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Desta Damtew

 
Wikipedia: Desta Damtew

Ras Desta Damtew (circa 1896 - 24 February 1937) was an Ethiopian noble and one of the sons-in-law of Emperor Haile Sellassie.

Contents

Biography

Born at the village of Maskan (in the contemporary Gurage Zone), Desta Damtew was the second son of Fitawrari Damtew Ketena. In 1896, Damtew Ketena had been killed at the Battle of Adwa.

In 1924, Desta Damtew married the Emperor's oldest daughter Princess (Leult) Tenagnework Haile Selassie. They had four daughters and two sons.[1]

Anthony Mockler describes Ras Desta as "something of an eccentric among Ethiopian nobles", who had run away in his twenties to become a monk at Debre Libanos, as well as having a reputation "as an entrepreneur and an enfant terrible." Mockler continues that Ras Desta "had as little taste as the young progressives of inferior birth for the traditional amusements of the Amhara aristocracy, the feasting, the horsemanship, the boasting and the drunkenness."[2]

In 1930, Emperor Haile Selassie appointed Ras Desta Governor (Shum) of Sidamo Province. He succeeded Birru Wolde Gabriel.

In 1935, Ras Desta commanded troops along the southern border of Ethiopia during the Second Italo-Abyssinian War. In January 1936, he was defeated by the Italian General Rodolfo Graziani at the Battle of Ganale Dorya. Desta retreated back to his administrative center at Irgalem, where with the help of Dejazmach Gabremariam, he reorganized his survivors to resist the Italian advance.[3] Desta continued to resist the Italians after Emperor Haile Selassie left the country.[4]

After the end of the rainy season in 1936, Italian General Geloso advanced from the north to dislodge Ras Desta and Dejazmach Gabremariam. But, by the end of October, Geloso had not advanced very far or effectively. It was not until a month later when a second Italian column advanced from the south through the Wadara Forest that Ras Desta at last left Irgalem, which was occupied 1 December. With Dejazmach Gabremariam, Dejazmach Beyene Merid (Governor of Bale Province), and a dwindling number of soldiers, for the next few months Ras Desta eluded the Italians until they were trapped near Lake Shala in the Battle of Gogetti and annihilated. Wounded, Ras Desta managed to escape, only to be caught and executed near his birthplace.[5]

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ Anthony Mockler, Haile Selassie's War (New York: Olive Branch, 2003), p. 390
  2. ^ Mockler, Haile Selassie's War, p. 90
  3. ^ Mockler, Haile Selassie's War, p. 95
  4. ^ According to Bahru Zewde, Desta Damtew vacillated between surrender and continuing the struggle, but a group of Eritreans who deserted the Italians to join him forced him "to stick it out." (A History of Modern Ethiopia, second edition [London: James Currey, 2001], p. 169)
  5. ^ Mockler, Haile Selassie's War, pp. 172f

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