By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
Social mobility in medieval Ethiopia, as we saw last week, was 
rigidly circumscribed by tradition. Christianity, which was conceived of
 as a religion with a place for all men, perhaps prevented the emergence
 of anything approaching the caste system of Hindu India, and even 
preached the desirability of slave-owners emancipating their slaves, if 
converted, on the basis of individual charity. Blacksmiths, potters, 
tanners and other manual workers, many of whom in various areas were of 
separate racial, religious or linguistic background, were nonetheless 
regarded as communities apart. Popular superstition went so far as to 
hold that such people were sorcerers who turned into hyenas at night and
 caused people to fall ill and die.
Traditionally there was, at this time, little realisation of either 
the need or the possibility of improvement in the economic field. The 
kindness of the climate and the fertility of the soil, which allowed of 
abundant harvests, seems to have engendered an attitude of complacency. 
Occasional crop failures and famines were thus dismissed as arising from
 divine displeasure and therefore failed to operate as catalysts of 
change. The relative isolation of the Ethiopian empire, as well as of 
its various provinces, similarly minimised the opportunity of external 
influence producing innovation.
Orthodoxy
The mental climate of the Middle Ages in Ethiopia, as elsewhere, was 
by no means favourable to either freedom of thought, or the idea of 
innovation. Great emphasis was laid on the value of religious orthodoxy.
 Emperor Zara Yaqob (1434-1468) carried this attitude to considerable 
extremes when he gave orders that all his subjects should wear amulets 
inscribed with such words as “Belonging to the Father, the Son and the 
Holy Spirit”, and when he appointed a grand inquisitor and an army of 
spies to seek out secret idolaters. “Everyone”, the chronicle of this 
reign declares, “trembled before the power of the King.” Zara Yaqob was 
doubtless more extreme than most Ethiopian rulers, but the attitude he 
displayed was to a greater or lesser extent characteristic.
The climate of the times may be further illustrated by the story of 
the Venetian painter, Brancaleone, who is thought to have been 
commissioned by Zara Yaqob’s successor, Emperor Baeda Mariam 
(1468-1478), to paint a representation of the Virgin and Child for one 
of the churches. The painting, according to a contemporary chronicle, 
aroused the hostility of the priests.
Emperors Dream of Foreign Skills
Notwithstanding the static and isolated nature of the country, many 
of the Emperors dreamt of contacts with other lands and the utilisation 
of foreign skills. Such interest in innovation was, however, largely 
centred, as we shall see, on the military sector, above all on the 
import of firearms, which was rightly considered a matter of vital 
concern. A certain preoccupation with innovation in building and 
medicine may, however, also be discerned.
Interest in foreign contacts and innovation was displayed by Emperor 
Yeshaq I (1414-1429) who employed Turkish Mamelukes to establish 
workshops for making coats of mail, swords and other weapons, as well as
 in training his soldiers and reorganising his system of taxes. He also 
wrote in 1428 to King Affonso of Aragon asking him to send skilled 
artisans. A couple of decades later Zara Yaqob, despite his orthodoxy, 
made a similar request to the King of Aragon.
Letters to the King of Portugal
In the following century Emperor Lebna Dengel (1508-1540) wrote to King Manoel I of Portugal, declaring:
-Send masters who can make figures of gold and silver, copper, iron, 
tin, and lead, and send me lead for the churches; and masters of gilding
 with gold leaf, and of making gold leaf; and this soon, and let them 
come to remain with me here and in my favour. And when they may wish to 
return at their desire, I will not detain them and this I swear by Jesus
 Christ, Son of the Living God.”
In a later letter to Manoel’s son, Joao Ill, he wrote:
“Sir, brothers hear another word now, I want you to send me men, 
artificers to make images and printed books, and to make swords and arms
 of all sorts for fighting; and also masons and carpenters, and men who 
can make medicines, and physicians, and surgeons to cure illnesses; 
artificers to beat gold and place it, and goldsmiths and silversmiths, 
and men who know how to extract gold and silver and also copper from the
 veins, and men who can make sheet lead and earthen ware; and masters of
 any trades which are necessary in these kingdoms, also gunsmiths. 
Assist me in this, which I beg of you as a brother does to a brothers 
and God will assist you and save you from evil things.”
