- Reb River
Reb River (also transliterated as Rib; Amharic "bottom, buttocks") is a river of north-central
Ethiopia which empties intoLake Tana . The river originates on the slopes ofMount Guna , and flows west throughKemekem woreda . It has no significant tributaries.R.E. Cheesman described the Reb in 1936 as bringing "down quantities of dark sand, and we passed banks of it deposited on the lake shore. The river bar, 600 yards out in the lake, is a semicircle, and parties of travellers with loaded donkeys were passing round it instead of crossing the river." Merchants based in
Yifag would transport bars ofsalt or "amoleh " in small boats or "tankwas" down the Reb toZege on the lake to trade forcoffee . [ [http://130.238.24.99/library/resources/dossiers/local_history_of_ethiopia/r/ORTR.pdf "Local History in Ethiopia"] (pdf) The Nordic Africa Institute website (accessed 12 January 2008)]The Reb was also the site of one of several stone bridges built during the time of the
Jesuit missionaries or the reign of Fasilides. Consisting of five arches, it was located 24 kilometers (15 miles) from the estuary and enabled travel betweenGondar andDebre Tabor . [Richard Pankhurst, "Economic History of Ethiopia" (Addis Ababa: Haile Selassie University, 1968), p. 297] During the Italian occupation, the Italians built a bridge over the river with wooden supports, but it was damaged during the British campaign. [Solomon Getahun, "History of the City of Gondar" (Trenton: Red Sea Press, 2005), pp. 95ff.]See also
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List of Ethiopian rivers Notes
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