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Country Study &
Country Guide for EthiopiaEthiopia Origins and
the Early Periods Early Populations and Neighboring States
Details
on the origins of all the peoples that make up the population of highland
Ethiopia were still matters for research and debate in the early 1990s.
Anthropologists believe that East Africa's Great Rift Valley is the site of
humankind's origins. (The valley traverses Ethiopia from southwest to
northeast.) In 1974 archaeologists excavating sites in the Awash River valley
discovered 3.5-million-year- old fossil skeletons, which they named
Australopithecus afarensis. These earliest known hominids stood upright, lived
in groups, and had adapted to living in open areas rather than in forests. Coming forward to the late Stone Age, recent
research in historical linguistics--and increasingly in archaeology as
well--has begun to clarify the broad outlines of the prehistoric populations of
present-day Ethiopia. These populations spoke languages that belong to the
Afro-Asiatic super-language family, a group of related languages that includes
Omotic, Cushitic, and Semitic, all of which are found in Ethiopia today.
Linguists postulate that the original home of the Afro-Asiatic cluster of
languages was somewhere in northeastern Africa, possibly in the area between
the Nile River and the Red Sea in modern Sudan. From here the major languages
of the family gradually dispersed at different times and in different
directions--these languages being ancestral to those spoken today in northern
and northeastern Africa and far southwestern Asia. The first language to separate seems to have been Omotic, at a
date sometime after 13,000 B.C. Omotic speakers moved southward into the
central and southwestern highlands of Ethiopia, followed at some subsequent
time by Cushitic speakers, who settled in territories in the northern Horn of
Africa, including the northern highlands of Ethiopia. The last language to
separate was Semitic, which split from Berber and ancient Egyptian, two other
Afro-Asiatic languages, and migrated eastward into far southwestern Asia. By about 7000 B.C. at the latest, linguistic
evidence indicates that both Cushitic speakers and Omotic speakers were present
in Ethiopia. Linguistic diversification within each group thereafter gave rise
to a large number of new languages. In the case of Cushitic, these include Agew
in the central and northern highlands and, in regions to the east and
southeast, Saho, Afar, Somali, Sidamo, and Oromo, all spoken by peoples who
would play major roles in the subsequent history of the region. Omotic also
spawned a large number of languages, Welamo (often called Wolayta) and
Gemu-Gofa being among the most widely spoken of them, but Omotic speakers would
remain outside the main zone of ethnic interaction in Ethiopia until the late
nineteenth century. Both Cushitic- and
Omotic-speaking peoples collected wild grasses and other plants for thousands
of years before they eventually domesticated those they most preferred.
According to linguistic and limited archaeological analyses, plough agriculture
based on grain cultivation was established in the drier, grassier parts of the
northern highlands by at least several millennia before the Christian era.
Indigenous grasses such as teff
<http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/ethiopia/et_glos.html>(see
Glossary) and eleusine were the initial domesticates; considerably later,
barley and wheat were introduced from Southwest Asia. The corresponding
domesticate in the better watered and heavily forested southern highlands was
ensete, a root crop known locally as false banana. All of these early peoples
also kept domesticated animals, including cattle, sheep, goats, and donkeys.
Thus, from the late prehistoric period, agricultural patterns of livelihood
were established that were to be characteristic of the region through modern
times. It was the descendants of these peoples and cultures of the Ethiopian
region who at various times and places interacted with successive waves of
migrants from across the Red Sea. This interaction began well before the modern
era and has continued through contemporary times. During the first millennium B.C. and possibly even earlier,
various Semitic-speaking groups from Southwest Arabia began to cross the Red
Sea and settle along the coast and in the nearby highlands. These migrants
brought with them their Semitic speech (Sabaean and perhaps others) and script
(Old Epigraphic South Arabic) and monumental stone architecture. A fusion of
the newcomers with the indigenous inhabitants produced a culture known as
pre-Aksumite. The factors that motivated this settlement in the area are not
known, but to judge from subsequent history, commercial activity must have
figured strongly. The port city of Adulis, near modern-day Mitsiwa, was a major
regional entrepôt and probably the main gateway to the interior for new
arrivals from Southwest Arabia. Archaeological evidence indicates that by the
beginning of the Christian era this pre-Aksumite culture had developed western
and eastern regional variants. The former, which included the region of Aksum,
was probably the polity or series of polities that became the Aksumite state. Data
as of 1991 Top of Form span>