The Southern marches of imperial Ethiopia : essays in history and social anthropology
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Southern marches of imperial Ethiopia : essays in history and social anthropology
(African studies series, 51)
Cambridge University Press, 1986
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Note
Revised versions of selected papers originally presented at a workshop of the Cambridge African Studies Centre in July 1979 and at a conference at Monterey, Calif. in March 1982
Bibliography: p. 295-298
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This international collection of essays offers a unique approach to the understanding of imperial Ethiopia, out of which the present state was created by the 1974 revolution. After the 1880s, Abyssinia, under Menilek II, expanded its ancient heartland to incorporate vast new territories to the south. Here, for the first time, these regions are treated as an integral part of the empire. The book opens with an interpretation of nineteenth-century Abyssinia as an African political economy, rather than as a variant on European feudalism, and with an account of the north's impact on peoples of the new south. Case studies from the southern regions follow four by historians and four by anthropologists, each examining aspects of the relationship between imperial rule and local society. In revealing the region's diversity and the relationship of the periphery to the centre, the volume illuminates some of the problems faced by post-revolutionary Ethiopia.
Table of Contents
- Part I. The making of an imperial state: 1. Old Abyssinia and the new Ethiopian empire: themes in social history Donald Donham
- Part II. Renegotiating power and authority: 2. Nekemte and Addis Abeba: dilemmas of provincial rule Alessandro Triulzi
- 3. From ritual kings to Ethiopian landlords in Maale Donald Donham
- 4. Institutionalizing a fringe periphery: Dassanetch-Amhara relations Uri Almagor
- Part III. Reorienting kinship and identity: 5. Lifelines: exchange marriage among the Gumuz Wendy James
- 6. A problem of domination at the periphery: the Kwegu and the Mursi David Turton
- Part IV. Expanding tribute and trade: 7. Coffee in centre-periphery relations: Gedeo in the early twentieth century Charles W. McCellan
- 8. Vicious cycles: ivory, slaves, and arms on the new Maji frontier Peter P. Garretson
- 9. On the Nilotic frontier: imperial Ethiopia in the southern Sudan, 1898-1936 Douglas H. Johnson
- Epilogue Wendy James.
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