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'Fasilides' or 'Basilides' (
Ge'ez ፋሲልደስ ''Fāsīladas'', modern ''Fāsīledes''; throne name 'ʿAlam Sagad',
Ge'ez ዓለም ሰገድ ''ʿĀlam Sagad'', modern ''ʿĀlem Seged'', "to whom the world bows";
1603 -
18 October,
1667) was ''
'' (
1632 -
October 18,
1667) of
Ethiopia, and a member of the
Solomonic dynasty. He was the son of
Susenyos and Empress Sultana Mogassa, born at
Magazaz in
Shewa before
10 November 1603.
Fasilides was proclaimed Emperor in
1630 during a revolt led by Sersa Krestos, but did not actually reach the throne until his father abdicated in 1632. Fasilides immediately acted to restore the power of the traditional
Ethiopian Orthodox Church.He sent for a new ''
abuna'' from the
Patriarch of Alexandria, restoring the ancient relationship that had been allowed to lapse. He confiscated the lands of the
Jesuits at
Dankaz and elsewhere in the empire, and relegated them to
Fremona. When he heard that the
Portuguese bombarded
Mombasa, Fasilides assumed that
Alfonso Mendez, the
Roman Catholic prelate, was behind the act, and banished the remaining Jesuits from his lands. Mendez and most of his followers made their way back to
Goa, being robbed or imprisoned several times on the way. In
1665, he ordered the "Books of the Franks" -- the remaining religious writings of the Catholics -- burnt.
He founded what became the city of
Gondar in
1636 and established it as capital.
Fasilides campaigned against the restive
Agaw in
1637, and for the rest of his reign he was occupied either with repelling
Oromo raids into his realm, or punitive expeditions against the Agaw.
Fasilides dispatched an embassy to
India in 1664-5 to congratulate
Aurangzeb upon his accession to the throne of the
Mughal Empire.
In
1666, after his son Dawit rebelled, Fasilides incarcerated him at
Wehni, reviving the ancient practice of confining troublesome members of the Imperial family to a mountaintop, as they had once been confined at
Amba Geshen.
Fasilides died at
Azazo, five miles south of Gondar, and his body was interred at St. Stephen's Monastery on
Daga Island in
Lake Tana. When Nathaniel T. Kenney was shown Fasilides' remains, he saw a smaller mummy also shared the coffin. A monk told Kenney that it was Fasilides' seven-year-old son Isur, who had been smothered in a crush of people who had come to pay the new king homage.
1
References
# Nathaniel T. Kenney, "Ethiopian Adventure", ''
National Geographic'', '127' (1965), p.557.
Weblinks