Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GelawdewosGelawdewos - Wikipedia

    Galawdewos (Ge'ez: ገላውዴዎስ, 1521/1522 – 23 March 1559), also known as Mar Gelawdewos (Amharic: ማር ገላውዴዎስ), was Emperor of Ethiopia from 3 September 1540 until his death in 1559, and a member of the Solomonic dynasty. His throne name was Atsnaph Sagad I (Ge'ez: አጽናፍ ሰገድ).

  2. Gelawdewos ("Claudius"; 1521/1522 – 23 de marzo de 1559) fue Emperador (nombre de trono Asnaf Sagad I (ገላውዴዎስ), "ante el que el horizonte se inclina" o "las más remotas regiones se inclinan"; 3 de septiembre de 1540– 23 de marzo de 1559) de Etiopía, y un miembro de la Dinastía Salomónica.

  3. Gelawdewos es considerado uno de los gobernantes más importantes de la dinastía Salomónica, que gobernó Etiopía desde el siglo XIII hasta 197 ¿Cuál fue la prosopografía de Gelawdewos? La prosopografía de Gelawdewos describe a un gobernante alto, delgado y bastante joven en su época de reinado.

  4. I-IV) (pp. I-IV) In mediaeval Ethiopia, King Gälawdewos (1540–1559), whose regnal name was Aṣnaf Sägäd,¹ was considered as a savior of the Christian kingdom, that he restored from a disastrous and long civil war with the Adalites. The reign of King Gälawdewos was recounted in Portuguese sources, in a short chronicle and, more ...

  5. In eastern Africa: The Solomonids. There, in 1541, Emperor Galawdewos learned that 400 Portuguese musketeers had disembarked at Mitsiwa in response to pleas for assistance. Though they lost half their strength moving inland, their weapons and tactics inspired Galawdewos to exploit Ethiopia’s difficult terrain by undertaking hit-and-run warfare.

  6. This article traces the history of the city of Harar prior to the mid-16 th century until the end of the Barr Saʿd ad-Dīn Sultanate. The research for this article is based on the few mentions of the city that exist in the medieval literature and on recent archaeological data.

  7. 3 de mar. de 2023 · Solomon Gebreyes Beyene 2022. The Confession of King Gälawdewos (r. 1540–1559): A Sixteenth-Century Ethiopian Monophysite Document against Jesuit Proselytism Aethiopica 25 (2022) 160–181.