile Selassie actually did succeed in effecting new land taxes, the burdens were often still passed by the landowners to the peasants.[146]

 
Haile Selassie I with U.S President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on board the USS Quincy (CA-71) in Egypt after the Yalta Conference on February 13, 1945
Selassie with Sir Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Downing Street, on October 22, 1954

Between 1941 and 1959, Haile Selassie worked to establish the autocephaly of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.[148] The Ethiopian Orthodox Church had been headed by the Abuna, a bishop who answered to the Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria. In 1942 and 1945, Haile Selassie applied to the Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church to establish the independence of Ethiopian bishops, and when his appeals were denied he threatened to sever relations with the Coptic Church of Alexandria.[148] Finally, in 1959, Pope Kyrillos VI elevated the Abuna to Patriarch-Catholicos.[148] The Ethiopian Church remained affiliated with the Alexandrian Church.[146] In addition to these efforts, Haile Selassie changed the Ethiopian church-state relationship by introducing taxation of church lands, and by restricting the legal privileges of the clergy, who had formerly been tried in their own courts for civil offenses.[146]

In 1948, the Harari Muslims of Harar with Somali allies staged a significant rebellion against the empire; the state responded violently. Hundreds were arrested and the entire town of Harar was put under

house arrest.[149] The government also took control of many assets and estates belonging to the people.[150][151] This led to a massive exodus of Hararis from the Harari Region, which had not occurred in their history prior.[15][152] The dissatisfaction of the Harari stemmed from the fact that they had never received limited autonomy of Harar, which was promised by Menelik II after his conquest of the kingdom. The promise was eroded by successive Amhara governors.[153] According to historians Tim Carmicheal and Roman Loimeier, Haile Selassie was directly involved in the suppression of the Harari movement that formed as a response to the crackdown on Hararis who collaborated with the Italians during their occupation of Ethiopia from 1935 to 1941.[154][155]

Nearly two decades ago, I personally assumed before history the responsibility of placing the fate of my beloved people on the issue of collective security, for surely, at that time and for the first time in world history, that issue was posed in all its clarity. My searching of conscience convinced me of the rightness of my course and if, after untold sufferings and, indeed, unaided resistance at the time of aggression, we now see the final vindication of that principle in our joint action in Korea, I can only be thankful that God gave me strength to persist in our faith until the moment of its recent glorious vindication.

Haile Selassie I, [156]

In keeping with the principle of collective security, for which he was an outspoken proponent, Haile Selassie sent a contingent, under

General Mulugueta Bulli, known as the Kagnew Battalion, to take part in the Korean War by supporting the United Nations Command. It was attached to the American 7th Infantry Division, and fought in a number of engagements including the Battle of Pork Chop Hill.[157] In a 1954 speech, Haile Selassie spoke of Ethiopian participation in the Korean War as a redemption of the principles of collective security.

During the celebrations of his Silver Jubilee in November 1955, Haile Selassie introduced a revised constitution,[158] whereby he retained effective power, while extending political participation to the people by allowing the lower house of parliament to become an elected body. Party politics were not provided for. Modern educational methods were more widely spread throughout the

 
Portrait by Edward Copnall in 1954, Selassie was awarded the Order of the Garter

Empire. The country embarked on a development scheme and plans for modernisation, tempered by Ethiopian traditions, and within the framework of the state's ancient monarchical structure.

Haile Selassie compromised, when practical, with the traditionalists in the nobility and church. He also tried to improve relations between the state and ethnic groups, and granted autonomy to Afar lands that were difficult to control. Still, his reforms to end feudalism were slow and weakened by the compromises he made with the entrenched aristocracy. The Revised Constitution of 1955 has been criticised for reasserting "the indisputable power of the monarch" and maintaining the relative powerlessness of the peasants.[159]

 
Haile Selassie photographed with: Nikita Khrushchev, General Secretary of the Soviet Union at Moscow in 1959

Haile Selassie also maintained cordial relations with the government of the United Kingdom through charitable gestures. He sent aid to the British government in 1947 when Britain was affected by heavy flooding. His letter to Lord Meork, National Distress Fund, London said, "even though We are busy of helping our people who didn't recover from the crises of the war, We heard that your fertile and beautiful country is devastated by the unusually heavy rain, and your request for aid. Therefore, We are sending small amount of money, about one thousand pounds through our embassy to show our sympathy and cooperation."[160] He also left his home in exile, Fairfield House, Bath, to the City of Bath for the use of the aged in 1959.

1958 famine of Tigray edit

In the summer of 1958, a widespread famine in the Tigray province of northern Ethiopia was already two years old yet people in Addis Ababa knew hardly anything about it. When significant reports of death finally reached the Ministry of Interior in September 1959 the central government immediately disclosed the information to the public and began asking for contributions. The Emperor personally donated 2,000 tons of relief grain, the U.S. sent 32,000 tons, which was distributed between Eritrea and Tigray, and money for aid was raised throughout the country but it is estimated that approximately 100,000 people had died before the crisis ended in August 1961. The causes of the famine were attributed to drought, locusts, hailstone and epidemics of small-pox, typhus, measles and malaria.[161][162][163]

1960s edit

Haile Selassie contributed Ethiopian troops to the United Nations Operation in the

Video of Haile Selassie I 1968 United Nations speech

Congo peacekeeping force during the 1960 Congo Crisis, to preserve Congolese integrity, per United Nations Security Council Resolution 143. On 13 December 1960, while Haile Selassie was on a state visit to Brazil, his Kebur Zabagna (Imperial Guard) forces staged an unsuccessful coup, briefly proclaiming Haile Selassie's eldest son Asfa Wossen as emperor. The regular army and police forces crushed the coup d'état. The coup attempt lacked broad popular support, was denounced by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and was unpopular with the army, air force and police. Nonetheless, the effort to depose the emperor had support among students and the educated classes.[164] The coup attempt has been characterised as a pivotal moment in Ethiopian history, the point at which Ethiopians "for the first time questioned the power of the king to rule without the people's consent".[165] Student populations began to empathise with the peasantry and poor and advocate on their behalf.[165] The coup spurred Haile

Selassie to accelerate reform, which was manifested in the form of land grants to military and police officials.

 
 
Haile Selassie with U.S. President John F. Kennedy, October 1963

The emperor continued to be a staunch ally of the West, while pursuing a firm policy of decolonisation in Africa, which was still largely under European colonial rule. The United Nations conducted a lengthy inquiry regarding Eritrea's status, with the superpowers each vying for a stake in the state's future. Britain, the administrator at the time, suggested Eritrea's partition between Sudan and Ethiopia, separating Christians and Muslims. The idea was instantly rejected by Eritrean political parties, as well as the UN.[166]

A UN plebiscite voted 46 to 10 to have Eritrea be federated with Ethiopia, which was later stipulated on 2 December 1950 in resolution 390 (V). Eritrea would have its own parliament and administration and would be represented in what had been the Ethiopian parliament and would become the federal parliament.[167] Haile Selassie would have none of the European attempts to draft a separate Constitution under which Eritrea would be governed, and wanted his own 1955 Constitution protecting families to apply in both Ethiopia and Eritrea. In 1961 the 30-year Eritrean Struggle for Independence began, followed by the dissolution of the federation and shutting down of Eritrea's parliament.

 
Haile Selassie with President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt in Addis Abeba for the Organisation of African Unity summit, 1963.

In September 1961, Haile Selassie attended the Conference of Heads of State of Government of Non-Aligned Countries in Belgrade, FPR Yugoslavia. This is considered to be the founding conference of the Non-Aligned Movement.

In 1961, tensions between independence-minded Eritreans and Ethiopian forces culminated in the Eritrean War of Independence. Eritrea's elected parliament voted to become the fourteenth province of Ethiopia in 1962.[168][169] The war would continue for 30 years; first Haile Selassie, then the Soviet-backed junta that succeeded him, attempted to retain Eritrea by force.

In 1963, Haile Selassie presided over the formation of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), the precursor of the continent-wide African Union (AU). The new organisation would establish its headquarters in Addis Ababa. In May of that year, Haile Selassie was elected as the OAU's first official chairperson, a rotating seat. Along with Modibo Keïta of Mali, the Ethiopian leader would later help successfully negotiate the Bamako Accords, which brought an end to the border conflict between Morocco and Algeria. In 1964, Haile Selassie would initiate the concept of the United States of Africa, a proposition later taken up by Muammar Gaddafi.[170] Also in 1963 Selassie was allegedly helped by Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh to put his grandson in the elite Gordonstoun school by pulling the "strings."[171]

On 4 October 1963, Haile Selassie addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations[172][173] referring in his address to his earlier speech to the League of Nations:

Twenty-seven years ago, as Emperor of Ethiopia, I mounted the rostrum in Geneva, Switzerland, to address the League of Nations and to appeal for relief from the destruction [that] had been unleashed against my defenseless nation, by the fascist invader. I spoke then both to and for the conscience of the world. My words went unheeded, but history testifies to the accuracy of the warning that I gave in 1936. Today, I stand before the world organisation [that] has succeeded to the mantle discarded by its discredited predecessor. In this body is enshrined the principle of collective security [that] I unsuccessfully invoked at Geneva. Here, in this Assembly, reposes the best – perhaps the last – hope for the peaceful survival of [hu]mankind.

Haile Selassie I, [174]

 
Haile Selassie I in the state funeral of U.S. President John F. Kennedy on November 25, 1963

On 25 November 1963, the emperor was among other heads of state, including France's President Charles de

Gaulle and Belgium's King Baudouin, who traveled to Washington, D.C., and attended the funeral of assassinated President John F. Kennedy. Haile Selassie was the only African head of state to attend the funeral.[175] In addition, he was also the only one of the three

prominent world leaders (De Gaulle, Baudouin, and Selassie) that would have another meeting with the new president Lyndon B. Johnson, in Washington during his presidency; the two would meet on Johnson's first day in the Oval Office of the White House and again during an informal visit to the United States in 1967.[176][177][178]

In 1966, Haile Selassie attempted to replace the historical tax system with a single progressive income tax, which would significantly weaken the nobility who had previously avoided paying most of their taxes.[179] Even with alterations, this law led to a revolt in Gojjam, which was repressed although enforcement of the tax was abandoned. Having achieved its design in undermining the tax, the revolt encouraged other landowners to defy Haile Selassie.

In October of the same year, Haile Selassie had a 4-day visit to the Kingdom of Jordan hosted by King Hussein II. During this trip, Haile

 
Selassie with Queen Elizabeth II in Addis Ababa on her 1965 state visit to Ethiopia

Selassie visited Jerusalem and the Church of The Holy Sepulchre where Jesus is believed to have been crucified and buried.[180] While he had fully approved and assured Ethiopia's participation in UN-approved collective security operations, including Korea and Congo, Haile Selassie drew a distinction between it and the non-UN-approved foreign intervention in Indochina, consistently deploring it as needless suffering and calling for the Vietnam War to end on several occasions. At the same time he remained open toward the United States and commended it for making progress with African Americans' Civil Rights legislation in the 1950s and 1960s, while visiting the US several times during these years.

In 1967, he visited Montréal, Canada, to open the Ethiopian Pavilion at the Expo '67 World's Fair where he received great acclaim among other World leaders there for the occasion.

 
Selassie with U.S President Richard Nixon in July, 1969 at the White House

Student unrest became a regular feature of Ethiopian life in the 1960s and 1970s. Communism took root in large segments of the Ethiopian intelligentsia, particularly among those who had studied abroad and had thus been exposed to radical and left-wing sentiments that were becoming popular in other parts of the globe.[164] Resistance by conservative elements at the Imperial Court and Parliament, and by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, made Haile Selassie's land reform proposals difficult to implement, and also damaged the standing of the government, costing Haile Selassie much of the goodwill he had once enjoyed. This bred resentment among the peasant population. Efforts to weaken unions also hurt his image.[181][182] As these issues began to pile up, Haile Selassie left much of domestic governance to his Prime Minister, Aklilu Habte Wold, and concentrated more on foreign affairs.

1970s edit

 
Haile Selassie I in Beijing China with Chinese leader and Chairman of the CCP Mao Zedong in 1971, Selassie also met Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai in his state visit

Outside of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie continued to enjoy enormous prestige and respect. As the longest-serving head of state in power, he was often given precedence over other leaders at state events, such as the state funerals of John F. Kennedy and Charles de Gaulle, the summits of the Non-Aligned Movement, and the 1971 celebration of the 2,500 years of the Persian Empire.[183][184] In 1970 he visited Italy as a guest of President Giuseppe Saragat, and in Milan he met Giordano Dell'Amore, President of Italian Savings Banks Association. He visited China in October 1971, and was the first foreign head of state to meet Mao Zedong following the death of Mao's designated successor Lin Biao in a plane crash in Mongolia.[185][186] Civil liberties and political rights were low with Freedom House giving Ethiopia a "Not Free" score for both civil liberties and political rights in the last years of Haile Selassie's rule.[187] Although some sources state that common human rights abuses included imprisonment and torture of political dissidents and very poor prison conditions,[16] the Emperor was known for pardoning hundreds of prisoners at a time and there were no

 
Selassie with Pope Paul VI at the Holy See in November 10, 1970

more than ten political prisoners during his entire reign.[188] The Imperial Ethiopian Army also carried out a number of atrocities while fighting the Eritrean separatists. This was due to frustrated soldiers, some of them ethnically Eritrean, who broke ranks with the military, disobeyed laws and began illegally destroying Eritrean villages that supported the rebels.[189] There were a number of mass killings of hundreds of civilians during the war in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[190][191][192][193]

He also went to Vatican City to meet Pope Paul VI on 1970 where they discussed issues regarding both their countries and history.[194] An investigation into the atrocities was started by Haile Selassie's administration and some officials were arrested. However, six days after the investigation began, the government collapsed when the Emperor was deposed on 12 September 1974.[189]

Wollo famine edit

 
Selassie's speech regarding Human Rights on October 23, 1970 which marked the 25th anniversary for the United Nations founding

Famine—mostly in Wollo, north-eastern Ethiopia, as well as in some parts of Tigray—is estimated to have killed 40,000 to 80,000

Ethiopians[13][195] between 1972 and 1974. A BBC News report[196] has cited a 1973 estimate that

200,000 deaths occurred, based on a contemporaneous estimate from the Ethiopian Nutrition Institute. While this figure is still repeated in some texts and media sources, it was an estimate that was later found to be "over-pessimistic".[198] Although the region is infamous for recurrent crop failures and continuous food shortage and starvation risk, this episode was remarkably severe. A 1973 production of the ITV programme The Unknown Famine by Jonathan Dimbleby[199][200] relied on the unverified estimate of 200,000 dead,[196][201] stimulating a massive influx of aid while at the same

time destabilising Haile Selassie's regime:[195]

Against that background, a group of dissident army officers instigated a creeping coup against the emperor's faltering regime. To guard against a public backlash in favour of Haile Selassie (who was still widely revered), they contrived to obtain a copy of The Unknown Famine that they intercut with images of Africa's grand old man presiding at a wedding feast in the grounds of his palace. Retitled The Hidden Hunger, this film noir was shown around the clock on Ethiopian television to coincide with the day that they finally summoned the nerve to seize the emperor himself.

