Semien Mountains
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The Semien Mountains lie in northern Ethiopia, north east of Gondar. They are a World Heritage Site and a national park. The mountains consist of plateaux separated by valleys and rising to pinnacles. The tallest peak is Ras Dashen (4,543 m); other notable heights include Mounts Biuat (4,437 m) and Abba Yared (4,460 m).
Notable animals in the mountains include the Walia Ibex, Gelada Baboons and a few Ethiopian wolves.
The Semiens are remarkable as being one of the few spots in Africa where snow regularly falls. First mentioned in the Monumentum Adulitanum of the 4th century AD (which described them as "inaccessible mountains covered with snow" and where soldiers walked up to their knees in snow), the presence of snow was undeniably witnessed by the 17th century Jesuit priest Jerónimo Lobo.[1] Although the later traveler James Bruce claims that he had never witnessed snow in the Semien Mountains, the 19th century explorer Henry Salt not only recorded that he saw snow there (on 9 April 1814), but explained the reason for Bruce's failure to see snow in these mountains -- Bruce had ventured no further than the foothills into the Semiens.[2]
Despite their ruggedness and altitude, the mountains are dotted with villages linked by tracks. Historically inhabited by Ethiopian Jews, Beta Israel resistance to Christian rule in the 15th withdrew out of the southern areas province of Dembiya (in which the Semien mountains are located) into the more defensible Semien mountains.