List of famines that occurred throughout Ethiopian history
Famines in Ethiopia have occurred periodically throughout the history of the country.
The economy was based on subsistence agriculture, with an aristocracy that consumed the surplus. Due to a number of causes, the peasants have lacked incentives to either improve production or to store their excess crops; as a result, they lived from harvest to harvest. Despite the extensive modernization and land reform in the country during the last 120 years, especially underEmperor Haile Selassie, as of 2016, about 80% of the population are poor farmers who still live from harvest to harvest and are vulnerable to crop failures.[1]
As described in the Futuh al-Habasha, this famine took a heavy toll on Imam Ahmad Gragn's army: "When they entered Tigray each Muslim had fifty mules; some of them even one-hundred. When they left, each one of them had only one or two mules."[4]: 367 Amongst the dead was the Imam's young son Ahmad al-Nagasi.[4]: 373
1540
Contemporary accounts, collected by Richard Pankhurst, describe this famine as "worse than that which occurred at the time of the destruction of the Second Temple."[2]
It saw the death of Nur ibn Mujahid, Emir of Harar, by typhus: as J. Spencer Trimingham describes, Emir Nur "exerted every effort to help his people to recover, but after every respite the Oromo would again descend like locusts and scourge the country, and Nur himself died (975/1567–8) of the pestilence which spread during the famine."[6]
1611
The heavy rains that fell this year and extreme cold caused extensive crop failures in the northern provinces.
Occurring under the reign of Emperor Susenyos I, the plague was referred to as manan tita (literally 'whom did it leave?'). Many people died, particularly in the province of Dembiya.[7]: 52–3 [8]
1625–c. 1627
Accounted by both Ethiopians and PortugueseJesuits—including Jerome Lobo, Afonso Mendes, Gaspar Pais, Thomas Barneto, and Manoel de Almeida—this famine lasted for several years and was said to have been caused by unusually large swarms of locusts. The Jesuits also took this opportunity to convert famine victims to Catholicism.[7]: 54–62
Starving peasants were said to have appealed to Emperor Iyasu I at Gondar, insisting that if he did not feed them, they would die. In response, the Emperor and his nobles fed an uncountable number of the destitute for two months.[10] The Emperor reportedly extended his charity to all those in need, whether they be a Jew, "disloyal or a murderer."[11]
1747–48
This famine is attributed to locusts.[12] There was also an epidemic of fever (gunfan), possibly influenza, in 1747.
1752
According to Pankhurst.[5] A European visitor to Gondar, Remedius Prutky, is silent about this disaster.
1783
This famine is referred to as həmame ('my sickness') in The Royal Chronicle of Abyssinia.[12]
DejazmachHailu Eshte, who was then living in Este, settled many "needy people" in his villages as guards. "And hearing of this report... many commanders who acted as he did adopted his example for themselves."[12]: 411
1796
This famine was particularly serious in Gondar, and blamed on an infestation of locusts.[5]
This famine was followed by a cholera outbreak in 1830–31. Sengwer folklore has it that, the land "became dry and there was great hunger. The Siger went away to the east to Moru Eris, where most of them died of heat and starvation."[13]
1835
Shewa
Rains failed, leading to famine and "great mortality".[14]
1880–81
A cattle plague in 1879 spread from the Adal region, causing famine as far west as Begemder.[citation needed]
1888–92
The African rinderpest epizootic of the 1890s, introduced from Indian cattle brought by the Italians for their campaign against Somalia, killed approximately 90% of cattle. Lack of rainfall from as early as 16 November 1888 led to famine in all but southernmost provinces; locusts and caterpillar infestations destroy crops in Akele Guzay, Begemder, Shewa, and around Harar. Conditions worsened with a typhus epidemic, a major smallpox epidemic (1889–90), and cholera outbreaks (1889–92), forcing the coronation of Menelik II to be a subdued event.[15]
The 1972–1975 Wollo famine had a death toll of c. 200,000.[21] This famine spread throughout northern provinces. Failure to adequately handle this crisis contributed to the fall of the Imperial government and the rise of Derg rule.
1984–85
Tigray and Wollo
The 1983–1985 famine in Ethiopia had a death toll of 1.2 million, leaving "400,000 refugees outside the country, 2.5 million people internally displaced, and almost 200,000 orphans."[20]: 44 [22] The majority of the dead were from Tigray and other parts of northern Ethiopia.[23]
2003
A severe drought affected 13.2 million people in 2002/2003. Program data showed that thousands of adults and children died despite the large scale humanitarian response.[24] However, despite the drought being the most extensive in the country's modern history, there was a higher child mortality in drought-affected areas but no measurable increase in child mortality amongst the general population. Household-level demographic factors, household-level food and livelihood security, community-level economic production, access to potable water, and household receipt of food aid were predictive of child survival. The latter had a small but significant positive association with child survival.[24]
During the Tigray War, the Ethiopian federal government blocked food and humanitarian aid from entering the region as a weaponization of hunger. This led to a famine that the Ethiopian Parliament classified, as of January 2021[update], as a crisis (phase 3)/emergency (phase 4) acute food insecurity situation in most of Tigray except for Western Tigray by the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) under the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC).[25]
^ abcdefPankhurst, Richard. 1966. "The Great Ethiopian Famine of 1888-1892: A New Assessment." Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 21(2):95–124. JSTOR24621531. p. 96.
"The country's royal chronicles and other historical sources, which enable us to date events in Ethiopia much more precisely than in most other parts of Africa reveal that no fewer than twenty-three major famines occurred in the two centuries or so from 1540 to 1800, namely in 1540, 1543, 1567, 1611, 1623, 1625, 1633, 1634, 1635, 1636, 1650, 1653, 1678, 1700, 1702, 1747, 1748, 1752, 1783, 1789, 1796, 1797, and 1800."
^ abcPankhurst, Richard. 1972. "The History of Famine and Pestilence in Ethiopia Prior to the Founding of Gondär." Journal of Ethiopian Studies 10(2):37–64. JSTOR41965857.
^Pereira, F. M. Esteves. 1900. Chronica de Susenyos, rei de Ethiopia. Lisboa.
^Levine, Donald N. 1965. Wax and Gold: Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopian Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN0226475638.
^Pankhurst, Richard. 1966. "The Great Ethiopian Famine of 1888-1892: A New Assessment." Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 21(2):95–124. JSTOR24621531. p. 97.
^Guidi, I. 1905. Annales, Iohannis I, Iyasu I et Bakaffa. Louvain. p. 231.
^ abcdeWeld-Blundell, Herbert. 1922. The Royal Chronicle of Abyssinia, 1769-1840. Cambridge: The University Press.
^Lamphear, John. 1988. "The People of the Grey Bull: The Origin and Expansion of the Turkana." The Journal of African History 29(1):32–33. doi:10.1017/S0021853700035970. JSTOR182237.
^Pankhurst, Economic History of Ethiopia (Addis Ababa: Haile Selassie I University Press), p. 217
^Pankhurst, Economic History of Ethiopia, pp. 217-220