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Gore, Ethiopia

Gore (Oromo:Goree) is a town in south-westernEthiopia. Located south ofMetu in theIllubabor Zone of theOromia Region, this town has a latitude and longitude of8°9′N35°31′E / 8.150°N 35.517°E /8.150; 35.517 and an elevation of 2085 meters.

Gore
Goree
Town
Gore is located in Ethiopia
Gore
Gore
Location within Ethiopia
Coordinates:8°9′N35°31′E / 8.150°N 35.517°E /8.150; 35.517
CountryEthiopiaEthiopia
RegionOromia RegionOromia
ZoneIllubabor
Elevation
2,085 m (6,841 ft)
Population
 (2005)
 • Total
12,708
Time zoneUTC+3 (EAT)

Gore is known for itshoney. The map attached to C. W. Gwynn's account of his 1908/09 triangulation survey of southern Ethiopia shows that Gore had a telegraph station.[1] During the 1960s experimentaltea plantations were started around Gore, and a number of them thrived. The Gummaro plantation near Gore, with 800 hectares, is the largest tea plantation in Ethiopia.[2]

The town is served byGore Airport. Captain Esme Nourse Erskine, the British Consul at Gore (1928-1936), developed the aerodrome and produced “Flying Directions Kurmuk to Gore (1932).[3]

History

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Gore was founded in the nineteenth century, growing up aroundRasTessema Nadew'spalace. The Russian explorerAlexander Bulatovich stopped here 21 November 1896, expecting to meetRas Tessema, who was away campaigning against theMocha;Ras Tessema had not returned when Bulatovich left on 31 December.[4] With the growing prosperity of the port town ofGambela, and the growth of theBaro River route toSudan, Gore likewise prospered, holding two market days a week.Richard Pankhurst describes the pre-World War I community as having five foreign trading concerns -- "twoGreek, one Syrian, one British and one German"—engaged in the export ofcoffee,wax, and to a lesser extent animal hides, and the import ofcotton cloth, salt, and other manufactured goods.Civet cat oil was also a significant export at the time, Pankhurst noting thatRas Tessema exported 42 kilos in 1910.[5]

On 9 July 1927, the Greek nationals T. Zewos and A. Donalis were awarded a contract to link the town and Gore by road with Gambela, a distance of 180 kilometers.[6] However, the road fromJimma to Gore was not yet built by 1935. A trip toAddis Ababa took 20–22 days for pack mules and 14–15 days for riding mules. The mail transport from Gore to the capital departed every Monday at 17.00 while the government telephone line was used also as telegraph connection.[2]

Esme Nourse Erskine was the British Consul at Gore from 1928 to 1936.[7] On arrival “Erskine set about building an impressive residency on a hill overlooking Gore, with outbuildings, barracks, and stables for ten special constables, and a pack of hounds” now a ruin.[8] During the Italian invasion 1935-1936, Erskine helped theWestern Galla Confederation with their application to League of Nations, in which the Galla (Oromo) chiefs asked “to be placed under a British mandate … until we achieve self government”.[9] The British government declined to forward these applications to the League of Nations.[10]

Later RasImru Haile Selassie attempted to use Gore as his base to resist the forces of the occupyingItalian forces, but hostility from the localWelega Oromo forced him to move from the town late in October, 1936.[11] On 26 November 1936, the Italian 1st Eritrean Brigade occupied the town.[2]

DuringWorld War II the British War office sent out Military Mission 107 to Cairo in October 1940 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Courtney Brocklehurst,[12] with Erskine as political Officer, to raise the Galla (or Oromo) people of the Gore area against the Italians with a promise of liberation from both the Italians and the Amhara. However, the Emperor objected to the Mission as he considered that it might lead to the Galla people breaking away from Ethiopa as had been proposed by theWestern Galla Confederation in 1936. The Emperor also distrusted Erskine. The Emperor appealed to Churchill, who instructed that it should not proceed, but should be moved to Kenya to assist with the invasion of Ethiopia from the south and priority was given to Mission 101 (Gideon Force).[13]

AfterWorld War II, Gore served as the capital ofIllubabor province, until 1978 whenMetu became the capital.[14]

Demographics

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Based on figures from theCentral Statistical Agency in 2005, Gore has an estimated total population of 12,708 of whom 6,125 were males and 6,583 were females.[15] The 1994 census reported this town had a total population of 7,114 of whom 3,322 were males and 3,792 were females. It is the largest settlement in theworeda ofAle.

