Article contents
The end of the reign of Menilek II
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Extract
This article describes the debilitating illness of Menilek and its effects upon the Ethiopian state. Prior to his incapacity, the old emperor established a European-style cabient, reformed the appelate judiciary, named Lij Eyyasu as his heir, and appointed Ras Bitwodded Tessema Nado as regent. The latter two actions were opposed by Empress Taitou, who hoped to become the real ruler of Ethiopia, operating behind the scenes. As the emperor weakened, she managed to concentrate many of his functions and much of his authority in her own hands. Given the confusion caused by Menilek's condition, she went unchallenged for a time, during which she attempted futilely to construct a viable power base in the north. Finally, in reaction, the Shoan, southern faction, which had much to lose if Menilek's settlement was upset, united and successfully deposed the empress in 1910. A regency government, composed of Menilek's council of ministers and the more important provincial governors, operated more or less functionally until April 1911, when the Ras-Regent died. At the time Lij Eyyasu became chairman of the regency council, and by 1913 he was exercising more or less full authority over the empire. Contrary to contemporary official European expectations and calculations, Menilek's empire did not crack apart upon his removal, nor from regional and personal rivalries. The diplomats showed complete ignorance about the effectiveness of the administrative and military occupation of the newly annexed parts of the empire; they grossly undervalued the strength of Amhara–Tigrean nationalism; they misunderstood the vitality of the mythology of the Solomonic dynasty; and they failed to consider the veneration which Menilek elicited from his people. More than any other point, this article demonstrates the transcendent vitality of the empire which Menilek constructed.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1970
References
1 Marcus, H. G., ‘A Preliminary History of the Tripartite Treaty of 13 December 1906’, Journal of Ethiopian Studies, III 4 (1965), passim.Google Scholar
2 F.O. 401/9, Harrington, to Grey, , 29 06 1906.Google Scholar
3 F.O. 401/9, Harrington, to Grey, , 11 09 1906.Google Scholar
4 F.O. 401/9, Harrington, to Grey, , 12 10 1906.Google Scholar
5 SirThomas, Hohier, Diplomatic Petrel (London, 1942), 122, 125, 127, 129, 141, 143.Google Scholar
6 F.O. 401/10, Hohler, to Hardinge, , 20 08 1907.Google Scholar
7 F.O. 401/10, Harrington, to Grey, , 10 09 1907.Google ScholarGrey, to San, Giuliano, Cambon, , Metternich, and Poklewski-Koziell, , 23 09 1907.Google Scholar
