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Tigray Region

The Tigray Region,[A] officially the Tigray National Regional State,[B] is the northernmost regional state in Ethiopia. The Tigray Region is the homeland of the Tigrayan, Irob, and Kunama people. Its capital and largest city is Mekelle. Tigray is the fifth-largest by area, the fifth-most populous, and the fifth-most densely populated of the 11 regional states.

Tigray Region
ክልል ትግራይ
Tigray National Regional State
Nickname: 
The birthplace of Ethiopian civilization
Motto(s): 
"ዘይንድይቦ ጎቦ"
"There are no mountains we would not climb"
Map of Ethiopia showing Tigray Region
Coordinates: 13°34′30″N 39°05′15″E / 13.57500°N 39.08750°E / 13.57500; 39.08750
CountryEthiopia
CapitalMekelle
Government
 • Chief AdministratorGetachew Reda Kahsay
Area
 • Total50,079 km2 (19,336 sq mi)
 • Rank6th
Population
 (2019)[2]
 • Total5,443,000
 • Rank5th
 • Density110/km2 (280/sq mi)
Demographics
 • Official languageTigrinya
 • Other languagesSaho, Kunama, Xamtanga (Agaw), Amharic, Oromo
 • DemonymTigrayan
Time zoneUTC+3 (EAT)
ISO 3166 codeET-TI
HDI (2021)0.522 [3]
low · 5th of 11
Websitewww.ethiopia.gov.et/regional-states/tigray-regional-state/

Tigray is bordered by Eritrea to the north, Sudan to the west, the Amhara Region to the south and the Afar Region to the east.[4] Towns in Tigray include: Mekelle, Adigrat, Axum, Shire, Adwa, Enticho, Addi Remets, Wukro, Sheraro, Abiy Addi, Atsbi, Hawzen, Adi Gudom, Mai Tsebri, and Zalambessa.

Tigray's official language is Tigrinya, similar to that spoken in Eritrea just to the North. The estimated population as of 2019 is 5,443,000.[5] The majority of the population (c. 80%) are farmers, contributing 46% to the regional gross domestic product (2009). The highlands have the highest population density, especially in eastern and central Tigray. The much less densely populated lowlands comprise 48% of Tigray's area. Like many parts of Africa, Tigray is far from a religious monolith. Despite the historical identification of Ethiopia with Orthodox Christianity, the presence of Islam in Ethiopia is as old as the religion itself. The most recent Ethiopian census, collected in 2007, estimates that Muslims make up 34% of the rapidly growing national population. Although the percentage of Muslims in Tigray is only 5 to 10%, it has historically been Islam’s doorway to the region and to Africa at large.[6] 96% of Tigrayans are Orthodox Christian.

The government of Tigray consists of the executive branch, led by the president, Getachew Reda; the legislative branch, which comprises the state council; and the judicial branch, which is led by the state supreme court. In early November 2020, a conflict between the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and the Ethiopian federal government (with support from Eritrea)[7] rapidly escalating into the Tigray War, destabilizing the region,[8] and exposing a well-organized campaign to wipe out the region of ethnic Tigrayans.[9] As many as 600,000 people were killed as a result of the war.[10][11][12] As of 2023, the region is run by the Interim Regional Administration of Tigray.

History Edit

3rd millennium to 1st century BC Edit

Tigray is often regarded as the cradle of Ethiopian civilization.[13] Its landscape has many historic monuments. Three major monotheistic religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam arrived in Ethiopia through the Red Sea and then Tigray.

Given the presence of a large temple complex and fertile surroundings, the capital of the 3,000-year-old kingdom of Dʿmt may have been near present-day Yeha.[14] Dʿmt developed irrigation schemes, used the plough, grew millet, and made iron tools and weapons. Some modern historians, including Stuart Munro-Hay, Rodolfo Fattovich, Ayele Bekerie, Cain Felder, and Ephraim Isaac consider this civilization to be indigenous, although Sabaean-influenced due to the latter's dominance of the Red Sea. Others, including Joseph Michels, Henri de Contenson, Tekletsadik Mekuria, and Stanley Burstein, have viewed Dʿmt as the result of a mixture of Sabaean and indigenous peoples.[15][16] The most recent research, however, shows that Ge'ez, the ancient Semitic language spoken in Tigray, Eritrea and northern Ethiopia in ancient times, is not likely to have been derived from Sabaean.[17] There is evidence of a Semitic-speaking presence in Tigray, Eritrea and northern Ethiopia at least as early as 2000 BC.[16][18] It is now believed that Sabaean influence was minor, limited to a few localities and disappearing after a few decades or a century, It may have represented a trading or military colony, in some sort of symbiosis or military alliance with the civilization of Dʿmt or some other proto-Aksumite state.[15][19]

After the fall of Dʿmt in the 5th century BC, the plateau came to be dominated by smaller, unknown successor kingdoms. This lasted until the rise of one of these polities during the first century BC, the Aksumite Kingdom, which succeeded in reunifying the area[20] and is, in effect, the ancestor of medieval and modern states in Eritrea and Ethiopia using the name "Ethiopia" as early as the 4th century.[15][21][citation needed]

1st to 10th century AD Edit

 
Axum Stele in the city Axum.
 
Aksumite gold coins.

The Kingdom of Aksum was a trading empire rooted in northern Ethiopia.[22] It existed from approximately 100–940 AD, growing from the proto-Aksumite Iron Age period c. 4th century BC to achieve prominence by the 1st century AD.

According to the Book of Axum, Axum's first capital, Mazaber, was built by Itiyopis, son of Cush.[23] The capital was later moved to Aksum in northern Ethiopia.

The Empire of Aksum, at its height, at times extended across most of present-day Eritrea, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Sudan, Yemen and Saudi Arabia. The capital city of the empire was Axum, now in northern Ethiopia. Today a smaller community, the city of Axum was once a bustling metropolis and a cultural and economic hub. Two hills and two streams lie on the east and west expanses of the city; perhaps providing the initial impetus for settling this area. Along the hills and plain outside the city, the Aksumites had cemeteries with elaborate grave stones, which are called stelae, or obelisks. Other important cities included Yeha, Hawulti-Melazo, Matara, Adulis, and Qohaito, the last three of which are now in Eritrea. By the reign of Endubis in the late 3rd century, Aksum had begun minting its own currency and was named by Mani as one of the four great powers of his time, along with China and the Sassanid and Roman empires. It converted to Christianity in 325 or 328 under King Ezana and was the first state to use the image of the cross on its coins.[24][25]

 
Handtke’s map is 39 cm wide and 66 cm tall, and is printed on paper that has been bonded to fabric. The scale is approximately 1:5,600,000; relief is shown by short lines representing slope aspect and a general sense of steepness (hachures).The work was created in one of the few stronger cartographic publishing houses in 19thcentury Germany, managed by Carl Flemming (1806-1878). Flemming was aided by cartographer Friedrich Handtke (1815-1879), who worked on nearly every map assignment for the firm.[26]

11th to 19th century AD Edit

 
Mekelle palace of Emperor Yohannes IV (emperor of the whole Ethiopian Empire).

In the 14th century the Tigrinya-speaking lands (Tigray-Mareb Melash) were divided into two provinces, separated by the Mereb River, by the newly enthroned Agaw (not Amhara) emperors. The governor of the northern province received the title Bahre Negash (Ruler of the sea), whereas the governor of the southern province was given the title of Tigray Mekonen (Lord of Tigray). The Portuguese Jesuit Emanuele Baradas's work titled "Do reino de Tigr", written in 1633–34, states that the "Reino de Tigr" (Kingdom of Tigray) extended from Hamasien to Temben, from the borders of Dankel to the Adwa mountain. He also stated that Tigray-Mereb Melash was divided into 24 smaller political units (principalities), twelve of which were located south of the Mereb and governed by the Tigray Mekonen, based in Enderta. The other twelve were located north of the Mereb, under the authority of the Bahre Negash, based in the district of Serae.[27]: 259 

The Book of Aksum, likely written and compiled before the 15th century, shows a traditional schematic map of Tigray with the city of Aksum at its center, surrounded by the 13 principal provinces: "Tembien, Shire, Serae, Hamasien, Bur, Sam’a, Agame, Amba Senayt, Garalta, Enderta, Sahart and Abergele."[28][failed verification]

During the Middle Ages, the position of Tigray Mekonnen ("Governor of Tigray") was established to rule over the area. Other districts included Akele Guzay (now part of Eritrea), and the kingdom of the Bahr negus, who ruled much of what is now Eritrea and Shire district and town in Western Tigray. At the time when Tigray Mekonnen existed simultaneously with that of Bahr negus, their frontier seems to have been the Mareb River, which is currently constitutes the border between the Ethiopian province of Tigray and Eritrea.

After the loss of power of the Bahr negus in the aftermath of Bahr negus Yeshaq's rebellions, the title of Tigray mekonnen gained power in relation to the Bahr negus and at times included ruling over parts of what is now Eritrea, especially in the 19th century.[failed verification][29] By the unsettled Zemene Mesafint period ("Era of the Princes"), both designations had declined to little more than empty titles, and the lord who succeeded them used (and received from the Emperor) the title of either Ras or Dejazmach, beginning with Ras Mikael Sehul. Rulers of Tigray such as Ras Wolde Selassie alternated with others, chiefly those of Begemder or Yejju, as warlords to maintain the Ethiopian monarchy during the Zemene Mesafint.

In the mid-19th century, the lords of Tembien and Enderta managed to establish an overlordship of Tigray. One of its members, Dejazmach Kahsay Mercha, ascended the imperial throne in 1872 under the name Yohannes IV. Following his 1889 death in the Battle of Metemma, the Ethiopian throne came under the control of the king of Shewa, and the center of power shifted south and away from Tigray.[citation needed]

20th century Edit

In 1943, open resistance broke out all over southern and eastern Tigray under the slogan, "there is no government; let's organize and govern ourselves". Throughout Enderta Awraja, including Mekelle, Didibadergiajen, Hintalo, Saharti, Samre and Wajirat, Raya Awraja, Kilte-Awlaelo Awraja and Tembien Awraja, local assemblies, called gerreb, were formed. The gerreb sent representatives to a central congress, called the shengo, which elected leaders and established a military command system. Although the first Woyane rebellion of 1943 had shortcomings as a prototype revolution, historians agree that it involved a fairly high level of spontaneity and peasant initiative. It demonstrated considerable popular participation and reflected widely shared grievances. The uprising was specifically directed against the central Shoan Amhara regime of Haile Selassie I, rather than the Tigrayan imperial elite.