— Jonathan Dimbleby, "Feeding on Ethiopia's famine"[202]

Some reports suggest that the emperor was unaware of the famine's extent,[189][196] while others assert that he was well aware of it.[203][204] In addition to the exposure of attempts by corrupt local officials to cover up the famine from the imperial government, the Kremlin's depiction of Haile Selassie's Ethiopia as backwards and inept (relative to the purported utopia of Marxism–Leninism) contributed to the popular uprising that led to its downfall and the rise of Mengistu Haile Mariam.[205] The famine and its image in the media undermined the government's popular support, and Haile Selassie's once unassailable personal popularity fell.[206]

The crisis was exacerbated by military mutinies and high oil prices, the latter a result of the 1973 oil crisis. The international economic crisis triggered by the oil crisis caused the costs of imported goods, gasoline, and food to skyrocket, while unemployment spiked.[159]

Revolution edit

In February 1974, four days of serious riots in Addis Ababa against a sudden economic inflation left five dead. The emperor responded by announcing on national television a reduction in petrol prices and a freeze on the cost of basic commodities. This calmed the public, but the promised 33% military wage hike was not substantial enough to pacify the army, which then mutinied, beginning in Asmara and spreading throughout the empire. This mutiny led to the resignation of Prime Minister Aklilu Habte-Wold on 27 February 1974.[207] Haile Selassie again went on television to agree to the army's demands for still greater pay, and named Endelkachew Makonnen as his new Prime Minister.[208][209] Despite Endalkatchew's many concessions, discontent continued in March with a four-day general strike that paralyzed the nation.[210]

Imprisonment edit

 
Much of the Royal Family seen behind, fled the country were imprisoned or executed. Emperor Haile Selassie was overthrown on 12 September 1974 when the Derg took power through a coup d'état

The Derg, a committee of low-ranking military officers and enlisted men, set up in June to investigate the military's demands, took advantage of the government's disarray to depose the 82-year-old Haile Selassie on 12 September.[211] General Aman Mikael Andom, a Protestant of Eritrean origin,[207] served briefly as provisional head of state pending the return of Crown Prince Asfa Wossen, who was then receiving medical treatment abroad. Haile Selassie was placed under house arrest briefly at the 4th Army Division in Addis Ababa.[207] At the same time, most of his family was detained at the late Duke of Harar's residence in the north of the capital. The last months of the emperor's life were spent in imprisonment, in the Grand Palace.[212]

Later, most of the imperial family was imprisoned in the Addis Ababa prison Kerchele, also known as "Alem Bekagne", or "I've had Enough of This World". On 23 November, 60 former high officials of the imperial government were executed by firing squad without trial,[213] which included Haile Selassie's grandson Iskinder Desta, a rear admiral, as well as General Andom and two former prime ministers.[212][214] These killings, known to Ethiopians as "Black Saturday", were condemned by Crown Prince Asfa Wossen; the Derg responded to his rebuke by revoking its acknowledgment of his imperial legitimacy, and announcing the end of the Solomonic dynasty.[213]

Death and interment edit

 
The tombs of Haile Selassie and his wife, Menen Asfaw, inside the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa

On 28 August 1975, state media reported that Haile Selassie had died on 27 August of "respiratory failure" following complications from a prostate examination followed up by a prostate operation.[215] Dr. Asrat Woldeyes denied that complications had occurred and rejected the government version of his death. The prostate operation in question apparently had taken place months before the state media claimed, and Haile Selassie had apparently enjoyed strong health in his last days.[216] In 1994, an Ethiopian court found several former military officers guilty of strangling the emperor in his bed in 1975. Three years after the military socialist Derg regime was overthrown,[217] the court charged them with genocide and murder, claiming that it had obtained documents attesting to a high-level order from the military regime to assassinate Haile Selassie for leading a "feudal regime".[9] Documents have been widely circulated online showing the Derg's final assassination order and bearing the military regime's seal and signature.[218][219] The veracity of these documents has been corroborated by multiple former members of the military Derg regime.[220][221]

The Soviet-backed People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, the Derg's successor, fell in 1991. In 1992, Haile Selassie's bones were found under a concrete slab on the palace grounds,[222] Haile Selassie's coffin rested in Bhata Church for nearly a decade, near his great-uncle Menelik II's resting place.[223] On 5 November 2000, the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa gave him a funeral, but the government refused calls to declare the ceremony an official imperial funeral.[223]

Prominent Rastafari figures such as Rita Marley participated in the funeral, but most Rastafari rejected the event and refused to accept that the bones were Haile Selassie's remains. There is some debate within the Rastafari movement whether he actually died in 1975.[224]

Rastafari messiah edit

…Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her hands unto God.

— Psalm 68:31

Today, Haile Selassie is worshipped as God incarnate[225] among some followers of the Rastafari movement (taken from Haile Selassie's pre-imperial name Ras—meaning Head, a title looking equivalent to Duke—Tafari Makonnen), which emerged in Jamaica during the 1930s under the influence of Leonard Howell, a follower of Marcus Garvey's "African Redemption" movement. He is viewed as the messiah who will lead the peoples of Africa and the African diaspora to freedom.[226] His official titles are Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah and King of Kings of Ethiopia, Lord of Lords and Elect of God, and his traditional lineage is thought to be from Solomon and Sheba.[227] These notions are perceived by Rastafari as confirmation of the return of the messiah in the prophetic Book of Revelation in the New Testament: King of Kings, Lord of Lords, Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah, and Root of David. Rastafari faith in the incarnate divinity of Haile Selassie[228] began after news reports of his coronation reached Jamaica,[229] particularly via the two Time magazine articles on the coronation the week before and the week after the event. Haile Selassie's own perspectives permeate the philosophy of the movement.[229][230]

In 1961, the Jamaican government sent a delegation composed of both Rastafari and non-Rastafari leaders to Ethiopia to discuss the matter of repatriation, among other issues, with the emperor. He reportedly told the Rastafari delegation (which included Mortimer Planno), "Tell the Brethren to be not dismayed, I personally will give my assistance in the matter of repatriation."[231]

Haile Selassie visited Jamaica on 21 April 1966, and approximately one hundred thousand Rastafari from all over Jamaica descended on Palisadoes Airport in Kingston to greet him.[229] Spliffs[232] and chalices[233] were openly[234] smoked, causing "a haze of ganja smoke" to drift through the air.[235][236][237] Haile Selassie arrived at the airport but was unable to come down the airplane's mobile steps, as the crowd rushed the tarmac. He then returned into the plane, disappearing for several more minutes. Finally, Jamaican authorities were obliged to request Ras Mortimer Planno, a well-known Rasta leader, to climb the steps, enter the plane, and negotiate the emperor's descent.[238] Planno re-emerged and announced to the crowd: "The Emperor has instructed me to tell you to be calm. Step back and let the Emperor land".[239] This day is widely held by scholars to be a major turning point for the movement,[240][241][242] and it is still commemorated by Rastafari as Grounation Day, the anniversary of which is celebrated as the second holiest holiday after 2 November, the emperor's Coronation Day.

From then on, as a result of Planno's actions, the Jamaican authorities were asked to ensure that Rastafari representatives were present at all state functions attended by the emperor,[241][242] and Rastafari elders also ensured that they obtained a private audience with the emperor,[241] where he reportedly told them that they should not emigrate to Ethiopia until they had first liberated the people of Jamaica. This dictum came to be known as "liberation before repatriation".

Haile Selassie defied expectations of the Jamaican authorities[243] and never rebuked the Rastafari for their belief in him as God. Instead, he presented the movement's faithful elders with gold medallions—the only recipients of such an honor on this visit.[244][245] During PNP leader (later Jamaican Prime Minister) Michael Manley's visit to Ethiopia in October 1969, the emperor allegedly still recalled his 1966 reception with amazement, and stated that he felt that he had to be respectful of their beliefs.[246] This was the visit when Manley received the Rod of Correction or Rod of Joshua as a present from the emperor, which is thought to have helped him to win the 1972 election in Jamaica.[247][248]

Rita Marley, Bob Marley's wife, converted to the Rastafari faith after seeing Haile Selassie on his Jamaican trip. She claimed in interviews

(and in her book No Woman, No Cry) that she saw a stigmata print on the palm of Haile Selassie's hand as he waved to the crowd, which resembled the markings on Christ's hands from being nailed to the cross—a claim that was not supported by other sources, but was used as evidence for her and other Rastafari to suggest that Haile Selassie I was indeed their messiah.[249] Rastafari became much better known throughout much of the world due to the popularity of Bob Marley.[250]

Bob Marley's posthumously released song "Iron Lion Zion" refers to

Haile Selassie.

Haile Selassie's position edit

In a 1967 recorded interview with the CBC, Haile Selassie denied his alleged divinity. In the interview Bill McNeil says: "there are millions of

Christians throughout the world, your Imperial Majesty, who regard you as the reincarnation of Jesus Christ." Haile Selassie replied in his native language:

I have heard of that idea. I also met certain Rastafarians. I told them clearly that I am a man, that I am mortal, and that I will be replaced by the oncoming generation, and that they should never make a mistake in assuming or pretending that a human being is emanated from a deity.[251]

For many Rastafari the CBC interview is not interpreted as a denial of his divinity. According to Robert Earl Hood, Haile Selassie neither denied nor affirmed his divinity either way.[252] In Reggae Routes: The Story of Jamaican Music, Kevin Chang and Wayne Chen note:

It's often said, though no definite date or source is ever cited, that Haile Selassie himself denied his divinity. Former senator and Gleaner editor, Hector Wynter, tells of asking him, during his visit to Jamaica in 1966, when he was going to tell Rastafarians he was not God. "Who am I to disturb their belief?" replied the emperor.[243][253]

After his return to Ethiopia, he dispatched Archbishop Abuna Yesehaq Mandefro to the Caribbean and according to Yesehaq this was done to help draw Rastafari and other West Indians to the Ethiopian church.[254][255] However some sources suggest that certain islanders and their leaders were resenting the services of their former colonial churches and vocalised their interest of establishing the Ethiopian church in the Caribbean to which the Emperor obliged.[256]

In 1969, Michael Manley visited the Emperor at his palace in Addis Ababa before his election as Prime Minister of Jamaica in 1972. Haile Selassie spoke about his visit to Jamaica in 1966 and told Manley that he was totally dumbfounded by the Rastafarians' beliefs but that he had to be respectful of them.[257]

In 1948, Haile Selassie donated 500 hectares of land at Shashamane, 250 kilometres (160 mi) south of Addis Ababa, to the Ethiopian World Federation Incorporated for the use of people of African descent who supported Ethiopia during the war, particularly those from the West.[258] Numerous Rastafari families settled there and still live as a community to this day.[259] Haile Selassie granted Rastafarians land on traditional Oromo domain hence today the Rastas are viewed by the locals as invaders.[260][261][262]

Legacy edit

Public opinion and media depiction edit

 
Haile Selassie, I visiting a children's hospital in 1969

During the beginning of his reign, and primarily in the 1930s through 1940s when Fascist Italy invaded Ethiopia, media coverage of Haile Selassie was positive, describing him as a hero against fascist forces. He was seen as an African beacon of hope and a friend and a part of the allies in World War II.[263] He was even featured as a Time "Man of the Year" in 1935 amidst the invasion.[264] British Pathé reported that Haile Selassie's return was "As an Emperor returns and triumphs to his people."[265] During one of his rare interviews with Meet the Press, in a 1963 State visit during the period of the Civil Rights movement in the U.S., he rebuked the notation of skin or race-based oppression of peoples and pushed a Pan-African narrative.[266][267] Later NBC News was seen ridiculing the state visit months later; The New York Times provided counterpoints saying, "what civilized purpose is served by making a point of the fact months later to the probable embarrassment of the Ethiopian diplomatic representatives in this country?". It also said NBC News "cannot afford to be a handmaiden of the State Department."[268][269]

 
Official portrait of Selassie by Moneta Sleet Jr, during a U.S state visit in 1963

During the 1950s, when the Silver Jubilee of the Emperor's reign was celebrated, he adopted the 1955 Constitution which legally gave more democratic rights to the public, and legally restricted the Monarch's power. Since World War II ended it played a major role towards the new administration, he limited and weakened the Orthodox Church's power. He was widely viewed as a modern and good leader in Ethiopia during the 1950s.[270][271] Nonetheless, subsequently, in the 1970s, due to economic turmoil and a famine, Selassie's reputation suffered. Mass protests involving intellectuals and the common people occurred. It was widely believed that due to his old age and failed land reform policy implementation he should abdicate, which ultimately led to Selassie's removal from power.[272][273]

Although Haile Selassie's image and legacy has differed views, he is notably thought of as a moderniser, as one of the leading persons founding Haile Selassie University, and the Organisation of African Unity which later turned into the Africa Union and an anti-colonial movement leader.[274][275][276]

In 2016 the Canadian-Ethiopian singer The Weeknd tweeted with the image of Selassie in his full uniform "anbessa" amharic for lion: which can be interpreted to a courageous leader.[277]

In 2021 a documentary by Selassie's granddaughter was released showcasing the life of the Ethiopian royal family.[278][279] The documentary, titled Grandpa Was An Emperor, has a 100 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes.[280]

He has been depicted by photographers, portraits and sculptors such as Edward Copnall, Beulah Woodard, Jacob Epstein, William H. Johnson, and Yevonde Middleton.[281][282][283][284][285]

Memorials edit

In recent years multiple memorials were built and unveiled for Selassie. Mainly in Ethiopia, and one in Jamaica. One of these memorials is in the African Union's Headquarters in Addis Ababa unveiled in 2019, the other memorial in Addis Ababa is that of a wax statue in Unity Park.[286][287][288] Selassie's memorial in the African Union was due to his long efforts of Pan-Africanism and anti-colonial efforts during his rule. Nonetheless the statue caused some concern between groups which howbeit was ultimately ignored and futile in effort.[289][290] Another memorial although not a statue is a marker for a Kingston High School, not only a memorial but the school being named "Haile Selassie High School." Other memorials exist although being very hold, such as in Addis Ababa where the Emperor is seen teaching 12 children roundabout.[291][292] In 2020, a bust statue which was built in 1957 was destroyed by protestors allegedly claiming Haile Selassie's rule and legacy played a part with Ethiopian singer Hachalu Hundessa assassination.[293][294][295] Selassie also has a road, being one of the three major express ways in Nairobi being named after him.[296][297]

Titles, styles, arms, honours edit

Styles of
Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia
 
Reference style
Spoken style
  • Your Imperial Majesty
  • Amharic: ጃንሆይ; djānhoi
  • lit. "O [esteemed] royal"
Alternative style
  • Our Lord (familiar)
  • Amharic: ጌቶቹ; getochu
  • lit. "Our master" (pl.)

