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- Gugsa_Welle abstract "Gugsa Welle (1875 – 31 March 1930), also known as Gugsa Wale, Gugsa Wolie and Gugsa Wele, was an army commander and a member of the Royal family of the Ethiopian Empire. He represented a provincial ruling elite which was often at odds with the Ethiopian central government.Gugsa Wale was born in Marto in Yejju Province. He was the son of Ras Welle Betul and the nephew of Empress Taytu Betul. His half-sister, Kefey Wale, was the second wife of Ras Mangesha Yohannes, the natural son of Emperor Yohannes IV. Prouty quotes Bairu Tafla's favorable opinion of Gugsa as: "One of the most enlightened men of the Ethiopian nobility, a renowned poet, great lover of books, and pious and fair in the administration of Begemder."Taytu Betul arranged the marriage of Gugsa Wale to Leult Zewditu, the eldest daughter of Emperor Menelek II and an earlier wife. Gugsa and Zewditu were married in 1900, six years before her elevation to Empress. Gugsa was her fourth husband. Upon his marriage to Zewditu, Gugsa Wale was immediately promoted to Ras over Begemder Province. Prouty indicates that this alliance allowed Empress Taytu to extend her influence over this important province. Despite the political nature of this marriage, the two were happy. However, in 1909, Gugsa was summoned to Addis Ababa by Menelek II to respond to the charge that he had mistreated Zewditu.Ras Gugsa came close to becoming the power behind the throne during the intrigue that characterized the years of Emperor Menelik II's senility, for in 1909 the Empress Taytu made a serious effort to prevent the accession of Lij Iyasu as Menelik's successor. This led to the rumor that Empress Taytu and her brother, Ras Wale Betul, intended to move the capital to Gondar and make Ras Gugsa the Emperor. However, the Shewan aristocracy agreed that their authority, positions and honors depended on obeying Menelik's wishes, and they united behind Lij Iyasu as the successor. Despite this setback, Ras Gugsa initially supported the resulting status quo: when Dejazmach Abraha Araya rebelled in Tigray, Gugsa supported Dejazmach Abate Bwalu who was sent to suppress this threat, helping him to defeat Dejazmach Abraha in the Battle of Lake Ashenge on 9 October.However, once Iyasu was secure as Emperor the following year, Ras Gugsa was arrested "on a murder charge so patently false that he ultimately regained his freedom." By late April, he was in chains in Addis Ababa and "no longer a potential threat to the government." This confinement proved to be cruel. According to Prouty, Gugsa "was kept in chains for so long that his legs became swollen and the metal cut into his flesh." Zewditu begged Iyasu's short-lived Regent, Ras Tessema Nadew, to ease conditions for Gugsa. But it was not until 1915, when she was relegated to Falle, that Gugsa was released and the two were allowed to live together.In 1916, a successful coup d'état against Iyasu resulted in his being deposed and Zewditu being proclaimed Empress. Iyasu's father, Mikael of Wollo, then invaded Shewa Province with an army to restore Iyasu. Mikael was defeated in the Battle of Segale. With Iyasu deposed, Zewditu became "Queen of Kings" and Empress of Ethiopia, and her young cousin Tafari Makonnen became heir to the throne and Regent of the Empire.Empress Zewditu and Gugsa were restored to good graces. But the Shewan leadership, leery of a resurgence of the influence of Dowager Empress Taitu and her family, forced Gugsa to separate from Zewditu and he was sent to Gondar where he served once again as Governor of Begemder. Gugsa also served as Governor of Semien at this time.The crowning of Tafari Makonnen was controversial. He occupied the same territory as Zewditu rather than occupying a far off region in the empire. In Ethiopian history two monarchs, even with one being the vassal and the other the Emperor (in this case Empress), had never occupied the same location as their seat. Conservatives, including Balcha Safo, agitated to redress this perceived insult to the Empress and to the dignity of the crown. This state of agitation ultimately led to Ras Gugsa's rebellion in 1930. Gugsa saw Zewditu remaining as Empress and himself as the future Emperor. However, Empress Zewditu did not authorize or openly support his rebellious actions.In January, Gugsa Wale raised an army in Begemder. On 28 March, he marched from his governorate at Gondar towards the capital. But, on 31 March, he was met near the border by the Army of the Center (Mahel Sefari) and he was defeated and killed at the Battle of Anchem. News of Gugsa Wale's defeat and death had hardly spread through Addis Ababa when the Empress died suddenly on 2 April. Although it was long rumored that the Empress was poisoned upon the defeat of her husband, or alternately that she died from shock upon hearing of the death of her estranged yet beloved husband, it has since been documented that the Empress succumbed to a flu-like fever (possibly Typhoid) and complications from diabetes.".