Ethiopian Civil War Edit

 
Memorial in Mekelle to more than 60,000 TPLF fighters who died and over 100,000 fighters who were injured in the overthrow of the Marxist Derg regime in 1991.

After the February 1974 popular revolution, the first signal of any mass uprising was the actions of the soldiers of the 4th Brigade of the 4th Army Division in Nagelle in southern Ethiopia. The Coordinating Committee of the Armed Forces, Police, and Territorial Army, or the Derg (Ge'ez "Committee"), was officially announced 28 June 1974 by a group of military officers. The committee elected Major Mengistu Haile Mariam as its chairman and Major Atnafu Abate as its vice-chairman. In July 1974, the Derg obtained key concessions from the emperor, Haile Selassie, which included the power to arrest not only military officers but government officials at every level. Soon both former Prime Ministers Tsehafi Taezaz Aklilu Habte-Wold and Endalkachew Makonnen, along with most of their cabinets, most regional governors, many senior military officers and officials of the Imperial court were imprisoned. In August 1974, after a proposed constitution creating a constitutional monarchy was presented to the emperor, the Derg began a program of dismantling the imperial government in order to forestall further developments in that direction. The Derg deposed and imprisoned the emperor on 12 September 1974.

 
Nest box for Columba guinea (considered a symbol of peace) in the wall of a homestead in Zerfenti, a village in Tigray where hundreds were killed by Derg bombings.

In addition, the Derg in 1975 nationalized most industries and private and somewhat secure urban real-estate holdings. But mismanagement, corruption, and general hostility to the Derg's violent rule, coupled with the draining effects of constant warfare with the separatist guerrilla movements in Tigray, led to a drastic fall in general productivity of food and cash crops. In October 1978, the Derg announced the National Revolutionary Development Campaign to mobilize human and material resources to transform the economy, which led to a Ten-Year Plan (1984/1985-1993/1994) to expand agricultural and industrial output, forecasting a 6.5% growth in GDP and a 3.6% rise in per capita income. Instead per capita income declined 0.8% over this period. Famine scholar Alex de Waal observes that while the famine that struck the country in the mid-1980s is usually ascribed to drought, "closer investigation shows that widespread drought occurred only some months after the famine was already under way". Hundreds of thousands fled economic misery, conscription, and political repression, and went to live in neighboring countries and all over the Western world, creating an Ethiopian diaspora.

Toward the end of January 1991, a coalition of rebel forces, the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) captured Gondar, the ancient capital city, Bahar Dar, and Dessie.[citation needed]

Postwar Edit

John Young, who visited the area several times in the early 1990s, attributes this delay in part to "central budget restraint, structural readjustment, and lack of awareness by government bureaucrats in Addis Ababa of conditions in the province", but notes "an equally significant obstacle was posed by an entrenched, and largely Amhara-dominated, central bureaucracy which used its power to block government-authorised funds from reaching Tigray".[30] At the same time, a growing urban middle class of traders, businessmen and government officials emerged that was suspicious of and distant from the victorious EPRDF.[citation needed] From 1991 to 2001, the president of Tigray was Gebru Asrat. In 1998, war erupted between Eritrea and Ethiopia over a portion of territory that had been administered as part of Tigray, which included the town of Badme. A 2002 United Nations decision awarded much of this land to Eritrea, but Ethiopia did not accept the ruling until 2018, when a bilateral agreement ended the border conflict. The text of this agreement has not been publicly availed.

21st century Edit

From 2001 to 2010 the president was Tsegay Berhe.

2020 administrative reorganisation Edit

Between 2018 and 2020, as part of a reform aimed to deepen and strengthen decentralisation, woredas were reorganised, and new boundaries established. As smaller towns had been growing, they had started providing a larger range of services, such as markets and even banks, that encouraged locals to travel there rather than to their formal woreda centre. However, these locals still had to travel to their local woreda centre for most local government services - often in a different direction. In 2018 and 2019, after multiple village discussions that were often vigorous in the more remote areas, 21 independent urban administrations were added and other boundaries re-drawn, resulting in an increase from 35 to 88 woredas in January 2020.[citation needed]

Tigray War Edit

Following the 2020 Tigray regional election, after months of preparation with the Eritrean army, as demonstrated by the Eritrean president visiting the Ethiopian air force on October 14, 2020, the Ethiopian military launched attacks on the government of Tigray headquarters in Mekelle on 4 November, marking the beginning of the Tigray War. Ethiopian troops as well as Amhara militia advanced through southern Tigray, while Eritrean troops occupied border towns in northern Tigray.[31] Amhara militias also occupied Western Tigray and still do as of 2023.[32]

Warfare, the COVID-19 pandemic in Ethiopia, and a locust outbreak all contributed to an emergency food situation in the region in January 2021. Two million people faced food shortages; the situation was particularly dire in Shire Inda Selassie, where there are 100,000 refugees. The Famine Early Warning Systems Network said parts of central and eastern Tigray are likely in emergency phase 4, a step below famine.[33]

Geography Edit

Location and size Edit

Tigray is situated between 12° – 15°N and 36° 30' – 40° 30'E.

A 2006 national statistics report stated the land area as 50,079 km2 (19,336 sq mi).[1] The 2011 National Statistics gave an area of 41,410 km2 (15,990 sq mi), but the sum of the figures it gave for the Tigray zones was substantially different,[34] rendering the 2011 report internally inconsistent. The figure of 50,079 km2 is supported by the Google Maps area calculator.

Geology Edit

Overview Edit

The East African Orogeny led to the growth of a mountain chain in the Precambrian (up to 800 Ma [million years ago]), which was largely eroded afterwards.[35][36][37] Around 600 Ma, the Gondwana break-up led to the presence of tectonic structures and a Palaeozoic planation surface, that extents to the north and west of the Dogu'a Tembien massif.[38]

Subsequently, there was the deposition of sedimentary and volcanic formations, from older (at the foot of the massif) to younger, near the summits. From Palaeozoic to Triassic, Tigray was located near the South Pole. The (reactivate) Precambrian extensional faults guided the deposition of glacial sediments (Edaga Arbi Glacials and Enticho Sandstone). Later alluvial plain sediments were deposited (Adigrat Sandstone). The break-up of Gondwana (Late Palaeozoic to Early Triassic) led to an extensional tectonic phase, what caused the lowering of large parts of the Horn of Africa. As a consequence a marine transgression occurred, leading to the deposition of marine sediments (Antalo Limestone and Agula Shale).[39] The region has an estimated 3.89 billion tons of mostly "excellent" quality oil shale.[40]

 
The Antalo Limestone cliff at Mishlam in the southeastern part of Dogu'a Tembien

At the end of the Mesozoic tectonic phase, a new (Cretaceous) planation took place. After that, the deposition of continental sediments (Amba Aradam Formation) indicates the presence of less shallow seas, probably caused by a regional uplift. At the beginning of the Caenozoic, there was a relative tectonic quiescence, during which the Amba Aradam Sandstones were partially eroded, which led to the formation of a new planation surface.[41]

In the Eocene, the Afar plume, a broad regional uplift, deformed the lithosphere, leading to the eruption of flood basalts. Three major formations may be distinguished: lower basalts, interbedded lacustrine deposits and upper basalts.[42] Almost at the same time, the Mekelle Dolerite intruded into the Mesozoic sediments, following joints and faults.[43]

A new magma intrusion occurred in the Early Miocene, which gave rise to phonolite plugs, mainly in the Adwa area and also in Dogu’a Tembien.[42] The present geomorphology is marked by deep valleys, eroded as a result of the regional uplift. Throughout the Quaternary, deposition of alluvium and freshwater tufa occurred in the valley bottoms.[44]

Fossils Edit

In Tigray, there are two main fossil-bearing geological units. The Antalo Limestone (upper Jurassic) is the largest. Its marine deposits comprise mainly benthic marine invertebrates. Also, the Tertiary lacustrine deposits, interbedded in the basalt formations, contain a range of silicified mollusc fossils.[45]

In the Antalo Limestone: large Paracenoceratidae cephalopods (nautilus); Nerineidae indet.; sea urchins; Rhynchonellid brachiopod; crustaceans; coral colonies; crinoid stems.[46][45]

In the Tertiary silicified lacustrine deposits: Pila (gastropod); Lanistes sp.; Pirenella conica; and land snails (Achatinidae indet.).[45][47]

All snail shells, both fossil and recent, are called t’uyo in Tigrinya language, which means ‘helicoidal’.

Traditional uses of rock Edit

As Tigray holds a wide variety of rock types, there is expectedly a varied use of rock.

  • Natural stone masonry. Preferentially, the easier shaped limestone and sandstone are used to build homesteads and churches, but particularly in the upland areas, basalt is also used. Traditionally, fermented mud will be used as mortar
  • Fencing of homesteads, generally in dry stones
  • Church bells, generally three elongated plates in phonolite or clinkstone, with different tonalities
  • Milling stone: for this purpose plucked-bedrock pits, small rock-cut basins that naturally occur in rivers with kolks, are excavated from the river bed and further shaped. Milling is done at home using an elongated small boulder[48][49]
  • Door and window lintels, prepared from rock types that frequently have an elongated shape (sandstone, phonolite, limestone), or that are easily shaped (tufa)
  • Troughs for livestock watering and feeding, generally hewn from tufa
  • Footpath paving, generally done as community work. Some very ancient paved footpaths occur on major communication lines dating back to the period before the introduction of the automobile
  • foot travellers stop, pray and put an additional stone
  • Stones collected from farmlands in order to free space for the crop, and heaped in typical rounded metres-high heaps, called zala
  • Contour bunding or gedeba: terrace walls in dry stone, typically laid out along the contour for sake of soil conservation
  • Check dams or qetri in gullies for sake of gully erosion control
  • Cobble stones, used for paving secondary streets in the towns. Generally limestone is used.