8 F.O. 401/10, Hohler, to Grey, , 23 10 1907.Google Scholar
9 F.O. 401/10, Menilek, to Hohler, , 25 10 1907.Google Scholar
10 Barois, M. J., ‘Impressions de Voyage en Abyssinie’, Bull. de l'institut Egyptien, II (12 1908), 36.Google Scholar
11 Guèbrè, Sellasié, Chronique du Règne de Ménélik II (Paris, 1931), II, 527–8Google Scholar
12 Guèbrè, Sellasié, Chronique, II, 531–53.Google Scholar
13 Hohier, , Diplomatic Petrel, 133–7.Google Scholar
14 F.O. 401/11, Hervey, to Grey, , 14 10 1908.Google Scholar
15 Docteur, Merab, Impressions d'ethiopie (Paris, 1922), II, 226.Google Scholar
16 F.O. 401/11, Harrington, to Grey, , 14 06 1908.Google Scholar
17 ‘Faits Divers’, Le Semeur d'ethiopie, 4 (07 1908), 432.Google Scholar
18 F.O. 401/11, Harrington, to Grey, , 13 10 1908.Google Scholar
19 F.O. 401/11, Hervey, to Grey, , 30 10 1908.Google Scholar
20 Marcus, ‘The Tripartite Treaty’, passim.
21 Always a notable exception are those writers whose absurd ethnocultural or racist bias invalidate their reporting. For example see Baroness Löwenkreuz, Emanuela (ed.), In Reiche Kaiser Menileks: Tagebuch einer Abessinischen Reise von Friedrich Freiherrn von Kulmer (Leipzig, n.d.).Google Scholar
22 DrGeorge, Montandon, Au Pays Ghimirra, 1909–11 (Paris, 1913), 21.Google Scholar
23 Dr George, Montandon, ‘A Journey in South-Western Abyssinia’, The Geographical Journal, XL, 4 (10 1912), 383.Google Scholar
24 Rein, G. K., Abessinien, Eine Landeskunde Nach Reisen und Studien in den Jahren 1907–13 (Berlin, 1918), 1, 253.Google Scholar
25 Lagana, G., ‘Abissinia’, L'Africa Italiana, XXXIV, X (10 1915.) 259, 263.Google Scholar
26 Barois, , ‘Impressions’, 34.Google ScholarClifford, Halle, To Menilek in a Motor Car (London, 1913), 262, 267, 268, 269, 274, 300.Google ScholarHenry Savage Landor, A., Across Widest Africa (New York, 1907), 1, 77, 86, 89, 90, 97, 98.Google Scholar
27 George, Rémond: ‘L'Agonie de I'Empereur Ménélik’, Le Correspondent 244 (25 07 1911), 377.Google Scholar
28 Guèbrè, Selassié, Chronique, II, 596.Google Scholar
29 Rémond, , ‘L'Agonie’, 399.Google Scholar
30 F.O. 401/12, Hervey, to Grey, , 02 1909.Google Scholar
31 F.O. 401/12, Rodd, to Grey, , 4 02, 1909.Google Scholar
32 F.O. 408/12, Hervey, to Grey, , 6 02 1909.Google Scholar
33 F.O. 402/12, Count, de Bosdari to Grey, , 8 02 1909.Google Scholar
34 The date of his return is reported differently. See ‘Faits Divers’, Le Semeur d'Ethiopie, 5 (02 1909),Google Scholar and F.O. 401/12, Hervey, to Grey, , 13 02 1909.Google Scholar
35 F.O. 401/12, Count, de Bosdari to Grey, , 23 02 1909Google Scholar and Montandon, , Pays Ghimirra, 40.Google Scholar
36 F.O. 401/12, Count, de Bosdari to Grey, , 23 02 1909.Google Scholar
37 ‘Faits Divers’, Le Semeur d'Ethiopie, 5 (03 1909) 566.Google Scholar
38 Hoffman, Philip, Abyssinian Memories (Santa Barbara, California, 1948) 16–17.Google Scholar
39 F.O. 401/12, Count, de Bosdari to Grey, , 16 03 1909.Google Scholar
40 ‘Faits Divers’, Le Semeur d'Ethiopie, 5 (03 1909) 566.Google Scholar
41 Rémond, , ‘l'Agonie’, 342.Google Scholar
42 F.O. 401/12, Count, de Bosdari to Grey, , 16 03 1909.Google Scholar
43 American Archives, Records of the Department of State relating to the internal affairs of Ethiopia, 1910–29, Memo on current affairs in Addis Ababa by Hoffman Philip, Consul General, to the Asst. Secretary of State, 35 January 1910. Also see Arnaldo, Cipolla, Nell' Impero di Menilek (Milano, 1911) 15.Google Scholar
44 F.O. 403/12, Report on Abyssinia, 1907–8 by Lord, Hervey, 31 12 1908;Google ScholarHervey, to Grey, , 13 02 1909;Google ScholarLagana, , ‘Abissinia’, 263;Google ScholarGuiseppe, Piazza, Alla Corte di Menilek (Ancona, 1912), 165ff.;Google ScholarMontandon, , Pays Ghimirra, 50;Google ScholarMérab, , Impressions, II, 226.Google Scholar
45 F.O. 401/12, Hervey, to Grey, , 13 02 1909Google Scholar and F.O. 403/13, Hervey, to Grey, , 16 07 1909.Google Scholar
46 F.O. 401/12, Rodd, to Grey, , 18 05 1909;Google ScholarPiazza, , Alla Corte, 167.Google Scholar
47 Lagana, , ‘Abissinia’, 264;Google Scholar F.O. 401/14, Thesiger, to Grey, , 25 02 1910.Google Scholar
48 F.O. 401/12, Hervey, to Grey, , 4 06 1909.Google Scholar
49 ‘Faits divers’, SE, 5 (06 1909), 603.Google Scholar
50 See below, p. 583.
51 For the standard and opposite view, see Montandon, , Ghimmira, 59Google Scholar and Merab, , Impressions, II, 288 ff.Google Scholar
52 The sources disagree about the dates. The events may have taken place on 16–18 May.
53 In the Chronicles, Eyyasu is mentioned by name, but the other sources are unanimous that no name was specified.
54 Guèbrè, Sellasié, Chronique, II, 540–2;Google ScholarMérab, , Impressions, II, 65–6;Google ScholarRémond, , ‘l'Agonie’, 340;Google Scholar F.O. 401/12, Hervey, to Grey, , 18 05 1909.Google Scholar
55 Guèbrè, Sellasié, Chronique, II, 542, fn. 4.Google Scholar
56 Rémond, , ‘l'Agonie’, 342.Google Scholar
57 F.O. 401/13, Hervey, to Grey, , 16 07 1909.Google Scholar
58 F.O. 401/13, Hervey, to Grey, , 28 07 1909.Google Scholar
59 She may have been correct about Haili Giorgis, and he may have been acting for Ras Mikail, who would have wanted Taitou out of the way to insure his son's immediate succession, now that Menilek had made a more or less precise public proclamation. Later on, Mikail did rescue Haili Giorgis from the obscurity of disfavour, and he became very important in Lij Eyyasu's government.
