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Defeat of Italy at Adwa

The Italians had established themselves along the Red Sea coast, and the governor of the
Italian colony of Eritrea, after much intrigue and several minor military skirmishes, risked a
major confrontation. The Italian army was defeated by the Ethiopians in one of the greatest
battles in the history of Africa—the Battle of Adwa, on March 1, 1896. A settlement after the
battle canceled the Treaty of Wichale and acknowledged the full sovereignty and
independence of Ethiopia, but the Italians were allowed to retain Eritrea.
After Adwa, Menilek’s Ethiopia was at once accepted by the European powers as a real
political force. The crushing defeat of a European army greatly enhanced Menilek’s
international reputation, causing a host of foreign advisers, ambassadors, emissaries, and
adventurers to flow into the country.
Menilek’s later activities as emperor included the creation of ministries, the initiation of
modern education, and the construction of telephone and telegraph systems and of a railway
from Djibouti, on the Gulf of Aden, to Addis Ababa, the emperor’s new capital in the
highlands of Shewa. Beginning in 1906 or 1907, Menilek suffered a series of paralytic
strokes, and power passed to his wife, Empress Taitu, to Ras Tesemma, who became regent,
and to Lij Iyasu, the grandson who was to succeed him. The stricken emperor finally died in
1913.

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