- This
paper covers an archeological investigation of three abandoned Italian
colonial outposts in Benishangul-Gumuz region of Ethiopia that was
conducted between 2006 and 2007 (552). The three outposts were were
Was'i and Afodo in the region south of the Blue Nile in the Asosa zone
and Gubba in the region north of the river in the Metekel zone (554).
- The
Was'i site is an Italian fortified outpost outside of Asosa and near
the Sudanese border, making it the westernmost Italian colonial outpost.
The outpost is built on a rocky spur, defended by drystone parapets,
two dugouts, and a trench. The purpose of the site was to control the
Sirokoli/Sherkole valley that is a trading route with Sudan. The outpost
was probably garrisoned by colonial troops from the village of Mahdi
and rotated every week. No combat is remoted at the site, likely
indicating retreat or surrender before the Belgian Congolese force sent
to take control of the valley. The only archeological finding were some
fragments of green glass (555). There is a map of the site on page 557.
- The
Afodo/Afodu site was a fortification on the ridge overlooking Asosa and
controlling the main road thru Gizen towards Sudan. The site was
occupied by a banda of between 250 and 300 colonial soldiers of
the 4th Gruppo Bande di Frontiera and the 10th Battery. The site
consisted of a number of fortified positions, including at least two
19th Century Turkish-Egyptian forts that were reinforced with bamboo
barricades (555-556). There is a map of the site on page 558.
- There
was a battle over the ridge on March 8, 1941, between the Italians and
British Sudanese forces, in which the Italians lost 50 killed, 68
captured, and the British lost 4 dead, 31 wounded, and the Italians were
forced to retreat first to the Dabus River and from there to Dembidolo,
where they surrendered in June 1941 (556).
- The archeological dig focused on the two Turkish-Egyptian
forts, one of which had a number of glassware, tin cans, and whiteware.
These items suggested an obvious use pattern, with most activity
occuring in one part of the fort. It also indicated, as supported by
oral testimony, that the colonial troops and their families lived
together in the forts (556). Images of this material are on page 559.
- There
was a battle over the ridge on March 8, 1941, between the Italians and
British Sudanese forces, in which the Italians lost 50 killed, 68
captured, and the British lost 4 dead, 31 wounded, and the Italians were
forced to retreat first to the Dabus River and from there to Dembidolo,
where they surrendered in June 1941 (556).
- The
Gubba site was actually the palace of local lord Hamdan Abu Shok, which
was taken over the Italians. The palace, which overlooked the town of
Gubba, was turned into a headquarters for the comisariato and the 2nd
Gruppo Bande di Confine under Major Quigini was garrisoned in huts
around the palace (558, 564).
- There were a
large number of archeological finds at this site, including glassware,
tin cans, whitewear, a Ford Model T, parts of military equipments, shell
casings, parts of a battery, and metal scrap (560-561). Some of these items are illustrated on page 562.
- The
fort at Gubba was evacuated by the Italians on January 10, 1941, after
several Free French bombing raids carried out from Chad and Cameroon
between October 1940 and January 1941. The bombing raids lit the palace
on fire, injured the comissioner, and so weakened the Italian forces
that they stopped sending patrols into the town. The Italian forces
there retreated first to the Shogali Ford on the Blue Nile, then
combined with other forces and retreated to the Highlands (561).
- There were a
large number of archeological finds at this site, including glassware,
tin cans, whitewear, a Ford Model T, parts of military equipments, shell
casings, parts of a battery, and metal scrap (560-561). Some of these items are illustrated on page 562.
- The
Was'i site is an Italian fortified outpost outside of Asosa and near
the Sudanese border, making it the westernmost Italian colonial outpost.
The outpost is built on a rocky spur, defended by drystone parapets,
two dugouts, and a trench. The purpose of the site was to control the
Sirokoli/Sherkole valley that is a trading route with Sudan. The outpost
was probably garrisoned by colonial troops from the village of Mahdi
and rotated every week. No combat is remoted at the site, likely
indicating retreat or surrender before the Belgian Congolese force sent
to take control of the valley. The only archeological finding were some
fragments of green glass (555). There is a map of the site on page 557.
