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Emperor Tewodros II: Ethiopia's Modernizer Who Defied Britain
Description
Emperor Tewodros II, born Kassa Hailu, rose from a bandit leader to become Ethiopia's emperor in 1855, determined to reunify the fractured Solomonic dynasty and modernize his nation. This episode explores his radical reforms—abolishing regional lords, creating a standing army, and building a modern arsenal at Magdala—that threatened entrenched powers and European interests. His brutal methods and the infamous hostage crisis, including British consul Charles Duncan Cameron and a letter to Queen Victoria, led to the 1868 British Expedition to Abyssinia, a massive military campaign involving 13,000 troops and a 400-kilometer march. The climactic siege of Magdala ended in Tewodros's suicide, but his legacy as a tragic reformer who envisioned a united Ethiopia endures. We examine the contradictions: a visionary who used terror, a Christian king who imprisoned missionaries, and a nationalist who admired European technology. Key figures include Empress Tiruwork Wube, the British envoy Hormuzd Rassam, and General Robert Napier. The episode also touches on Tewodros's correspondence with European powers and the cultural shock of the Magdala treasures, which still spark restitution debates today.