Dobe'a

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The Dobe'a were a people of medieval Ethiopia being then primary inhabitants of Doba situated in northeastern Ethiopia in what is now the Amhara, Tigray and Afar Regions. "Doba" now exists as a clan identity among the Afar people, although it isn't known whether or not they were always a part of that ethnic group.

They were first described, during the reign of Emperor Ba'eda Maryam (r. 1468–1478), as inhabiting the region between Enderta and Lake Ashenge (in Tigray Province), neighboring the Afars of the vassal Dankali Sultanate on the east.[1] The area was described by Francisco Álvares during his stay in Ethiopia as being five days' journey (ca. 100 km) in length, and extending far into Muslim Afar territory. One of their largest towns, Manadeley, situated on the edge of the Ethiopian Highlands and overlooking the Afar lowlands, was a market town of great size. Álvares describes it as a town of "very great trade, like a city or seaport", where any good could be found, and with merchants from a number of areas, such as Jeddah, Fez, elsewhere in Morocco, Tunis, Greece, Ormus, Cairo, and India, as well as an uncountable number of people from surrounding regions in Ethiopia.[2]

Culture

The Dobe'a tended numerous high quality cows (the largest in the world, according to Álvares), and subsisted mainly on banditry and pastoralism prior to the 15th century, when they converted to an agropastoral system and many converted to Christianity as a result of Campaigns taken by Emperor Ba'eda Maryam. The Dobe'a were ruled by 24 leaders, 12 of whom were often at war and 12 at peace.[2]

People

Attacks by Emperor Ba'eda Maryam

References

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