- Italy
was late to colonization due to its late unification and its colonial
ventures were largely failures. The biggest of these failures was the
Italian defeat by Emperor Menelik II at Adwa in 1896 (548).
- Italy
declared war on Ethiopia on October 3, 1935 after a period of pointless
mediation by the League of Nations and invaded with 200,000 soldiers.
The invasion used massed artillery, airpower, and tanks against a
materially inferior enemy. In May 1936, Italy was victorious and Emperor
Haile Selassie left for exile in Britain (548).
- Benito
Mussolini saw colonization and specifically war against Ethiopia as a
way to build unity within Italy. He also sought to recreate the Roman
Empire, relieve Italian population pressure through settler colonialism,
and instill Italians with new national values linked to war and
aggressiveness (548).
- Benito
Mussolini saw colonization and specifically war against Ethiopia as a
way to build unity within Italy. He also sought to recreate the Roman
Empire, relieve Italian population pressure through settler colonialism,
and instill Italians with new national values linked to war and
aggressiveness (548).
- In the
aftermath, Italy occupied the country and incorporated it into Italian
East Africa (548). The Italian occupation was a shitshow despite having
300,000 troops in the country. The engineering and industrial projects
were failured and massively costly, only a few thousand settlers came,
the country was a net food importer rather than a breadbasket, and
Italian faced a fierce insurgency throughout the entire occupation
(549).
- Italy responded to the insurgency with
reprisals and, when this also didn't work, Italian forces retreated into
fortified towns. They were terrified of reprisals and attacks by the
native population and so remained in their fortifications even when the
British invaded in January 1941. This largely explains the poor military
performance of Italian soldiers and why so many surrendered to the less
numerous British forces. On November 27, 1941, General Guglielmo Nasi
surrended his forces in Gondar, bringing an end to the Italian
occupation (549).
- The siege mentality of Italian
occupation is reflected in the architecture of the time period, with
even Addis Ababa being surrounded by forts and barbed wire (549, 571).
- The siege mentality of Italian
occupation is reflected in the architecture of the time period, with
even Addis Ababa being surrounded by forts and barbed wire (549, 571).
- The
Italian response to the insurgence was extremely brutal as was the
conduct of Italian soldiers, including massacres; the mutiliation of
corpses, including the removal of male genitals; mass execution of
resistance fighters; torture; use of chemical weapons; and the
confinement of Ethiopian civilians in concentration camps (552).
- Italy responded to the insurgency with
reprisals and, when this also didn't work, Italian forces retreated into
fortified towns. They were terrified of reprisals and attacks by the
native population and so remained in their fortifications even when the
British invaded in January 1941. This largely explains the poor military
performance of Italian soldiers and why so many surrendered to the less
numerous British forces. On November 27, 1941, General Guglielmo Nasi
surrended his forces in Gondar, bringing an end to the Italian
occupation (549).
- Archeology
can provide new insights into Italian fascism and colonialism because
the existing written sources do not cover culture and daily life.
Written sources are mainly military, technical, or operational, and even
personal papers and diaries from this period mainly talk about work
topics. Pictures suffer similar problems, as they are mainly of soldiers
and military equipment (549-550). Archeology can provide insight into
these quotidian aspects of life in the colony (551).
- Additionally,
these existing sources are from the perspective of Italian colonizers,
meaning that the brutality of the occupation is downplayed or justified
and that the Ethiopian perspective and even information about the
Ethiopians are missing from current sources (550). Archeology can help
destroy these perceptions by cataloging and exploring the concentration
camps and mass graves that prove the crimes of Italian colonialism
(552).
- This idea of a 'humane' occupation
remains in the Italian collective memory, which views Italian
colonialism as less sinister than other forms of European colonialism.
This view paints the 'tolerant' Italians are less inclined to racism and
ignores the racist policies of the colonial regime as well as its
brutal conduct against the occupied population (551-552).
