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  2. Tigre people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tigre_people

    Mainland Tigre, the near total majority, adopted Islam much later on including as late as the 19th century. [5] During World War II, many Tigre served in the Italian Colonial army, part of the period of Italian Eritrea. [2] The Tigre are closely related to the Tigrinya people of Eritrea, [5] as well as the Beja (particularly the Hadendoa). [6]

  3. Tigrinya people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tigrinya_people

    Mount Emba Soira, Eritrea's highest mountain, and a small successor village lies near the site. Qohaito is often identified as the town Koloe described in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea , a Greco-Roman document dated to the end of the first century, [ 6 ] which thrived as a stop on the trade route between Adulis and Aksum .

  4. Beni-Amer people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beni-Amer_people

    They live near the Red Sea around the borders of Eritrea and Sudan. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The majority having settled permanently in Sudan or mixed into the larger pastoralist communities of Eritrea. The Beni-Amer people probably emerged in the fourteenth century AD from the intermixing of the Beja and the Tigre .

  5. Tigrayans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tigrayans

    The toponym Tigray is probably originally ethnic, the "TigrÄ“tai" then meant "the tribes near Adulis". These are believed to be the ancient people from whom the present-day Tigray, the Eritrean tribes Tigre and Tigrinya are descended from. There is no indication that the term Tigray could be explained through Ge'ez gäzärä ("subdue"), with ...

  6. Tora people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tora_people

    The existing population, called Tigre was subdued and Mensa and Marya became the ruling classes (Shimagele) in the area. The area mentioned above was located in the Central Eastern Highlands of Eritrea and stretched towards the north. The language spoken by the people was Tigre, closely related to the ancient Ge'ez language. Other related ...

  7. Provinces of Eritrea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Provinces_of_Eritrea

    Semhar is the name of a former province of Eritrea, which has now become almost incorporated into the Northern Red Sea Region when the number and names of provinces were unilaterally changed in 1996. [18] The province was thinly settled with Massawa as the provincial capital. [19] The population is mainly Tigre, Afar, Saho and Tigrinya. The ...

  8. Eritreans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eritreans

    Eritreans are the native inhabitants of Eritrea, as well as the global diaspora of Eritrea. Eritreans constitute several component ethnic groups , some of which are related to ethnic groups that make up the Ethiopian people in neighboring Ethiopia and people groups in other parts of the Horn of Africa .

  9. List of rulers of Eritrea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rulers_of_Eritrea

    Before the official creation of Italian Eritrea (Colonia Eritrea) in 1890, the territory had seven interim governors: Giovanni Branchi (1882 to 1885), Alessandro Caimi (1885), Tancredi Saletta (1885), Matteo Albertone (1886 to 1887), Tancredi Saletta (1887), Alessandro Di San Marzano (1888) and Antonio Baldissera (1889).

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