National orders edit

Coat of arms edit

 
Coat of arms in Spain under the order of Charles III of Spain
 
Coat of arms as Emperor in the United Kingdom under the Order of Garter
 
Coat of arms as Emperor under the Order of Seraphim

edit

 
The Flag of the Lion of Judah served as the banner of Haile Selassie I's government as a State flag

As sovereign edit

 
Imperial Royal Standard for Haile Selassie I obverse
 
Imperial Royal Standard for Haile Selassie I reverse

Military ranks edit

Haile Selassie held the following ranks:

Issue edit

Name Birth Death Notes
Princess Romanework 1909 14 October 1940 Married Dejazmatch Beyene Merid in the late 1920s, died in 1937. Had four issues: Lij Getachew Beyene, Dejazmatch Merid Beyene, Dejazmatch Samson Beyene, and Lij Gideon Beyene
Princess Tenagnework 12 January 1912 6 April 2003 Married 1924 to 1937 (death), Ras Desta Damtew;6 Issues including: Lij Amha Desta, Rear Admiral Iskinder Desta, Princess Aida Desta, Princess Seble Desta, Princess Sophia Desta, Princess, Hirut Desta. Married again with Andargachew Messai till 1981 (death) had 2 Issues: Emebet Tsige Mariam Abebe, Emebet Mentewab Andargatchew
Crown Prince Amha Selassie 27 July 1916 17 January 1997 Married Wolete Israel Seyoum in 1931 had 1 issue from Amha Selassie being Princess Ijigayehu Amha Selassie, Amha divorced and married Medferiashwork Abebe in 1945 and had 4 Issues from her being: Princess Maryam Senna, Princess Sehin Azebe, Crown Prince Zera Yacob Amha Selassie, and Princess Sifrash Bizu
Princess Zenebework 25 July 1917 24 March 1934 Married Dejazmach Haile Selassie Gugsa had no Issues
Princess Tsehai 13 October 1919 17 August 1942 Married in 1941, Lij Abiye Abebe; had one daughter (died in miscarriage)
Prince Makonnen, Duke of Harar 16 October 1924 13 May 1957 Married Sara Gizaw, died (1957), they had five Issues including: Prince Paul Wossen-Seged, Duke of Harar, Prince Mikael, Prince Dawit, Prince Taffari, Prince Beede Mariam
His Imperial Highness, Prince Sahle Selassie Haile Selassie 27 February 1932 24 April 1962 Married Princess Mahisente Habte Mariam had one issue: Prince Ermias Sahle Selassie

Ancestry edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In exile from 2 May 1936 – 20 January 1941[1]
  2. ^ Translates to "Power of the Trinity".[2]
  3. ^ Ge'ez ግርማዊ ቀዳማዊ አፄ ኃይለ ሥላሴ ሞዓ አንበሳ ዘእምነገደ ይሁዳ ንጉሠ ነገሥት ዘኢትዮጵያ ሰዩመ እግዚአብሔር; girmāwī ḳedāmāwī 'aṣē ḫayle śillāsē, mō'ā 'anbessā ze'imneggede yihudā niguse negest ze'ītyōṗṗyā, siyume 'igzī'a'bihēr.[47]
  4. ^ Bālemulu literally means "fully empowered" or "wholly authorised," thus distinguishing it from the general use of Enderase, that being a representative or lieutenant of the Emperor to fiefs or vassals, essentially a Governor-General or Viceroy, by which term provincial governors in the contemporary Imperial period, during Haile Selassie's reign, were referred.[64][65]
  5. ^ Balcha Safo brought an army of ten thousand with him from Sidamo.[67]
  6. ^ Balcha Safo's personal bodyguard numbered about five hundred.[67]

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Sources edit

  • Marcus, Harold G. (1994). A History of Ethiopia. London: University of California Press. p. 316. ISBN 978-0-520-22479-7.
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  • Murrell, Nathaniel Samuel; Spencer, William David; McFarlane, Adrian Anthony (1998). Chanting Down Babylon: The Rastafari Reader. Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1-56639584-7.
  • Roberts, Andrew Dunlop (1986). The Cambridge History of Africa: From 1905 to 1940. Vol. 7. Cambridge: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. ISBN 978-0-52122505-2.
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Bibliography edit