- This idea of a 'humane' occupation
remains in the Italian collective memory, which views Italian
colonialism as less sinister than other forms of European colonialism.
This view paints the 'tolerant' Italians are less inclined to racism and
ignores the racist policies of the colonial regime as well as its
brutal conduct against the occupied population (551-552).
- Main
written documents from the period of Italian colonization are also
missing. The records and diaries from isolated outposts disappeared.
There is also almost no documentary evidence of the experience of
Ethiopian partisans (550).
- Additionally,
these existing sources are from the perspective of Italian colonizers,
meaning that the brutality of the occupation is downplayed or justified
and that the Ethiopian perspective and even information about the
Ethiopians are missing from current sources (550). Archeology can help
destroy these perceptions by cataloging and exploring the concentration
camps and mass graves that prove the crimes of Italian colonialism
(552).
- The
majority of the occupational force in Ethiopia was Africa. There were
91,000 Italian soldiers versus 200,000 African troops, including
Somalis, Eritreans, Libyans, and Ethiopians (550).
- Italian
fascism triumphed technology, modernity, youth, progress, and permenant
revolution (551). This was incorporated into the colonial project in
Ethiopia in the form of architecture as well as modernization and road
building projects (551).
- Benishangul-Gumuz is a
lowland area of western Ethiopia that is bisected by the Blue Nile
river. The landscape is composed of undulating hills covered with thick
savannah and bamboo woodlands. The natives of the region are primarily
Nilo-Saharan farmers practicing slash-and-burn agriculture; north of the
Blue Nile it is mainly Gumuz, while most living on the south of the
river are Bertha (552-553).
- During the period of
Italian occupation, the old administrative divisions in Ethiopia were
abolished and new ones were created based on ethnicity, with the north
part of Benishangul-Gumuz made administratively part of the Amhara
Region, while the south was placed in the Galla-Sidamo Region. The
people living there were ignored in these administrative divisions
because they were 'too primitive' (552-553).
- The
region attracted European colonial attention prior to Italian
occupation due to its gold deposits. The Italians began to explore and
develop these resources during their brief occupation (553).
- There
were little Italian presence in Benishangul-Gumuz because the Italians,
correctly, believed that any future Allied attack would come from the
north in Eritrea or from Kenya in the south. The soldiers stationed
there played almost no role in the war and most outposts were abandoned
before the British even arrived (553).
- There were only 1,500
soldiers along the Sudanese frontier and these were mainly colonial
troops or irregulars supplied by the local chiefs, while the main
defensive forces and Blackshirts were kept on the Highlands (553-554).
- The
limited combat that occured in Benishangul-Gumuz to the north of the
Blue Nile was related to the return of Emperor Haile Selassie to the
country, which required marched through Metekel in northern
Benishangul-Gumuz on the way to Addis Ababa. Prior to invasion, British
forces under Mission 101 entered this region and worked with Ethiopian
partisans to neutralize the Italian forts protecting the western
approaches to the Ethiopian Highlands. This mission, commanded by Major
Orde Wingate of the Gideon Force, entered Ethiopia on January 20, 1941,
and participated in minor battles in Benishangul-Gumuz before moving on
to capture Debre Markos on April 4, 1941, and towards the capital (553).
- The
limited combat that occured to the south of the Blue Nile was conducted
by the Belgian Congolese Battalion, the King's African Rifles, and the
Sudan Defense Force, assisted by Ethiopian partisans. The main town of
this area, Asosa, was liberated on March 11, 1941 (553).
- The
limited combat that occured in Benishangul-Gumuz to the north of the
Blue Nile was related to the return of Emperor Haile Selassie to the
country, which required marched through Metekel in northern
Benishangul-Gumuz on the way to Addis Ababa. Prior to invasion, British
forces under Mission 101 entered this region and worked with Ethiopian
partisans to neutralize the Italian forts protecting the western
approaches to the Ethiopian Highlands. This mission, commanded by Major
Orde Wingate of the Gideon Force, entered Ethiopia on January 20, 1941,
and participated in minor battles in Benishangul-Gumuz before moving on
to capture Debre Markos on April 4, 1941, and towards the capital (553).
