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Hambaricho Mountain

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Hambaricho, (Amharic ሐምባርቾ), at an elevation of 3058 meters above sea level, is one of the highest mountains in southern Ethiopia. It is located in the Central Ethiopian Regional State in Kambata (Amharic ከምባታ) Zone.[1] Durame, the capital city of Kambata Zone, is located at the foothills of the Hambaricho Mountain. The mountain has a lot of historical, cultural, and spiritual significance to the local Kambata community. It is believed that the first seven kinship groups of tribes of the Kambata lived on Mount Hambaricho from ancient times, and the Kambatas still refer to these groups as "Hambaricho Lamala" (ሀምበሪቾ ላማላ) (the seven kin-groups of Kambata) as the original/founding groups of the Kambata. As can be learned from historical sources based on oral traditions, people radiated from this historical center of Mount Hambaricho and began to settle around the mountain.[2]

The Hambaricho Mountain and its ranges served as the administrative center and seat for successive Kambata kings from 16th century until the last decade of 19th century when the last Kambata Woma (king) and his advisors were captured and executed [3] during the invasion and military occupation of Kambata by the armies of Menelik II from 1890 to 1893.[4] After the conquest, the rule of the Woma was replaced by the rule of the Balabat, the local nobility until it lost importance after the Ethiopian civil war.However, Hambaricho continued to serve as acenter for the Kambata people. After the conquest of Kambata Dejazmatch Bashah Aboye was "believed to have relocated his garrison" headquarters to Hambaricho. Tessema Darge, who led the conquest against Kambatta, had "lived at Hambaricho garrison and then relocated it into a new garrison in Angacha, Kambata."[5]

The Kambata people (ከምባቲ ምናደቡ) used to gather in Hambaricho annually to celebrate the Masala festival with gifata (patriotic and war songs) and shalla (cultural songs and dances) in the presence of the revered Abba Serecho (አባ ሰሬቾ), who was generally believed to have possessed immense Spiritual gift, spiritual power. Today, one can get a panoramic view of Hambaricho from Durame, an administrative center of Kambata Zone, and from other places in the Zone. The Kambata Zone administration has built 777 staircases that crisscross the mountain from the bottom to the summit which made the Hambaricho Mountain easily accessible for ocal and international visitors b& tourists. Kambata engineers managed the project from site survey and design to construction and completion of the stairs, demonstrating a great engineering performance. In the words of the Regional Centre for Mapping of Resources for Development (RCMRD) expert, Degalo Sendabo, the newly inaugurated Hambaricho Mountain staircase is "one of the best viewpoints to see the Great Rift Valley of Eastern Africa." The 777 stairs project, coupled with other ongoing Hambaricho Tourism and Green Development Projects (HT GDP), is part and parcel of making "the historical center of Kambata people"[6] one of the tourist destination centers in Southern Ethiopia.

References

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  1. ^ Girma Zewude Anjulo, Asham Kokata: Yetarik Yebahelna Yeemnet Dasesa, 2018 p.7
  2. ^ Fantaye A Keshebo, The Legacies of Menelik II and the Fate of the Peoples of Southern Ethiopia: Untold Story of Conquest, Subjugation and Empire Building, Hott off the Press Printing Co, 2018 p.42 (Unpublished Manuscript)
  3. ^ Yacob Arsano, Seera: A Traditional Institution of Kambata. Ethiopia: The Challenge of Democracy from Below Edited by Bahru Zewude and Seigfried Pausewang, Elanders Gotab, Stockholm, 2002, P. 54
  4. ^ Richard Pankhurst, Economic History of Ethiopia 1800-1935 Haile Selassie I University Press, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 1968, P. 24
  5. ^ Fantaye A. Keshebo, A Void in Ethiopian History 1865-1941 Untold History of the Southern Ethiopian Peoples, Middletown DE July 23, 2020 p. 292, 297
  6. ^ Fantaye A. Keshebo, 2020 p. 58.