Major mountains Edit

Water challenge Edit

 
Regularised stream, fed by Gereb Segen dam

Overall, the region is semi-arid. The wet season lasts only for a couple of months. The farmers are adapted to this, but the problem arises when rains are less than normal. Another major challenge is providing water to urban areas. Smaller towns, but particularly Mekelle, face endemic water shortages. Reservoirs have been built, but their management is sub-optimal.

Wildlife Edit

Large mammals Edit

 

Besides elephants in Western Tigray and the endemic gelada baboon on the highest mountains, large mammals in the region, with scientific (italics), English and Tigrinya language names, are:[51]

Small rodents Edit

The most common pest rodents with widespread distribution in agricultural fields and storage areas are three Ethiopian endemic species: the Dembea grass rat (Arvicanthis dembeensis, sometimes considered a subspecies of Arvicanthis niloticus), Ethiopian white-footed rat (Stenocephalemys albipes), and Awash multimammate mouse (Mastomys awashensis).[52]

Bats Edit

Bats occur in natural caves, church buildings and abandoned homesteads. The large colony of bats that roosts in Zeyi cave comprises Hipposideros megalotis (Ethiopian large-eared roundleaf bat), Hipposideros tephrus, and Rhinolophus blasii (Blasius's horseshoe bat).[53]

Birds Edit

With its numerous exclosures, forest fragments and church forests, Tigray is a birdwatcher's paradise. Detailed inventories[54][55] list at least 170 bird species, including numerous endemic species. Species belonging to the Afrotropical Highland Biome occur in the dry evergreen montane forests of the highland plateau but can also occupy other habitats. Wattled Ibis can be found feeding in wet grassland and open woodland. Black-winged Lovebird, Banded Barbet, Golden-mantled or Abyssinian Woodpecker, Montane White-eye, Rüppell's Robin-chat, Abyssinian Slaty Flycatcher and Tacazze Sunbird are found in evergreen forest, mountain woodlands and areas with scattered trees including fig trees, Euphorbia abyssinica and Juniperus procera. Erckel's spurfowl, Dusky Turtle Dove, Swainson's or Grey-headed Sparrow, Baglafecht Weaver, African Citril, Brown-rumped Seedeater and Streaky Seedeater are common Afrotropical breeding residents of woodland edges, scrubland and forest edges. White-billed Starling and Little Rock Thrush can be found on steep cliffs; Speckled or African rock pigeon and White-collared Pigeon in gorges and rocky places but also in towns and villages.[54]

Species belonging to the Somali-Masai Biome. Hemprich's Hornbill and White-rumped Babbler are found in bushland, scrubland and dense secondary forest, often near cliffs, gorges or water. Chestnut-Winged or Somali Starling and Rüppell's Weaver are found in bushy and shrubby areas. Black-billed wood hoopoes have some red at the base of the bill or an entirely red bill in this area.[54]

Species belonging to the Sudan-Guinea Savanna Biome: Green-backed eremomela and Chestnut-crowned Sparrow-Weaver.[54]

Species that are neither endemic nor biome-restricted but that have restricted ranges or that can be more easily seen in Ethiopia than elsewhere in their range: Abyssinian Roller is an Ethiopian relative of Lilac-breasted Roller, which is an intra-tropical breeding migrant of south and east Africa, and of European Roller, an uncommon Palearctic passage migrant. Black-billed Barbet, Yellow-breasted Barbet and Grey-headed Batis are species from the Sahel and Northern Africa but also occur in Acacia woodlands in the area.[54]

The most regularly observed raptor birds in crop fields in Tigray are Augur buzzard (Buteo augur), Common Buzzard (Buteo buteo), Steppe Eagle (Aquila nipalensis), Lanner falcon (Falco biarmicus), Black kite (Milvus migrans), Yellow-billed kite (Milvus aegyptius) and Barn owl (Tyto alba).[56]

Birdwatching can be done particularly in exclosures and forests. Eighteen bird-watching sites have been inventoried in Enderta and Degua Tembien[54] and mapped.[57]

Administrative zones and districts Edit

 
Administrative zones of Tigray
 
Districts of Tigray

Like other Regions in Ethiopia, Tigray is subdivided into administrative zones, and further into woredas or districts. Up to January 2020, these were the woredas of Tigray:

In 2018 and 2019, after multiple village discussions that were often vigorous in the more remote areas, 21 independent urban administrations were added and other boundaries re-drawn, resulting in an increase from 35 to 94 woredas in January 2020:

Major cities Edit

Mekelle, home to Mekelle University, Mekelle Institute of Technology, Tigray Institute of Policy Studies, Admas University, Microlink College, Nile College, and Mekelle College of Teacher Education is the capital of Tigray, near the geographic center of the state.

Other Tigray cities functioning as centers of Ethiopian metropolitan areas include:

Of the 10 largest cities in Tigray, Maychew has the highest elevation at 2479 meter above sea level. Plenty of smaller towns, like Atsbi and Edaga Hamus are located at even higher elevations. Of the large cities, Humera is located at the lowest altitude (585 m).

Government and politics Edit

Executive branch Edit

The executive branch is headed by the Chief Administrator of Tigray. The current president is Getachew Reda Kahsay, a TPLF member, elected in 2023. A Vice President of Tigray succeeds the president in the event of any removal from office, and performs any duties assigned by the president.[59] The other elected constitutional offices in the executive branch are the Regional Health Bureau (Ato Hagos Godefy),[60] Educational Bureau (Ato Gebre'egziabher),[61] Auditor General (Ato Alemseged Kebedew), and 12 other officials.[62]

Judicial branch Edit

There are three levels of the Tigray state judiciary. The lowest level is the court of common pleas: each woreda maintains its own constitutionally mandated court of common pleas, which maintain jurisdiction over all justiciable matters.[63][self-published source] The intermediate-level court system is the district court system. Four courts of appeals exist, each retaining jurisdiction over appeals from common pleas, municipal, and county courts in an administrative zone. A case heard in this system is decided by a three-judge panel, and each judge is elected.

The highest-ranking court, the Tigray Supreme Court, is Tigray's "court of last resort".[64] A seven-justice panel composes the court, which, by its own discretion, hears appeals from the courts of appeals, and retains original jurisdiction over limited matters. The chief judge is called the President of Tigray Supreme Court (W/ro Hirity Miheretab).

Legislative branch Edit

The State Council, which is the highest administrative body of the state, is made up of 152 members.[62]

National politics Edit

Tigray is represented by 38 representatives in the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia House of Peoples' Representatives. But currently after the illegitimate postponement of the national election of Ethiopia Tigray has pulled it representative from the House of House of Peoples' Representatives and has no representation in the Federal parliament [1].

Demographics Edit

 
Tigrayan women washing clothes in Santarfa
 
Faithful to the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion

Based on the 2007 census conducted by the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia (CSA), the Tigray Region has a population of 4,316,988, of whom 2,126,465 are men and 2,190,523 women; urban inhabitants number 844,040 or 19.55% of the population. With an estimated area of 84,722 km2, the region had an estimated density of 51 people per km2. In the entire region 992,635 households were counted, for an average of 4.4 people per household, with urban households having on average 3.4 and rural households 4.6.[65]

In the previous census, conducted in 1994, the region's population was 3,136,267, of whom 1,542,165 were men and 1,594,102 women; urban inhabitants numbered 621,210, or 14% of the population.

According to the CSA, as of 2004, 53.99% of the total population had access to safe drinking water, of whom 42.68% were rural inhabitants and 97.28% were urban.[66] Values for other reported common indicators of the standard of living for Tigray as of 2005 include: 31.6% of the inhabitants fall into the lowest wealth quintile; adult literacy for men is 67.5% and for women 33.7%; and the infant mortality rate is 67 infant deaths per 1,000 live births, less than the national average of 77; at least half of these deaths occurred in the infants' first month of life.[67]

The predominant religion in Tigray is Orthodox Christianity[68]

Religion 1994 Census 2007 Census [68]
Orthodox Christians 96.5% 96.6%
Muslim 3.1% 3.0%
Catholics 0.4% 0.4%
Historical population
YearPop.±%
1994 3,136,267—    
2007 4,316,988+37.6%
source:[69]

Ethnicity Edit

 
14th century illustration showing the Christian King (Negus) of Aksum (King Armah also known as Al-Najashi) declining the request of a pagan Meccan delegation, to forfeit the first Muslims who received refuge in the city of Axum following the First Hijra as Prophet Muhammad told them to take refuge in Axum.

With 96.55% of the local population, the region is predominantly inhabited by the Tigrinya-speaking Tigrayan people. The Tigrinya language belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family of languages. Most other residents hail from other Afro-Asiatic-speaking communities, including the Amhara, Irob, Afar, Agaw and Oromo. Partly assimilated Oromo live in remoter villages in Raya Azebo and Alamata (woreda), whereas there are Agaw in Abergele (woreda). There are also Nilo-Saharan-speaking Kunama as well.[citation needed]

Ethnic
group
1994 Census 2007 Census [65]
Tigrayan 94.98% 96.55%
Amhara 2.60% 1.63%
Irob 0.70% 0.71%
Afar 0.29%
Agaw 0.19%
Oromo 0.17%
Kunama 0.05% 0.07%

Languages Edit

The working language is Tigrinya. Saho and Kunama are also spoken, and people in urban areas are also able to speak Amharic.[70]

Notable people Edit

Agriculture Edit

Cropping Edit

 
Heaped straw or kulsas

Terracing and dam construction Edit

 
Gestet forest

An important aspect of the agricultural work in Tigray after the end of the 1991 civil war was to minimize the problems of drought. In the past, Tigray was covered with forests and had a micro-climate that favoured the rains. Subsequently, the forests were cut down, usually to impoverish the population during the wars. Consequently, Tigray achieved a fair amount of rainfall during the rainy season, from August to September, but quickly lost these waters downstream. In the process the fertile soil of the fields eroded. After a few weeks of rain, the country again dried up.[citation needed]

 
Crop harvesting in Khunale

The government undertook two projects in Tigray. The first was the construction of terraces which, with the agreement and help of local communities, go up to the tops of the mountains at 2,500 metres. The goal was to prevent the rainfall flowing away immediately so that it could be conserved for the agricultural season. On the highest terraces were planted trees, mainly eucalyptus, the dominant tree in Ethiopia and native to Australia. These plants created a new microclimate.[71] The terracing method was very simple but required good organization. Long stretches of the fields were terraced by the villagers using stone walls from stones that erosion had exposed. The rains eroding the still non-terraced ground formed mudslides that were held by the topmost walls, which permitted construction of a new terrace field and another wall with uncovered stones, creating new ground terraced farmland every year.