haile, selassie, tafari, redirects, here, religion, rastafari, confused, with, haile, gebrselassie, gugsa, ቀዳማዊ, ኀይለ, ሥላሴ, romanized, qädamawi, häylä, səllasé, born, tafari, makonnen, july, 1892, august, 1975, emperor, ethiopia, from, 1930, 1974, rose, power, . Ras Tafari redirects here For the religion see Rastafari Not to be confused with Haile Gebrselassie or Haile Selassie Gugsa Haile Selassie I Ge ez ቀዳማዊ ኀይለ ሥላሴ romanized Qadamawi Hayla Sellase nb 2 born Lij Tafari Makonnen 23 July 1892 27 August 1975 3 was Emperor of Ethiopia from 1930 to 1974 He rose to power as Regent Plenipotentiary of Ethiopia Enderase for Empress Zewditu from 1916 until 1930 Haile Selassie is widely considered a defining figure in modern Ethiopian history and the key figure of Rastafari a religious movement in Jamaica that emerged shortly after he became emperor in the 1930s Before he rose to power he defeated Ras Gugsa Wole Bitul Nephew of Empress Taytu of Begemidr present Gondar at the Battle of Anchem in 1928 4 5 He was a member of the Solomonic dynasty which claims to trace lineage to Emperor Menelik I believed to be the son of King Solomon and Makeda the Queen of Sheba Haile Selassie I ቀዳማዊ ኀይለ ሥላሴNegusa NagastHaile Selassie in the full ceremonial dress uniform of a field marshal 1970Emperor of EthiopiaReign2 April 1930 2 May 1936 nb 1 20 January 1941 12 September 1974Coronation2 November 1930PredecessorZewdituSuccessorAmha SelassiePrime MinisterList of prime ministers HimselfWolde TzaddickMakonnen EndelkachewAbebe AregaiImru Haile SelassieAklilu Habte WoldEndelkachew MakonnenMikael ImruRegent Plenipotentiary of EthiopiaReign27 September 1916 2 April 1930PredecessorTessema NadewMonarchZewdituSuccessorKirubel AbrahamBornTafari Makonnan 1892 07 23 23 July 1892Ejersa Goro Hararghe Ethiopian EmpireDied27 August 1975 1975 08 27 aged 83 Jubilee Palace Addis Ababa EthiopiaBurial5 November 2000Holy Trinity Cathedral Addis Ababa EthiopiaSpouseMenen AsfawIssuePrincess RomaneworkPrincess TenagneworkCrown Prince Asfaw WossenPrincess ZenebeworkPrincess TsehaiPrince MakonnenPrince Sahle SelassieNamesLij Tafari MakonnenHouseHouse of ShewaDynastySolomonic dynastyFatherMakonnen Wolde MikaelMotherYeshimebet AliReligionEthiopian Orthodox TewahedoSignature1st and 5th Chairperson of the Organisation of African UnityIn office 25 May 1963 17 July 1964Succeeded byGamal Abdel NasserIn office 5 November 1966 11 September 1967Preceded byJoseph Arthur AnkrahSucceeded byMobutu Sese SekoMilitary careerAllegianceEthiopian EmpireService wbr branch Army of the Ethiopian Empire Imperial Ethiopian NavyEthiopian Imperial Air ForceYears of service1930 1974RankField MarshalCommands heldCommander in chiefBattles warsSee list Second Italo Ethiopian War First Battle of Tembien Battle of Amba Aradam Second Battle of Tembien Battle of Shire Battle of Maychew World War II East African campaign Korean War Ethiopian Somali Border WarHaile Selassie I s voice source source Speech to the Ethiopian Parliament following the occasion of a new ConstitutionRecorded 4 November 1955Haile Selassie attempted to modernise the country through a series of political and social reforms including the introduction of the 1931 constitution its first written constitution and the abolition of slavery He led the failed efforts to defend Ethiopia during the Second Italo Ethiopian War and spent most of the period of Italian occupation exiled in England In 1940 he traveled to the Anglo Egyptian Sudan in order to assist in coordinating the anti fascist struggle in Ethiopia and returned to his home country in 1941 after the East African campaign He dissolved the Federation of Ethiopia and Eritrea which was established by the UN General Assembly in 1950 and annexed Eritrea into Ethiopia as one of its provinces while fighting to prevent secession 6 Haile Selassie s internationalist views led to Ethiopia becoming a charter member of the United Nations 7 In 1963 he presided over the formation of the Organisation of African Unity the precursor of the African Union and served as its first chairman In 1974 he was overthrown in a military coup by a Marxist Leninist junta the Derg Haile Selassie was assassinated on 27 August 1975 8 9 Among some members of the Rastafari movement Haile Selassie is referred to as the returned messiah of the Bible God incarnate This distinction notwithstanding he was a Christian and adhered to the tenets and liturgy of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church 10 11 He has been criticised by some historians for his suppression of rebellions among the landed aristocracy the mesafint which consistently opposed his reforms some critics have also criticised Ethiopia s failure to modernise rapidly enough 12 13 During his rule the Harari people were persecuted and many left the Harari Region 14 15 His administration was also criticised by human rights groups such as Human Rights Watch as autocratic and illiberal 13 16 Although some sources state that late during his administration the Oromo language was banned from education public speaking and use in administration 17 18 19 there was never an official law or government policy that criminalised any language 20 21 22 The Haile Selassie government relocated numerous Amharas into southern Ethiopia where they served in government administration courts and church 23 24 25 Following the death of Hachalu Hundessa in June 2020 the Statue of Haile Selassie in Cannizaro Park London was destroyed by Oromo protesters and his father s equestrian monument in Harar was removed 26 27 28 Contents 1 Name 2 Biography 2 1 Early life 2 2 Governorship 2 3 Regency 2 3 1 Travel abroad 2 4 King and Emperor 2 5 Conflict with Italy 2 5 1 Mobilisation 2 5 2 Progress of the war 2 5 3 Exile debate 2 5 4 Collective security and the League of Nations 1936 2 5 5 Exile 2 6 1940s and 1950s 2 6 1 1958 famine of Tigray 2 7 1960s 2 8 1970s 2 8 1 Wollo famine 2 8 2 Revolution 2 8 3 Imprisonment 2 8 4 Death and interment 3 Rastafari messiah 3 1 Haile Selassie s position 4 Legacy 4 1 Public opinion and media depiction 4 2 Memorials 5 Titles styles arms honours 5 1 National orders 5 2 Coat of arms 5 3 Banner 5 4 As sovereign 6 Military ranks 7 Issue 8 Ancestry 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 11 3 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksName editHaile Selassie was known as a child as Lij Tafari Makonnen Ge ez ልጅ ተፈሪ መኮንን romanized Lej Tafari Makonnen Lij is translated as child and serves to indicate that a youth is of noble blood His given name Tafari means one who is respected or feared Like most Ethiopians his personal name Tafari is followed by that of his father Makonnen and that of his grandfather Woldemikael His name Haile Selassie was given to him at his infant baptism and adopted again as part of his regnal name in 1930 On 1 November 1905 at the age of 13 Tafari was appointed by his father as the Dejazmatch of Gara Mulatta a region some twenty miles southwest of Harar 29 The literal translation of Dejazmatch is keeper of the door it is a title of nobility equivalent to a count 30 On 27 September 1916 he was proclaimed Crown Prince and heir apparent to the throne Alga Worrach 31 32 and appointed Regent Plenipotentiary Balemulu Silt an Enderase 31 33 On 11 February 1917 he was crowned Le ul Ras 34 and became known as Ras Tafari Makonnen listen Ras is translated as head 35 32 and is a rank of nobility equivalent to a duke 32 36 though it is often rendered in translation as prince Originally the title Le ul which means Your Highness was only ever used as a form of address 37 however in 1917 the title Le ul Ras replaced the senior office of Ras Bitwoded and so became the equivalent of a royal duke 38 39 In 1928 Empress Zewditu planned on granting him the throne of Shewa however at the last moment opposition from certain provincial rulers caused a change and his title Negus or King was conferred without geographical qualification or definition 40 41 On 2 November 1930 after the death of Empress Zewditu Tafari was crowned Negusa Nagast literally King of Kings rendered in English as Emperor 42 Upon his ascension he took as his regnal name Haile Selassie I Haile means in Ge ez Power of and Selassie means trinity therefore Haile Selassie roughly translates to Power of the Trinity 43 Haile Selassie s full title in office was By the Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie I King of Kings Lord of Lords Elect of God 44 34 37 45 46 nb 3 This title reflects Ethiopian dynastic traditions which hold that all monarchs must trace their lineage to Menelik I who is described by the Kebra Nagast a 14th century CE national epic as the son of the tenth century BCE King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba 48 To Ethiopians Haile Selassie has been known by many names including Janhoy His Majesty Talaqu Meri Great Leader and Abba Tekel Father of Tekel his horse name 47 The Rastafari movement employs many of these appellations also referring to him as Jah Jah Jah Jah Rastafari and HIM the abbreviation of His Imperial Majesty 47 Biography edit nbsp This article contains Ethiopic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Ethiopic characters Main article Chronology of Haile Selassie Early life edit Haile Selassie s royal line through his father s mother descended from the Shewan Amhara Solomonic King Sahle Selassie 49 He was born on 23 July 1892 in the village nbsp Then Tafari Makonnen wearing a warrior s dress nbsp Ras Makonnen Woldemikael and his son Lij Tafari Makonnen of Ejersa Goro in the Hararghe province of Ethiopia Haile Selassie s mother was paternally of Oromo descent and maternally of Gurage heritage while his father was maternally of Amhara descent but his paternal lineage remains disputed 50 51 52 Haile Selassie s paternal grandfather belonged to a noble family from Shewa and was the governor of the districts of Menz and Doba which are located in Semien Shewa 53 His mother was Woizero Lady Yeshimebet Ali Abba Jifar daughter of a ruling chief from Were Ilu in Wollo province Dejazmach Ali Abba Jifar 54 Haile Selassie s father was Ras Makonnen Wolde Mikael the grandson of King Sahle Selassie who was once the ruler of Shewa He served as a general in the First Italo Ethiopian War playing a key role at the Battle of Adwa 54 Haile Selassie was thus able to ascend to the imperial throne through his paternal grandmother Woizero Tenagnework Sahle Selassie who was an aunt of Emperor Menelik II and daughter of the Solomonic Amhara King of Shewa Negus Sahle Selassie As such Haile Selassie claimed direct descent from Makeda the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon of ancient Israel 55 Ras Makonnen arranged for Tafari as well as his first cousin Imru Haile Selassie to receive instruction in Harar from Abba Samuel Wolde Kahin an Ethiopian Capuchin friar and from Dr Vitalien a surgeon from Guadeloupe Tafari was named Dejazmach literally commander of the gate roughly equivalent to count 56 at the age of 13 on 1 November 1905 57 29 Shortly thereafter his father Ras Makonnen died at Kulibi in 1906 58 Governorship edit nbsp Dejazmatch Tafari as governor of HararTafari assumed the titular governorship of Selale in 1906 a realm of marginal importance 59 but one that enabled him to continue his studies 57 In 1907 he was appointed governor over part of the province of Sidamo It is alleged that during his late teens Haile Selassie was married to Woizero Altayech and that from this union his daughter Princess Romanework was born 60 Following the death of his brother Yelma in 1907 the governorate of Harar was left vacant 59 and its administration was left to Menelik s loyal general Dejazmach Balcha Safo Balcha Safo s administration of Harar was ineffective and so during the last illness of Menelik II and the brief reign of Empress Taytu Betul Tafari was made governor of Harar in 1910 58 or 1911 61 On 3 August 1911 he married Menen Asfaw of Ambassel niece of the heir to the throne Lij Iyasu Regency edit The extent to which Tafari Makonnen contributed to the movement that would come to depose Lij Iyasu has been discussed extensively particularly in Haile Selassie s own detailed account of the matter Iyasu was the designated but uncrowned emperor of Ethiopia from 1913 to 1916 Iyasu s reputation for scandalous behavior and a disrespectful attitude towards the nobles at the court of his grandfather Menelik II 62 damaged his reputation Iyasu s flirtation with Islam was considered treasonous among the Ethiopian Orthodox Christian leadership of the empire On 27 September 1916 Iyasu was deposed 63 Contributing to the movement that deposed Iyasu were conservatives such as Fitawrari Habte Giyorgis Menelik II s longtime Minister of War The movement to depose Iyasu preferred Tafari as he attracted support from both progressive and conservative factions Ultimately Iyasu was deposed on the grounds of conversion to Islam 35 63 In his place the daughter of Menelik II the aunt of Iyasu was named Empress Zewditu while Tafari was elevated to the rank of Ras and was made heir apparent and Crown Prince In the power arrangement that followed Tafari accepted the role of Regent Plenipotentiary Balemulu Inderase nb 4 and became the de facto ruler of the Ethiopian Empire Mangista Ityop p ya Zewditu would govern while Tafari would administer 66 While Iyasu had been deposed on 27 September 1916 on 8 October he managed to escape into the Ogaden Desert and his father Negus Mikael of Wollo had time to come to his aid 67 On 27 October Negus Mikael and his army met an army under Fitawrari Habte Giyorgis loyal to Zewditu and Tafari During the Battle of Segale Negus Mikael was defeated and captured Any chance that Iyasu would regain the throne was ended and he went into hiding On 11 January 1921 after avoiding capture for about five years Iyasu was taken into custody by Gugsa Araya Selassie On 11 February 1917 the coronation for Zewditu took place She pledged to rule justly through her Regent Tafari While Tafari was the more visible of the two Zewditu was far from an honorary ruler Her position required that she arbitrate the claims of competing factions In other words she had the last word Tafari carried the burden of daily administration but because his position was relatively weak this was often an exercise in futility Initially his personal army was poorly equipped his finances were limited and he had little leverage to withstand the combined influence of the Empress the Minister of War or the provincial governors 67 nbsp Haile Selassie in 1924 at the International Labour OrganizationDuring his Regency the new Crown Prince developed the policy of cautious modernisation initiated by Menelik II Also during this time he survived the 1918 flu pandemic having come down with the illness 68 He secured Ethiopia s admission to the League of Nations in 1923 by promising to eradicate slavery each emperor since Tewodros II had issued proclamations to halt slavery 69 but without effect the internationally scorned practice persisted well into Haile Selassie s reign with an estimated 2 million slaves in Ethiopia in the early 1930s 70 71 Travel abroad edit In 1924 Ras Tafari toured Europe and the Middle East visiting Jerusalem Alexandria Paris Luxembourg Brussels Amsterdam Stockholm London Geneva Gibraltar and Athens With him on his tour was a group that included Ras Seyum Mangasha of western Tigray Province Ras Hailu Tekle Haymanot of Gojjam province Ras Mulugeta Yeggazu of Illubabor Province Ras Makonnen Endelkachew and Blattengeta Heruy Welde Sellasie The primary goal of the trip to Europe was for Ethiopia to gain access to the sea In Paris Tafari was to find out from the French Foreign Ministry Quai d Orsay that this goal would not be realised 72 However failing this he and his retinue inspected schools hospitals factories and churches Although patterning many reforms after European models Tafari remained wary of European pressure To guard against economic imperialism Tafari required that all enterprises have at least partial local ownership 73 Of his modernisation campaign he remarked We need European progress only because we are surrounded by it That is at once a benefit and a misfortune 74 Throughout Tafari s travels in Europe the Levant and Egypt he and his entourage were greeted with enthusiasm and fascination Seyum Mangasha accompanied him and Hailu Tekle Haymanot who like Tafari were sons of generals who contributed to the victorious war against Italy a quarter century earlier at the Battle of Adwa 75 Another member of his entourage Mulugeta Yeggazu actually fought at Adwa as a young man The Oriental Dignity of the Ethiopians 76 and their rich picturesque court dress 77 were sensationalised in the media among his entourage he even included a pride of lions which he distributed as gifts to President Alexandre Millerand and Prime Minister Raymond Poincare of France to King George V of the United Kingdom and to the Zoological Garden Jardin Zoologique of Paris France 75 As one historian noted Rarely can a tour have inspired so many anecdotes 75 In return for two lions the United Kingdom presented Tafari with the imperial crown of Emperor Tewodros II for its safe return to Empress Zewditu The crown had been taken by General Sir Robert Napier during the 1868 Expedition to Abyssinia 78 In this period the Crown Prince visited the Armenian monastery of Jerusalem There he adopted 40 Armenian orphans አርባ ልጆች Arba Lijoch forty children who had lost their parents during the Armenian Genocide Tafari arranged for the musical education of the youths and they came to form the imperial brass band 79 King and Emperor edit See also Modernization under Haile Selassie nbsp Selassie signing into law an act of the Ethiopian Parliament in 1969Tafari s authority was challenged in 1928 when Dejazmach Balcha Safo went to Addis Ababa with a sizeable armed force When Tafari consolidated his hold over the provinces many of Menelik s appointees refused to abide by the new regulations Balcha Safo the governor Shum of coffee rich Sidamo Province was particularly troublesome The revenues he remitted to the central government did not reflect the accrued profits and Tafari recalled him to Addis Ababa The old man came in high dudgeon and insultingly with a large army nb 5 The Dejazmatch paid homage to Empress Zewditu but snubbed Tafari 80 81 On 18 February while Balcha Safo and his personal bodyguard nb 6 were in Addis Ababa Tafari had Ras Kassa Haile Darge buy off his army and arranged to have him displaced as the Shum of Sidamo Province 82 by Birru Wolde Gabriel who himself was replaced by Desta Damtew 67 Even so the gesture of Balcha Safo empowered Empress Zewditu politically and she attempted to have Tafari tried for treason He was tried for his benevolent dealings with Italy including a 20 year peace accord that was signed on 2 August 57 In September a group of palace reactionaries including some courtiers of the empress made a final bid to get rid of Tafari The attempted coup d etat was tragic in its origins and comic in its end When confronted by Tafari and a company of his troops the ringleaders of the coup took refuge on the palace grounds in Menelik s mausoleum Tafari and his men surrounded them only to be surrounded themselves by the personal guard of Zewditu More of Tafari s khaki clad soldiers arrived and decided the outcome in his favor with superiority of arms 83 Popular support as well as the support of the police 80 remained with Tafari Ultimately the Empress relented and on 7 October 1928 she crowned Tafari as Negus Amharic King nbsp Coronation of Emperor Haile Selassie I on November 2 1930The crowning of Tafari as King was controversial He occupied the same territory as the empress rather than going off to a regional kingdom of the