The subsequent invasion of the Muslim conqueror, Ahmad Gragn, was 
followed by the arrival in 1541 of a Portuguese expeditionary force led 
by Christovao da Gama and composed of over 400 men at arms and a further
 130 slaves. After the war Emperor Galawdewos (1540-1599) did much to 
encourage foreigners to remain in the country, and employed European, 
Syrian, Armenian and Egyptian craftsmen in building a palace. Though 
anxious to utilize such foreign skills Galawdewos was fully determined 
to maintain the doctrinal purity of the Ethiopian Church, and wrote his 
famous Confession of Faith to rebut the influences of the foreigners.
Requests for Skilled Workmen
Later in the century Emperor Sartsa Dengel (1563-1597) wrote in 1589 
to King Felipe II of Spain asking him to send experienced workmen who 
knew how to make helmets and cannon and to prepare gunpowder and other 
war material.” According to tradition Sartsa Dengel also employed two 
Frenchmen, Garneau and Arnaud, to guild him a palace at Guzara. His 
brother Za Dengel (1603-1604), subsequently wrote to King Felipe Ill of 
Spain in similar vein, asking him to send many artisans and soldiers 
quickly “so that peace and love should take root between us who are 
united in the faith of Christ.”
Contact between Ethiopia and sixteenth and seventeenth century Europe
 entered into a new phase with the advent of the Jesuits in 1557. 
Emperors Za Dengel (1603-1604) and Susneyos (1607-1623), both espoused 
the Roman Catholic faith, in part in the hope of obtaining Portuguese 
military aid. The population as a whole, however, was most reluctant to 
accept the religious revolution demanded by the Jesuits. There were 
numerous rebellions and in 1632 Susneyos was obliged to issue a 
proclamation which said, ” Hear Ye! Hear Ye! We first gave you this 
faith believing it to be good. But innumerable people have been slain… 
For which reason we restore to you the faith of your forefathers. Let 
the former clergy return to the churches, let them put in their altars, 
let them say their own liturgy. And do you rejoice.”
Opposition to the Jesuits
The extent of popular opposition to religious innovation was noted by
 the seventeenth century German historian of Ethiopian history, Hiob 
Ludolf. He declares that it was:
“a thing almost impossible to be believed with what an Universal Joy 
the Emperor’s Edict was receiv’d among the People. The whole Camp, as if
 they had some great Deliverance from the Enemy, rang with Shouts and 
Acclamations. The Monks and Clergy, who had felt the greatest weight of 
the Fathers’ Hatred, lifted up their Thankful voices to Heaven. The 
promiscuous Multitude of Men and Women danc’d and caper’d ; the Soldiers
 wish’d all happiness to their Commanders, they broke their own and the 
Rosaries of all they met.
“Others ran about Singing for joy that Ethiopia was deliver’d from the Western Lyons, Chanting forth the following Lines:
At length the Sheep of Ethiopia free’d
From the Bold Lyons of the West
Securely in their Pastures feed,
St. Mark and Cyril’s Doctrines have o’recome The Folly’s of the Church of Rome.
Rejoyce, rejoyce, Sing Hallelujahs all,
No more the Western Wolves
Our Ethiopia shall enthrall.
“What the King of Habessinia Most Desired”
Continued interest in modern techniques is nonetheless apparent from 
the observation of Ludolf’s friend, the Ethiopian scholar Gregory. 
Travelling in Germany in the early seventeenth century, he was asked by 
Duke Ernestus of Saxony what “the King of Habessinia most desired out of
 Europe.” According to Ludolf the Ethiopian savant replied, “Arts and 
Handicraft Trades; well understanding that neither Merchandize nor any 
other calling could be well followed without the help of the Workmans’ 
Tool.”
Foreign contacts throughout this period had, however, surprisingly 
little effect on the Ethiopian economy or way of life. Despite 
considerable Portuguese activity in the country from 1541 to 1633 the 
forces of continuity were far stronger than those of change. Except in 
the military sector the Emperors do not seem to have been very 
interested in technology. They utilised the service of a handful of 
foreigners to undertake such skilled work as was unknown to their own 
subjects, but did not institute any system of training to enable their 
own people to acquire what were virtually regarded as foreign habits. 
The population at large, being mainly self-sufficient and assured of the
 basic necessities of life, tended to be conservative and saw little 
need for adopting new techniques.
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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