Gaturi people

Extinct ethnic group of Ethiopia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Gaturi (Harari: ጋቱሪ), also spelled as Gatouri are an extinct ethnic group that once inhabited present-day eastern Ethiopia.[1]

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Gaturi
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Gaturi
Religion
Pagan?, Islam
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History

According to Mohammed Hassen, the Gaturi were a Semitic-speaking people who resided in the region of Mount Kundudo, Babile, and Dawaro.[2] Historian Merid Wolde Aregay deduced that the Gatur state language was Harari.[3]

The Harari chronicle states Abadir arrived at an Islamic region called Balad Gatur known later as Harar in the tenth or thirteenth century.[4][5] In Harar, Abadir encountered the Gaturi alongside the Harla and Argobba people.[6] Gaturi is claimed by one source to be a Harla sub clan.[7] According to another Harari tradition seven clans and villages united against a common adversary, including Gaturi, to form Harar city state.[8]

According to sixteenth century Adal writer Arab Faqīh, during the Ethiopian-Adal war, one of the leaders of the Muslim forces of Malassay was Amir Husain bin Abubaker al-Gaturi.[9][10] Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi designated Amir Husain al-Gaturi as governor of Dawaro region which was a border province of Abyssinia.[11]

Gaturi ceased to be mentioned in texts after the sixteenth century. Gaturi is today represented as a sub group of the Harari people and remains a Harari surname.[12][13]

Language

They spoke Gaturi language, possibly an extinct South Ethiopic grouping within the Semitic subfamily of the Afroasiatic languages and closely related to Harari and Argobba languages.[14]

See also

References

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