empire Two monarchs even with one being the vassal and the other the emperor in this case empress had never occupied the same location as their seat in Ethiopian history Conservatives agitated to redress this perceived insult to the crown s dignity leading to the rebellion of Ras Gugsa Welle Gugsa Welle was the husband of the empress and the Shum of Begemder Province In early 1930 he raised an army and marched it from his governorate at Gondar towards Addis Ababa On 31 March 1930 Gugsa Welle was met by forces loyal to Negus Tafari and was defeated at the Battle of Anchem Gugsa Welle was killed in action 84 News of Gugsa Welle s defeat and death had hardly spread through Addis Ababa when the empress died suddenly on 2 April 1930 Although it was long rumored that the empress was poisoned upon her husband s defeat 85 or alternately that she died from shock upon hearing of the death of her estranged yet beloved husband 86 it has since been documented that the Empress succumbed to paratyphoid fever and complications from diabetes after the Orthodox clergy imposed strict rules concerning her diet against her physicians orders with regards to Lent 87 88 nbsp Bank note of the Emperor as head of stateUpon Zewditu s death Tafari himself rose to emperor and was proclaimed Neguse Negest ze Ityopp ya King of Kings of Ethiopia He was crowned on 2 November 1930 at Addis Ababa s Cathedral of St George The coronation was by all accounts a most splendid affair 89 and it was attended by royals and dignitaries from all over the world Among those in attendance were The Duke of Gloucester King George V s son Marshal Louis Franchet d Esperey of France and the Prince of Udine representing King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy Special Ambassador Herman Murray Jacoby attended the coronation as the personal representative of President Herbert Hoover 90 91 92 93 Other emissaries from Egypt Turkey Sweden Belgium and Japan were also present 89 British author Evelyn Waugh was also present penning a contemporary report on the event and American travel lecturer Burton Holmes shot the only known film footage of the event 94 95 One newspaper report suggested that the celebration had incurred a cost in excess of 3 000 000 96 Many of those in attendance received lavish gifts 97 in one instance the Christian emperor even sent a gold encased Bible to an American bishop who had not attended the coronation but who had dedicated a prayer to the emperor on the day of the coronation 98 nbsp Cover of Time magazine 3 November 1930Haile Selassie introduced Ethiopia s first written constitution on 16 July 1931 99 providing for a bicameral legislature 100 The constitution kept power in the hands of the nobility but it did establish democratic standards among the nobility envisaging a transition to democratic rule it would prevail until the people are in a position to elect themselves 100 The constitution limited the succession to the throne to the descendants of Haile Selassie a point that met with the disapprobation of other dynastic princes including the princes of Tigrai and even the emperor s loyal cousin Ras Kassa Haile Darge In 1932 the Sultanate of Jimma was formally absorbed into Ethiopia following the death of Sultan Abba Jifar II of Jimma Conflict with Italy edit See also Abyssinia Crisis and Second Italo Abyssinian War Ethiopia became the target of renewed Italian imperialist designs in the 1930s Benito Mussolini s Fascist regime was keen to avenge the military defeats Italy had suffered to Ethiopia in the First Italo Abyssinian War and to efface the failed attempt by liberal Italy to conquer the country as epitomised by the defeat at Adwa 101 102 103 A conquest of Ethiopia could also empower the cause of fascism and embolden its empire s rhetoric 103 Ethiopia would also provide a bridge between Italy s Eritrean and Italian Somaliland possessions Ethiopia s position in the League of Nations did not dissuade the Italians from invading in 1935 the collective security envisaged by the League proved useless and a scandal erupted when the Hoare Laval Pact revealed that Ethiopia s League allies were scheming to appease Italy 104 nbsp Haile Selassie at the League of Nations appealing Italy s invasion in 1936Mobilisation edit Following 5 December 1934 Italian invasion of Ethiopia at Welwel Ogaden Province Haile Selassie joined his northern armies and set up headquarters at Desse in Wollo province He issued his mobilization order on 3 October 1935 If you withhold from your country Ethiopia the death from cough or head cold of which you would otherwise die refusing to resist in your district in your patrimony and in your home our enemy who is coming from a distant country to attack us and if you persist in not shedding your blood you will be rebuked for it by your Creator and will be cursed by your offspring Hence without cooling your heart of accustomed valour there emerges your decision to fight fiercely mindful of your history that will last far into the future If on your march you touch any property inside houses or cattle and crops outside not even grass straw and dung excluded it is like killing your brother who is dying with you You countryman living at the various access routes set up a market for the army at the places where it is camping and on the day your district governor will indicate to you lest the soldiers campaigning for Ethiopia s liberty should experience difficulty You will not be charged excise duty until the end of the campaign for anything you are marketing at the military camps I have granted you remission After you have been ordered to go to war but are then idly missing from the campaign and when you are seized by the local chief or by an accuser you will have punishment inflicted upon your inherited land your property and your body to the accuser I shall grant a third of your property On 19 October 1935 Haile Selassie gave more precise orders for his army to his Commander in Chief Ras Kassa When you set up tents it is to be in caves and by trees and in a wood if the place happens to be adjoining to these and separated in the various platoons Tents are to be set up at a distance of 30 cubits from each other When an aeroplane is sighted one should leave large open roads and wide meadows and march in valleys and trenches and by zigzag routes along places that have trees and woods When an aeroplane comes to drop bombs it will not suit it to do so unless it comes down to about 100 metres hence when it flies low for such action one should fire a volley with a good and very long gun and then quickly disperse When three or four bullets have hit it the aeroplane is bound to fall down But let only those fire who have been ordered to shoot with a weapon that has been selected for such firing for if everyone shoots who possesses a gun there is no advantage in this except to waste bullets and to disclose the men s whereabouts Lest the aeroplane when rising again should detect the whereabouts of those who are dispersed it is well to remain cautiously scattered as long as it is still fairly close In time of war it suits the enemy to aim his guns at adorned shields ornaments silver and gold cloaks silk shirts and similar things Whether one possesses a jacket or not it is best to wear a narrow sleeved shirt with faded colours When we return with God s help you can wear your gold and silver decorations then Now it is time to go and fight We offer you all these words of advice in the hope that no great harm should befall you through lack of caution At the same time We are glad to assure you that in time of war We are ready to shed Our blood in your midst for the sake of Ethiopia s freedom 105 nbsp Haile Selassie in 1934Compared to the Ethiopians the Italians had an advanced modern military that included a large air force The Italians would also come to employ chemical weapons extensively throughout the conflict even targeting Red Cross field hospitals in violation of the Geneva Conventions 106 Progress of the war edit Starting in early October 1935 the Italians invaded Ethiopia But by November the pace of invasion had slowed appreciably and Haile Selassie s northern armies were able to launch what was known as the Christmas Offensive During this offensive the Italians were forced back in places and put on the defensive In early 1936 the First Battle of Tembien stopped the progress of the Ethiopian offensive and the Italians were ready to continue their offensive Following the defeat and destruction of the northern Ethiopian armies at the Battle of Amba Aradam the Second Battle of Tembien and the Battle of Shire Haile Selassie took the field with the last Ethiopian army on the northern front On 31 March 1936 he launched a counterattack against the Italians himself at the Battle of Maychew in southern Tigray The emperor s army was defeated and retreated in disarray As Haile Selassie s army withdrew the Italians attacked from the air along with rebellious Raya and Azebo tribesmen on the ground who were armed and paid by the Italians 107 Haile Selassie made a solitary pilgrimage to the churches at Lalibela at considerable risk of capture before returning to his capital 108 After a stormy session of the council of state it was agreed that because Addis Ababa could not be defended the government would relocate to the southern town of Gore and that in the interest of preserving the Imperial house the emperor s wife Menen Asfaw and the rest of the imperial family should immediately depart for French Somaliland and from there continue on to Jerusalem 109 110 111 Exile debate edit nbsp The Emperor arrives in Jerusalem May 1936After further debate as to whether Haile Selassie should go to Gore or accompany his family into exile it was agreed that he should leave Ethiopia with his family and present the case of Ethiopia to the League of Nations at Geneva The decision was not unanimous and several participants including the nobleman Blatta Tekle Wolde Hawariat strenuously objected to the idea of an Ethiopian monarch fleeing before an invading force 112 Haile Selassie appointed his cousin Ras Imru Haile Selassie as Prince Regent in his absence departing with his family for French Somaliland on 2 May 1936 On 5 May Marshal Pietro Badoglio led Italian troops into Addis Ababa and Mussolini declared Ethiopia an Italian province Victor Emanuel III was proclaimed as the new Emperor of Ethiopia On the previous day the Ethiopian exiles had left French Somaliland aboard the British cruiser HMS Enterprise They were bound for Jerusalem in the British Mandate of Palestine where the Ethiopian imperial family maintained a residence The family disembarked at Haifa and then went on to Jerusalem Once there Haile Selassie and his retinue prepared to make their case at Geneva The choice of Jerusalem was highly symbolic since the Solomonic Dynasty claimed descent from the House of David Leaving the Holy Land Haile Selassie and his entourage sailed aboard the British cruiser HMS Capetown for Gibraltar where he stayed at the Rock Hotel From Gibraltar the exiles were transferred to an ordinary liner By doing this the United Kingdom government was spared the expense of a state reception 113 Collective security and the League of Nations 1936 edit Mussolini invaded Ethiopia and promptly declared his own Italian Empire After the League of Nations afforded Haile Selassie the opportunity to address the assembly Italy withdrew its League delegation on 12 May 1936 114 It was in this context that Haile Selassie walked into the hall of the League of Nations introduced by the President of the Assembly as His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Ethiopia Sa Majeste Imperiale l Empereur d Ethiopie The introduction caused a great many Italian journalists in the galleries to erupt into jeering heckling and whistling As it turned out they had earlier been issued whistles by Mussolini s son in law Count Galeazzo Ciano 115 The Romanian delegate and former League president Nicolae Titulescu famously jumped to his feet in response and cried To the door with the savages and the offending journalists were removed from the hall Haile Selassie waited calmly for the hall to be cleared and responded majestically 116 with a speech considered by some among the most stirring of the 20th century and a possible warning for future generations 117 118 Although fluent in French the League s working language Haile Selassie chose to deliver his historic speech in his native Amharic He asserted that because his confidence in the League was absolute his people were now being slaughtered He pointed out that the same European states that found in Ethiopia s favor at the League of Nations were refusing Ethiopia credit and materiel while aiding Italy which was employing chemical weapons on military and civilian targets alike It was at the time when the operations for the encircling of Makale were taking place that the Italian command fearing a rout followed the procedure that it is now my duty to denounce to the world Special sprayers were installed on board aircraft so that they could vapourise over vast areas of territory a fine death dealing rain Groups of nine fifteen eighteen aircraft followed one another so that the fog issuing from them formed a continuous sheet It was thus that as from the end of January 1936 soldiers women children cattle rivers lakes and pastures were drenched continually with this deadly rain In order to kill off systematically all living creatures in order to more surely poison waters and pastures the Italian command made its aircraft pass over and over again That was its chief method of warfare 119 Noting that his own small people of 12 million inhabitants without arms without resources could never withstand an attack by a large power such as Italy with its 42 million people and unlimited quantities of the most death dealing weapons he contended that the aggression threatened all small states and that all small states were in effect reduced to vassal states in the absence of collective action He admonished the League that God and history will remember your judgment 120 It is collective security it is the very existence of the League of Nations It is the confidence that each State is to place in international treaties In a word it is international morality that is at stake Have the signatures appended to a Treaty value only in so far as the signatory Powers have a personal direct and immediate interest involved At the beginning of 1936 Time had named him Man of the Year for 1935 121 and his June 1936 speech made the emperor an icon for anti fascists around the world He failed however to get what he most needed the League agreed to only partial and ineffective sanctions on Italy Only six nations in 1937 did not recognise Italy s occupation China New Zealand the Soviet Union the Republic of Spain Mexico and the United States 102 It is often said one of the many reasons the League of Nations effectively collapsed was due to its failure to condemn Italy s invasion of Abyssinia 122 Despite this international praise Selassie was left without much needed military equipment Upon his return to Ethiopia it was primarily his military cunning and strategy that led him to defeat Italy For example Ethiopian troops were able to successfully raid Italian weapons stores and used pack animals to carry artillery over rugged terrain in order to position themselves to ambush Italian troops in areas they were not prepared to fight 123 Exile edit nbsp Haile Selassie in 1942Haile Selassie spent his exile years 1936 41 in Bath England in Fairfield House which he bought The emperor and Kassa Haile Darge took morning walks together behind the 14 room Victorian house s high walls Haile Selassie s favorite reading was diplomatic history But most of his serious hours were occupied with the 90 000 word story of his life that he was laboriously writing in Amharic 124 Prior to Fairfield House he briefly stayed at Warne s Hotel in Worthing 125 and in Parkside Wimbledon 126 A bust of Haile Selassie by Hilda Seligman stood in nearby Cannizaro Park to commemorate this time and was a popular place of pilgrimage for London s Rastafari community until it was destroyed by protestors on 30 June 2020 127 Haile Selassie stayed at the Abbey Hotel in Malvern in the 1930s and his granddaughters and daughters of court officials were educated at Clarendon School for Girls in North Malvern During his time in Malvern he attended services at Holy Trinity Church in Link Top A blue plaque commemorating his stay in Malvern was unveiled on Saturday 25 June 2011 As part of the ceremony a delegation from the Rastafari movement gave a short address and a drum recital 128 129 130 Haile Selassie s activity in this period was focused on countering Italian propaganda as to the state of Ethiopian resistance and the legality of the occupation 131 He spoke out against the desecration of houses of worship and historical artifacts including the theft of a 1 600 year old imperial obelisk and condemned the atrocities suffered by the Ethiopian civilian population 132 He continued to plead for League intervention and to voice his certainty that God s judgment will eventually visit the weak and the mighty alike 133 though his attempts to gain support for the struggle against Italy were largely unsuccessful until Italy entered World War II on the German side in June 1940 134 The emperor s pleas for international support did take root in the United States particularly among African American organisations sympathetic to the Ethiopian cause 135 In 1937 Haile Selassie was to give a Christmas Day radio address to the American people to thank his supporters when his taxi was involved in a traffic accident leaving him with a fractured knee 136 Rather than canceling the radio broadcast he delivered the address in which he linked Christianity and goodwill with the Covenant of the League of Nations and asserted that War is not the only means to stop war 136 With the birth of the Son of God an unprecedented an unrepeatable and a long anticipated phenomenon occurred He was born in a stable instead of a palace in a manger instead of a crib The hearts of the Wise men were struck by fear and wonder due to His Majestic Humbleness The kings prostrated themselves before Him and worshipped Him Peace be to those who have good will This became the first message Although the toils of wise people may earn them respect it is a fact of life that the spirit of the wicked continues to cast its shadow on this world The arrogant are seen visibly leading their people into crime and destruction The laws of the League of Nations are constantly violated and wars and acts of aggression repeatedly take place So that the spirit of the cursed will not gain predominance over the human race whom Christ redeemed with his blood all peace loving people should cooperate to stand firm in order to preserve and promote lawfulness and peace 136 During this period Haile Selassie suffered several personal tragedies His two sons in law Ras Desta Damtew and Dejazmach Beyene Merid were both executed by the Italians 133 The emperor s daughter Princess Romanework wife of Dejazmach Beyene Merid was herself taken into captivity with her children and she died in Italy in 1941 137 His daughter Tsehai died during childbirth shortly after the restoration in 1942 138 After his return to Ethiopia he donated Fairfield House to the city of Bath as a residence for the aged 139 In 2019 two further blue plaques commemorating his residence at Fairfield and his visits to nearby Weston super Mare were unveiled by his grandson 140 1940s and 1950s edit nbsp Meeting with Crown Prince Akihito and his wife Princess Michiko in 1955 nbsp Haile Selassie with Brigadier Daniel Sandford