- Princess Tenagnework
Infobox person
name = Tenagnework Haile Selassie
birthname = Fikirte Mariam
birthdate =January 12 ,1912 -April 6 ,2003
location =Harrar Princess Tenagnework Haile Selassie,DBE ,baptismal name Fikirte Mariam (January 12 ,1912 -April 6 ,2003 ) ofEthiopia was the eldest child of EmperorHaile Selassie and EmpressMenen Asfaw .Early life
Born in the city of
Harrar , Princess Tenagnework received her title upon her father's succession to the imperial throne in November 1930. Princess Tenagnework was first married to RasDesta Damtew , a member of the prominent aristocraticAddisge clan. Ras Desta and Princess Tenagnework were the parents of two sons, Princes Amha andIskinder Desta (later Rear Admiral), and four daughters, PrincessesAida Desta ,Seble Desta ,Sophia Desta andHirut Desta . Ras Desta Damtew was appointed Governor-General, first of Kaffa and Limu, and then of Sidamo.In 1935, following the invasion of Ethiopia by
Italy , the imperial family was forced to flee into exile in Bath,England . However, Ras Desta remained behind to command the imperial forces fighting in the south of the country. Ras Desta was captured and summarily executed by the fascist forces. While in exile, Princess Tenagnework gave birth to Emebet Tsige Mariam (Mary) during a brief union withAto Abebe Retta , who later served in ambassadorial and other roles in the post-war imperial government, and would eventually become president of the Imperial Senate after their separation.Government career
In 1941, with British assistance, Emperor Haile Selassie was restored to his throne, and Princess Tenagnework and her children returned to Ethiopia. Unfortunately, her elder son, Amha Desta, died shortly before the return. Princess Tenagnework would eventually marry Betwoded (later Ras) Andargatchew Messai, who had formerly served as "Afe-Mesfin" and representative for the underage Prince Makonnen in his Duchy of Harrar. They were married at the
Miskea Hazunan Medhane Alem Church ("Church of the Savior of the World, Consoler of the Bereaved") in September 1944. Bitwoded Andargatchew was then appointed Governor-General ofBegemder and Semien Provinces, and the couple were based inGondar .The couple then served as the Vice-Roy and Vice-Reine of
Eritrea , representing the Emperor there when the former Italian colony was federated to Ethiopia in 1951. Bitwoded Andargatchew served in many other governmental posts. He was elevated to the title of Ras, served as Minister of the Interior, and was made an Imperial Senator and a Crown Councilor. Princess Tenagnework and Ras Andargatchew Messai were the parents of a daughter, Mentewab Andargatchew, who died in childhood. After the death of her mother, Empress Menen Asfaw in 1961, Princess Tenagnework became the most visible and foremost woman at the imperial court and played an ever increasing advisory role to the monarch.The princess was often described as the child most like her father in temperament and character. A strong personality credited with mostly conservative views, she was widely regarded as a guardian of the institution of the
monarchy . She was perceived as a leader of the traditionalist element within the nobility, which was seen as opposingconstitutional andland tenure reform.Imprisonment
Princess Tenagnework and the rest of the imperial family were arrested on
September 11 ,1974 , the day before EmperorHaile Selassie was formally deposed by theDerg . The women of the imperial family were kept at Akaki Prison, also known as "Alem Bekagn" which translates to "I have had enough of this world". OnNovember 24 , 1974, the Dergue executed sixty-one former officials of the imperial government without trial. Among the many relatives, friends and associates of the Princess to die at this time, was her remaining son, Rear Admiral Prince Iskinder (Alexander) Desta.The Princess was allowed a final visit with her father only a few days before his death in August 1975. That same year her daughter Mary Abebe Retta died, as did her niece Princess Ijigayehu Asfaw Wossen. Her husband, Ras Andargatchew Messai, who had been outside Ethiopia when the monarchy fell, died after a long illness in
London a few years later (August 1981).After an imprisonment of fifteen years, the women of the imperial family were freed in 1989. A year later, the imprisoned males of the family were also released. After living in
Addis Ababa quietly for a little over a year, Princess Tenagnework and a few of the other members of the imperial family were allowed to depart into exile. Princess Tenagnework travelled toLondon and from there joined her only surviving brother, Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen in the Virginia suburbs of Washington DC.Later life
Princess Tenagnework settled in her second exile, in the
Virginia suburbs ofWashington D.C. to be near her only surviving sibling,Amha Selassie (Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen). The imperial family was living mostly in the Washington area and in London at the time. The death of her brother in 1997 deeply affected her, and her health began to decline. She returned permanently to Ethiopia in 1999. OnNovember 5 ,2000 , Emperor Haile Selassie was reburied with at Holy Trinity Cathedral with much pomp conducted by theEthiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church . The Princess attended the burial, which was refused state funeral status by the EPRDF government.Princess Tenagnework died in
Addis Ababa on April 6, 2003. On April 13, a funeral mass for the Princess was led byAbune Paulos , Patriarch of the Ethiopian Church, and was attended by most of the other hierarchs of the Ethiopian Church. Much of the old Ethiopian nobility and many members of the general public attended. She was buried in the crypt of Addis Ababa's Holy Trinity Cathedral near the graves of other members of the imperial family.External links
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article1128552.ece Obituary of Princess Tenagnework] at "
The Times "
* [http://www.angelfire.com/ny/ethiocrown/Princess.html Biography of Princess Tenagnework, with photographs]
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