| Kingdom Of Janjero |
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Although one of the Sidamo kingdoms, until its conquest in 1894 Janjero was "isolated, and had little to do with its neighbors, its rivers being very difficult to cross. Although first visited by Europeans in 1614 , until the late 1950s this region remained poorly known to outsiders. As a result, its people were said to have preserved a number of "customs so barbarious and strange that there cannot be any more so." 1 Some of these alleged customs are as follows: 2
HISTORY Janjero is first mentioned in a victory song of Yeshaq I for paying tribute in horses. The first kings of Janjero belonged to the Halmam Gama dynasty, which was ejected by the Mwa clan, who claimed to have come from the north. In 1844, warriors of the Kingdom of Jimma defeated the army of Janjero in 1844 , and the king of Janjero was taken prisoner. He regained his freedom in 1847 , and resumed his struggle against his more powerful neighbor. 3 Jimma conquered part of Janjero in the 1880s . The rest of the kingdom was annexed in the reign of Menelik II in 1894, and its last king, Abba Bagibo , fled to the Gurage country, but eventually made his submission to Emperor Menelik. His son Abba Chabsa became a Christian , and adopted the name Gabra Madhen, and served the Ethiopian who held the fief. During the reorganization of the provinces in 1942 , the former kingdom was absorbed to become part of the Kaffa Province . However, with the new constitution of 1995 , the area Janjero once occupied became the Yem Special Wereda , which was added to the Southern Nations, Nationalities, And Peoples Region forming the Enclave of the Region west of the Omo River. NOTES # G.W.B. Huntingford, ''The Galla of Ethiopia; the Kingdoms of Kafa and Janjero'' (London: International African Institute, 1955), p. 137 # Based on Huntingford, ''Galla of Ethiopia'', pp. 137-144. # Mordechai Abir, ''The era of the princes: the challenge of Islam and the re-unification of the Christian empire, 1769-1855'' (London: Longmans, 1968), pp. 91f |
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