 
Addi Amharay reservoir

Another endeavour involved the construction of small reservoirs for local irrigation. As rains last only for a couple of months per year, reservoirs of different sizes allow harvesting runoff from the rainy season for further use in the dry season. The dams needed to create these basins are typically an embankment of a few hundreds of meters, closing off one part of a valley, with a maximum height of 20 metres. Each took months of work, in which people carried earth on their back, and with assistance of donkeys. Generally 2,000–3,000 people — men, women and children — carried the earth in simple baskets.[citation needed]

The small reservoirs in Tigray include:

Overall, these reservoirs suffer from rapid siltation.[72][73] Part of the water that could be used for irrigation is lost through seepage; the positive side-effect is that this contributes to groundwater recharge.[74]

Vegetation and enclosures Edit

 
Mountains of Lemalimo near Inda Selassie in western Tigray

Tigray holds numerous exclosures, areas that are set aside for regreening.[75] Logging and livestock grazing are not allowed there. Besides effects on biodiversity,[54][76][77] water infiltration, protection from flooding, sediment deposition,[78] carbon sequestration,[79] people commonly have economic benefits from these exclosures through grass harvesting, beekeeping and other non-timber forest products.[80] The local inhabitants also consider it as "land set aside for future generations".[81] In Dogu'a Tembien, several exclosures are managed by the EthioTrees project. They have as an additional benefit that the villagers receive carbon credits for the sequestered CO2,[82] as part of a carbon offset programme.[83] The revenues are then reinvested in the villages, according to the priorities of the communities;[84] it may be for an additional class in the village school, a water pond, conservation in the exclosures, or a store for incense.[85]

Livestock Edit

 
Raya oxen at ploughing near Mekelle

The CSA estimated in 2005 that farmers in Tigray had a total of 2,713,750 cattle (representing 7.0% of Ethiopia's total cattle), 72,640 sheep (0.42%), 208,970 goats (1.61%), 1,200 horses (less than 0.1%), 9,190 mules (6.24%), 386,600 asses (15.43%), 32,650 camels (7.15%), 3,180,240 poultry of all species (10.3%), and 20,480 beehives (0.47%).[86] Cattle are an essential component in the dominant grain-plough agricultural system. In the rainy season, a large part of the cattle herds are in transhumance.[87][88]

Mainly used for draught, there are several cattle landraces in Tigray:[89][90]

Landmarks Edit

 
Debre Damo monastery.

A distinctive feature of Tigray are its rock-hewn churches. Similar in design to those of Lalibela in the Amhara Region, these churches are found in four or five clusters – Gheralta, Teka-Tesfay, Atsbi and Tembien – with Wukro sometimes included. Some of the churches are considered earlier than those of Lalibela, perhaps dating from the eighth century. Mostly monolithic, with designs partly inspired by classical architecture, they are often located at the top of cliffs or steep hills, for security. For example, Tigray's ancient Debre Damo monastery is accessible only by climbing a rope 25 metres up a sheer cliff.

Looting has become a major issue in the Tigray Region, as archaeological sites have become sources for construction materials and ancient artifacts used for everyday purposes by local populations.[92]

The area is famous for a single rock sculptured 23 meter long obelisk in Axum as well as for other fallen obelisks. The Axum treasure site of ancient Tigrayan history is a major landmark. Yeha is another important local landmark that is little-known outside the region.

Transport Edit

Ground travel Edit

A major north–south road corridor goes through Tigray. This is facilitated by Highway 2 which goes from Adigrat to Addis Ababa and Highway 3 which goes from Shire to Addis Ababa.

Air travel Edit

 
Alula Aba Nega Airport near to Mekelle.

Tigray has one international airport and four commercial airports. The international airport is Alula Aba Nega Airport (MQX) near Mekelle. The region's four other commercial airports are Shire Airport (SHC), Humera Airport (HUE), Dansha Airport, and Emperor Yohannes IV Airport (AXU), which serves Axum.

Sports Edit

Mekelle 70 Enderta F.C. (Tigrinya: ጋንታ መቐለ 70 እንደርታ) is an Ethiopian football club based in the capital, Mekelle. They are a member of the Ethiopian Football Federation and currently play in the top division of Ethiopian football, the Ethiopian Premier League. They are known by the nickname the Lion of Judah (ምዓም ኣንበሳ /ምዓም አናብስት/ኣናብስቶቹ). The club won its first Ethiopian Premier League title in the 2018–2019 Ethiopian Premier League Season.

Shire Indasillasie F.C. (Tigrinya: ጋንታ ስሑል ሽረ, also known as Sihul Shire FC) is an Ethiopian football club based in Shire. They are a member of the Ethiopian Football Federation and play in the Ethiopian Premier League, the first division of football in Ethiopia.

Mekele City, Suhul Shire, and Adigrat University football clubs were Tigray-based clubs among the 14 clubs to participate in the Ethiopian Premier League in 2020/2021. However, due to the war, they were replaced by other clubs from the League one rank below the Ethiopian Premier League.[93]

Tigrayans are known for their good performance in circus and road cycling. For many years cyclists from this region have been dominant in Ethiopian cycle championships. Tsgabu Gebremaryam Grmay is one of the best Ethiopian cyclists and the first Ethiopian to participate in the Tour de France.

Education Edit

At the regional level, the Tigray Education Bureau governs primary and secondary educational institutions. At the municipal level, there are approximately 300 school districts region-wide.

Colleges and universities Edit

Libraries Edit

Tigray is home to Ethiopia's most extensive church libraries that are found in the eastern and central zones of the region. There are several ongoing digitization projects to preserve previous historical texts.

Non-governmental organisations Edit

Major NGOs, involved in development activities are:

Notes Edit

  1. ^ /ˈtɪɡr/ or /ˈtˈɡr/ ; Tigrinya: ክልል ትግራይ; Amharic: ትግራይ ክልል, romanizedTigrāy kilil
  2. ^ Tigrinya: ብሔራዊ ክልላዊ መንግስቲ ትግራይ, romanized: Bəh̩erawi Kəllelawi Mängəśti Təgray; formerly known as Region 1.

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  90. ^ Cattle breeds, milk production, and transhumance in Dogu'a Tembien. In: Geotrekking in Ethiopia's tropical mountains, Chapter 28. Cham: Springer Nature. 2019. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-04955-3_28. S2CID 199323600.
  91. ^ Merha Zerabruk; Vangen, O. (2005). "The Abergelle and Irob cattle breeds of North Ethiopia: description and on-farm characterization". Animal Genetic Resources Information Bulletin. 36: 7–20. doi:10.1017/S101423390000184X.
  92. ^ Jacke Phillips, Tekle Hagos et alia, "Combating the destruction of Ethiopia's archaeological heritage", Antiquity 28 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine 78 (December 2004)
  93. ^ Tolesa, Dawit (26 June 2021). "Six clubs to compete in Hawassa to replace Tigray clubs". The Reporter (Ethiopia). from the original on 4 August 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.

External links Edit

  • Tigray Revenue Development Authority 28 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tigray State Information
  • Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray website
  • Ethiopian Treasures – Queen of Sheba, Aksumite Kingdom – Aksum
  • Ethiopian Treasures – Emperor Yohannes IV Castle – Mekele
  • – Dam Building in Tigray by David Mercer
  • "Tigrayans want end to border row" by Elizabeth Blunt, BBC News, 20 December 2007
  • Tigray: Then and Now – the son of Mohamed Amin covers sustainable agriculture in Tigray following the Horn of Africa drought in 2011.

