TAYYE GABRA-MARYAM
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Alaga Tayye Gabra-Maryam (1858-August 1924) was an Ethiopian scholar, teacher and writer, as well as an eloquent preacher.
Born at Qaroda, in Bagemder, Tayye began his education in a church school. His education was interrupted, however, when his father and uncle fled their province for political reasons, and his mother died in an epidemic in 1867. He then wandered to different places in search of his father and uncle, who had gone to Bombay, India.
Tayye ventured as far as Massawa, on the Red Sea coast, and enrolled in an evangelical mission school at Monkolu near Massawa in 1874. In 1875, he returned to his home province to continue his education. He became proficient in Ge’ez language and in the teachings of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.
In 1880 he returned to Monkolu, where he became a teacher, and preached for about 20 years. He published five books, mostly on religious themes. His most outstanding work was a Ge’ez grammar which was published in 1889. By the time he returned to Bagemder again in 1899, his reputation for learning was established. Emperor Menilek II [reigned 1889-1913] commissioned him to write the history of Ethiopia, and protected him against the clergy, who viewed him as a heretic.
The German emperor Kaiser Wilhelm II (reigned 1888-1918) requested Menilek to send him an Ethiopian scholar to catalog Ethiopian manuscripts and to teach Ge’ez in the University of Berlin, and Menilek sent Tayye in 1905. During his four-year stay in Germany, Tayye visited Stockholm, Vienna, Rome, Istanbul, Jerusalem, Athens, and Alexandria, mainly in pursuit of historical material.
Many of the governments of the countries he visited awarded him medals. Menilek also awarded him a gold medal, and again authorized him to write on Ethiopian history.
Tayye was questioned several times on his faith by the Abuna (head of the Ethiopian Church), but showed no deviation from the doctrines of the church, though he was critical of its practices. After Menilek’s illness in 1909, Tayye was attacked by his enemies. He was arrested in December 1910, and was imprisoned in Addis Ababa, but showed himself happy to be able to teach the other prisoners. He was eventually confined outside the prison.
In 1918 the government realized his value as a scholar, and reinstated him as an official author. His first historical work, a social history of Ethiopia, was published in 1922. He had also written a book on the general history of Ethiopia, but he died in August 1924 before it could be published.
BAIRU TAFLA