Notes

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  1. ^Gwynn,"A Journey in Southern Abyssinia",Geographical Journal, 38 (1911), pp. 113-139
  2. ^abc"Local History in Ethiopia"[permanent dead link] The Nordic Africa Institute website (accessed 27 November 2007)
  3. ^Asafou Waseni, Aeroplane Landing, Gore, by Capt. E.N. Erskine. Reproduced by the Sudan Survey Dept, Khartoum May 1932 and updated Sept 1936 and File: Air Route – Kurmuk to Addis Abbaba. Sketch map. (WOMAAT-AFR-ABY-56-1).JPGhttps://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Air_Route--_Kurmuk_to_Addis_Abbaba._Sketch_map._(WOMAT-AFR-ABY-56-1).jpg ; File: Gore (W. Abyssinia). Plans of Aeroplane Landing-ground and Surroundings. Correspondence. Despatch No. 15. (WOMAT-AFR-ABY-55-3-1-2).jpg.https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gore_(W._Abyssinia)._Plans_of_Aeroplane_Landing-ground_and_Surroundings._Correspondence._Despatch_No._15._(WOMAT-AFR-ABY-55-3-1-2).jpg
  4. ^From Entotto to the River BaroArchived 2017-12-16 at theWayback Machine (1897), translated by Richard Selzer,Ethiopia through Russian Eyes: Country in Transition, 1896-1898 (Lawrenceville: Red Sea Press, 2000)ISBN 1-56902-117-1 (accessed 2 November 2009)
  5. ^Pankhurst, Richard K. P. (1968).Economic History of Ethiopia. Addis Ababa: Haile Selassie I University. p. 449.
  6. ^Pankhurst,Economic History, pp. 290f
  7. ^ London Gazette 4 December 1928 Issue 33444 page 7975
  8. ^ Morton, C. (2020). The Anthropological Lens: Rethinking EE Evans-Pritchard. Oxford University Press, USA. DOI:10.1093/oso/9780198812913.003.0006. Chap 6, p. 147 and Tsegaye, Yihune, 2018 Historical heritages in Gore Town and its surroundings: Since the late nineteenth century, PhD diss., University of Gondar. Available via Academia
  9. ^Morton C. (2020) cite p.149/150. Photographs of the applications, dated 25 May 1936, are in the National Archives, FO 371/20206.
  10. ^ National Archives, FO 371/20206 and Heli von Rosen (2013), Gustaf von Rosen: An Airborne Knight-errant (English translation Printed privately), p.81 Carl Gustaf von Rosen: An Airborne Knight-errant - Heli von Rosen - Google Books.
  11. ^Anthony Mockler,Haile Selassie's War (New York: Olive Branch, 2003), pp. 163-166
  12. ^Courtney ‘Brock’ Brocklehursthttps://longwaytotipperary.ul.ie/cbrocklehurst
  13. ^The National Archives FO 371 Ethiopia 1940, Files 18 pp 1580 to end; File 20 pp 1174; Anthony Mockler pp. 310-331; University of Limerick’s WW1 Online Exhibition, Courtney ‘Brock’ Brocklehurst, Courtney ‘Brock’ Brocklehurst | It's a Long Way To Tipperary (ul.ie)
  14. ^"States of Ethiopia".Statoids.
  15. ^CSA 2005 National StatisticsArchived 2006-11-23 at theWayback Machine, Table B.4

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