tigray, region, this, article, about, modern, region, historical, province, tigray, province, other, uses, tigray, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sou. This article is about the modern region For the historical province see Tigray Province For other uses see Tigray disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tigray Region news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Tigray Region A officially the Tigray National Regional State B is the northernmost regional state in Ethiopia The Tigray Region is the homeland of the Tigrayan Irob and Kunama people Its capital and largest city is Mekelle Tigray is the fifth largest by area the fifth most populous and the fifth most densely populated of the 11 regional states Tigray Region ክልል ትግራይRegional stateTigray National Regional StateFlagSealNickname The birthplace of Ethiopian civilizationMotto s ዘይንድይቦ ጎቦ There are no mountains we would not climb Map of Ethiopia showing Tigray RegionCoordinates 13 34 30 N 39 05 15 E 13 57500 N 39 08750 E 13 57500 39 08750CountryEthiopiaCapitalMekelleGovernment Chief AdministratorGetachew Reda KahsayArea 1 Total50 079 km2 19 336 sq mi Rank6thPopulation 2019 2 Total5 443 000 Rank5th Density110 km2 280 sq mi Demographics Official languageTigrinya Other languagesSaho Kunama Xamtanga Agaw Amharic Oromo DemonymTigrayanTime zoneUTC 3 EAT ISO 3166 codeET TIHDI 2021 0 522 3 low 5th of 11Websitewww wbr ethiopia wbr gov wbr et wbr regional states wbr tigray regional state wbr This article contains Ethiopic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Ethiopic characters Tigray is bordered by Eritrea to the north Sudan to the west the Amhara Region to the south and the Afar Region to the east 4 Towns in Tigray include Mekelle Adigrat Axum Shire Adwa Enticho Addi Remets Wukro Sheraro Abiy Addi Atsbi Hawzen Adi Gudom Mai Tsebri and Zalambessa Tigray s official language is Tigrinya similar to that spoken in Eritrea just to the North The estimated population as of 2019 is 5 443 000 5 The majority of the population c 80 are farmers contributing 46 to the regional gross domestic product 2009 The highlands have the highest population density especially in eastern and central Tigray The much less densely populated lowlands comprise 48 of Tigray s area Like many parts of Africa Tigray is far from a religious monolith Despite the historical identification of Ethiopia with Orthodox Christianity the presence of Islam in Ethiopia is as old as the religion itself The most recent Ethiopian census collected in 2007 estimates that Muslims make up 34 of the rapidly growing national population Although the percentage of Muslims in Tigray is only 5 to 10 it has historically been Islam s doorway to the region and to Africa at large 6 96 of Tigrayans are Orthodox Christian The government of Tigray consists of the executive branch led by the president Getachew Reda the legislative branch which comprises the state council and the judicial branch which is led by the state supreme court In early November 2020 a conflict between the Tigray People s Liberation Front TPLF and the Ethiopian federal government with support from Eritrea 7 rapidly escalating into the Tigray War destabilizing the region 8 and exposing a well organized campaign to wipe out the region of ethnic Tigrayans 9 As many as 600 000 people were killed as a result of the war 10 11 12 As of 2023 the region is run by the Interim Regional Administration of Tigray Contents 1 History 1 1 3rd millennium to 1st century BC 1 2 1st to 10th century AD 1 3 11th to 19th century AD 1 4 20th century 1 4 1 Ethiopian Civil War 1 4 2 Postwar 1 5 21st century 1 5 1 2020 administrative reorganisation 1 5 2 Tigray War 2 Geography 2 1 Location and size 2 2 Geology 2 2 1 Overview 2 2 2 Fossils 2 2 3 Traditional uses of rock 2 2 4 Major mountains 2 3 Water challenge 2 4 Wildlife 2 4 1 Large mammals 2 4 2 Small rodents 2 4 3 Bats 2 4 4 Birds 3 Administrative zones and districts 3 1 Major cities 4 Government and politics 4 1 Executive branch 4 2 Judicial branch 4 3 Legislative branch 4 4 National politics 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnicity 5 2 Languages 5 3 Notable people 6 Agriculture 6 1 Cropping 6 2 Terracing and dam construction 6 3 Vegetation and enclosures 6 4 Livestock 7 Landmarks 8 Transport 8 1 Ground travel 8 2 Air travel 9 Sports 10 Education 10 1 Colleges and universities 10 2 Libraries 11 Non governmental organisations 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksHistory Edit3rd millennium to 1st century BC Edit Tigray is often regarded as the cradle of Ethiopian civilization 13 Its landscape has many historic monuments Three major monotheistic religions Judaism Christianity and Islam arrived in Ethiopia through the Red Sea and then Tigray Given the presence of a large temple complex and fertile surroundings the capital of the 3 000 year old kingdom of Dʿmt may have been near present day Yeha 14 Dʿmt developed irrigation schemes used the plough grew millet and made iron tools and weapons Some modern historians including Stuart Munro Hay Rodolfo Fattovich Ayele Bekerie Cain Felder and Ephraim Isaac consider this civilization to be indigenous although Sabaean influenced due to the latter s dominance of the Red Sea Others including Joseph Michels Henri de Contenson Tekletsadik Mekuria and Stanley Burstein have viewed Dʿmt as the result of a mixture of Sabaean and indigenous peoples 15 16 The most recent research however shows that Ge ez the ancient Semitic language spoken in Tigray Eritrea and northern Ethiopia in ancient times is not likely to have been derived from Sabaean 17 There is evidence of a Semitic speaking presence in Tigray Eritrea and northern Ethiopia at least as early as 2000 BC 16 18 It is now believed that Sabaean influence was minor limited to a few localities and disappearing after a few decades or a century It may have represented a trading or military colony in some sort of symbiosis or military alliance with the civilization of Dʿmt or some other proto Aksumite state 15 19 After the fall of Dʿmt in the 5th century BC the plateau came to be dominated by smaller unknown successor kingdoms This lasted until the rise of one of these polities during the first century BC the Aksumite Kingdom which succeeded in reunifying the area 20 and is in effect the ancestor of medieval and modern states in Eritrea and Ethiopia using the name Ethiopia as early as the 4th century 15 21 citation needed 1st to 10th century AD Edit nbsp Axum Stele in the city Axum nbsp Aksumite gold coins The Kingdom of Aksum was a trading empire rooted in northern Ethiopia 22 It existed from approximately 100 940 AD growing from the proto Aksumite Iron Age period c 4th century BC to achieve prominence by the 1st century AD According to the Book of Axum Axum s first capital Mazaber was built by Itiyopis son of Cush 23 The capital was later moved to Aksum in northern Ethiopia The Empire of Aksum at its height at times extended across most of present day Eritrea Ethiopia Djibouti Sudan Yemen and Saudi Arabia The capital city of the empire was Axum now in northern Ethiopia Today a smaller community the city of Axum was once a bustling metropolis and a cultural and economic hub Two hills and two streams lie on the east and west expanses of the city perhaps providing the initial impetus for settling this area Along the hills and plain outside the city the Aksumites had cemeteries with elaborate grave stones which are called stelae or obelisks Other important cities included Yeha Hawulti Melazo Matara Adulis and Qohaito the last three of which are now in Eritrea By the reign of Endubis in the late 3rd century Aksum had begun minting its own currency and was named by Mani as one of the four great powers of his time along with China and the Sassanid and Roman empires It converted to Christianity in 325 or 328 under King Ezana and was the first state to use the image of the cross on its coins 24 25 nbsp Handtke s map is 39 cm wide and 66 cm tall and is printed on paper that has been bonded to fabric The scale is approximately 1 5 600 000 relief is shown by short lines representing slope aspect and a general sense of steepness hachures The work was created in one of the few stronger cartographic publishing houses in 19thcentury Germany managed by Carl Flemming 1806 1878 Flemming was aided by cartographer Friedrich Handtke 1815 1879 who worked on nearly every map assignment for the firm 26 11th to 19th century AD Edit nbsp Mekelle palace of Emperor Yohannes IV emperor of the whole Ethiopian Empire In the 14th century the Tigrinya speaking lands Tigray Mareb Melash were divided into two provinces separated by the Mereb River by the newly enthroned Agaw not Amhara emperors The governor of the northern province received the title Bahre Negash Ruler of the sea whereas the governor of the southern province was given the title of Tigray Mekonen Lord of Tigray The Portuguese Jesuit Emanuele Baradas s work titled Do reino de Tigr written in 1633 34 states that the Reino de Tigr Kingdom of Tigray extended from Hamasien to Temben from the borders of Dankel to the Adwa mountain He also stated that Tigray Mereb Melash was divided into 24 smaller political units principalities twelve of which were located south of the Mereb and governed by the Tigray Mekonen based in Enderta The other twelve were located north of the Mereb under the authority of the Bahre Negash based in the district of Serae 27 259 The Book of Aksum likely written and compiled before the 15th century shows a traditional schematic map of Tigray with the city of Aksum at its center surrounded by the 13 principal provinces Tembien Shire Serae Hamasien Bur Sam a Agame Amba Senayt Garalta Enderta Sahart and Abergele 28 failed verification During the Middle Ages the position of Tigray Mekonnen Governor of Tigray was established to rule over the area Other districts included Akele Guzay now part of Eritrea and the kingdom of the Bahr negus who ruled much of what is now Eritrea and Shire district and town in Western Tigray At the time when Tigray Mekonnen existed simultaneously with that of Bahr negus their frontier seems to have been the Mareb River which is currently constitutes the border between the Ethiopian province of Tigray and Eritrea After the loss of power of the Bahr negus in the aftermath of Bahr negus Yeshaq s rebellions the title of Tigray mekonnen gained power in relation to the Bahr negus and at times included ruling over parts of what is now Eritrea especially in the 19th century failed verification 29 By the unsettled Zemene Mesafint period Era of the Princes both designations had declined to little more than empty titles and the lord who succeeded them used and received from the Emperor the title of either Ras or Dejazmach beginning with Ras Mikael Sehul Rulers of Tigray such as Ras Wolde Selassie alternated with others chiefly those of Begemder or Yejju as warlords to maintain the Ethiopian monarchy during the Zemene Mesafint In the mid 19th century the lords of Tembien and Enderta managed to establish an overlordship of Tigray One of its members Dejazmach Kahsay Mercha ascended the imperial throne in 1872 under the name Yohannes IV Following his 1889 death in the Battle of Metemma the Ethiopian throne came under the control of the king of Shewa and the center of power shifted south and away from Tigray citation needed 20th century Edit In 1943 open resistance broke out all over southern and eastern Tigray under the slogan there is no government let s organize and govern ourselves Throughout Enderta Awraja including Mekelle Didibadergiajen Hintalo Saharti Samre and Wajirat Raya Awraja Kilte Awlaelo Awraja and Tembien Awraja local assemblies called gerreb were formed The gerreb sent representatives to a central congress called the shengo which elected leaders and established a