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Ethiopia
A Land of Timeless Appeal
‘The land of a thousand smiles’, home of the Ark of the Covenant,
custodian of some of the world’s oldest civilizations- this is
Ethiopia. But how much do you really know about this amazing
country. |
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Bahar Dar is 578 kilometres
and is located on the southern shores of Lake Tana, the source
of the Blue Nile, with its ancient island monasteries and both
the Blue and the White Nile’s most spectacular feature, the Tis
last falls. on the island of Dega Estefanos you will find the
church of Saint Stefanos, which has a priceless collection of
icons and manuscripts and houses the mummified remains of a
number of Ethiopian emperors. For the modern traveler, the
starting point of any visit to the Blue Nile Falls, or to the
islands of Lake Tana, is the busting market town of Bahar Dar on
the lake’s south-eastern shore. |
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The colorful markets and a
variety of handicrafts and weaving centers also make it a
comfortable base for excursion by land or water. Bahar Dar port
provides access by boat to a number of historic lakeside
churches and monasteries near and far. Most date form the 14th-
century and have beautifully painted walls. Some monastic
islands are forbidden to women, but others can be visited by
all. |
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Gondar is founded by Emperor
Fasilidas in 1636. The city was Ethiopia’s capital until the
reign of the would-be reforming Emperor Tewodros II, also know
as Thedore. Gonder is famous for its many medieval castles and
the design and decoration of its churches. The earliest of the
castles was created by Fasilidas himself and is still in such an
excellent state of repair that it is possible to climb its
stairs all the way to the roof, which commands a breathtaking
view over much of the city. |
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Besides the famous palaces,
visitors should inspect the Bathing Place of Emperor Fasilidas,
which is used for the annual Timket or epiphany celebrations, and the
abbey of the redoubtable 18th- century Empress Mentewab at
Qwesquam, in the mountains just outside Gonder. |
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Much more is known about the
historic highland city of Axum, once a great commercial centere,
trading via the Red Sea port of Adulis and founded perhaps 500
years after the decline of Yeha. Axum stands in the highlands of
north western Tigray, commanding spectacular views over the
nearby Adwa hills. This ancient settlement is frequently
referred to as ‘’the sacred city of Ethiopians’’- a description
that adequately sums up its significance in national culture as
a center of Orthodox Christianity.
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Many remarkable monuments
here attest to the great antiquity of religious expression in
this country, and as a former capital that has never lost its
special appeal to the hearts and minds of all Ethiopians.
Axum is renowned for its Cathedral of St.Mary of Zion where,
legend has it; the original Ark of the Covenant is housed. Axum
is also famous for its seven mysterious monolithic stelae, hewn
from single pieces of solid granite. The most notable are carved
to multi-storey houses; several weigh more than 500 tones and
stand 20 meters high. Axum’s greatest significance, however, is
as the epicenter of the Queen of Sheba’s dynasty, upon which
rests the notion of the sacred kinship of the Semitic peoples
Ethiopia- a notion that links the recent past to ancient times.
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Lalibela is an ancient
settlement, which is also famous for its rock hewed churches.
Lalibela is a city carved from legend-a medieval settlement in
the Lasta area of Wollo that is the site of II remarkable
rock-hewn monolithic churches, believed to have been built by
King Lalibela in the late12th century. These notable structures
are carved inside and outside the solid rock, and are considered
among the wonders of the world. Each building is architecturally
unique, and several of them are decorated with fascinating rock
paintings. |
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The unadulterated biblical atmosphere and vivid local colour of the Timket celebration provide an ideal opportunity to
see Lalibela as a sacred centre whose roots go to man’s very
early years. |
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Harar is medieval walled
city which is considered as eastern historic route and stands
amid green mountains on the east wall of the Great Rift Valley.
Harar’s heritage is almost entirely Muslim and Oriental. Harar
has probably always had a great deal more in common with the
Horn’s coastal culture than with the life of the highlands –and
it retains to this day a certain redolence of the Orient. The
most dominant features, apart from its strong encircling walls,
are its rich and exciting market place probably the most
colorful in Ethiopia. |
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With its 90 mosques and shrines, Harar is
considered to be the fourth- most sacred centre of the Islamic
world; Its Islamic character is best expressed in the Grand
Mosque (Al Jami), which dominates the town. Harar’s Megalo Gudo
market is a centre for beautiful baskets of woven grass,
decorative wall-mats and bright shawls, as well as all the
fruits, vegetables, spices and grains of the province. Harar’s
five gates-the only means to enter or leave the city centre-have
been strongly guarded over the years. The fully restored Rimbaud
house is well worth a visit. |
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Ethiopia boasts seven of the
Great Rift Valley lakes. Some are alkaline brown, yet
surprisingly good for swimming some are tropical in setting;
some are bordered or fed by hot mineral springs; some play host
to large flocks of flamingos, pelicans, cormorants, herons,
storks and ibises; with 831 recorded bird species, Ethiopia is a
bird-watcher’s paradise.
Ethiopia’s Lake Tana is the
source of the Blue Nile. The lake is dotted with island
monasteries, which house many treasures of medieval art |
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Only 30 kilometres from the lake, the river
explodes over Tis lsat falls (meaning’ smoke of fire’) - a sight
that inspired wonder from the 18th century explorer, James
Bruce. Before the Blue Nile joins the White Nile, which flows
north from Lake Victoria, it runs for 800 kilometers through one
of world’s deepest and most dramatic gorges.
