Menas, throne name Admas Sagad I (Ge'ez አድማስ ሰገድ admās sagad, Amh. ādmās seged, "to whom the horizon bows") was nəgusä nägäst (1559 - February 1, 1563) of Ethiopia, and a member of the Solomonic dynasty. He was a brother of Gelawdewos. According to a genealogy collected by James Bruce, Menas' father Lebna Dengel arranged Menas to be married to the daughter of Robel, governor of Bora and Selawe; upon becoming empress she took the name Adimas Moas. They had two children, Fiqtor and Theodora.
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- Minas, Thronname: Admas Sagad I. , „vor dem sich der Horizont verneigt“, war von 1559 bis zum 1. Februar 1563 Negus Negest von Äthiopien und ein Mitglied der Solomonischen-Dynastie. Er war der Bruder von Claudius (Gelawdewos).
- Menas, throne name Admas Sagad I (Ge'ez አድማስ ሰገድ admās sagad, Amh. ādmās seged, "to whom the horizon bows") was nəgusä nägäst (1559 - February 1, 1563) of Ethiopia, and a member of the Solomonic dynasty. He was a brother of Gelawdewos. According to a genealogy collected by James Bruce, Menas' father Lebna Dengel arranged Menas to be married to the daughter of Robel, governor of Bora and Selawe; upon becoming empress she took the name Adimas Moas. They had two children, Fiqtor and Theodora. During Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi's invasion of Ethiopia, Menas had been captured but treated well as a valuable prisoner. Although the fate of prisoners of war at the time was to be castrated and enslaved, due to the intervention of Bati del Wambara, wife of Imam Ahmad Gragn, Menas escaped this mutilation, and was married to Bati del Wambara's daughter—an act Whiteway describes as "a unique act of clemency. " This clemency came to an end in 1542, when the Imam, desperate for help from his fellow Muslims, included Menas in an assortment of extravagant gifts to the sultan of Yemen in return for military aid. However, Imam Ahmad's son was later captured in the aftermath of the Battle of Wayna Daga, Gelawdewos used his prisoner to recover his brother Menas; according to Pankhurst, "when the royal family was reunited there were many days of celebrations."
- Menas, est négus d’Éthiopie de la dynastie salomonide sous le nom de Admas Sagad IModèle:Erde 1559 à 1563. Lorsqu’il monte sur le trône à la mort de son frère Claudius, Menas vient d’être seulement racheté aux musulmans qui l’avaient capturé lors d’une bataille et gardé captif à Harar pendant de longues années. Il combat avec succès les Turcs mais ne peut résister aux Oromos, au sud, qui envahissent un tiers de l’Éthiopie. Sous la direction du luba Harmufa (1562-1570), plusieurs groupes oromos atteignent l’est du plateau éthiopien et poussent jusqu’à l’Angot, l’Amhara et le Bégameder. D’autres s’établissent au Wellega. Dès son avènement, il combat les Falasha au Siemienr. Il banni l'évêque jésuite André d'Oviedo et ses compagnons dans un village entre Axoum et Adowa appelé Maigoga, que les jésuites rebaptisent Fremona, en l'honneur du missionnaire Frumentius En 1560, le vice-roi du Tigré Yeshaq se révolte et s’allie aux Turcs de Massaoua. Il proclame empereur Tazkaro, un fils illégitime de Yaqob, le fils ainé de Dawit II. À sa mort le Modèle:Date, son fils aîné Sarsa Dengel lui succède. Modèle:Début dynastie Modèle:Insérer dynastie Modèle:Fin dynastie
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- 1563-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
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- Minas, Thronname: Admas Sagad I. , „vor dem sich der Horizont verneigt“, war von 1559 bis zum 1. Februar 1563 Negus Negest von Äthiopien und ein Mitglied der Solomonischen-Dynastie. Er war der Bruder von Claudius (Gelawdewos).
- Menas, throne name Admas Sagad I (Ge'ez አድማስ ሰገድ admās sagad, Amh. ādmās seged, "to whom the horizon bows") was nəgusä nägäst (1559 - February 1, 1563) of Ethiopia, and a member of the Solomonic dynasty. He was a brother of Gelawdewos. According to a genealogy collected by James Bruce, Menas' father Lebna Dengel arranged Menas to be married to the daughter of Robel, governor of Bora and Selawe; upon becoming empress she took the name Adimas Moas. They had two children, Fiqtor and Theodora.
- Menas, est négus d’Éthiopie de la dynastie salomonide sous le nom de Admas Sagad IModèle:Erde 1559 à 1563. Lorsqu’il monte sur le trône à la mort de son frère Claudius, Menas vient d’être seulement racheté aux musulmans qui l’avaient capturé lors d’une bataille et gardé captif à Harar pendant de longues années. Il combat avec succès les Turcs mais ne peut résister aux Oromos, au sud, qui envahissent un tiers de l’Éthiopie.
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- Minas (Kaiser)
- Menas d'Éthiopie
- Menas of Ethiopia
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