military command system Although the first Woyane rebellion of 1943 had shortcomings as a prototype revolution historians agree that it involved a fairly high level of spontaneity and peasant initiative It demonstrated considerable popular participation and reflected widely shared grievances The uprising was specifically directed against the central Shoan Amhara regime of Haile Selassie I rather than the Tigrayan imperial elite Ethiopian Civil War Edit nbsp Memorial in Mekelle to more than 60 000 TPLF fighters who died and over 100 000 fighters who were injured in the overthrow of the Marxist Derg regime in 1991 After the February 1974 popular revolution the first signal of any mass uprising was the actions of the soldiers of the 4th Brigade of the 4th Army Division in Nagelle in southern Ethiopia The Coordinating Committee of the Armed Forces Police and Territorial Army or the Derg Ge ez Committee was officially announced 28 June 1974 by a group of military officers The committee elected Major Mengistu Haile Mariam as its chairman and Major Atnafu Abate as its vice chairman In July 1974 the Derg obtained key concessions from the emperor Haile Selassie which included the power to arrest not only military officers but government officials at every level Soon both former Prime Ministers Tsehafi Taezaz Aklilu Habte Wold and Endalkachew Makonnen along with most of their cabinets most regional governors many senior military officers and officials of the Imperial court were imprisoned In August 1974 after a proposed constitution creating a constitutional monarchy was presented to the emperor the Derg began a program of dismantling the imperial government in order to forestall further developments in that direction The Derg deposed and imprisoned the emperor on 12 September 1974 nbsp Nest box for Columba guinea considered a symbol of peace in the wall of a homestead in Zerfenti a village in Tigray where hundreds were killed by Derg bombings In addition the Derg in 1975 nationalized most industries and private and somewhat secure urban real estate holdings But mismanagement corruption and general hostility to the Derg s violent rule coupled with the draining effects of constant warfare with the separatist guerrilla movements in Tigray led to a drastic fall in general productivity of food and cash crops In October 1978 the Derg announced the National Revolutionary Development Campaign to mobilize human and material resources to transform the economy which led to a Ten Year Plan 1984 1985 1993 1994 to expand agricultural and industrial output forecasting a 6 5 growth in GDP and a 3 6 rise in per capita income Instead per capita income declined 0 8 over this period Famine scholar Alex de Waal observes that while the famine that struck the country in the mid 1980s is usually ascribed to drought closer investigation shows that widespread drought occurred only some months after the famine was already under way Hundreds of thousands fled economic misery conscription and political repression and went to live in neighboring countries and all over the Western world creating an Ethiopian diaspora Toward the end of January 1991 a coalition of rebel forces the Ethiopian People s Revolutionary Democratic Front EPRDF captured Gondar the ancient capital city Bahar Dar and Dessie citation needed Postwar Edit John Young who visited the area several times in the early 1990s attributes this delay in part to central budget restraint structural readjustment and lack of awareness by government bureaucrats in Addis Ababa of conditions in the province but notes an equally significant obstacle was posed by an entrenched and largely Amhara dominated central bureaucracy which used its power to block government authorised funds from reaching Tigray 30 At the same time a growing urban middle class of traders businessmen and government officials emerged that was suspicious of and distant from the victorious EPRDF citation needed From 1991 to 2001 the president of Tigray was Gebru Asrat In 1998 war erupted between Eritrea and Ethiopia over a portion of territory that had been administered as part of Tigray which included the town of Badme A 2002 United Nations decision awarded much of this land to Eritrea but Ethiopia did not accept the ruling until 2018 when a bilateral agreement ended the border conflict The text of this agreement has not been publicly availed 21st century Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2022 From 2001 to 2010 the president was Tsegay Berhe 2020 administrative reorganisation Edit Between 2018 and 2020 as part of a reform aimed to deepen and strengthen decentralisation woredas were reorganised and new boundaries established As smaller towns had been growing they had started providing a larger range of services such as markets and even banks that encouraged locals to travel there rather than to their formal woreda centre However these locals still had to travel to their local woreda centre for most local government services often in a different direction In 2018 and 2019 after multiple village discussions that were often vigorous in the more remote areas 21 independent urban administrations were added and other boundaries re drawn resulting in an increase from 35 to 88 woredas in January 2020 citation needed Tigray War Edit Main article Tigray War Following the 2020 Tigray regional election after months of preparation with the Eritrean army as demonstrated by the Eritrean president visiting the Ethiopian air force on October 14 2020 the Ethiopian military launched attacks on the government of Tigray headquarters in Mekelle on 4 November marking the beginning of the Tigray War Ethiopian troops as well as Amhara militia advanced through southern Tigray while Eritrean troops occupied border towns in northern Tigray 31 Amhara militias also occupied Western Tigray and still do as of 2023 32 Warfare the COVID 19 pandemic in Ethiopia and a locust outbreak all contributed to an emergency food situation in the region in January 2021 Two million people faced food shortages the situation was particularly dire in Shire Inda Selassie where there are 100 000 refugees The Famine Early Warning Systems Network said parts of central and eastern Tigray are likely in emergency phase 4 a step below famine 33 Geography EditLocation and size Edit Tigray is situated between 12 15 N and 36 30 40 30 E A 2006 national statistics report stated the land area as 50 079 km2 19 336 sq mi 1 The 2011 National Statistics gave an area of 41 410 km2 15 990 sq mi but the sum of the figures it gave for the Tigray zones was substantially different 34 rendering the 2011 report internally inconsistent The figure of 50 079 km2 is supported by the Google Maps area calculator Geology Edit Overview Edit The East African Orogeny led to the growth of a mountain chain in the Precambrian up to 800 Ma million years ago which was largely eroded afterwards 35 36 37 Around 600 Ma the Gondwana break up led to the presence of tectonic structures and a Palaeozoic planation surface that extents to the north and west of the Dogu a Tembien massif 38 Subsequently there was the deposition of sedimentary and volcanic formations from older at the foot of the massif to younger near the summits From Palaeozoic to Triassic Tigray was located near the South Pole The reactivate Precambrian extensional faults guided the deposition of glacial sediments Edaga Arbi Glacials and Enticho Sandstone Later alluvial plain sediments were deposited Adigrat Sandstone The break up of Gondwana Late Palaeozoic to Early Triassic led to an extensional tectonic phase what caused the lowering of large parts of the Horn of Africa As a consequence a marine transgression occurred leading to the deposition of marine sediments Antalo Limestone and Agula Shale 39 The region has an estimated 3 89 billion tons of mostly excellent quality oil shale 40 nbsp The Antalo Limestone cliff at Mishlam in the southeastern part of Dogu a TembienAt the end of the Mesozoic tectonic phase a new Cretaceous planation took place After that the deposition of continental sediments Amba Aradam Formation indicates the presence of less shallow seas probably caused by a regional uplift At the beginning of the Caenozoic there was a relative tectonic quiescence during which the Amba Aradam Sandstones were partially eroded which led to the formation of a new planation surface 41 In the Eocene the Afar plume a broad regional uplift deformed the lithosphere leading to the eruption of flood basalts Three major formations may be distinguished lower basalts interbedded lacustrine deposits and upper basalts 42 Almost at the same time the Mekelle Dolerite intruded into the Mesozoic sediments following joints and faults 43 A new magma intrusion occurred in the Early Miocene which gave rise to phonolite plugs mainly in the Adwa area and also in Dogu a Tembien 42 The present geomorphology is marked by deep valleys eroded as a result of the regional uplift Throughout the Quaternary deposition of alluvium and freshwater tufa occurred in the valley bottoms 44 Fossils Edit In Tigray there are two main fossil bearing geological units The Antalo Limestone upper Jurassic is the largest Its marine deposits comprise mainly benthic marine invertebrates Also the Tertiary lacustrine deposits interbedded in the basalt formations contain a range of silicified mollusc fossils 45 In the Antalo Limestone large Paracenoceratidae cephalopods nautilus Nerineidae indet sea urchins Rhynchonellid brachiopod crustaceans coral colonies crinoid stems 46 45 In the Tertiary silicified lacustrine deposits Pila gastropod Lanistes sp Pirenella conica and land snails Achatinidae indet 45 47 All snail shells both fossil and recent are called t uyo in Tigrinya language which means helicoidal Traditional uses of rock Edit As Tigray holds a wide variety of rock types there is expectedly a varied use of rock Natural stone masonry Preferentially the easier shaped limestone and sandstone are used to build homesteads and churches but particularly in the upland areas basalt is also used Traditionally fermented mud will be used as mortar Fencing of homesteads generally in dry stones Church bells generally three elongated plates in phonolite or clinkstone with different tonalities Milling stone for this purpose plucked bedrock pits small rock cut basins that naturally occur in rivers with kolks are excavated from the river bed and further shaped Milling is done at home using an elongated small boulder 48 49 Door and window lintels prepared from rock types that frequently have an elongated shape sandstone phonolite limestone or that are easily shaped tufa Troughs for livestock watering and feeding generally hewn from tufa Footpath paving generally done as community work Some very ancient paved footpaths occur on major communication lines dating back to the period before the introduction of the automobile foot travellers stop pray and put an additional stone Stones collected from farmlands in order to free space for the crop and heaped in typical rounded metres high heaps called zala Contour bunding or gedeba terrace walls in dry stone typically laid out along the contour for sake of soil conservation Check dams or qetri in gullies for sake of gully erosion control Cobble stones used for paving secondary streets in the towns Generally limestone is used Major mountains Edit Ferrah Imba 3954 metres 50 summit of the Tsibet massif in Endamekoni woreda 12 50 34 N 39 31 03 E 12 84278 N 39 51750 E 12 84278 39 51750 and highest peak of Tigray Imba Alaje 3438 metres in Alaje woreda 12 59 39 N 39 30 13 E 12 99417 N 39 50361 E 12 99417 39 50361 Mugulat 3263 metres in Ganta Afeshum woreda 14 16 N 39 25 E 14 267 N 39 417 E 14 267 39 417 one of its spurs is crossed by the Siqurto foot tunnel Asimba 3199 metres in Irob woreda 14 26 N 39 36 E 14 433 N 39 600 E 14 433 39 600 Upper