- The
main area occupied by the Italians during the war was Asosa, the
capital of Benishangul-Gumuz. The Italians stationed 4,000 soldiers of
the 10th Brigata Coloniale under the command of Colonel Giuseppe Cloza
and Major Venturini in the town, including Somalis, Eritreans, Amhara,
Tigray, and some local Oromo soldiers. There were a number of Italian
fortifications and administrative buildings in the town, but they were
all destroyed (554-555).
- Asosa was the operating
base of one of the only Italian offensives into Sudan. In mid-October
1940, Colonel Rolle took 1,800 men and raided Sudan before retreating.
This offensive was not repeated (555).
- Asosa was the operating
base of one of the only Italian offensives into Sudan. In mid-October
1940, Colonel Rolle took 1,800 men and raided Sudan before retreating.
This offensive was not repeated (555).
- There were only 1,500
soldiers along the Sudanese frontier and these were mainly colonial
troops or irregulars supplied by the local chiefs, while the main
defensive forces and Blackshirts were kept on the Highlands (553-554).
- During the period of
Italian occupation, the old administrative divisions in Ethiopia were
abolished and new ones were created based on ethnicity, with the north
part of Benishangul-Gumuz made administratively part of the Amhara
Region, while the south was placed in the Galla-Sidamo Region. The
people living there were ignored in these administrative divisions
because they were 'too primitive' (552-553).
- Material
culture is paramount in understanding colonialsm, particularly because
of the attention that colonialism paid to spatial organization and
arrangement and partially the use of space to separate and distinguish
the colonizer from the colonized (563).
- This
use of spatial arrangement to embody the messages of colonialism is
demonstrated at the Gubba site, where Italian occupation of the palace,
used by the slave trader kings of the region, simultaneously dethroned
the slavers and let everyone know who the new boss was. This was also
true for the Turkish-Egyptian forts at Afodo and the occupation of
Sheikh Khojele's palace in Asosa, both of which had been used by slavers
and now were occupied by the abolitionist Italians (563-564).
- The
presence of a showerhead at Gubba and whitewear at multiple sites
indicates that resources were used to make possible the material culture
of the Italians, particularly showering and eating from individual
plates, that differentiated the 'clean' colonizer from the 'unclean'
colonized who couldn't shower and ate from communal pots (563).
- The
presence of prepackaged drinks and tin cans from Europe at these
archeological sites and their large numbers indicates that a massive
logistic effort was involved in keeping these garrisons, composed almost
entirely of East Africans, supplied with European food and drink. In
fact, testimony indicates that Italians and their colonial soldiers only
ate local food in cases of starvation despite its widespread
availability. This indicates that food and drink, as well as eating
habits, were important means of creating a cultural distinction between
the colonizer, including Italians and East African colonial soldiers,
and the colonized (566).
- The use and
availability of different kinds of clothes was also used to
distinguished colonizer and colonized. Italians disliked when Africans
wore European clothes, which was seen to challenge racial distinctions.
This distinction was maintained within the army, as colonial soldiers
were not issued and were not permitted to wear boots, which were
reserved for Italians (566).
- The
presence of prepackaged drinks and tin cans from Europe at these
archeological sites and their large numbers indicates that a massive
logistic effort was involved in keeping these garrisons, composed almost
entirely of East Africans, supplied with European food and drink. In
fact, testimony indicates that Italians and their colonial soldiers only
ate local food in cases of starvation despite its widespread
availability. This indicates that food and drink, as well as eating
habits, were important means of creating a cultural distinction between
the colonizer, including Italians and East African colonial soldiers,
and the colonized (566).
- The
organization of the colonial troop's barracks at Gubba also
demonstrates a colonizing influence, as they were square huts in
contrast to the circular or rounded huts traditionally built in East
Africa. The troops were lived there were subjected to two pressured
related to space: they were quartered together as Italian subjects
regardless of ethnicity and spoke Italian and adopted some forms of
Italian material culture; and they were physically separated from the
local population. The physical separation of the colonial soldiers from
the local population is also observed at the Afodo site (565).