left and Colonel Wingate right in Dambacha Fort after its capture 15 April 1941British forces which consisted primarily of Ethiopian backed African and South African colonial troops under the Gideon Force of Colonel Orde Wingate coordinated the military effort to liberate Ethiopia The emperor himself issued several imperial proclamations in this period demonstrating that while authority was not divided up in any formal way British military might and the emperor s populist appeal could be joined in the concerted effort to liberate Ethiopia 134 On 18 January 1941 during the East African Campaign Haile Selassie crossed the border between Sudan and Ethiopia near the village of Um Iddla The standard of the Lion of Judah was raised again Two days later he and a force of Ethiopian patriots joined Gideon Force which was already in Ethiopia and preparing the way 141 Italy was defeated by a force of the United Kingdom the Commonwealth of Nations Free France Free Belgium and Ethiopian patriots On 5 May 1941 Haile Selassie entered Addis Ababa and personally addressed the Ethiopian people exactly five years after the fascist forces entered Addis Ababa Today is the day on which we defeated our enemy Therefore when we say let us rejoice with our hearts let not our rejoicing be in any other way but in the spirit of Christ Do not return evil for evil Do not indulge in the atrocities that the enemy has been practicing in his usual way even to the last Take care not to spoil the good name of Ethiopia by acts that are worthy of the enemy We shall see that our enemies are disarmed and sent out the same way they came As Saint George who killed the dragon is the Patron Saint of our army as well as of our allies let us unite with our allies in everlasting friendship and amity in order to be able to stand against the godless and cruel dragon that has newly risen and that is oppressing hu mankind 142 On 27 August 1942 Haile Selassie confirmed the legal basis for the abolition of slavery that had been enacted by Italy throughout the empire and imposed severe penalties including death for slave trading 143 After World War II Ethiopia became a charter member of the United Nations In 1948 the Ogaden a region disputed with both Italian Somaliland and British Somaliland was granted to Ethiopia 144 On 2 December 1950 the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 390 V establishing the federation of Eritrea the former Italian colony into Ethiopia 145 nbsp Queen Elizabeth II with Emperor Haile Selassie heading towards to Buckingham Palace in 1954 Eritrea was to have its own constitution which would provide for ethnic linguistic and cultural balance while Ethiopia was to manage its finances defense and foreign policy 145 Despite his centralisation policies that had been made before World War II Haile Selassie still found himself unable to push for all the programmes he wanted In 1942 he attempted to institute a progressive tax scheme but this failed due to opposition from the nobility and only a flat tax was passed in 1951 he agreed to reduce this as well 146 Ethiopia was still semi feudal 147 and the emperor s attempts to alter its social and economic form by reforming its modes of taxation met with resistance from the nobility and clergy which were eager to resume their privileges in the post war era 146 Where Haile Selassie actually did succeed in effecting new land taxes the burdens were often still passed by the landowners to the peasants 146 nbsp Haile Selassie I with U S President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on board the USS Quincy CA 71 in Egypt after the Yalta Conference on February 13 1945 source source source Selassie with Sir Winston Churchill Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Downing Street on October 22 1954 Between 1941 and 1959 Haile Selassie worked to establish the autocephaly of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church 148 The Ethiopian Orthodox Church had been headed by the Abuna a bishop who answered to the Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria In 1942 and 1945 Haile Selassie applied to the Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church to establish the independence of Ethiopian bishops and when his appeals were denied he threatened to sever relations with the Coptic Church of Alexandria 148 Finally in 1959 Pope Kyrillos VI elevated the Abuna to Patriarch Catholicos 148 The Ethiopian Church remained affiliated with the Alexandrian Church 146 In addition to these efforts Haile Selassie changed the Ethiopian church state relationship by introducing taxation of church lands and by restricting the legal privileges of the clergy who had formerly been tried in their own courts for civil offenses 146 In 1948 the Harari Muslims of Harar with Somali allies staged a significant rebellion against the empire the state responded violently Hundreds were arrested and the entire town of Harar was put underhouse arrest 149 The government also took control of many assets and estates belonging to the people 150 151 This led to a massive exodus of Hararis from the Harari Region which had not occurred in their history prior 15 152 The dissatisfaction of the Harari stemmed from the fact that they had never received limited autonomy of Harar which was promised by Menelik II after his conquest of the kingdom The promise was eroded by successive Amhara governors 153 According to historians Tim Carmicheal and Roman Loimeier Haile Selassie was directly involved in the suppression of the Harari movement that formed as a response to the crackdown on Hararis who collaborated with the Italians during their occupation of Ethiopia from 1935 to 1941 154 155 Nearly two decades ago I personally assumed before history the responsibility of placing the fate of my beloved people on the issue of collective security for surely at that time and for the first time in world history that issue was posed in all its clarity My searching of conscience convinced me of the rightness of my course and if after untold sufferings and indeed unaided resistance at the time of aggression we now see the final vindication of that principle in our joint action in Korea I can only be thankful that God gave me strength to persist in our faith until the moment of its recent glorious vindication Haile Selassie I 156 In keeping with the principle of collective security for which he was an outspoken proponent Haile Selassie sent a contingent underGeneral Mulugueta Bulli known as the Kagnew Battalion to take part in the Korean War by supporting the United Nations Command It was attached to the American 7th Infantry Division and fought in a number of engagements including the Battle of Pork Chop Hill 157 In a 1954 speech Haile Selassie spoke of Ethiopian participation in the Korean War as a redemption of the principles of collective security During the celebrations of his Silver Jubilee in November 1955 Haile Selassie introduced a revised constitution 158 whereby he retained effective power while extending political participation to the people by allowing the lower house of parliament to become an elected body Party politics were not provided for Modern educational methods were more widely spread throughout the nbsp Portrait by Edward Copnall in 1954 Selassie was awarded the Order of the GarterEmpire The country embarked on a development scheme and plans for modernisation tempered by Ethiopian traditions and within the framework of the state s ancient monarchical structure Haile Selassie compromised when practical with the traditionalists in the nobility and church He also tried to improve relations between the state and ethnic groups and granted autonomy to Afar lands that were difficult to control Still his reforms to end feudalism were slow and weakened by the compromises he made with the entrenched aristocracy The Revised Constitution of 1955 has been criticised for reasserting the indisputable power of the monarch and maintaining the relative powerlessness of the peasants 159 nbsp Haile Selassie photographed with Nikita Khrushchev General Secretary of the Soviet Union at Moscow in 1959Haile Selassie also maintained cordial relations with the government of the United Kingdom through charitable gestures He sent aid to the British government in 1947 when Britain was affected by heavy flooding His letter to Lord Meork National Distress Fund London said even though We are busy of helping our people who didn t recover from the crises of the war We heard that your fertile and beautiful country is devastated by the unusually heavy rain and your request for aid Therefore We are sending small amount of money about one thousand pounds through our embassy to show our sympathy and cooperation 160 He also left his home in exile Fairfield House Bath to the City of Bath for the use of the aged in 1959 1958 famine of Tigray edit In the summer of 1958 a widespread famine in the Tigray province of northern Ethiopia was already two years old yet people in Addis Ababa knew hardly anything about it When significant reports of death finally reached the Ministry of Interior in September 1959 the central government immediately disclosed the information to the public and began asking for contributions The Emperor personally donated 2 000 tons of relief grain the U S sent 32 000 tons which was distributed between Eritrea and Tigray and money for aid was raised throughout the country but it is estimated that approximately 100 000 people had died before the crisis ended in August 1961 The causes of the famine were attributed to drought locusts hailstone and epidemics of small pox typhus measles and malaria 161 162 163 1960s edit Haile Selassie contributed Ethiopian troops to the United Nations Operation in the source source source source source source source source source source Video of Haile Selassie I 1968 United Nations speech Congo peacekeeping force during the 1960 Congo Crisis to preserve Congolese integrity per United Nations Security Council Resolution 143 On 13 December 1960 while Haile Selassie was on a state visit to Brazil his Kebur Zabagna Imperial Guard forces staged an unsuccessful coup briefly proclaiming Haile Selassie s eldest son Asfa Wossen as emperor The regular army and police forces crushed the coup d etat The coup attempt lacked broad popular support was denounced by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and was unpopular with the army air force and police Nonetheless the effort to depose the emperor had support among students and the educated classes 164 The coup attempt has been characterised as a pivotal moment in Ethiopian history the point at which Ethiopians for the first time questioned the power of the king to rule without the people s consent 165 Student populations began to empathise with the peasantry and poor and advocate on their behalf 165 The coup spurred HaileSelassie to accelerate reform which was manifested in the form of land grants to military and police officials nbsp nbsp Haile Selassie with U S President John F Kennedy October 1963 The emperor continued to be a staunch ally of the West while pursuing a firm policy of decolonisation in Africa which was still largely under European colonial rule The United Nations conducted a lengthy inquiry regarding Eritrea s status with the superpowers each vying for a stake in the state s future Britain the administrator at the time suggested Eritrea s partition between Sudan and Ethiopia separating Christians and Muslims The idea was instantly rejected by Eritrean political parties as well as the UN 166 A UN plebiscite voted 46 to 10 to have Eritrea be federated with Ethiopia which was later stipulated on 2 December 1950 in resolution 390 V Eritrea would have its own parliament and administration and would be represented in what had been the Ethiopian parliament and would become the federal parliament 167 Haile Selassie would have none of the European attempts to draft a separate Constitution under which Eritrea would be governed and wanted his own 1955 Constitution protecting families to apply in both Ethiopia and Eritrea In 1961 the 30 year Eritrean Struggle for Independence began followed by the dissolution of the federation and shutting down of Eritrea s parliament nbsp Haile Selassie with President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt in Addis Abeba for the Organisation of African Unity summit 1963 In September 1961 Haile Selassie attended the Conference of Heads of State of Government of Non Aligned Countries in Belgrade FPR Yugoslavia This is considered to be the founding conference of the Non Aligned Movement In 1961 tensions between independence minded Eritreans and Ethiopian forces culminated in the Eritrean War of Independence Eritrea s elected parliament voted to become the fourteenth province of Ethiopia in 1962 168 169 The war would continue for 30 years first Haile Selassie then the Soviet backed junta that succeeded him attempted to retain Eritrea by force nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Haile Selassie s address to the United Nations 1963 In 1963 Haile Selassie presided over the formation of the Organisation of African Unity OAU the precursor of the continent wide African Union AU The new organisation would establish its headquarters in Addis Ababa In May of that year Haile Selassie was elected as the OAU s first official chairperson a rotating seat Along with Modibo Keita of Mali the Ethiopian leader would later help successfully negotiate the Bamako Accords which brought an end to the border conflict between Morocco and Algeria In 1964 Haile Selassie would initiate the concept of the United States of Africa a proposition later taken up by Muammar Gaddafi 170 Also in 1963 Selassie was allegedly helped by Prince Philip the Duke of Edinburgh to put his grandson in the elite Gordonstoun school by pulling the strings 171 On 4 October 1963 Haile Selassie addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations 172 173 referring in his address to his earlier speech to the League of Nations Twenty seven years ago as Emperor of Ethiopia I mounted the rostrum in Geneva Switzerland to address the League of Nations and to appeal for relief from the destruction that had been unleashed against my defenseless nation by the fascist invader I spoke then both to and for the conscience of the world My words went unheeded but history testifies to the accuracy of the warning that I gave in 1936 Today I stand before the world organisation that has succeeded to the mantle discarded by its discredited predecessor In this body is enshrined the principle of collective security that I unsuccessfully invoked at Geneva Here in this Assembly reposes the best perhaps the last hope for the peaceful survival of hu mankind Haile Selassie I 174 nbsp Haile Selassie I in the state funeral of U S President John F Kennedy on November 25 1963On 25 November 1963 the emperor was among other heads of state including France s President Charles deGaulle and Belgium s King Baudouin who traveled to Washington D C and attended the funeral of assassinated President John F Kennedy Haile Selassie was the only African head of state to attend the funeral 175 In addition he was also the only one of the threeprominent world leaders De Gaulle Baudouin and Selassie that would have another meeting with the new president Lyndon B Johnson in Washington during his presidency the two would meet on Johnson s first day in the Oval Office of the White House and again during an informal visit to the United States in 1967 176 177 178 In 1966 Haile Selassie attempted to replace the historical tax system with a single progressive income tax which would significantly weaken the nobility who had previously avoided paying most of their taxes 179 Even with alterations this law led to a revolt in Gojjam which was repressed although enforcement of the tax was abandoned Having achieved its design in undermining the tax the revolt encouraged other landowners to defy Haile Selassie In October of the same year Haile Selassie had a 4 day visit to the Kingdom of Jordan hosted by King Hussein II During this trip Haile nbsp Selassie with Queen Elizabeth II in Addis Ababa on her 1965 state visit to EthiopiaSelassie visited Jerusalem and the Church of The Holy Sepulchre where Jesus is believed to have been crucified and buried 180 While he had fully approved and assured Ethiopia s participation in UN approved collective security operations including Korea and Congo Haile Selassie drew a distinction between it and the non UN approved foreign intervention in Indochina consistently deploring it as needless suffering and calling for the Vietnam War to end on several occasions At the same time he remained open toward the United States and commended it for making progress with African Americans Civil Rights legislation in the 1950s and 1960s while visiting the US several times during these years In 1967 he visited Montreal Canada to open the Ethiopian Pavilion at the Expo 67 World s Fair where he received great acclaim among other World leaders there for the occasion nbsp Selassie with U S President Richard Nixon in July 1969 at the White House Student unrest became a regular feature of Ethiopian life in the 1960s and 1970s Communism took root in large segments of the Ethiopian intelligentsia particularly among those who had studied abroad and had thus been exposed to radical and left wing sentiments that were becoming popular in other parts of the globe 164 Resistance by conservative elements at the Imperial Court and Parliament and by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church made Haile Selassie s land reform proposals difficult to implement and also damaged the standing of the government costing Haile Selassie much of the goodwill he had once enjoyed This bred resentment among the peasant population Efforts to weaken unions also hurt his image 181 182 As these issues began to pile up Haile Selassie left much of domestic governance to his Prime Minister Aklilu Habte Wold and concentrated more on foreign affairs 1970s edit nbsp Haile Selassie I in Beijing China with Chinese leader and Chairman of the CCP Mao Zedong in 1971 Selassie also met Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai in his state visit Outside of Ethiopia Haile Selassie continued to enjoy enormous prestige and respect As the longest serving head of state in power he was often given precedence over other leaders at state events such as the state funerals of John F Kennedy and Charles de Gaulle the summits of the Non Aligned Movement and the 1971 celebration of the 2 500 years of the Persian Empire 183 184 In 1970 he visited Italy as a guest of President Giuseppe Saragat and in Milan he met Giordano Dell Amore President of Italian Savings Banks Association He visited China in October 1971 and was the first foreign head of state to meet Mao Zedong following the death of Mao s designated successor Lin Biao in a plane crash in Mongolia 185 186 Civil liberties and political rights were low with Freedom House giving Ethiopia a Not Free score for both civil liberties and political rights in the last years of Haile Selassie s rule 187 Although some sources state that common human rights abuses included imprisonment and torture of political dissidents and very poor prison conditions 16 the Emperor was known for pardoning hundreds of prisoners at a time and there were no nbsp Selassie with Pope Paul VI at the Holy See in November 10 1970more than ten political prisoners during his entire reign 188 The Imperial Ethiopian Army also carried out a number of atrocities while fighting the Eritrean separatists This was due to frustrated soldiers some of them ethnically Eritrean who broke ranks with the military disobeyed laws and began illegally