Tigray Province

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The historic flag of Tigray
The historic flag of Tigray

For other uses please see Tigre (disambiguation)

Tigray was a province of Ethiopia. The Tigray Region superseded the province in 1995. By the time of its demise, Tigray had absorbed a number of its neighboring provinces, including Semien, Tembien, Agame and Enderta.

[edit] History

A typical landscape of Tigray region, Ethiopia near the archaeological site of Yeha.
A typical landscape of Tigray region, Ethiopia near the archaeological site of Yeha.

Proto-Tigrayans and Proto-Amharas were the main ethnicity of kingdom of Axum in the first millennium CE. Their language, a form of Ge'ez, remained the language of later Ethiopian imperial court as well as the Ethiopian Church.

During the middle ages the position of Tigray Mekonnen ("Governor of Tigray") was established to rule over the area. Other districts included Bur, which included the Buri peninsula, Agame, and Akkele Guzay (the last in modern 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 Meknonnen 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. By the unsettled Zemene Mesafint period ("Era of the Princes"), both titles had sunken to little more than empty titles, and the lord who in his turn dominated the region, used (and received from Emperor) the title of either Ras or Dejazmach, beginning with Ras Mikael Sehul. Princes of Tigray alternated with others, chiefly those of Begemder or Yejju, as warlords to rule in reality the Ethiopian monarchy during the Zemene Mesafint.

In the mid-1800s, the lords of Tembien and Enderta managed to create an overlordship of Tigray to their dynasty. One of its members, Dejazmach Kassai Mercha, ascended the imperial throne in 1872 under the name Yohannes IV. Following his death in the Battle of Metemma, the Ethiopian throne came under control of the king of Shewa, and the center of power was shifted south and away from Tigray.

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