-
Arkiko (Arabic: حرقيقو, Afar and Saho: Hirg-Higo,
alternately Archigo,
Arqiqo, Ercoco, Hirgigo,
Hargigo or Harkiko)
historically known as
Dokono is a town...
- this, Özdemir
Pasha took the port city of M****awa and the
adjacent city of
Arqiqo.
Ethiopian Empire Ethiopian Highlands Habesha people Horn of
Africa "Abyssinia"...
- slaves, and
sufficient supplies for them at M****awa and the
nearby port of
Arqiqo under the
charge of his
brother Cristóvão,
before departing for
India on...
- when Özdemir
Pasha took the port city of M****awa and the
adjacent city of
Arqiqo,
followed by Debarwa, then
capital of the Bahr
Negus Yeshaq. The conflict...
-
Ottomans were
checked by
Emperor Sarsa Dengel's
victory and
sacking of
Arqiqo in 1589, thus
containing them on a
narrow coastline strip. The Afar Sultanate...
-
Huntingford notes that
Ptolemais has been
identified both with the
locales of
Arqiqo and
Suakin some 150
miles apart, and
notes that
Suakin lay at the end of...
- eye-witness to
almost everything he recorded. The men were
landed at M****awa and
Arqiqo, the next port
south of M****awa, and
began their trek
inland to Debarwa...
-
conquest of Habesh, the
Ottomans under Özdemir
Pasha attacked seized M****awa,
Arqiqo and Dahlak.
Gelawdewos relied on the
resistance of the
local po****tion...
-
province of Habesh,
crossed over from
Jeddah in 1557 and
occupied M****awa,
Arqiqo and
finally Debarwa, the
residence of the Bahr Negus.
Reinforced by a m****ive...
-
Sarsa Dengel defended the
Ethiopian frontier. 1589 – the
Ottomans sacked Arqiqo in Eritrea, thus
containing them on
narrow strip. 16th
century –
Oromo migrations...