destroying Eritrean villages that supported the rebels 189 There were a number of mass killings of hundreds of civilians during the war in the late 1960s and early 1970s 190 191 192 193 He also went to Vatican City to meet Pope Paul VI on 1970 where they discussed issues regarding both their countries and history 194 An investigation into the atrocities was started by Haile Selassie s administration and some officials were arrested However six days after the investigation began the government collapsed when the Emperor was deposed on 12 September 1974 189 Wollo famine edit nbsp source source Selassie s speech regarding Human Rights on October 23 1970 which marked the 25th anniversary for the United Nations founding Main article 1958 1975 Wollo Tigray famine Famine mostly in Wollo north eastern Ethiopia as well as in some parts of Tigray is estimated to have killed 40 000 to 80 000Ethiopians 13 195 between 1972 and 1974 A BBC News report 196 has cited a 1973 estimate that200 000 deaths occurred based on a contemporaneous estimate from the Ethiopian Nutrition Institute While this figure is still repeated in some texts and media sources it was an estimate that was later found to be over pessimistic 198 Although the region is infamous for recurrent crop failures and continuous food shortage and starvation risk this episode was remarkably severe A 1973 production of the ITV programme The Unknown Famine by Jonathan Dimbleby 199 200 relied on the unverified estimate of 200 000 dead 196 201 stimulating a massive influx of aid while at the sametime destabilising Haile Selassie s regime 195 Against that background a group of dissident army officers instigated a creeping coup against the emperor s faltering regime To guard against a public backlash in favour of Haile Selassie who was still widely revered they contrived to obtain a copy of The Unknown Famine that they intercut with images of Africa s grand old man presiding at a wedding feast in the grounds of his palace Retitled The Hidden Hunger this film noir was shown around the clock on Ethiopian television to coincide with the day that they finally summoned the nerve to seize the emperor himself Jonathan Dimbleby Feeding on Ethiopia s famine 202 Some reports suggest that the emperor was unaware of the famine s extent 189 196 while others assert that he was well aware of it 203 204 In addition to the exposure of attempts by corrupt local officials to cover up the famine from the imperial government the Kremlin s depiction of Haile Selassie s Ethiopia as backwards and inept relative to the purported utopia of Marxism Leninism contributed to the popular uprising that led to its downfall and the rise of Mengistu Haile Mariam 205 The famine and its image in the media undermined the government s popular support and Haile Selassie s once unassailable personal popularity fell 206 The crisis was exacerbated by military mutinies and high oil prices the latter a result of the 1973 oil crisis The international economic crisis triggered by the oil crisis caused the costs of imported goods gasoline and food to skyrocket while unemployment spiked 159 Revolution edit Main article Ethiopian Revolution In February 1974 four days of serious riots in Addis Ababa against a sudden economic inflation left five dead The emperor responded by announcing on national television a reduction in petrol prices and a freeze on the cost of basic commodities This calmed the public but the promised 33 military wage hike was not substantial enough to pacify the army which then mutinied beginning in Asmara and spreading throughout the empire This mutiny led to the resignation of Prime Minister Aklilu Habte Wold on 27 February 1974 207 Haile Selassie again went on television to agree to the army s demands for still greater pay and named Endelkachew Makonnen as his new Prime Minister 208 209 Despite Endalkatchew s many concessions discontent continued in March with a four day general strike that paralyzed the nation 210 Imprisonment edit Main article 1974 Ethiopian coup d etat nbsp Much of the Royal Family seen behind fled the country were imprisoned or executed Emperor Haile Selassie was overthrown on 12 September 1974 when the Derg took power through a coup d etatThe Derg a committee of low ranking military officers and enlisted men set up in June to investigate the military s demands took advantage of the government s disarray to depose the 82 year old Haile Selassie on 12 September 211 General Aman Mikael Andom a Protestant of Eritrean origin 207 served briefly as provisional head of state pending the return of Crown Prince Asfa Wossen who was then receiving medical treatment abroad Haile Selassie was placed under house arrest briefly at the 4th Army Division in Addis Ababa 207 At the same time most of his family was detained at the late Duke of Harar s residence in the north of the capital The last months of the emperor s life were spent in imprisonment in the Grand Palace 212 Later most of the imperial family was imprisoned in the Addis Ababa prison Kerchele also known as Alem Bekagne or I ve had Enough of This World On 23 November 60 former high officials of the imperial government were executed by firing squad without trial 213 which included Haile Selassie s grandson Iskinder Desta a rear admiral as well as General Andom and two former prime ministers 212 214 These killings known to Ethiopians as Black Saturday were condemned by Crown Prince Asfa Wossen the Derg responded to his rebuke by revoking its acknowledgment of his imperial legitimacy and announcing the end of the Solomonic dynasty 213 Death and interment edit nbsp The tombs of Haile Selassie and his wife Menen Asfaw inside the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis AbabaOn 28 August 1975 state media reported that Haile Selassie had died on 27 August of respiratory failure following complications from a prostate examination followed up by a prostate operation 215 Dr Asrat Woldeyes denied that complications had occurred and rejected the government version of his death The prostate operation in question apparently had taken place months before the state media claimed and Haile Selassie had apparently enjoyed strong health in his last days 216 In 1994 an Ethiopian court found several former military officers guilty of strangling the emperor in his bed in 1975 Three years after the military socialist Derg regime was overthrown 217 the court charged them with genocide and murder claiming that it had obtained documents attesting to a high level order from the military regime to assassinate Haile Selassie for leading a feudal regime 9 Documents have been widely circulated online showing the Derg s final assassination order and bearing the military regime s seal and signature 218 219 The veracity of these documents has been corroborated by multiple former members of the military Derg regime 220 221 The Soviet backed People s Democratic Republic of Ethiopia the Derg s successor fell in 1991 In 1992 Haile Selassie s bones were found under a concrete slab on the palace grounds 222 Haile Selassie s coffin rested in Bhata Church for nearly a decade near his great uncle Menelik II s resting place 223 On 5 November 2000 the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa gave him a funeral but the government refused calls to declare the ceremony an official imperial funeral 223 Prominent Rastafari figures such as Rita Marley participated in the funeral but most Rastafari rejected the event and refused to accept that the bones were Haile Selassie s remains There is some debate within the Rastafari movement whether he actually died in 1975 224 Rastafari messiah edit Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her hands unto God Psalm 68 31 Today Haile Selassie is worshipped as God incarnate 225 among some followers of the Rastafari movement taken from Haile Selassie s pre imperial name Ras meaning Head a title looking equivalent to Duke Tafari Makonnen which emerged in Jamaica during the 1930s under the influence of Leonard Howell a follower of Marcus Garvey s African Redemption movement He is viewed as the messiah who will lead the peoples of Africa and the African diaspora to freedom 226 His official titles are Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah and King of Kings of Ethiopia Lord of Lords and Elect of God and his traditional lineage is thought to be from Solomon and Sheba 227 These notions are perceived by Rastafari as confirmation of the return of the messiah in the prophetic Book of Revelation in the New Testament King of Kings Lord of Lords Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah and Root of David Rastafari faith in the incarnate divinity of Haile Selassie 228 began after news reports of his coronation reached Jamaica 229 particularly via the two Time magazine articles on the coronation the week before and the week after the event Haile Selassie s own perspectives permeate the philosophy of the movement 229 230 In 1961 the Jamaican government sent a delegation composed of both Rastafari and non Rastafari leaders to Ethiopia to discuss the matter of repatriation among other issues with the emperor He reportedly told the Rastafari delegation which included Mortimer Planno Tell the Brethren to be not dismayed I personally will give my assistance in the matter of repatriation 231 Haile Selassie visited Jamaica on 21 April 1966 and approximately one hundred thousand Rastafari from all over Jamaica descended on Palisadoes Airport in Kingston to greet him 229 Spliffs 232 and chalices 233 were openly 234 smoked causing a haze of ganja smoke to drift through the air 235 236 237 Haile Selassie arrived at the airport but was unable to come down the airplane s mobile steps as the crowd rushed the tarmac He then returned into the plane disappearing for several more minutes Finally Jamaican authorities were obliged to request Ras Mortimer Planno a well known Rasta leader to climb the steps enter the plane and negotiate the emperor s descent 238 Planno re emerged and announced to the crowd The Emperor has instructed me to tell you to be calm Step back and let the Emperor land 239 This day is widely held by scholars to be a major turning point for the movement 240 241 242 and it is still commemorated by Rastafari as Grounation Day the anniversary of which is celebrated as the second holiest holiday after 2 November the emperor s Coronation Day From then on as a result of Planno s actions the Jamaican authorities were asked to ensure that Rastafari representatives were present at all state functions attended by the emperor 241 242 and Rastafari elders also ensured that they obtained a private audience with the emperor 241 where he reportedly told them that they should not emigrate to Ethiopia until they had first liberated the people of Jamaica This dictum came to be known as liberation before repatriation Haile Selassie defied expectations of the Jamaican authorities 243 and never rebuked the Rastafari for their belief in him as God Instead he presented the movement s faithful elders with gold medallions the only recipients of such an honor on this visit 244 245 During PNP leader later Jamaican Prime Minister Michael Manley s visit to Ethiopia in October 1969 the emperor allegedly still recalled his 1966 reception with amazement and stated that he felt that he had to be respectful of their beliefs 246 This was the visit when Manley received the Rod of Correction or Rod of Joshua as a present from the emperor which is thought to have helped him to win the 1972 election in Jamaica 247 248 Rita Marley Bob Marley s wife converted to the Rastafari faith after seeing Haile Selassie on his Jamaican trip She claimed in interviews and in her book No Woman No Cry that she saw a stigmata print on the palm of Haile Selassie s hand as he waved to the crowd which resembled the markings on Christ s hands from being nailed to the cross a claim that was not supported by other sources but was used as evidence for her and other Rastafari to suggest that Haile Selassie I was indeed their messiah 249 Rastafari became much better known throughout much of the world due to the popularity of Bob Marley 250 Bob Marley s posthumously released song Iron Lion Zion refers toHaile Selassie Haile Selassie s position edit Emperor Haile Selassie I at Jamaica on an official state visit in 1966 nbsp Emperor Haile Selassie I at Jamaica on an official state visit in 1966Selassie visited Canada on 1967 for an official state visit CBC news interviewed the Emperor and asked him a variety of questions including his position on Rastafarianism source source audio only version Problems playing these files See media help In a 1967 recorded interview with the CBC Haile Selassie denied his alleged divinity In the interview Bill McNeil says there are millions ofChristians throughout the world your Imperial Majesty who regard you as the reincarnation of Jesus Christ Haile Selassie replied in his native language I have heard of that idea I also met certain Rastafarians I told them clearly that I am a man that I am mortal and that I will be replaced by the oncoming generation and that they should never make a mistake in assuming or pretending that a human being is emanated from a deity 251 For many Rastafari the CBC interview is not interpreted as a denial of his divinity According to Robert Earl Hood Haile Selassie neither denied nor affirmed his divinity either way 252 In Reggae Routes The Story of Jamaican Music Kevin Chang and Wayne Chen note It s often said though no definite date or source is ever cited that Haile Selassie himself denied his divinity Former senator and Gleaner editor Hector Wynter tells of asking him during his visit to Jamaica in 1966 when he was going to tell Rastafarians he was not God Who am I to disturb their belief replied the emperor 243 253 After his return to Ethiopia he dispatched Archbishop Abuna Yesehaq Mandefro to the Caribbean and according to Yesehaq this was done to help draw Rastafari and other West Indians to the Ethiopian church 254 255 However some sources suggest that certain islanders and their leaders were resenting the services of their former colonial churches and vocalised their interest of establishing the Ethiopian church in the Caribbean to which the Emperor obliged 256 In 1969 Michael Manley visited the Emperor at his palace in Addis Ababa before his election as Prime Minister of Jamaica in 1972 Haile Selassie spoke about his visit to Jamaica in 1966 and told Manley that he was totally dumbfounded by the Rastafarians beliefs but that he had to be respectful of them 257 In 1948 Haile Selassie donated 500 hectares of land at Shashamane 250 kilometres 160 mi south of Addis Ababa to the Ethiopian World Federation Incorporated for the use of people of African descent who supported Ethiopia during the war particularly those from the West 258 Numerous Rastafari families settled there and still live as a community to this day 259 Haile Selassie granted Rastafarians land on traditional Oromo domain hence today the Rastas are viewed by the locals as invaders 260 261 262 Legacy editPublic opinion and media depiction edit nbsp Haile Selassie I visiting a children s hospital in 1969During the beginning of his reign and primarily in the 1930s through 1940s when Fascist Italy invaded Ethiopia media coverage of Haile Selassie was positive describing him as a hero against fascist forces He was seen as an African beacon of hope and a friend and a part of the allies in World War II 263 He was even featured as a Time Man of the Year in 1935 amidst the invasion 264 British Pathe reported that Haile Selassie s return was As an Emperor returns and triumphs to his people 265 During one of his rare interviews with Meet the Press in a 1963 State visit during the period of the Civil Rights movement in the U S he rebuked the notation of skin or race based oppression of peoples and pushed a Pan African narrative 266 267 Later NBC News was seen ridiculing the state visit months later The New York Times provided counterpoints saying what civilized purpose is served by making a point of the fact months later to the probable embarrassment of the Ethiopian diplomatic representatives in this country It also said NBC News cannot afford to be a handmaiden of the State Department 268 269 nbsp Official portrait of Selassie by Moneta Sleet Jr during a U S state visit in 1963During the 1950s when the Silver Jubilee of the Emperor s reign was celebrated he adopted the 1955 Constitution which legally gave more democratic rights to the public and legally restricted the Monarch s power Since World War II ended it played a major role towards the new administration he limited and weakened the Orthodox Church s power He was widely viewed as a modern and good leader in Ethiopia during the 1950s 270 271 Nonetheless subsequently in the 1970s due to economic turmoil and a famine Selassie s reputation suffered Mass protests involving intellectuals and the common people occurred It was widely believed that due to his old age and failed land reform policy implementation he should abdicate which ultimately led to Selassie s removal from power 272 273 Although Haile Selassie s image and legacy has differed views he is notably thought of as a moderniser as one of the leading persons founding Haile Selassie University and the Organisation of African Unity which later turned into the Africa Union and an anti colonial movement leader 274 275 276 In 2016 the Canadian Ethiopian singer The Weeknd tweeted with the image of Selassie in his full uniform anbessa amharic for lion which can be interpreted to a courageous leader 277 In 2021 a documentary by Selassie s granddaughter was released showcasing the life of the Ethiopian royal family 278 279 The documentary titled Grandpa Was An Emperor has a 100 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes 280 He has been depicted by photographers portraits and sculptors such as Edward Copnall Beulah Woodard Jacob Epstein William H Johnson and Yevonde Middleton 281 282 283 284 285 Memorials editIn recent years multiple memorials were built and unveiled for Selassie Mainly in Ethiopia and one in Jamaica One of these memorials is in the African Union s Headquarters in Addis Ababa unveiled in 2019 the other memorial in Addis Ababa is that of a wax statue in Unity Park 286 287 288 Selassie s memorial in the African Union was due to his long efforts of Pan Africanism and anti colonial efforts during his rule Nonetheless the statue caused some concern between groups which howbeit was ultimately ignored and futile in effort 289 290 Another memorial although not a statue is a marker for a Kingston High School not only a memorial but the school being named Haile Selassie High School Other memorials exist although being very hold such as in Addis Ababa where the Emperor is seen teaching 12 children roundabout 291 292 In 2020 a bust statue which was built in 1957 was destroyed by protestors allegedly claiming Haile Selassie s rule and legacy played a part with Ethiopian singer Hachalu Hundessa assassination 293 294 295 Selassie also has a road being one of the three major express ways in Nairobi being named after him 296 297 nbsp Haile Selassie I s statue located at the AU Conference HQ Addis Ababa nbsp Wax figurine statue of the Emperor in Unity Park Addis Ababa nbsp Former standing statue of the Emperor in Wimbledon England nbsp A plaster figure of Selassie by Jacob Epstein in 1936 The New Art Gallery Walsall EnglandTitles styles arms honours editStyles of Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia nbsp Reference styleHis Imperial MajestyAmharic ግርማዊ girmawiSpoken styleYour Imperial MajestyAmharic ጃንሆይ djanhoilit O esteemed royal Alternative styleOur Lord familiar Amharic ጌቶቹ getochulit