plateaus of the Atsbi Horst at 3057 metres in Atsbi Wenberta woreda 14 03 N 39 43 E 14 050 N 39 717 E 14 050 39 717 Maebino 3031 metres in Irob woreda 14 27 N 39 33 E 14 450 N 39 550 E 14 450 39 550 Imba Tsion 2917 metres in Hawzen woreda 14 06 N 39 26 E 14 100 N 39 433 E 14 100 39 433 Ekli Imba 2799 metres summit of the Arebay massif in Degua Tembien woreda 13 43 N 39 16 E 13 717 N 39 267 E 13 717 39 267 Imba Aradom sometimes transliterated as Amba Aradam 2756 metres in Hintalo Wajirat woreda 13 20 N 39 31 E 13 333 N 39 517 E 13 333 39 517 Soloda 2436 metres part of the Adwa plugs in Adwa woreda 14 11 N 38 54 E 14 183 N 38 900 E 14 183 38 900 Imba Neway 2388 metres in Abergele woreda 13 16 N 38 57 E 13 267 N 38 950 E 13 267 38 950 Water challenge Edit nbsp Regularised stream fed by Gereb Segen damOverall the region is semi arid The wet season lasts only for a couple of months The farmers are adapted to this but the problem arises when rains are less than normal Another major challenge is providing water to urban areas Smaller towns but particularly Mekelle face endemic water shortages Reservoirs have been built but their management is sub optimal Wildlife Edit Large mammals Edit nbsp Besides elephants in Western Tigray and the endemic gelada baboon on the highest mountains large mammals in the region with scientific italics English and Tigrinya language names are 51 Cercopithecus aethiops grivet monkey ወዓግ wi ag Crocuta crocuta spotted hyena ዝብኢ zibi Caracal caracal caracal ጭክ ኣንበሳ ch ok anbessa Panthera pardus leopard ነብሪ nebri Xerus rutilus unstriped ground squirrel ምጹጽላይ or ጨጨራ mitsutsilay chechera Canis mesomelas black backed jackal ቡኳርያ bukharya Canis anthus golden jackal ቡኳርያ bukharya Papio hamadryas hamadryas baboon ጋውና gawina Procavia capensis rock hyrax ጊሐ gihe Felis silvestris African wildcat ሓክሊ ድሙ hakili dummu Civettictis civetta African civet ዝባድ zibad Papio anubis olive baboon ህበይ hibey Ichneumia albicauda white tailed mongoose ፂሒራ tsihira Herpestes ichneumon large grey mongoose ፂሒራ tsihira Hystrix cristata crested porcupine ቅንፈዝ qinfiz Oreotragus oreotragus klipspringer ሰስሓ sesiha Orycteropus afer aardvark ፍሒራ fihira Genetta genetta common genet ስልሕልሖት silihlihot Lepus capensis cape hare ማንቲለ mantile Mellivora capensis honey badger ትትጊ titigi Small rodents Edit The most common pest rodents with widespread distribution in agricultural fields and storage areas are three Ethiopian endemic species the Dembea grass rat Arvicanthis dembeensis sometimes considered a subspecies of Arvicanthis niloticus Ethiopian white footed rat Stenocephalemys albipes and Awash multimammate mouse Mastomys awashensis 52 Bats Edit Bats occur in natural caves church buildings and abandoned homesteads The large colony of bats that roosts in Zeyi cave comprises Hipposideros megalotis Ethiopian large eared roundleaf bat Hipposideros tephrus and Rhinolophus blasii Blasius s horseshoe bat 53 Birds Edit With its numerous exclosures forest fragments and church forests Tigray is a birdwatcher s paradise Detailed inventories 54 55 list at least 170 bird species including numerous endemic species Species belonging to the Afrotropical Highland Biome occur in the dry evergreen montane forests of the highland plateau but can also occupy other habitats Wattled Ibis can be found feeding in wet grassland and open woodland Black winged Lovebird Banded Barbet Golden mantled or Abyssinian Woodpecker Montane White eye Ruppell s Robin chat Abyssinian Slaty Flycatcher and Tacazze Sunbird are found in evergreen forest mountain woodlands and areas with scattered trees including fig trees Euphorbia abyssinica and Juniperus procera Erckel s spurfowl Dusky Turtle Dove Swainson s or Grey headed Sparrow Baglafecht Weaver African Citril Brown rumped Seedeater and Streaky Seedeater are common Afrotropical breeding residents of woodland edges scrubland and forest edges White billed Starling and Little Rock Thrush can be found on steep cliffs Speckled or African rock pigeon and White collared Pigeon in gorges and rocky places but also in towns and villages 54 Species belonging to the Somali Masai Biome Hemprich s Hornbill and White rumped Babbler are found in bushland scrubland and dense secondary forest often near cliffs gorges or water Chestnut Winged or Somali Starling and Ruppell s Weaver are found in bushy and shrubby areas Black billed wood hoopoes have some red at the base of the bill or an entirely red bill in this area 54 Species belonging to the Sudan Guinea Savanna Biome Green backed eremomela and Chestnut crowned Sparrow Weaver 54 Species that are neither endemic nor biome restricted but that have restricted ranges or that can be more easily seen in Ethiopia than elsewhere in their range Abyssinian Roller is an Ethiopian relative of Lilac breasted Roller which is an intra tropical breeding migrant of south and east Africa and of European Roller an uncommon Palearctic passage migrant Black billed Barbet Yellow breasted Barbet and Grey headed Batis are species from the Sahel and Northern Africa but also occur in Acacia woodlands in the area 54 The most regularly observed raptor birds in crop fields in Tigray are Augur buzzard Buteo augur Common Buzzard Buteo buteo Steppe Eagle Aquila nipalensis Lanner falcon Falco biarmicus Black kite Milvus migrans Yellow billed kite Milvus aegyptius and Barn owl Tyto alba 56 Birdwatching can be done particularly in exclosures and forests Eighteen bird watching sites have been inventoried in Enderta and Degua Tembien 54 and mapped 57 Administrative zones and districts Edit nbsp Administrative zones of Tigray nbsp Districts of TigrayLike other Regions in Ethiopia Tigray is subdivided into administrative zones and further into woredas or districts Up to January 2020 these were the woredas of Tigray Central Tigray Abergele Abiy Addi Town Adwa Adwa Town Aksum Town Dogu a Tembien Enticho Kola Tembien La ilay Maychew Mereb Lehe Naeder Adet Tahtay Maychew Werie Lehe East Tigray Adigrat Town Atsbi Wenberta Ganta Afeshum Gulomahda Hawzen Irob Kilte Awulaelo Saesi Tsaedaemba Wukro Town North West Tigray Asigede Tsimbela La ilay Adiyabo Medebay Zana Tahtay Adiyabo Tahtay Koraro Tselemti Shiraro Town Shire Town South Tigray Alaje Alamata Alamata Town Endamehoni Korem Town Maychew Town Ofla Raya Azebo South East Tigray Enderta Hintalo Wajirat Samre West Tigray Kafta Humera Humera Town Wolqayt Tsegede Mekelle special zone In 2018 and 2019 after multiple village discussions that were often vigorous in the more remote areas 21 independent urban administrations were added and other boundaries re drawn resulting in an increase from 35 to 94 woredas in January 2020 Central Tigray Abergele Adet Abiy Addi Town Adwa Adwa Town Ahlerorn Ahsea Aksum Town Chila Egada Arbi Egela Emba Seneyti Endaleiasi Enticho Town Hahayle Kayeh Tekli Kola Temben Laelay Maychew Naeder Rama Tahtay Maychew Tanqwa Melash East Tigray Adigrat Town Agulae Atsbi Atsbi Town Bizet Edaga Hamus Town Erob Freweyni Town Ganta Afeshum Geralta Hawzen Hawzen Town Irob Kelete Awelallo Saesie Tsaeda Emba Wukro Town Zala Anbesa Town North West Tigray Adi Daero town Adi Hageray Asgede Dima Inda Aba Guna town Shire Inda Slasse city Laelay Adiabo May Tsebri Town Selekleka Seyemti Adyabo Sheraro Town Tahtay Adiyabo Tahtay Koraro Tselemti Tsimbia Zena South Tigray Alamata Town Bora Chercher Emba Alaje Endamehoni Korem Town Maichew Town Mekhoni Town Neqsage Ofla Raya Alamata Raya Azebo Selewa Zata South East Tigray Adigudom Dogua Temberi Enderta Hagere Setam Town Hintalo Saharti Samre Wajirat West Tigray Awora Dansha Town Kafta Humera Korant May Gaba May Kadra Setit Hemera Tsegede Welkalt Mekelle special zone Major cities Edit Mekelle home to Mekelle University Mekelle Institute of Technology Tigray Institute of Policy Studies Admas University Microlink College Nile College and Mekelle College of Teacher Education is the capital of Tigray near the geographic center of the state Other Tigray cities functioning as centers of Ethiopian metropolitan areas include Adigrat home of Adigrat University Debre Damo monastery and Addis Pharmaceutical Factory Adwa home of Adwa Pan African University Axum home of Aksum University Maychew home of Raya University Of the 10 largest cities in Tigray Maychew has the highest elevation at 2479 meter above sea level Plenty of smaller towns like Atsbi and Edaga Hamus are located at even higher elevations Of the large cities Humera is located at the lowest altitude 585 m Government and politics EditExecutive branch Edit The executive branch is headed by the Chief Administrator of Tigray The current president is Getachew Reda Kahsay a TPLF member elected in 2023 A Vice President of Tigray succeeds the president in the event of any removal from office and performs any duties assigned by the president 59 The other elected constitutional offices in the executive branch are the Regional Health Bureau Ato Hagos Godefy 60 Educational Bureau Ato Gebre egziabher 61 Auditor General Ato Alemseged Kebedew and 12 other officials 62 Judicial branch Edit There are three levels of the Tigray state judiciary The lowest level is the court of common pleas each woreda maintains its own constitutionally mandated court of common pleas which maintain jurisdiction over all justiciable matters 63 self published source The intermediate level court system is the district court system Four courts of appeals exist each retaining jurisdiction over appeals from common pleas municipal and county courts in an administrative zone A case heard in this system is decided by a three judge panel and each judge is elected The highest ranking court the Tigray Supreme Court is Tigray s court of last resort 64 A seven justice panel composes the court which by its own discretion hears appeals from the courts of appeals and retains original jurisdiction over limited matters The chief judge is called the President of Tigray Supreme Court W ro Hirity Miheretab Legislative branch Edit The State Council which is the highest administrative body of the state is made up of 152 members 62 National politics Edit Tigray is represented by 38 representatives in the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia House of Peoples Representatives But currently after the illegitimate postponement of the national election of Ethiopia Tigray has pulled it representative from the House of House of Peoples Representatives and has no representation in the Federal parliament 1 Demographics Edit nbsp Tigrayan women washing clothes in Santarfa nbsp Faithful to the Church of Our Lady Mary of ZionBased on the 2007 census conducted by the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia CSA the Tigray Region has a population of 4 316 988 of whom 2 126 465 are men and 2 190 523 women urban inhabitants number 844 040 or 19 55 of the population With an estimated area of 84 722 km2 the region had an estimated density of 51 people per km2 In the entire region 992 635 households were counted for an average of 4 4 people per household with urban households having on average 3 4 and rural households 4 6 65 In the previous census conducted in 1994 the region s population was 3 136 267 of whom 1 542 165 were men and 1 594 102 women urban inhabitants numbered 621 210 or 14 of the population According to the CSA as of 2004 update 53 99 of the total population had access to safe drinking water of whom 42 68 were rural inhabitants and 97 28 were urban 66 Values for other reported common indicators of the standard of living for Tigray as of 2005 update include 31 6 of the inhabitants fall into the lowest wealth quintile adult literacy for men is 67 5 and for women 33 7 and the infant mortality rate is 67 infant deaths per 1 000 live births less than the national average of 77 at least half of these deaths occurred in the infants first month of life 67 The predominant religion in Tigray is Orthodox