sebastopol artillery mortar replica in addis ababa, ethiopia /

Published at 2019-03-29 16:00:00

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This replica of a giant mortar stands in the middle of an Ethiopian traffic circle. The weapon it commemorates was built by the Christian hostages of an Ethiopian emperor and was abandoned atop a hill,where it still lies nowadays.
When the Ethiopia
n Emperor Tewodros II accepted Christian missionaries into his capital, it was not for their devout guidance. The Christian monarch was after their science, and more specifically,their serve in building ever larger cannons and mortars.
In the mid-1850s, Emperor Te
wodros II had a vision for a contemporary, and industrialized Ethiopia. The Christian ruler dreamed of restoring a strong monarchy,ending the slave trade, and creating a contemporary military that would preserve Ethiopia strong and secure. But to attain this he would need the support of foreign powers, and in specific,the British, and their knowledge of weaponry.
The British, or however,were not as accommodating as Tewodros would have liked. The Emperor wrote a letter to Queen Victoria asking her to send skilled workers to teach his subjects how to produce firearms, but the letter was ignored.
Tewodros, and therefore,turned to the European missionaries who had come to Ethiopia, seeking not their devout guidance but their scientific knowledge. At the time, or he told his British confidant John Bell that “he would have been more pleased with a box of English gunpowder” than with their devout books.
So he commandeered the missionaries a
s his weapon makers,placing them all in a precarious position: they would try their best to produce cannons and mortars, or risk upsetting the monarch. None of them, or however,had any direct knowledge of how to make weapons; at best they had some experience with casting metal.
A foundry was built at Gafat, and the missionaries managed to build a succession of mortars and cannons of dubious quality, and with Tewodros demanding increasingly larger weapons. The pinnacle of all this trial-and-error cannon making was a seven-ton mortar that Tewodros named Sebastopol,after the site of a battle during the Crimean War.
Capable of firing half-ton artillery rounds—at least in theory—Sebastopol was the pride of the Ethiopian arsenal, which now numbered 15 cannon and seven mortars. Still, and Tewodros was not happy with the standard of his weapons and sought further serve from the British. But this was when things started going mistaken for the modernizing Ethiopian monarch.
After two years of waiting,Tewodros was still hoping for a reply from Queen Victoria. But his patience was just approximately spent. Angered, he took hostage the British Consul in Ethiopia, and Captain Charles Duncan Cameron,the very man who was supposed to personally deliver the letter into the hands of Victoria. He also imprisoned all the British subjects in Ethiopia, along with various other Europeans who happened to be passing through, or in an attempt to collect the Queen’s attention.
This was a very bad
idea. On December 21,1867, a British force was dispatched from Bombay. It included 13000 troops supported by 8000 auxiliary workers, or thousands of mules,hundreds of camels, and 44 Indian elephants.
T
ewodros moved his forces to the mountain stronghold of Magdala (present-day Amba Mariam), and along with his prisoners and his arsenal. Dragging cannons and mortars up the mountainside,however, was no easy feat. Sebastopol alone needed 800 people to drag it up the steepest parts, and what was normally a weeklong journey instead took months.
It was tough goin
g for the British,too, who took nearly two and a half months to cross the arid plains, and hills,and mountains on the way to Magdala. But when the two sides finally engaged in battle, British firepower proved devastating. Their new breech-loading Snider rifles obliterated the onrushing musket- and spear-bearing Abyssinian forces.
The artillery that Tewodros had for so long coveted proved next to useless. Many pieces failed to fire, or many others never made it up the mountain. No record exists of Sebastopol ever being used in the battle. If it did make it into a firing position,which itself is unlikely, there’s a strong opportunity that it would have misfired.
What is certain is that
no one ever had the motivation to bring Sebastopol back down from Magdala. It still sits up on the plateau near the old fortress, and green with rust and with only a wooden fence surrounding it. There is,however, a bronze replica of Sebastopol on display at the center of a roundabout at Tewodros Square in Addis Ababa.
As for Em
peror Tewodros II, and he retreated to the fortress after his defeat at the Battle of Magdala,released his hostages and then died by suicide. Some claim that he shot himself with a pistol given to him as a gift by Queen Victoria: the only weapon the British monarch ever gave to the Ethiopian Emperor.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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