Ethiopia’s mountains rise up to a height of over 4,000 meter,
with Mount Batu, the second highest peak in Ethiopia, rising to
4,307 metres. The national parks enable the visitor to enjoy the
country’s scenery and its wildlife, conserved in natural
habitats, and offer opportunities for travel adventure
unparallel in Africa. |
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is the oldest and most
developed wildlife reserve in Ethiopia. Featuring the
1,800-metre Fantalle Volcano, numerous mineral hot springs and
extraordinary volcanic formations, this natural treasure is
bordered to the south by the Awash River and lies 225 kilometers
east of the capital Addis Ababa.
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The wildlife consists mainly
of East African Plains animals. Oryx, bateared fox, caracal
aardvark, colobus and green monkeys, Anubis and hamadryas
baboons, klip-springer, leopard, bushbuck, hippopotamus,
Soemmering’s gazelle, cheetah, lion kudu and 450 species of
birds of all kinds live with in the park’s 720 square
kilometers.
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with their vast
moorlands-the lower reaches covered with St. John’s wort- and
their extensive heathland, virgin woodlands, pristine mountain
streams and alpine climate, remain an untouched and beautiful
world. Rising to a height or more than 4,000 meters, the range
borders Ethiopia’s southern highlands, whose highest peak, Mount
Tullu Deemtu, stands at 4,377 metres. |
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The Establishment of the
2,400-square-kilometre Bale Mountains National Park was crucial
to the survival of the mountain nyala, Menelik’s bushbuck and
the simien red fox. This fox is one of the most colorful members
of the dog family and more abundant here than anywhere else in
Ethiopia. All three endemic animals
thrive in this environment, the nyala in particular being seen
in large numbers. The Bale Mountains offer some fine
high-altitude terrain for horse and foot trekking, and the
streams of the park- which become important rivers-further
downstream-are well-stocked with rainbow and brown trout. |
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accessible by land or air
through the western Ethiopian town of Gambela, remains a
place of adventure and challenge. Traveling across the
undulating plains of high Sudanese grass, visitors can enjoy a
sense of achievement in simply finding their way around. This is
Ethiopia’s true tropical zone and here are found all the
elements of the African safari, enhanced by a distinctly
Ethiopian flavor Nile perch weighing too kilos can be caught in
the waters of Baro, snatched from the jaws of the huge
crocodiles that thrive along the riverbank, |
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The white-eared kob
also haunts the Baro along with other riverbank residents that
include the Nile lechwe, buffalo, giraffe, tiang, waterbuck roan
antelope, zebra, bushbuck, roan antelope. Abyssinian reedbuck, warthog, hartebeest, lion
elephant and hippopotamus. |
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massif is a broad plasteau,
cut off to the north and west by an enormous single crag over 60
kilometres long. To the south, the tableland slopes gently down
to 2,200 metres, divided by gorges 1,000 metres deep which can
take more than two days to cross Insufficient geological time
has elapsed to smooth the contours of the crags and buttresses
of hardened basalt.
Within this spectacular
splendor live the Walia (Abyssinian) ibex, Simien red fox and
Gelada baboon-all endemic to Ethiopia- as well as the hamadryas
baboon, klipspringer and bushbuck. |
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Birds such
as the lammergeyer, augur buzzard, Verreaux’s
eagle, kestrel and falcon soar above this mountain retreat.
Twenty
kilometers north-east of Gonder,the Simien Mountains National
Park covers 179 square kilometers of highland area at an average
elevation of 3,300 meters. Ras Dashen at 4,620 metres the
highest peak in Ethiopia stands adjacent to the park.
The Simien escarpments which are often compared to the Grand
Canyon in the United States of America have been named by UNFSCO
as a World Heritage Site. |
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is
dominated mainly by many ethnic groups who speak omotic language as
classified by linguistics. The region and the people of this are one
of the least affected by the modern world. The life style of the
people has hardly changed for centuries. People still live in simple
make shift huts, dress animal skins and drink with calabashes. The
area is a veritable paradise for photographers and naturalists.
The people of
the Omo Valley and their culture have been source of fascination for
travelers. The Hammar who are well known for their sense of elegance
are the major ethnic group in the region.
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The Surma and Mursi women,
who wear lip plates by piercing their lower lip have been compelling
tourists to travel to their land to see what seems impossible.
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he Afar region is part of the Ethiopian Rift Valley. Since the late
1960s it has attracted the attention of researchers because of its
uniqueness as the world's only active, superior triple junction
where the complex tectonics and volcanism of an area between three
separating lithosphere plates (African, Eastern African, and
Arabian) can be observed on dry land. From archaeological point of
view it was from this region that LUCY, the most important hominid
skeleton dated at about 3.5 million years discovered. |
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Any one who
wants to visit the homeland of this Great, Great, Great grandmother
of the 6 Billion people of the world have to travel to the Afar
region. The Denakil Depression, at 120 meters below sea level is one
of the lowest points on earth's surface and it is found in the Afar
region. |
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With a population of more than
three million people, Addis Ababa is not only the political capital
but also the economic and social nerve centre of Ethiopia Founded by
Emperor Menlik in 1887 this big, sprawling, hospitable city still
bears the stamp of his exuberant personality. More than 21,000
hectares in area, Addis Ababa is situated in the foothills of the
3,000 meters Entoto Mountains and rambles pleasantly across many
wooded hillsides and gullies cut through with fast flowing streams. |
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Addis Ababa is
also considered as unofficial capital of Africa as many embassies
and international organization head quarter is located in Addis.
Ancient buildings, unique churches, many museums, the famous open
air market of Mercato are few attractions in Addis. |
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