Battle of Hadiya (1569) explained

Conflict:Battle of Hadiya
Date:1569
Place:Hadiya (south of the upper Awash River)
Result:Decisive Ethiopian victory
  • Hadiya is reannexed
  • Aze maintains nominal rule over Hadiya
Combatant1:Hadiya Sultanate
Sultanate of Harar
Commander1:Garad Aze of Hadiya
Commander2:Emperor Sarsa Dengel
Strength1:1700 Cavalry (non combatants)
Large infantry (non combatants)
500 Malassay
Strength2:Unknown
Casualties1:Heavy; Entire Malassay force annihilated
Casualties2:Minimal

The Battle of Hadiya was fought between the forces of the Hadiya led by their Garad (chief) Aze, and the Ethiopian Empire under Emperor Sarsa Dengel.[1] The Hadiya ruler had refused to pay tribute to the Ethiopian emperor, which lead to the conflict.[2]

Battle

Emir Uthman of Harar dispatched 500 Malassay warriors donned in cuirasses to assist Hadiya however Aze's own men, who were large in number, refused to fight the invading Ethiopian army.[3] [4] Hadiya soldiers cited their refusal as being due to already having sustained heavy casualties during the Oromo migrations. The Malassay of Harar, finding themselves alone in battle, were thus easily defeated by the Ethiopian forces.[5]

See also

Battle of Hadiya (1600s)

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cerulli . Ernesta . Peoples of South-West Ethiopia and Its Borderland . 2017 . Taylor & Francis . 9781315307978 .
  2. Book: Ethnographic Survey of Africa . 1956 . International African Institute . 86 .
  3. Book: Aze . Encyclopedia Aethiopica .
  4. Book: Braukamper . Ulrich . Islamic History and Culture in Southern Ethiopia . 2002 . Lit . 59 . 9783825856717 .
  5. Book: Hassan . Mohammed . Oromo of Ethiopia 1500-1850 . University of London . 311 .