By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
We saw last week how Emperor Yohannes IV succeeded in defeating 
Egyptian incursions into Ethiopia, but, as we shall now see, faced an 
even greater threat from other enemies.
The British Occupation of Egypt, and the Mahdist Revolution in Sudan
In Egypt meanwhile the military revolt of Ahmad `Urabi in 1881 led 
directly in the following years to the British occupation of that 
country, as well as of Egyptian-occupied Sudan. This coincided with the 
spectacular rise in Sudan of its Mahdi, Muhammad Ahmad. His rebellion 
was so successful that the British, who had become responsible for the 
country on account of their occupation of Egypt in the previous year, 
decided in 1883 that it would have to be fully evacuated of Egyptian and
 British troops.
This evacuation was of direct relevance to Ethiopia. The Mahadists 
had by then isolated a number of towns with Egyptian garrisons and 
European inhabitants in the neighboring western Sudan. The British, 
reluctant to undertake a major expedition, which would inevitably have 
been much more arduous than that to Maqdala,
 decided that the isolated 
soldiers and civilians could most easily, and inexpensively, be carried 
out by the Ethiopians. This seemed particularly appropriate in view of 
Britain’s earlier cordial relations with Yohannes, who was moreover 
indebted to the British for their gift of arms at the time of the Napier
 expedition.
A British naval officer, Rear-Admiral Sir William Hewett, was 
accordingly dispatched to negotiate with the Ethiopian monarch. Yohannes
 received him courteously, agreed to assist, but stipulated (1) that the
 territories which the Egyptian had then recently occupied in the Bogos 
area on his western frontier, i.e. around Karan, should be restored to 
Ethiopian rule; and (2) that he should be given control of Massawa. His 
first demand was accepted, but as far as the port was concerned the 
British promised him only free transit, “under British protection”, for 
Ethiopian goods, including arms and ammunition. A tripartite treaty 
embodying these points, and, according to its preamble, binding not only
 the then reigning monarchs but also their heirs and successors, was 
duly signed by Britain, British-occupied Egypt, and Ethiopia, at Adwa on
 3 June 1884. In accordance with it the Emperor’s dynamic military 
leader, Ras Alula, relieved six garrison towns in Sudan, the only ones 
from which the isolated soldiers were able to escape.
The Coming of the Italians
The value of the 1884 agreement to Ethiopia was, however, 
short-lived, for on 3 February 1885, only eight months after its 
conclusion, the Italians seized Massawa. This action was taken with the 
support of the British Government, which favored Italian expansion in 
the area as a way of curbing that a France. The Italian officer 
responsible for the occupation, Rear-Admiral Pietro Caimi, issued a 
proclamation to the port’s inhabitants announcing that his action had 
been taken in agreement with the British and Egyptian Governments and 
promised, “No obstacle shall be put by me on your trade”. Such friendly 
protestations were, however, before long abandoned, for as soon as the 
Italians were in a position to do so they seized the coast adjacent to 
Massawa, and instituted a blockade to stop the supply of arms of 
Yohannes. Italian troops then advanced into the interior as far as 
Sa’ati an Wi’a, both around 30 kilometers inland from the sea.
Ras Alula protested against this unwarranted Italian penetration, but
 the invaders replied by strengthening their fortifications in the newly
 occupied areas. They also sent in more troops, which were intercepted 
and virtually all annihilated by Ras Alula at Dogali on 26 January 1887 –
 the “massacre” of Dogali, as it came to be known in Italy. The Italians
 then evacuated Sa’ati and Wi’a, and declared a blockade on all ships 
bringing supplies for Ethiopia.
The British traveller Augustus B. Wylde, commenting on British policy at this time, observed:
`Look at our behaviour to King Johannes from any point of view and it
 will not show one ray of honesty and to my mind it is one of the worst 
bits of business we have been guilty of in Africa…. England made use of 
King Johannes as long as he was of any service, and then threw him over 
to the tender mercies of Italy, who went to Massawah under our auspices 
with the intention of taking territory that belonged to our ally, and 
allowed them to destroy all the promises England had solemnly made to 
King Johannes after he had faithfully carried out his part of the 
agreement. The fact is not known to the British public, and I wish it 
was not true for our credit’s sake, but unfortunately it is, and it 
reads like one of he vilest bits of treachery that has been perpetrated 
in Africa or in India in the eighteenth century.’
War between the Italians and Yohannes now seemed imminent, but the 
former, wishing to obtain their objectives without resort to fighting, 
persuaded the British in mediate. A British diplomat, Sir Gerald Portal,
 was accordingly sent to the Emperor to ask him to agree to an Italian 
occupation of the coastal strip, including Sa’ati and Wi’a, as well as 
the Bogos area, which the Egyptians, it will be recalled, had ceded to 
him three years earlier. When these terms were read out to him, he 
proudly replied, “I can do nothing with all this. By the treaty made by 
Admiral Hewett, all the country evacuated by the Egyptians on my 
frontier was ceded to me at the instigation of England, and now you have
 come to ask me to give it up again”, Much incensed that Britain should 
have asked him to depart from the 1884 treaty, he wrote to Queen 
Victoria, protesting that if she wished to make peace for him it should 
be when the Italians were in their country, and the Ethiopians in 
theirs.
Faced with the threat from Italy, the Emperor strengthened his 
defences by transferring there his garrison stationed at Qallabat on the
 Sudan frontier. Finding the border thus unguarded, the Mahdists broke 
in at that point. Yohannes has hastened to Qallabat to repel them, but 
at the close of a victorious battle at Matamma on 9 March 1889 was 
mortally wounded by a sniper’s bullet. News of his death created great 
confusion in northern Ethiopia. This was intensified by the outbreak of a
 serious outbreak of cattle disease, which was followed by a famine of 
unprecedented proportions.
During this period of difficulty the Italians succeeded in advancing 
much further inland than they had been able to do previously. By the end
 of 1889 they had thus occupied a sizeable stretch of the northern 
Ethiopian plateau. This enabled them to establish their colony of 
Eritrea which came into formal existence on 1 January 1890. Their 
advance, Wylde Subsequently noted, “was unopposed, and once they had 
made good their foothold on the upper plateau and fortified themselves, 
no Abyssinian force could drive them out”.
Modernization
Yohannes, unlike his predecessor Tewodros, was more of a conservative
 rather than a moderniser. He was moreover so involved in successive 
struggles to resist foreign invaders, Egyptian, Italian and Dervish, 
that he had little time, or opportunity, for technological innovation. 
He nevertheless succeeded, where Tewodros had failed, in sending envoys 
abroad on important diplomatic missions abroad, even though the lack of 
European response was such that his initiatives earned him little 
advantage. He was at the same time the first Ethiopian ruler ever to 
appoint a foreign consul, a certain Samuel King, who served as his 
representative in London.
The reign of Yohannes also witnessed several important innovations. 
In the medical field mercury preparations for the treatment of syphilis 
at about this time came into extensive use, at least in the towns. 
Yohannes was moreover the first ruler of his country to have a foreign 
physician at his court, a Greek doctor, Nicholas Parisis, and the first 
to be inoculated with modern-style smallpox vaccine, which was beginning
 to replace traditional Ethiopian-Type inoculation. His military 
victories over the Egyptians likewise resulted in the advent, and 
extensive distribution, of numerous breech-loading rifles, as well as 
some modern artillery.
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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