Eritrea Governorate Explained

Conventional Long Name:Eritrea Governorate
Subdivision:Governorate
Nation:Italian East Africa
Image Map Caption:Eritrea within "Italian East Africa"
Capital:Asmara
Era:Interwar period
World War II
Life Span:1936-1941
Event Start:Created
Date Start:1 June 1936
Event End:British occupation
Date End:19 May 1941
Title Leader:Governor
Leader1:Alfredo Guzzoni
Year Leader1:1936-1937
Leader2:Vincenzo De Feo
Year Leader2:1937
Leader3:Giuseppe Daodice
Year Leader3:1937-1940
Leader4:Luigi Frusci
Year Leader4:1940-1941
P1:Italian Eritrea
Flag P1:Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg
P2:Ethiopian Empire
Flag P2:Flag of Ethiopia (1897-1936; 1941-1974).svg
S1:British Military Administration (Eritrea)
Flag S1:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg
S2:Ethiopian Empire
Flag S2:Flag of Ethiopia (1897-1936; 1941-1974).svg
Stat Pop1:ca. 1,500,000

Eritrea Governorate (Italian: Governatorato dell'Eritrea) was one of the six governorates of Italian East Africa. Its capital was Asmara. It was formed from the previously separate colony of Italian Eritrea, which was enlarged with parts of the conquered Ethiopian Empire following the Second Italo-Ethiopian War.[1]

History

In 1936, after the defeat of Ethiopia, Italy created an empire in Africa called Africa Orientale Italiana (Italian East Africa). It lasted for six years, until World War II, and was made of six governorates. One of these was the Eritrea Governorate. The original Italian Eritrea, sometimes called Colonia primogenita (First Colony), was enlarged by with territories ("Tigrai") taken from northern Ethiopia that were populated mostly by ethnic Eritreans. In 1938 the Eritrea Governorate was divided in 13 "commissariati" (provinces)[2]

The Eritrea Governorate in 1938 had an area of and a population of more than 1,500,000 - of which nearly 100,000 were Italian colonists concentrated in Asmara.[3]

Massawa was the port of the Italian Colony of Eritrea and was hugely improved and enlarged as a part of Italian East Africa.[4]

Eritrea was chosen by the Italian government to be the industrial center of Italian East Africa. The Italian government implemented agricultural reforms, primarily on farms owned by Italian colonists. Exports of coffee boomed in the 1930s.

In the region of Asmara there were in 1940 more than 2,000 small and medium-sized industrial companies, concentrated in the areas of construction, mechanics, textiles, electricity, and food processing. According to the Italian census of 1939 the city of Asmara had a population of 98,000, of which 53,000 were Italians. This made Asmara the main "Italian town" of the Italian empire in Africa. Furthermore, because of the Italian architecture of the city, Asmara was called Piccola Roma (Little Rome).[5]

In all of the Eritrea Governorate there were more than 75,000 Italians in 1939.[6]

Consequently, the living standard of life in Eritrea in 1939 was considered one of the best in Africa, for both the Italian colonists and the native Eritreans. In early 1940 laws were established that enabled all the autochthonous Eritreans in the Italian military forces to receive a pension for their families; no other European colonial country granted this at that time. In the summer of 1940, with Italy's entry into World War II, the Italians conquered the area of Kassala in British Sudan and annexed it. The mayor of Kassala was the Eritrean hero Hamid Idris Awate.

The Allies invaded and conquered Italian East Africa in the East African campaign of World War II. The last Italian governor of Eritrea, Luigi Frusci, surrendered the governorate to the Allies on 19 May 1941. Italian East Africa came under British occupation, and the British abollished the Eritrea Governorate and created a military occupation government associated with Ethiopia's negus (king).

Governors

There were 5 Italian governors, under a Viceroy representing the emperor Victor Emmanuel III:

Notes

  1. Web site: Untitled Document . www.solomoniccrownheraldry.org . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100821183529/http://www.solomoniccrownheraldry.org/history_of_ethiopia_monarchy_modern_era_part_seven.htm . 21 August 2010 . dead.
  2. Guida dell'Africa Orientale Italiana, CTI 1938, p.110
  3. https://www.academia.edu/31388398/Borghi_città_Piani_regolatori_e_Paesaggi_tra_Italia_e_Oltremare._Il_Piano_regolatore_di_Asmara_la_Milano_degli_Altipiani_di_Guido_Ferrazza_e_Vittorio_Cafiero_1936-1939_ ASMARA: I PIANI REGOLATORI FUNZIONALISTI (1936-1939); p. 92
  4. https://dadfeatred.blogspot.com/2018/07/italian-massaua-was-name-used-during.html Italian Massawa
  5. http://www.fedoa.unina.it/1881/01/Santoianni_Progettazione_Architettonica.pdf Italian architectural planification of Asmara (in Italian) p. 64-66
  6. http://www.maitacli.it/arg_menu/italiani/elenco.htm Italians in 1939 Eritrea

Bibliography

See also