The
Solomonic dynasty, which claimed descent from the old Aksumite rulers, ruled Ethiopia from the 13th century until 1974.
Modern era The
Amhara warrior turned emperor, Kassa of
Qwara,
Gonder, in 1855 took complete control over Ethiopia and was crowned Emperor
Tewodros II. Of the valley nobility, he claimed paternal descent from Emperor Fasilides, by way of one of the aforementioned emperor's daughters. After Emperor Tewodros' reign, one of the many rebels leaders that helped the
British in their expedition into Abyssinia was Dejazmatch Kassa, he was rewarded with articles of war for his services and went on to assume power through his claim of Solomonic descent from his mothers Gondarian ancestry and was crowned Emperor
Yohannes IV. Sahle Maryam of Shewa, who descended from Solomonic emperors directly paternally through the Shewan Branch (junior only to the Gondar line), ascended the imperial throne following Emperor Yohannes IV's death and thus, purporting to restore the male-line Solomonic tradition, for which he adopted the throne name of Menelik II. The Emperor Tewodros spent his youth fighting with invading Ottoman Egyptians (termed 'Turks' by the Ethiopians), then unifying the empire after the dark age of the '
Zemene Mesafint' (Era of the Princes). Emperor Yohannes IV defeated an invading
Egyptian army in modern day
Eritrea and died while working to address the situation regarding the
Mahdist presence in Ethiopia. Emperor
Menelik II achieved a major military victory against Italian invaders in March 1896 at the
Battle of Adwa and conquered the modern borders of Ethiopia.
Italian occupation of Ethiopia Italy under Benito Mussolini attacked Ethiopia in 1935, starting the
Second Italo-Ethiopian War. Italian successes in the war caused the emperor
Haile Selassie to be voted into exile by his nobles in 1936; he pled Ethiopia's case against Italy before the
League of Nations, but aid from the League was not forthcoming. Italy added Ethiopia to its already existing colonies of Eritrea and Italian Somalia, creating the new dependent state of
Italian East Africa and was the first to associate Ethiopia as part of the
Horn of Africa. On 9 May 1936, King
Victor Emmanuel III of Italy proclaimed himself emperor of Ethiopia, replacing Haile Selassie. He was recognised as emperor in the following year by all the countries in the world (with the exception of the
USSR). Victor Emmanuel's claim to emperorship was not entirely accepted, with the
Soviet Union never considering the Italian conquest legitimate, and Haile Selassie continuing to contest the occupation from exile in the United Kingdom. With Italy's entry on the side of the
Axis powers in
World War II, the African part of the British Empire aided Haile Selassie and anti-Italian Ethiopian forces in the
East African campaign. Italy was defeated and Selassie restored to the throne, with most combat in Ethiopia ending in 1941. The
Armistice of Cassibile was signed in September 1943 with the Kingdom of Italy's surrender, and Victor Emmanuel III officially renounced his title as emperor of Ethiopia in November 1943.
Return of Haile Selassie, post-war period, and end of the monarchy In January 1942, Haile Selassie was officially reinstated to power in Ethiopia. The position of the emperor and the line of succession were strictly defined in both of the constitutions adopted during the reign of Selassie: the
one adopted on July 16, 1931; and the
revised one of November 1955. Haile Selassie was the last Solomonic monarch to rule Ethiopia. He was deposed by the
Derg, the committee of lower-ranking military and police officials on September 12, 1974. The Derg offered the throne to Selassie's son
Amha Selassie, who – understandably mistrustful of the Derg – refused to return to Ethiopia to rule. The Derg abolished the monarchy on 21 March 1975. In April 1989, Amha Selassie was proclaimed emperor in exile at London, with his succession backdated to the date of Haile Selassie's death in August 1975 rather than his deposition in September 1974. In 1993 a group called the "
Crown Council of Ethiopia", which included several descendants of Haile Selassie, affirmed Amha as emperor and legal head of Ethiopia. However, the
1995 Constitution of Ethiopia confirmed the abolition of the monarchy. ==Symbols==