60 F.O. 401/13, Hervey, to Grey, , 13 08 1909.Google Scholar
61 Rémond, , ‘l'Agonie’, 345;Google ScholarMérab, , Impressions, 11, 165;Google ScholarGuè;brè, Sellasié, Chronique, 11, 621.Google Scholar
62 F.O. 401/13, San, Giuliano to Grey, , 31 10 1909Google Scholar and Hervey, to Grey, , 5 11 1909.Google Scholar
63 Montandon, , Pays Ghimirra, 40.Google Scholar
64 Rémond, , ‘l'Agonie’, 348.Google Scholar
65 F.O. 401/13, Hervey, to Grey, , 5 11 1909.Google Scholar
66 ‘Faits divers’, Le Semeur d'Ethiopie, 5 (10–11 1909), 674–7.Google Scholar
67 Rémond, , ‘l'Agonie’, 349;Google ScholarMontandon, , Pays Ghimirra, 381.Google Scholar
68 F.O. 401/14, Thesiger, to Grey, , 31 12 1909.Google Scholar
69 Ibid.
70 Mérab, , Impressions, 11, 230.Google Scholar
71 This may indeed have been the case. In 1913 he did attempt to obtain personal power. See chapter IX of my forthcoming book ‘The Life and Times of Menilek II of Ethiopia, 1844–1913’.
72 F.O. 401/14, Thesiger, to Grey, , 25 02 1910.Google Scholar
73 F.O. 401/14, Thesiger, to Grey, , 25 03 1910.Google Scholar
74 American Archives, proclamation by Ras, Tessema, 22 03 1910.Google Scholar
75 Ibid.
76 Mérab, , Impressions, II, 230.Google Scholar
77 American Archives, Love to the Asst. Sec. of State, 24 March 1910.
78 F.O. 401/14, Thesiger, to Grey, , 26 03 1910 and 24 04 1910.Google Scholar
79 A.A., Love to the Asst. Sec. of State, 26 04 1910.Google Scholar
80 A.A., Love to the Asat. Sec. of State, 3 06 1910.Google Scholar
81 Guèbrè, Sellasié, Chronique, II, 623.Google Scholar
82 F.O. 401/15, Thesiger, to Grey, , 16 06 1910.Google Scholar
83 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 8 08 1910.Google Scholar
84 A.A., Love to the Asst. Sec. of State, 12 05 1910.Google Scholar
85 A.A., Love to the Asst. Sec. of State, 2706 1910.Google Scholar and F.O. 401/15, Thesiger, to Grey, , 16 06 1910.Google Scholar
86 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 8 08 1910.Google Scholar
87 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 8 10 1910.Google Scholar and F.O. 401/15, Thesiger, to Grey, , 16 09 1910.Google Scholar
88 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 11 11 1910.Google Scholar
89 For the best example, see Mérab, , Impressions, II, 240–2.Google Scholar
90 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 27 12 1910.Google Scholar
91 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 18 02 1911.Google Scholar
92 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 12 12 1911.Google Scholar
93 A.A., Smith, to Sec. of State, 14 01 1914.Google Scholar
94 Mérab, , Impressions, II, 248.Google Scholar
95 F.O. 401/15, Thesiger, to Grey, , 2 12 1910.Google Scholar
96 F.O. 405/55, Thesiger, to Grey, , 9 12 1910.Google Scholar
97 F.O. 403/420, Thesiger, to Grey, , 2 03 1911.Google Scholar
98 Ibid.
99 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 12 04 1911.Google Scholar
100 A.A., Love to Sec. of State, 20 03 1911.Google Scholar
101 Mérab, , Impressions, II, 248.Google Scholar
102 F.O. 403/420, Doughty-Wylie, to Grey, , 6 05 1911.Google Scholar
103 A.A., Love to the Sec. of State, 1 06 1911.Google Scholar
104 Montandon, , Pays Ghimirra, 385.Google Scholar
- 1
- Cited by