Christianity 68 Religion 1994 Census 2007 Census 68 Orthodox Christians 96 5 96 6 Muslim 3 1 3 0 Catholics 0 4 0 4 Historical populationYearPop 19943 136 267 20074 316 988 37 6 source 69 Ethnicity Edit nbsp 14th century illustration showing the Christian King Negus of Aksum King Armah also known as Al Najashi declining the request of a pagan Meccan delegation to forfeit the first Muslims who received refuge in the city of Axum following the First Hijra as Prophet Muhammad told them to take refuge in Axum With 96 55 of the local population the region is predominantly inhabited by the Tigrinya speaking Tigrayan people The Tigrinya language belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afro Asiatic family of languages Most other residents hail from other Afro Asiatic speaking communities including the Amhara Irob Afar Agaw and Oromo Partly assimilated Oromo live in remoter villages in Raya Azebo and Alamata woreda whereas there are Agaw in Abergele woreda There are also Nilo Saharan speaking Kunama as well citation needed Ethnicgroup 1994 Census 2007 Census 65 Tigrayan 94 98 96 55 Amhara 2 60 1 63 Irob 0 70 0 71 Afar 0 29 Agaw 0 19 Oromo 0 17 Kunama 0 05 0 07 Languages Edit The working language is Tigrinya Saho and Kunama are also spoken and people in urban areas are also able to speak Amharic 70 Notable people Edit Mehari Taddele Maru author professor at European university Institute Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Director General World Health Organization WHO Meles Zenawi Asres Prime Minister Ethiopia 1995 2012 Zeresenay Alemseged Anthropologist known for his discovery of Selam also referred to as Lucy s child the almost complete fossilized remains of a 3 3 million year old child of the species Australopithecus afarensis Agriculture EditCropping Edit nbsp Heaped straw or kulsasThis section is empty You can help by adding to it July 2021 Terracing and dam construction Edit nbsp Gestet forestAn important aspect of the agricultural work in Tigray after the end of the 1991 civil war was to minimize the problems of drought In the past Tigray was covered with forests and had a micro climate that favoured the rains Subsequently the forests were cut down usually to impoverish the population during the wars Consequently Tigray achieved a fair amount of rainfall during the rainy season from August to September but quickly lost these waters downstream In the process the fertile soil of the fields eroded After a few weeks of rain the country again dried up citation needed nbsp Crop harvesting in KhunaleThe government undertook two projects in Tigray The first was the construction of terraces which with the agreement and help of local communities go up to the tops of the mountains at 2 500 metres The goal was to prevent the rainfall flowing away immediately so that it could be conserved for the agricultural season On the highest terraces were planted trees mainly eucalyptus the dominant tree in Ethiopia and native to Australia These plants created a new microclimate 71 The terracing method was very simple but required good organization Long stretches of the fields were terraced by the villagers using stone walls from stones that erosion had exposed The rains eroding the still non terraced ground formed mudslides that were held by the topmost walls which permitted construction of a new terrace field and another wall with uncovered stones creating new ground terraced farmland every year nbsp Addi Amharay reservoirAnother endeavour involved the construction of small reservoirs for local irrigation As rains last only for a couple of months per year reservoirs of different sizes allow harvesting runoff from the rainy season for further use in the dry season The dams needed to create these basins are typically an embankment of a few hundreds of meters closing off one part of a valley with a maximum height of 20 metres Each took months of work in which people carried earth on their back and with assistance of donkeys Generally 2 000 3 000 people men women and children carried the earth in simple baskets citation needed The small reservoirs in Tigray include Addi Abagie Addi Akhor Addi Amharay May Leiba Hiza iti Wedi Cheber Addi Asme e Chini Addi Gela Addi Hilo Addi Qenafiz Addi Shihu Aqushela Arato Belesat Betqua Chichat Dibdibo Dur Anbesa Imbagedo Inda Zib i Era reservoir Era Quhila Gereb Mihiz Filiglig Gereb May Zib i Gereb Bi ati Gereb Awso Felaga Gereb Segen Hintalo Gereb Segen May Gabat Gereb Shegal Ginda i Godew Overall these reservoirs suffer from rapid siltation 72 73 Part of the water that could be used for irrigation is lost through seepage the positive side effect is that this contributes to groundwater recharge 74 Vegetation and enclosures Edit nbsp Mountains of Lemalimo near Inda Selassie in western TigrayTigray holds numerous exclosures areas that are set aside for regreening 75 Logging and livestock grazing are not allowed there Besides effects on biodiversity 54 76 77 water infiltration protection from flooding sediment deposition 78 carbon sequestration 79 people commonly have economic benefits from these exclosures through grass harvesting beekeeping and other non timber forest products 80 The local inhabitants also consider it as land set aside for future generations 81 In Dogu a Tembien several exclosures are managed by the EthioTrees project They have as an additional benefit that the villagers receive carbon credits for the sequestered CO2 82 as part of a carbon offset programme 83 The revenues are then reinvested in the villages according to the priorities of the communities 84 it may be for an additional class in the village school a water pond conservation in the exclosures or a store for incense 85 Livestock Edit nbsp Raya oxen at ploughing near MekelleThe CSA estimated in 2005 that farmers in Tigray had a total of 2 713 750 cattle representing 7 0 of Ethiopia s total cattle 72 640 sheep 0 42 208 970 goats 1 61 1 200 horses less than 0 1 9 190 mules 6 24 386 600 asses 15 43 32 650 camels 7 15 3 180 240 poultry of all species 10 3 and 20 480 beehives 0 47 86 Cattle are an essential component in the dominant grain plough agricultural system In the rainy season a large part of the cattle herds are in transhumance 87 88 Mainly used for draught there are several cattle landraces in Tigray 89 90 Arado cattle the dominant variety Raya cattle long horned especially raised in Southern Tigray and traded widely as plough oxen Irob cattle particularly in the Irob woreda 91 Abergele cattle particularly in Abergele woreda and on the southwestern slopes of Dogu a Tembien Begayt cattle in western Tigray They are known for better milk production In small towns Cross bred Arado x Begayt and Arado x Holstein Friesian milk cowsLandmarks Edit nbsp Debre Damo monastery A distinctive feature of Tigray are its rock hewn churches Similar in design to those of Lalibela in the Amhara Region these churches are found in four or five clusters Gheralta Teka Tesfay Atsbi and Tembien with Wukro sometimes included Some of the churches are considered earlier than those of Lalibela perhaps dating from the eighth century Mostly monolithic with designs partly inspired by classical architecture they are often located at the top of cliffs or steep hills for security For example Tigray s ancient Debre Damo monastery is accessible only by climbing a rope 25 metres up a sheer cliff Looting has become a major issue in the Tigray Region as archaeological sites have become sources for construction materials and ancient artifacts used for everyday purposes by local populations 92 The area is famous for a single rock sculptured 23 meter long obelisk in Axum as well as for other fallen obelisks The Axum treasure site of ancient Tigrayan history is a major landmark Yeha is another important local landmark that is little known outside the region Transport EditGround travel Edit A major north south road corridor goes through Tigray This is facilitated by Highway 2 which goes from Adigrat to Addis Ababa and Highway 3 which goes from Shire to Addis Ababa Air travel Edit nbsp Alula Aba Nega Airport near to Mekelle Tigray has one international airport and four commercial airports The international airport is Alula Aba Nega Airport MQX near Mekelle The region s four other commercial airports are Shire Airport SHC Humera Airport HUE Dansha Airport and Emperor Yohannes IV Airport AXU which serves Axum Sports EditMekelle 70 Enderta F C Tigrinya ጋንታ መቐለ 70 እንደርታ is an Ethiopian football club based in the capital Mekelle They are a member of the Ethiopian Football Federation and currently play in the top division of Ethiopian football the Ethiopian Premier League They are known by the nickname the Lion of Judah ምዓም ኣንበሳ ምዓም አናብስት ኣናብስቶቹ The club won its first Ethiopian Premier League title in the 2018 2019 Ethiopian Premier League Season Shire Indasillasie F C Tigrinya ጋንታ ስሑል ሽረ also known as Sihul Shire FC is an Ethiopian football club based in Shire They are a member of the Ethiopian Football Federation and play in the Ethiopian Premier League the first division of football in Ethiopia Mekele City Suhul Shire and Adigrat University football clubs were Tigray based clubs among the 14 clubs to participate in the Ethiopian Premier League in 2020 2021 However due to the war they were replaced by other clubs from the League one rank below the Ethiopian Premier League 93 Tigrayans are known for their good performance in circus and road cycling For many years cyclists from this region have been dominant in Ethiopian cycle championships Tsgabu Gebremaryam Grmay is one of the best Ethiopian cyclists and the first Ethiopian to participate in the Tour de France Education EditAt the regional level the Tigray Education Bureau governs primary and secondary educational institutions At the municipal level there are approximately 300 school districts region wide Colleges and universities Edit Adigrat University Axum University Adwa Pan African University Ethio lmage College Greenwich College Hashenge College Mars Engineering College Mekelle University Mekelle Institute of Technology New Millennium College Nile College Sehba Info Tech amp Business College Signal College St Mary s University College Winner college Axum Libraries Edit Tigray is home to Ethiopia s most extensive church libraries that are found in the eastern and central zones of the region There are several ongoing digitization projects to preserve previous historical texts Axum Heritage Foundation Romanat Qeddus Mika el Church Gunda Gunde Monastery Agwaza Monastery Debre Damo MonasteryNon governmental organisations EditMajor NGOs involved in development activities are Relief Society of Tigray Tigrai Development Association Tegaru Disaster Relief Fund TDRF Notes Edit ˈ t ɪ ɡ r aɪ or ˈ t iː ˈ ɡ r eɪ Tigrinya ክልል ትግራይ Amharic ትግራይ ክልል romanized Tigray kilil Tigrinya ብሔራዊ ክልላዊ መንግስቲ ትግራይ romanized Beh erawi Kellelawi Mangesti Tegray formerly known as Region 1 References Edit a b National Statistics Section B Population PDF Central Statistical Agency 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 21 February 2007 Retrieved 22 November 2020 SITUATION ANALYSIS OF 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Region at DPPA of Ethiopia Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray website Ethiopian Treasures Queen of Sheba Aksumite Kingdom Aksum Ethiopian Treasures Emperor Yohannes IV Castle Mekele Future Observatory Dam Building in Tigray by David Mercer Tigrayans want end to border row by Elizabeth Blunt BBC News 20 December 2007 Tigray Then and Now the son of Mohamed Amin covers sustainable agriculture in Tigray following the Horn of Africa drought in 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tigray Region amp oldid 1180382967, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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