The Argobba are an ethnic group inhabiting Ethiopia. A Muslim community, they are spread out through isolated village networks and towns in the north-eastern and eastern parts of the country. Group members have typically been astute traders and merchants, and have adjusted to the economic trends in their area. These factors have led to a decline in usage of the Argobba language. Argobba are considered endangered today due to exogamy and destitution as well as ethnic cleansing by the Abyssinian state over the centuries.
According to scholars, the Kingdom of Aksum's army moved south beyond Angot, encountering a nomadic people named Gebal in eastern Shewa, who are supposedly the precursors to Argobba. Gebal would develop into settlers of Hararghe known as Argobba after their conversion to Islam and having significant ties to the Muslim world, dominated trade in Zeila and Harar. Modern Argobba claim they originate from the Arabian Peninsula through Zeila in what is now Somaliland and first settled in the Harar plateau. Argobba people consider the inhabitants of Doba their ancestors.
In the 13th century, Argobba are associated with the Walashma dynasty of Ifat, which would become leaders of the Sultanate of Ifat and Adal Sultanate. According to Harari tradition numerous Argobba had fled Ifat and settled around Harar in the Aw Abdal lowlands during their conflict with Abyssinia in the fifteenth century, a gate was thus named after them called the gate of Argobba.
The Argobba and the Harla people seem to have relied on each other in the Islamic period. A power struggle erupted between the Abadir dynasty of Harari and the Walashma dynasty of Argobba throughout the Islamic period until Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi took control of Adal Sultanate by executing the Walashma sultan Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad in the 16th century.
Due to the wars between the Ifat Sultanate and Ethiopia, the region of Ifat was incorporated into Ethiopia having been an integral part of the empire for over a century since early medieval times.
Cette page est générée automatiquement et peut contenir des informations qui ne sont pas correctes, complètes, à jour ou pertinentes par rapport à votre recherche. Il en va de même pour toutes les autres pages de ce site. Veillez à vérifier les informations auprès des sources officielles de l'EPFL.
Les Harari (ou Hareri ou Aderi) sont une population de la Corne de l'Afrique, vivant dans l'est de l'Éthiopie, dans la Région Harar. Cependant la plupart vivent aujourd'hui à Addis-Abeba. En Éthiopie, lors du recensement de 2007 portant sur une population totale de personnes, se sont déclarées « Harari ». Leur langue est le harari, une langue sémitique dont le nombre de locuteurs était de lors du recensement de 1994. Elisabeth-Dorothea Hecht, Die traditionellen Frauenvereine (Afōča) der Harari in Harar und in Addis Ababa, Äthiopien, D.
Habesha peoples (ሐበሠተ; ሀበሻ; ሓበሻ; commonly used exonym; "Abyssinians") is an ethnic or pan-ethnic identifier that has been historically employed to refer to Semitic language-speaking and predominantly Orthodox Christian peoples found in the highlands of Ethiopia and Eritrea between Asmara and Addis Ababa (i.e. the modern-day Amhara, Tigrayan, Tigrinya peoples) and this usage remains common today. The term is also used in varying degrees of inclusion and exclusion of other groups.
La région d'Oromia (amharique : ኦሮሚያ ክልል; afaan oromo : Oromiyaa) est, depuis 1995, l'une des neuf régions administratives de l'Éthiopie. Une dixième région (Sidama) a été créée le 18 juin 2020 et une onzième (Éthiopie du Sud-Ouest) le 23 novembre 2021. D'une superficie de , son territoire s'étend de l'est au sud-ouest du pays. Il s’agit de la région administrative la plus étendue du pays, ainsi que la plus peuplée. L'Oromia inclut tout ou partie des anciennes provinces de Balé, Hararghe, Illubabor, Kaffa, Choa et Welega.