' castle in
Fasil Ghebbi,
Gondar. During the early modern period, the absorption of new diverse influences such as Baroque, Arab, Turkish and Gujarati Indian style began with the arrival of
Portuguese Jesuit missionaries in the 16th and 17th centuries. Portuguese soldiers had initially come in the mid-16th century as allies to aid Ethiopia in
its fight against Adal, and later Jesuits came hoping to convert the country. Some Turkish influence may have entered the country during the late 16th century during its war with the Ottoman Empire (see
Habesh), which resulted in an increased building of fortresses and castles. castle (museum) in
Mekelle Ethiopia, naturally easily defensible because of its numerous
ambas or flat-topped mountains and rugged terrain, yielded little tactical use from the structures in contrast to their advantages in the flat terrain of Europe and other areas, and so had until this point little developed the tradition. Castles were built especially beginning with the reign of
Sarsa Dengel around the
Lake Tana region, and subsequent Emperors maintained the tradition, eventually resulting in the creation of the
Fasil Ghebbi (royal enclosure of castles) in the newly founded capital (1636),
Gondar. Emperor
Susenyos (r.1606-1632) converted to Catholicism in 1622 and attempted to make it the state religion, declaring it as such from 1624 until his abdication; during this time, he employed Arab, Gujarati (brought by the Jesuits), and Jesuit masons and their styles, as well as local masons, some of whom were
Beta Israel. With the reign of his son
Fasilides, most of these foreigners were expelled, although some of their architectural styles were absorbed into the prevailing Ethiopian architectural style. This style of the Gondarine dynasty would persist throughout the 17th and 18th centuries especially and also influenced modern 19th-century and later styles. However Gondarine architecture was limited exclusive to royalty. Hassan ibn Ahmed Al Haymi, Yemeni Ambassador to Ethiopia in 1684, mentions that besides the
Fasil Ghebbi the rest of Gondar was made
tukuls, or huts which he describes as “nets of grass”.
James Bruce states that mortar was only used in Gondar, and even there its quality was very bad. ==See also==