- The
presence of a large number of liquor and wine bottles at these sites,
especially the living quarters of colonial troops, indicates another
difference in the material culture of colonial troops versus the local
population, as this represents a European drinking culture markedly
different from the large communal pot of alcohol that characterized
drinking culture in the native lands of the soldiers (565-566).
- The
Italian colonial tactic of creating a visable and physical separation
between the occupying colonial forces and the local population was
evidently successful, as locals in western Ethiopia remember the forces
occupying all three sites as 'Italians', despite the fact that almost
everyone there was an East African (566-567).
- The
presence of a large number of liquor and wine bottles at these sites,
especially the living quarters of colonial troops, indicates another
difference in the material culture of colonial troops versus the local
population, as this represents a European drinking culture markedly
different from the large communal pot of alcohol that characterized
drinking culture in the native lands of the soldiers (565-566).
- This
use of spatial arrangement to embody the messages of colonialism is
demonstrated at the Gubba site, where Italian occupation of the palace,
used by the slave trader kings of the region, simultaneously dethroned
the slavers and let everyone know who the new boss was. This was also
true for the Turkish-Egyptian forts at Afodo and the occupation of
Sheikh Khojele's palace in Asosa, both of which had been used by slavers
and now were occupied by the abolitionist Italians (563-564).
- The
native inhabitants of Ethiopia, as well as native Africans everywhere,
were active participants in WWII, despite the dismissive attitude with
which they are treated in contemporary accounts. Contemproary accounts
by Europeans are mystified at African actions and ignore the range of
local politics underpinning African behavior (567-568).
- Zalak'a
Liku, a lord of the Agaw, joined the resistance against the Italians
because of a combination of national pride and the Italian abolition of
the slave trade in Benishangul-Gumuz. The fight for national liberation
and the return of the emperor lived alongside a reassertion of his
rights to enslave and raid the Gumuz (568-569).
- Sheikh Khojele al-Hassan,
a Bertha ruler, initially offered support for the Italians as a means
of aligning himself against the British in Sudan, who had impeded his
slave trading and imprisoned his wife, Sitt Amma, on charges of slave
trading. Alliance with the Italians also allowed Sheikh al-Hassan to accumulate modern guns and a large number of new prestigous medals and awards. Sheikh al-Hassan
rapidly changed sides in the war and donated huge sums of money to
Emperor Haile Salessie in order to retain power after the war, an act
for which his palace was burnt down by the retreating Italians (568).
- The
reaction of the common people to the Italian invasion was disperate and
depended on history, ethnicity, and religion. Initially, the Gumuz and
Bertha fled their villages but, once it was discovered that the Italians
were not there as slave raiders, they returned. Many Gumuz collaborated
with the Italians, voluntarily or forcibly, as did Muslim Berthas. The
Gumuz in particularly were targetted by Ethiopian patriots after the war
for their collaboration (569).
- Zalak'a
Liku, a lord of the Agaw, joined the resistance against the Italians
because of a combination of national pride and the Italian abolition of
the slave trade in Benishangul-Gumuz. The fight for national liberation
and the return of the emperor lived alongside a reassertion of his
rights to enslave and raid the Gumuz (568-569).
- The
memory of the Italian occupation in the communities nearby to the
archeological sites is limited. In Afodo, the only memory is the
Italians drinking too much. In Was'i, the memory is largely restricted
to an old song that mocks the Italians as cowards. The common thread in
Benishangul-Gumuz is a linkage between the Italians and gold, as it is
reported that the Italians came in search of gold or that gold mines are
haunted by Italian ghosts. Italians graves have also been ransacked in
search of gold (569-570).
- Fascist colonialism was not fundamentally different from other types of colonialism, as all shared racism, massive inequality, violence, and a pervasive and paranoid fear of revolt and rebellion. These fears manifested in Italy but also in South Africa and British Kenya, both of which were used by the Italians as models for colonial and apartheid rule (571).
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