- Gugsa_Welle birthDate "1875".
- Gugsa_Welle birthYear "1875".
- Gugsa_Welle deathDate "1930-03-31".
- Gugsa_Welle deathYear "1930".
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageID "16113198".
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageLength "7479".
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageOutDegree "50".
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageRevisionID "628329952".
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Abate_Bwalu.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Abraha_Araya.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Addis_Ababa.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Army_of_the_Ethiopian_Empire.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Bairu_Tafla.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Balcha_Safo.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Anchem.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Lake_Ashenge.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Segale.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Begemder.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Bilo.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Category:1875_births.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Category:1930_deaths.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ethiopian_military_personnel_killed_in_action.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ethiopian_nobility.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ethiopian_prisoners_and_detainees.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Prisoners_and_detainees_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Coup_dxc3xa9tat.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Dejazmach.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Diabetes.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Diabetes_mellitus.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Empress_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Ethiopian_Empire.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Ethiopian_aristocratic_and_court_titles.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Ethiopian_coup_dxc3xa9tat_of_1928.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Ethiopian_history.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Falle.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Gondar.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Gugsa_Wales_Rebellion.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Gugsa_Wales_Rebellion_(1930).
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Haile_Selassie.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Hailu_Tekle_Haymanot.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Iyasu_V.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Iyasu_V_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Kefey_Wale.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Mangesha_Yohannes.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Menelek_II_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Menelik_II.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Menelik_II_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Mikael_of_Wollo.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Princess.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Ras_(title).
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Ras_Mengesha_Yohannes.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Regent.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Royal_family.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Semien_Province.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Semien_province.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Shewa.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Tafari_Makonnen.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Taytu_Betul.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Tessema_Nadew.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Tigray_Province.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Welle_Betul.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Yohannes_IV.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Yohannes_IV_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Zewditu.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLink Zewditu_I_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gugsa Welle".
- Gugsa_Welle dateOfBirth "1875".
- Gugsa_Welle dateOfDeath "1930-03-31".
- Gugsa_Welle hasPhotoCollection Gugsa_Welle.
- Gugsa_Welle name "Gugsa Wale".
- Gugsa_Welle shortDescription "Ethiopian noble and army commander".
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Gugsa_Welle wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Gugsa_Welle description "Ethiopian noble and army commander".
- Gugsa_Welle description "Ethiopian noble and army commander".
- Gugsa_Welle subject Category:1875_births.
- Gugsa_Welle subject Category:1930_deaths.
- Gugsa_Welle subject Category:Ethiopian_military_personnel_killed_in_action.
- Gugsa_Welle subject Category:Ethiopian_nobility.
- Gugsa_Welle subject Category:Ethiopian_prisoners_and_detainees.
- Gugsa_Welle subject Category:Prisoners_and_detainees_of_Ethiopia.
- Gugsa_Welle hypernym Commander.
- Gugsa_Welle type Agent.
- Gugsa_Welle type Person.
- Gugsa_Welle type Person.
- Gugsa_Welle type Agent.
- Gugsa_Welle type NaturalPerson.
- Gugsa_Welle type Thing.
- Gugsa_Welle type Q215627.
- Gugsa_Welle type Q5.
- Gugsa_Welle type Person.
- Gugsa_Welle comment "Gugsa Welle (1875 – 31 March 1930), also known as Gugsa Wale, Gugsa Wolie and Gugsa Wele, was an army commander and a member of the Royal family of the Ethiopian Empire. He represented a provincial ruling elite which was often at odds with the Ethiopian central government.Gugsa Wale was born in Marto in Yejju Province. He was the son of Ras Welle Betul and the nephew of Empress Taytu Betul.".
- Gugsa_Welle label "Gugsa Welle".
- Gugsa_Welle sameAs Gougsa_Wellé.
- Gugsa_Welle sameAs Gugsza_etióp_rasz.
- Gugsa_Welle sameAs Гугса_Уоле.
- Gugsa_Welle sameAs m.03qpf5c.