Debarwa

Debarwa
town
Debarwa

Location in Eritrea.

Coordinates: 15°06′N 38°50′E / 15.100°N 38.833°E / 15.100; 38.833Coordinates: 15°06′N 38°50′E / 15.100°N 38.833°E / 15.100; 38.833
Country  Eritrea
Region Debub
District Debarwa
Population
  Total 25,000
Time zone EAT (UTC+3)

Debarwa (Tigrinya: ድባርዋ? Tigrinya pronunciation: [dɨbarwa]) is a market town in central Eritrea. It is situated about 25 kilometers south of the capital Asmara, and has a population of about 25,000 inhabitants.[1] It is the capital of the Debarwa district (Tsilima) in the Debub ("Southern") administrative region (one of five in Eritrea).

History

Debarwa was formerly the capital of an ancient Kingdom named Medri Bahri, which roughly translates as Land of the Sea. It was ruled by the Bahr Negus (King of the Sea). The Portuguese expedition under Cristóvão da Gama spent the rainy season of 1542 in Debarwa as the guests of the Bahr Negus.[2] The Ottomans invaded part of Medri Bahri in 1557, and for several decades struggled for control over the local population and their Ethiopian neighbors. By the time everything settled, the Ottomans were confined to Suakin, Massawa, Hergigo and the immediate hinterlands, but at times their raids would reach into Bogos, Hamasien and Habab districts of Eritrea.[3]

The town was hard hit by a typhus epidemic in 1893, which followed the misery of the Great Famine (1888-1892). A French visitor described Debarwa as "decimated", and all that was left of the once prosperous town were "a few piles of stones, an almost ruined church, and a few wretched hovels".[4]

Demographics

The majority of the population in Debarwa belongs to the Bihér-Tigrigna (Tigrinya-speaking) ethnic group. A significant ethnic Jeberti are also to be found in there. In terms of faith, local residents are mainly adherents of the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahdo Church, but the Jeberti are all Muslims.

Economy

Local people bring produce such as potatoes, tomatoes, chickens and grain to the market every Saturday. Aside from being a market town, it is also a mining town with resources of high grade gold, copper, silver and zinc, and an important transport route between the south-west corner of Zoba Debub and Asmara. The Japanese company Hitachi once operated a mine near Debarwa, but it was shut down in the 1960s due to the outbreak of the Eritrean War of Independence from Ethiopia.

References

  1. Older writers, such as Samuel Purchas, often use a corrupt form of its name, "Barua".
  2. R.S. Whiteway, editor and translator, The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1441-1543, 1902. (Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint, 1967), pp. xlvif, 9
  3. Richard Pankhurst, The Ethiopian Borderlands (Trenton: Red Sea Press, 1997), pp. 234-238
  4. Richard Pankhurst, An Introduction to the Medical History of Ethiopia (Trenton: Red Sea Press, 1990), p. 36
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