Our master pl Main article List of titles and honours of Haile Selassie 23 July 1892 1 November 1905 Lij Tafari Makonnen 29 298 1 November 1905 11 February 1917 Dejazmach Tafari Makonnen 29 34 11 February 1917 7 October 1928 Le ul Ras Tafari Makonnen 33 37 299 7 October 1928 2 November 1930 Negus Tafari Makonnen 300 2 November 1930 12 September 1974 His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie I King of Kings Lord of Lords Elect of God 34 37 39 45 301 46 National orders edit nbsp Chief Commander of the Order of the Star of Ethiopia 1909 302 nbsp Grand Collar of the Order of Solomon 1930 303 304 nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of the Seal of Solomon 305 306 nbsp Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of the Queen of Sheba 307 nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of the Holy Trinity 308 nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of Menelik II 309 nbsp Order of Fidelity 310 Coat of arms edit nbsp Coat of arms in Spain under the order of Charles III of Spain nbsp Coat of arms as Emperor in the United Kingdom under the Order of Garter nbsp Coat of arms as Emperor under the Order of Seraphim Banner edit nbsp The Flag of the Lion of Judah served as the banner of Haile Selassie I s government as a State flagAs sovereign edit nbsp Imperial Royal Standard for Haile Selassie I obverse nbsp Imperial Royal Standard for Haile Selassie I reverseMilitary ranks editHaile Selassie held the following ranks Field Marshal Imperial Ethiopian Army 311 312 Admiral of the Fleet Imperial Ethiopian Navy 312 Marshal of the Imperial Ethiopian Air Force 312 Honorary Field Marshal British Army 20 January 1965 313 314 315 Issue editName Birth Death NotesPrincess Romanework 1909 14 October 1940 Married Dejazmatch Beyene Merid in the late 1920s died in 1937 Had four issues Lij Getachew Beyene Dejazmatch Merid Beyene Dejazmatch Samson Beyene and Lij Gideon BeyenePrincess Tenagnework 12 January 1912 6 April 2003 Married 1924 to 1937 death Ras Desta Damtew 6 Issues including Lij Amha Desta Rear Admiral Iskinder Desta Princess Aida Desta Princess Seble Desta Princess Sophia Desta Princess Hirut Desta Married again with Andargachew Messai till 1981 death had 2 Issues Emebet Tsige Mariam Abebe Emebet Mentewab AndargatchewCrown Prince Amha Selassie 27 July 1916 17 January 1997 Married Wolete Israel Seyoum in 1931 had 1 issue from Amha Selassie being Princess Ijigayehu Amha Selassie Amha divorced and married Medferiashwork Abebe in 1945 and had 4 Issues from her being Princess Maryam Senna Princess Sehin Azebe Crown Prince Zera Yacob Amha Selassie and Princess Sifrash BizuPrincess Zenebework 25 July 1917 24 March 1934 Married Dejazmach Haile Selassie Gugsa had no IssuesPrincess Tsehai 13 October 1919 17 August 1942 Married in 1941 Lij Abiye Abebe had one daughter died in miscarriage Prince Makonnen Duke of Harar 16 October 1924 13 May 1957 Married Sara Gizaw died 1957 they had five Issues including Prince Paul Wossen Seged Duke of Harar Prince Mikael Prince Dawit Prince Taffari Prince Beede MariamHis Imperial Highness Prince Sahle Selassie Haile Selassie 27 February 1932 24 April 1962 Married Princess Mahisente Habte Mariam had one issue Prince Ermias Sahle SelassieAncestry editAncestors of Haile Selassie8 Dejazmach Wolde Malakot Yamana Krestos4 DejazmachWolde Mikael Gudessa9 Woizero Kalama Worq2 Ras Makonnen Walda Mika el Guddisa10 Negus King Sahle Selassie5 ImmabetTenagnework Sahle Selassie11 Woizero Yimegnushal Ayele1 Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia6 Dejazmach Ali Abba Jifar of Woreilu3 Woizero Yeshimebet Ali Abba Jifar14 Ato Yimeru of Gurage7 Immabet Hoy Walatta Ihata Giyorgis Yimeru15 Woizero Araza AregaiSee also editBlack Lions List of people who have been considered deities List of unsolved deaths Ethiopian Empire Ethiopian MonarchsNotes edit In exile from 2 May 1936 20 January 1941 1 Translates to Power of the Trinity 2 Ge ez ግርማዊ ቀዳማዊ አፄ ኃይለ ሥላሴ ሞዓ አንበሳ ዘእምነገደ ይሁዳ ንጉሠ ነገሥት ዘኢትዮጵያ ሰዩመ እግዚአብሔር girmawi ḳedamawi aṣe ḫayle sillase mō a anbessa ze imneggede yihuda niguse negest ze ityōṗṗya siyume igzi a biher 47 Balemulu literally means fully empowered or wholly authorised thus distinguishing it from the general use of Enderase that being a representative or lieutenant of the Emperor to fiefs or vassals essentially a Governor General or Viceroy by which term provincial governors in the contemporary Imperial period during Haile Selassie s reign were referred 64 65 Balcha Safo brought an army of ten thousand with him from Sidamo 67 Balcha Safo s personal bodyguard numbered about five hundred 67 References editCitations edit Talbot David Abner 1966 Ethiopia Liberation Silver Jubilee 1941 1966 Addis Ababa Ethiopia Ministry of Information pp 64 66 Gates Henry Louis and Anthony Appiah Africana The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience 1999 p 902 Page Melvin Eugene Sonnenburg Penny M 2003 Colonialism an international social cultural and political encyclopedia Vol 1 ABC CLIO p 247 ISBN 978 1 57607 335 3 Erlich Haggai 2002 The Cross and the River Ethiopia Egypt and the Nile Lynne Rienner Publishers ISBN 1 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href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Jimma Times 29 January 2012 Marc Horne 30 December 2023 Prince Philip pulled strings to get Haile Selassie s grandson into Gordonstoun The Sunday Times Brewer Sam Pope 5 October 1963 Selassie at U N Recalls 1936 Plea to League The New York Times Photo 84497 Emperor of Ethiopia Addresses General Assembly New York United Nations 4 October 1963 Wikisource Selassie s Address to the United Nations Schwartz Matthew S Why is There Such a Large Ethiopian Population in the Washington Region Wamu 88 5 American University Radio Retrieved 14 March 2022 Head of State Visits LBJ Presidential Library Retrieved 8 November 2022 Johnson and Haile Selassie Confer The New York Times Associated Press 15 February 1967 p 2 Johnson Hails Selassie As an Ignored Prophet The Washington Post 14 February 1967 p 2 Schwab Peter January 1970 The Tax System of Ethiopia The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 29 1 77 88 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1970 tb03120 x JSTOR 3485226 JORDAN EMPEROR HAILE SELASSIE OF ETHIOPIA ARRIVES IN AMMAN TO START OFFICIAL VISIT British Pathe Retrieved 15 September 2023 Cohen John 1985 Foreign Involvement in the Formulation of Ethiopia s Land Tenure Policies Part I Northeast African Studies 7 2 23 50 JSTOR 43660357 via JSTOR Haile Selassie Presses Ethiopian Land Reform The New York Times 4 November 1971 FRANCE MOURNS DE GAULLE WORLD LEADERS TO ATTEND A SERVICE AT NOTRE DAME The New York Times 11 November 1970 Tait Robert 22 September 2005 Iran to rebuild spectacular tent city at Persepolis The Guardian PEOPLE S REPUBLIC OF CHINA EMPEROR HAILE SELASSIE MEETS CHAIRMAN MAO THEN VISITS UNIVERSITY AND GREAT WALL 1971 Pathe News 1971 T Bianchi and M A Romani eds Giordano Dell Amore EGEA Milan 2013 p 79 Country ratings and status FIW 1973 2012 XLS Freedom House 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2012 ከበደ በሪሁን 1 October 2000 የአፄ ኃይለሥላሴ ታሪክ Addis Ababa አርቲስቲክ ማተሚያ ቤት p 1255 a b c Vukotic Petar The Truth About Haile Selassie s Legacy Rastafari Coalition Archived from the original on 26 July 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 40th anniversary of Hazemo Massacre commemorated Shabait Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 26 July 2007 Eritrean Martyrs Day Retrieved 26 September 2006 Latt Louise Eritrea Re photographed Landscape Changes in the Eritrean Highlands 1890 2004 PDF Laett Eritrea Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2006 Retrieved 26 September 2006 Dates in Eritrean History Retrieved 26 September 2006 Selassie went to meet Pope Paul VI on 1970 at the Holy See where he meets the Pope exchanged gifts and gave a speech regarding their histories and exchanged his internationalistic views and strengthening diplomacy a b De Waal p 58 a b c Dickinson Daniel The last of the Ethiopian emperors BBC News Addis Ababa 12 May 2005 De Waal De Waal 1991b 3 Rebellion and famine in the north under Haile Selassie PDF Evil Days p 58 n 7 from 197 The Unknown Famine in Ethiopia 1973 BBC Retrieved 12 September 2010 Dimbleby Jonathan 28 July 2002 Jonathan Dimbleby and the hidden famine The Guardian London Retrieved 12 September 2010 Eldridge John Eric Thomas 1993 Getting the Message News Truth and Power Psychology Press ISBN 0 41507983 7 p 26 Dimbleby Jonathan 8 December 1998 Feeding on Ethiopia s famine The Independent Retrieved 12 October 2015 De Waal p 61 Woodward Peter 2003 The Horn of Africa Politics and International Relations I B Tauris ISBN 1 86064870 3 p 175 Kumar Krishna 1998 Postconflict Elections Democratisation and International Assistance Lynne Rienner Publishers ISBN 1 55587778 8 p 114 Government and Politics Ethiopia country study Mongabay retrieved 24 April 2014 a b c Launhardt Johannes 2005 Evangelicals in Addis Ababa 1919 1991 LIT Verlag ISBN 3 82587791 4 pp 239 40 Mohr Charles 1 March 1974 Selassie to Placate Army Appoints a New Premier The New York Times Selassie Grants 5 Concessions To Army Including an Amnesty The New York Times 4 July 1974 ETHIOPIA POSTAL WORKERS END FOUR DAY STRIKE 1974 Pathe News 28 April 1974 Quiet coup ends reign of Selassie Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press 12 September 1974 p 1A a b Meredith Martin 2005 The Fate of Africa From the Hopes of Freedom to the Heart of Despair Public Affairs ISBN 1 58648398 6 p 216 a b Shinn p 44 Army rulers in Ethiopia execute 62 Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press 24 November 1974 p 1A Haile Selassie of Ethiopia Dies at 83 The New York Times 28 August 1975 Retrieved 21 July 2007 Haile Selassie the last emperor in the 3 000 year old Ethiopian monarchy who ruled for half a century before he was deposed in a military coup last September died yesterday in a small apartment in his former palace He was 83 years old His death was played down by the military rulers who succeeded him in Addis Ababa who announced it in a normally scheduled radio newscast there at 7 am They said that he had been found dead in his bed by a servant and that the cause of death was probably related to the effects of a prostate operation Haile Selassie underwent two months ago Asfa Wossen Asserate 2017 King of Kings the triumph and tragedy of Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia Haus Publishing p 348 ISBN 9781910376645 OCLC 987610656 Ex Rulers of Ethiopia Charged With Strangling Haile Selassie The New York Times Reuters 15 December 1994 Retrieved 6 November 2018 እንኳን ሰው ዝንብ አልገደልኩም ኮ ል መንግሥቱ የ60ዎቹ ባለስልጣናት ግድያ 43ኛ ዓመት መታሰቢያ Ethio Reference 1 November 1974 The real story of the last days of Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia Face2Face Africa Face2Face Africa 27 August 2018 Retrieved 6 November 2018 Riste Tesfaye 2009 Misekerenet Bebaale Seltanatu Andebet Addis Ababa Ethiopia a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wogderess Fikre Selassie 2014 Egnana Abiyotu Tsehay Publishers pp 211 310 An Imperial Burial for Haile Selassie 25 Years After Death The New York Times 6 November 2000 Ethiopians Celebrate a Mass for Exhumed Haile Selassie The New York Times 1 March 1992 a b Lorch Donatella 31 December 1995 Ethiopia Deals With Legacy of Kings and Colonels The New York Times Edmonds Ennis Barrington 2002 Rastafari From Outcasts to Culture Bearers Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19803060 6 p 55 Rastafarian beliefs BBC 9 October 2009 Retrieved 12 September 2010 The African Diaspora Ethiopianism and Rastafari Smithsonian education Retrieved 12 September 2010 Haile Selassie King of Kings Conquering Lion of the tribe of Judah Debate uvm edu Retrieved 12 September 2010 Haile Selassie Ethiopian History Retrieved 12 September 2010 a b c Owens Joseph 1974 Dread The Rastafarians of Jamaica ISBN 0 435 98650 3 The Re evolution of Rastafari Rastafari speaks 20 January 2003 Retrieved 12 September 2010 Barrett Leonard E 1988 The Rastafarians Beacon Press pp 118 ISBN 978 0 8070 1039 6 Christopher John Farley Before the Legend The Rise of Bob Marley p 145 David Katz People Funny Boy Lee Perry biography p 41 Murrell p 64 David Howard Kingston A Cultural and Literary History p 176 The State Visit of Emperor Haile Selassie I Jamaica gleaner com Archived from the original on 9 December 2010 Retrieved 12 September 2010 Commemorating The Royal Visit by Ijahnya Christian The Anguillian Newspaper 22 April 2005 White pp 15 210 211 Bogues Anthony 2003 Black Heretics Black Prophets Radical Political Intellectuals Psychology Press ISBN 0415943256 p 189 Bradley Lloyd 2001 This Is Reggae Music The Story of Jamaica s Music Grove Press ISBN 0802138284 pp 192 93 a b c Edmonds Ennis Barrington 2002 Rastafari From Outcasts to Culture Bearers Oxford University Press ISBN 0198030606 p 86 a b Habekost Christian 1993 Verbal Riddim The Politics and Aesthetics of African Caribbean Dub Poetry Rodopi ISBN 9051835493 p 83 a b O Brien Chang Kevin Chen Wayne 1998 Reggae Routes The Story of Jamaican Music Temple University Press p 243 ISBN 978 1 56639 629 5 African 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ISBN 0718128222 Archbishop Abuna Yesehaq Interview YouTube Archived from the original on 28 October 2021 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Ethiopians in D C Region Mourn Archbishop s Death The Washington Post 13 January 2006 Workneh Fikre Mariam 31 December 2018 Abune Tewophilos and Emperor Haile Selassie I Their Invaluable Contributions to the Ethiopian Orthodox Church ecadforum com ECADF Archived from the original on 23 August 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Funk Jerry 2003 Life Is an Excellent Adventure An Irreverent Personal Odyssey Victoria Canada CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform pp 148 150 ISBN 1412008484 A Tale of Two Nations ethiopianworldfederation org The Ethiopian World Federation Incorporated Retrieved 14 March 2022 The History and Location of the Shashamane Settlement Community Development Foundation Inc USA Shashamane Archived from the original on 25 May 2011 Retrieved 12 September 2010 Price Charles Review Erin C Macleod Visions of Zion Ethiopians and Rastafari in the 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1963 with guest His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie I Emperor of Ethiopia WorldCat TV A Question of Taste N B C Documentary Comes Close to Ridiculing Selassie s 1963 State Visit The New York Times 4 March 1964 Vestal Theodore M 2009 The Lion of Judah at Camelot U S Foreign Policy Towards Ethiopia as Reflected in the Second State Visit of Emperor Haile Selassie to the United States International Journal of Ethiopian Studies 4 1 2 135 152 JSTOR 27828908 David Talbot 1955 Haile Selassie I Silver Jubilee Ethiopia W P van Stockum ISBN 9780 9 7936 1937 Keller Edmond J 2010 Constitutionalism Citizenship and Political Transitions In Ethiopia Historic and Contemporary Process PDF UCLA World Press 66 67 Bellucci Stefano 18 September 2022 The 1974 Ethiopian Revolution at 40 Social Economic and Political Legacies Northeast African Studies 16 1 1 13 doi 10 14321 nortafristud 16 1 0001 S2CID 148384238 Haile Selassie I South African History Online The last emperor of Ethiopia Haile Selassie s legacy 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September 1935 September 1935 Haile Selassie Smithsonian American Art Museum Haile Selassie 1892 1975 Jeffrey James 18 October 2019 Ethiopia opens its secretive Imperial Palace for first time CNN African Union Unveiles a Statue of Former Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie I African Union 10 February 2019 Getache Addis Twessema Seleshi 2 October 2019 African leaders unveil statue of last Ethiopian emperor Anadolu Agency Haile Selassie Why the African Union put up a statue BBC News 10 February 2019 Archived from the original on 11 February 2019 Haile Selassie Statue AU Headquarters PDF Contested Histories Scourfield Stephen 8 May 2014 The legacy of Haile Selassie The West Australian 50th Anniversary Founders Day Celebration Haile Selassie High School Jamaica Rita Marley Foundation 28 April 2016 Haile Selassie Statue of former Ethiopian leader destroyed in London park BBC News 1 July 2020 Braddick Imogen 2 July 2020 Statue of former Ethiopian leader Haile Selassie destroyed by group of 100 people in Wimbledon park Evening Standard London Police Probe Destruction Of Haile Selassie Statue Agence France Presse via Barrons 2 July 2020 Lenser Loise 20 January 2024 Nairobi Expressway Launches New Exit at Haile Selassie Boxraft Limited Mbuthia Bashir 20 January 2024 Transport CS Murkomen To Launch Nairobi Expressway Haile Selassie Exit Plaza Citizen TV Vestal Theodore M 2011 The Lion of Judah in the New World Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and the Shaping of Americans Attitudes Toward Africa United States Praeger p 19 ISBN 9780313386206 Selassie Haile I 1976 My Life and Ethiopia s Progress The Autobiography of Emperor Haile Selassie I translated from Amharic by Edward Ullendorff Great Britain Oxford University Press p 155 ISBN 0197135897 Selassie Haile I 1976 My Life and Ethiopia s Progress The Autobiography of Emperor Haile Selassie I translated from Amharic by Edward Ullendorff Great Britain Oxford University Press p 172 ISBN 0197135897 McPartlin Joan 29 May 1954 Boston to Welcome Ruler of Ethiopia Boston Daily Globe ከበደ በሪሁን 21 September 1993 የአፄ ኃይለሥላሴ ታሪክ Addis Ababa አርቲስቲክ ማተሚያ ቤት p 903 Religious Traditional amp Ceremonial The Official Website of The Crown Council of Ethiopia The Crown Council of Ethiopia Retrieved 13 August 2014 ከበደ በሪሁን 21 September 1993 የአፄ ኃይለሥላሴ ታሪክ Addis Ababa አርቲስቲክ ማተሚያ ቤት p 891 Religious Traditional amp Ceremonial The Official Website of The Crown Council of Ethiopia The Crown Council of Ethiopia Retrieved 2 January 2021 ከበደ በሪሁን 21 September 1993 የአፄ ኃይለሥላሴ ታሪክ Addis Ababa አርቲስቲክ ማተሚያ ቤት p 893 ከበደ በሪሁን 21 September 1993 የአፄ ኃይለሥላሴ ታሪክ Addis Ababa አርቲስቲክ ማተሚያ ቤት pp 895 897 ከበደ በሪሁን 21 September 1993 የአፄ ኃይለሥላሴ ታሪክ Addis Ababa አርቲስቲክ ማተሚያ ቤት p 899 ከበደ በሪሁን 21 September 1993 የአፄ ኃይለሥላሴ ታሪክ Addis Ababa አርቲስቲክ ማተሚያ ቤት p 901 Mr and Mrs Jet Magazine VI 2 23 20 May 1954 Retrieved 9 April 2021 Copley Gregory R Ethiopia Reaches Her Hand Unto God Imperial Ethiopia s Unique Symbols Structures and Role in the Modern World Published 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1 56639584 7 Roberts Andrew Dunlop 1986 The Cambridge History of Africa From 1905 to 1940 Vol 7 Cambridge Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge ISBN 978 0 52122505 2 Safire William 1997 Lend Me Your Ears Great Speeches in History W W Norton ISBN 978 0 39304005 0 Shinn David Hamilton Ofcansky Thomas P 2004 Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 81086566 2 Distressed Negus Time Magazine 15 November 1937 Archived from the original on 24 May 2007 Retrieved 19 January 2010 De Waal Alexander 1991 Evil Days Thirty Years of War and Famine in Ethiopia PDF Human Rights Watch ISBN 978 1 56432038 4 Selassie Haile I 1999 My Life and Ethiopia s Progress The Autobiography of Emperor Haile Selassie I translated from Amharic by Edward Ullendorff New York Frontline Books ISBN 978 0 948390 40 1 White Timothy ed 2006 Catch a Fire The Life of Bob Marley Henry Holt amp Co ISBN 978 0 80508086 5 Bibliography edit Harris Brice Ullendorff Edward February 1977 The Autobiography of Emperor Haile Sellassie I My Life and Ethiopia s Progress Oxford University Press ISBN 9780 9 4839 0401 Asserate Asfa Wossen 15 September 2015 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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