Qwara Province

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Qwara (Amharic: ቋራ), also spelled Quara, was a province in now Amhara region, Ethiopia, located between Lake Tana and the frontier inside present-day Sudan, and stretching from Agawmeder in the south as far north as Metemma, and as far west as Wad Madani, Sudan.

Overview[]

The region contains mostly Amhara and a small Agew and Qemant community, some speaking the nearly extinct Qemant language, and was formerly inhabited by a substantial number of who spoke the Qwara language and the Beta Israel.

Qwara had political importance at least as early as the reign of Iyoas I, when the Dowager Queen Mentewab relied on her supporters in Qwara to support her against her rival , the wife of her son the late Emperor Iyasu II. More importantly, it formed part of the territories of the warlord Dejazmach , who had inherited the office of governor of Qwara from his uncle, Kebte; these territories, known as Ye Meru Qemas (literally, "The mouth of Meru", or "What Meru eats") were inherited by Dejazmach . In Qwara, was born Kinfu's relation, Kassa Hailu, who later used Kinfu's relationships in Qwara to build a power base there in his successful effort that made him Emperor "Tewodros the Quaregna" who was born in Qwara. II.[1] The future Emperor made Qwara his base from the until his victory at the Battle of Gur Amba (27 September 1852), sometimes as a shifta, or outlaw.[2]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Rubenson, Sven (1966). King of Kings: Tewodros of Ethiopia. Addis Ababa: Haile Selassie I University. pp. 20–25.
  2. ^ Rubenson, King of Kings, p. 28ff

Coordinates: 12°15′00″N 35°51′27″E / 12.2500°N 35.8576°E / 12.2500; 35.8576

Retrieved from ""