- Wedem Arad
Wedem Arad (died 1314) was "IPA|nəgusä nägäst" (1299 – 1314) of
Ethiopia , and a member of theSolomonic dynasty . He was the brother ofYagbe'u Seyon , and seized power from his nephews.Only one military action is recorded for this ruler. In the first year of his reign, one Sheikh Abu-Abdallah had gathered a large following, and proclaimed a
jihad against Wedem Arad's realm. Wedem Arad sent a number of agents into Abu-Abdallah's camp, who were able to persuade most of his followers to defect; without sufficient manpower, Abu-Abdallah was forced to agree to a treaty with Wedem Arad, in return for providing "them with all their needs until they are completely satisfied". Taddesse Tamrat suggests this involved giving them land to settle on, and notes that on the edge of the territory ofShewa there is a locality known as "Abdalla", which might be that settlement. [Tamrat, Taddesse (1972). "Church and State in Ethiopia", p. 131. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-821671-8.]In 1306, Wedem Arad sent an embassy of 30 envoys to
Europe seeking the "king of theSpain s" (probably Castile and Aragon). Perhaps hearing of the Christians' successes againstAl-Andalus in Iberia, Wedem Arad sought to negotiate a mutual defense pact with them against their common Muslim enemies. Whether or not the envoys reached their destination is unknown, but they did visitRome and got as far asAvignon . Delayed on their way home, they spent some time inGenoa , where they were interviewed by the geographerGiovanni da Carignano . Giovanni's account of their country based on the interviews is lost, but was summarized byJacobus Philippus Foresti da Bergamo in his "Supplementum Chronicarum"; this is the first text that associates the legendary figure ofPrester John with Ethiopia. [Silverberg, Robert (1972). "The Realm of Prester John", pp. 164–165. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press. ISBN 0-8214-1138-1.]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.