HAILE SELASSIE. 1892 – 1975. EMPEROR OF ETHIOPIACHAPTER IX. THE
PORTUGUESE ADVENTURERS
The two explorers went first to Barcelona from where they
obtained passage to Naples. They had discussed their plans in great detail
before starting and were careful to let no other travellers suspect their real mission. Thus at Naples they gave out that they were going
to Rhodes, and did in fact take ship for that lovely island. There they were
able to evade the attentions of their travelling companions and joined a
merchant vessel bound for Alexandria. They did not stay long in that city but
made their way to Cairo, a centre of Mohammedan
trading interests, and here they struck up a friendship with some Moorish
traders from Fez who were about to start south along the Red Sea.
The Moors were
experienced merchant adventurers, men of intrepid temperament and high
commercial principles. The party travelled easily and in harmony and at length
De Covilham and his companion came to Aden, where the
Indian Ocean lay before them. Here there was some little discussion as to what
course they should take, and at length it was decided that they should
separate. The chief aim of their journey was to collect information and this
end could best be served by their investigating commercial possibilities in
different directions.
Alfonso de Payva went first to Sofala where
he had heard there were excellent gold mines and then turned northward into the
unknown regions of Abyssinia; while De Covilham explored the Indian seas in search of trade.
De Covilham made a very successful voyage and gathered a great
many valuable facts concerning the markets of the Indies, noting down carefully
the various spices which were to be had and stressing the superiority of
certain types of product over others. Calicut he especially commended as a port
where good business might be done in cloves and cinnamon and pepper, and he
observed the various methods by which merchants of different nationalities endeavoured to pack these commodities so as to conserve
their virtues.
But he not only
interested himself in merchandise. Trade routes were always in his mind. By
listening carefully to the tales of various navigators he obtained conclusive evidence
that it was possible to sail to India by way of the Cape of Good Hope, and he
actually constructed a map to show how this might be done.
“First you
shall set your course for the Island of the Moon,” he wrote—he was referring to Sofala, the modern Madagascar—“from where it is
possible to strike a good course for Calicut.”
Having
satisfied himself that his work was well done De Covilham turned back towards the Red Sea and at last reached Cairo, where it had been
arranged that either of the travellers who arrived
first should await the other. It was not long before there came news of De Payva’s death. He had been killed somewhere in the deserts
of southern Abyssinia, but details were lacking. De Covilham was in a quandary. He felt bound to go in search of his friend, but it was also
his duty to send the information he had gathered back to his king.
Fortunately at
this juncture he met two envoys of John of Portugal who had been sent to look
for him. They were two Jewish travellers of humble
birth, a Rabbi and a shoemaker, Joseph of Lamego. The shoemaker was sent back
with the results of De Covilham’s voyages and the two
other men set off once more for Aden and Ormuz.
But now that
his work in the direction of the Indies was done, De Covilham felt drawn towards the mysterious Land of Prester John or ‘Ogani’
where his friend had perished, and at length he set out alone to settle once and
for all the question of what lay beyond the deserts of the Red Sea’s western
shore. Having first reached Mecca, the holy city of Arabia, he crossed the Red
Sea to the port of Zeila, and from there made his way inland.
But the king
who ruled the Land of Prester John, though he treated him with the utmost
courtesy, found him of such assistance by reason of his western knowledge that
he refused to let him leave, so that for thirty years he was in a position of honourable detention at the Ethiopian capital.
He reached the
heart of Ethiopia about the year 1490 and it was not till 1520 that he was to
see a fellow European. In that year a Portuguese embassy arrived, the Negus
having sent a young Armenian by the name of Matthew to solicit aid against the
Mohammedans. Since he left in 1507 and returned only in 1520 it can well be
imagined that De Covilham had given up all hope. He
was overjoyed to see his fellow-countrymen again and wept as he embraced them.
