Yohannes III of Ethiopia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Emperor Yohannes III (born c.1797) was the last of the elder "Gondar" line of the Solomonic dynasty to reign over Ethiopia. He was the son of Tekle Giyorgis. He was largely a figurehead, with real power in the hands of the Enderase or Regent, Ras Ali II a princeling of the Oromo ruling family of the district of Yejju. Ras Ali had compelled Emperor Yohannes to marry Ras Ali's mother, the formidable Empress Mennen Liben Amede, who dominated both her second husband and her son.
During the various wars between Ras Ali and his leading rival for power, Dejazmach Wube Haile Maryam of Semien, Emperor Yohannes was deposed and restored several times between 30 August 1840 and 1851, alternating with his cousin Sahle Dengel. Yohannes was deposed the first time (October 1841) for showing himself a friend to Dejazmach Wube; he was restored briefly in 1845, then restored once again "by some unknown means" in 1850, according to E.A. Wallis Budge.
Budge portrays Yohannes as a contemptible character, "only tolerated because he belonged to the Solomonic line. He was a glutton and a wine bibber, and was usually drunk, and when he was not in his banquet hall he was in his harim."1
His ultimate fate is unclear -- as well as many of the details of his reign. He is said to have been ruling as Emperor 18 June 1847 when Mennen was defeated near the northern shores of Lake Tana by Kassa of Qwara (the future Tewodros II), who captured Yohannes and Mennen and traded them to Ras Ali for the title of Dejazmach and the territories of the deceased Ras Kinfu in Gojjam.2 Another source states that when Kassa finally usurped the Imperial throne, Yohannes agreed to step down from the throne on the condition that the new Emperor guarantee that he would not ever be made to reunite with his much hated wife, Empress Mennen. Afterwards, Yohannes then faded into obscurity, dying a very impoverished man sometime in the early 1870s. It is also often said that he converted to Roman Catholicism at the end of his life, and wrote a letter to Napoleon III asking for financial relief.
Budge reports another version, where Yohannes ended his life far less memorably, dying in 1851 "during an attack of acute indigestion", when Sahle Dengel replaced him a final time. Because Sahle Dengel was Emperor until shortly before Tewodros' coronation (11 February 1855), this version may be closer to the truth.
[edit] Notes
- E. A. Wallis Budge, A History of Ethiopia: Nubia and Abyssinia, 1928 (Oosterhout, the Netherlands: Anthropological Publications, 1970), p. 483
- Mordechai Abir, Ethiopia: The Era of the princes (London: Longmans, 1968), p. 128f
Preceded by: Sahle Dengel |
Emperor of Ethiopia | Succeeded by: Tewodros II |