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ETHIOPIA

P.h.o.t.o.s . t.h.i.s . p.a.g.e

Ethiopia
Yitiopya


Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia

Addis Ababa, or Addis Abeba is the capital and largest city of Ethiopia, with a population of about 4 million. It lies at an altitude of almost 2300 m in the centre of the country. The city is the headquarters of important regional organizations, like the Organization of African Unity and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, both located in Africa Hall.

The city was founded in 1887 on the southern slopes of the Entoto Mountains and was named Addis Ababa ("New Flower") by the empress Taitu, the wife of Emperor Menelik who reigned from 1889 to 1913 and was the king of Shawa (Shoa) Province. Previously the capital had been situated on the Entoto tableland and was deemed to be too cold with a scarcity of firewood! To forestall a similar problem in Addis, eucalyptus trees were imported from Australia in 1905 and there are now groves of these trees all over the city.

From 1935 to 1941 Addis Ababa was the capital of Italian East Africa. During this time many modern stone houses were built, many roads were paved, a water reservoir was built and a hydroelectric station to the south of the city. A University was established in 1950 and there are several teacher-training colleges and technical schools. There are musea, a School of Music and a national Library. Homes of wealthy and poor people, high-rise apartments and traditional mud huts, stand next to each other throughout Addis Ababa.

Ethiopia's national government now occupies the palace of Emperor, Menelik II and The Jubilee Palace, the residence of former Emperor Haile Selassie I, is in the city as well. Addis Ababa is an important commercial center and has one of Africa's largest open-air markets, still know by its Italian name "Mercato". There is an international airport and a railroad link to Djibouti on the Gulf of Aden.


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Churchill Avenue
Churchill Avenue
Inner City
Inner City
Kids of Addis
Kids of Addis
Orthodox Church
Orthodox Church
Great Mosque
Great Mosque
Africa Hall
Africa Hall
Handicraft market
Handicraft market
"Shamma" cloths
"Shamma" cloths
Women of Addis
Women of Addis
Street market
Street market
Donkeys at Mercato
Donkeys at Mercato
"Lion of Juda"
"Lion of Juda"
 
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