He had much to tell, and all who heard him marvelled at the grace and vividness of his narrative, but he left no written record and
it is on the account prepared by Father Alvarez, one of the envoys, that our
information of Abyssinia at this period depends. This priest returned to
Portugal after a seven years’ residence in Ethiopia, and his book “True Facts
concerning the Land of Prester John” contains much of interest, though it
reveals a constant state of war against Islam which had prevented any real
progress in knowledge and civilisation.
Of absorbing
interest is the holy Father’s account of the huge monoliths of Aksum and of the
rock-hewn churches. His account of the greatest of the monoliths is as follows:
“Above the town
there are many stones standing erect, though some others have fallen on the
ground.... The greatest raised stone is 64 ells in length and six wide and
the sides measure three ells. It is worked like an altar stone, very straight
and skilfully made with arcades below and a summit
like a half-moon, and the side which has this half-moon is towards the south.... And
that it may not be said how can a stone so high be measured I have already said
that it was all in arcades as far as the foot of the half moon and these are
all of a size. We measured those we could reach and by this means calculated
the others and we found sixty ells and we allowed four more for the half moon.
...”
Father Alvarez
was a methodical observer but he could unearth no information as to the origin
of these great monuments, of which there were more than thirty, though only one
of any size was still in position. Of their inscriptions he could make nothing.
Later research
has established that they were sacrificial stones, and indeed the channels to
draw off the blood of the victims to the sacred bowls are still in evidence. It
is also clear that they indicate sun-worship—an interesting fact when we
remember that the legend of the Queen of Sheba speaks of the worship of the
sun. It is possible that these are relics of the splendours of her kingdom. Some writers have suggested that ‘ Queen of the South ’ may
have meant ‘Queen of the Sun.’
Shortly after
the return of Alvarez came the invasion of Mahommed Gran of which mention has
already been made. Gran, the Left-handed, made terrible inroads upon Ethiopia,
and the Emperor appealed to the Portuguese who very generously sent a fleet to
Massawa to render assistance. In 1542 Stephen de Gama sent his young brother
Christopher with troops into the interior. After a bitter struggle the combined
Christian forces routed Mahommed Gran, but not before the courageous^ young
commander had been killed in battle.
The reputation
which the Portuguese now enjoyed in Ethiopia was at once made the occasion by
the Jesuits to send numerous missions to the country. The story of their
efforts need not be told in detail. They were brave but for the most part
tactless and narrow-sighted men who were unable to perceive any good in native
doctrines and sought only by every means in their power to make converts. To do
this they frequently aided rebel emperors in return for a promise that the
rebel if successful would set up a Catholic Church. This led to much
unnecessary bloodshed and in the end the indignant Ethiopians forced the
Jesuits to leave. To be just it must be admitted that these missionaries were
single-minded men who had no thought but for their faith and never schemed to
obtain power for personal ends. Nor did they aim at the destruction of
Ethiopian independence. But like so many good men acting in misguided fashion
from sincere principles they did great and enduring harm. One of the Fathers,
Pedro Paez, who reached Abyssinia early in the seventeenth century, made very
great progress through his skill as an adviser on all civil matters and his
ability to avoid undue wounding of the feelings of those with whom he
disagreed. Traces of his work still remain in Abyssinia, for he aided in the
construction of roads and bridges. Had he lived the conversion of Ethiopia to
Christianity in its western form might have proved possible, but the
intolerance of his successors destroyed the foundations which he had laid so
well.
By 1623 the Jesuits had been for the most part expelled and in the succeeding two hundred years life in Ethiopia was little affected by any western influence. Travellers were slowly exploring the sources of the Nile and diplomats were manoeuvring for position, but of these matters the people of Ethiopia knew little. Two rival kingdoms existed and there were constant struggles between them. Usurpers were frequent. But one point is of great interest—the people always swung back to the ruler who could show true descent from Solomon, whose name remained a word to conjure with. At length a chief of humble origin seized the throne of Amhara and during a long and exciting reign eventually established himself sole ruler of Ethiopia. He was King Theodore, whose death, which resulted from a British expedition, was a tragedy of madness and misunderstanding almost Greek in its intensity of horror.
CHAPTER X.KING THEODORE
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