-
instead of
Ethiopic characters.
Susenyos I (Ge'ez: ሱስንዮስ Sūsinyōs; c. 1571–1575 – 17
September 1632), also
known as
Susenyos the Catholic, was
Emperor of...
-
Haymanot and the
presence audience. The
audience with
Susenyos was a
trying experience for Bruce.
Susenyos complained that the
Scotsman had paid him no attention...
- the
throne –
Susenyos, the son of
Abeto Fasilides – were exiled, but Za
Dengel escaped to the
mountains around Lake Tana,
while Susenyos found refuge...
-
Island in Lake Tana.
Being of
Amhara descent, he was the son of
Emperor Susenyos I and
Empress Sahle Work (Ge'ez: ሣህለወርቅ) (throne name) ለ (name) of Wagda...
- Portuguese-influenced (he
would later convert to
Roman Catholicism)
Ethiopian Emperor Susenyos.
During the
reign of the Na'ibs,
Ottoman raiding parties from the garrison...
-
including the most influential,
Spanish Jesuit Pedro Paez.
Under Emperor Susenyos I,
Roman Catholicism became the
state religion of the
Ethiopian Empire...
- when he and Ras
Mikael left the
capital city of
Gondar for Tigray, and
Susenyos II was made
Emperor by
rival warlords in Gondar, but
regained it when Ras...
- rider"
charms of the
Byzantine Period; see
Gello Susenyos I,
Emperor of
Ethiopia from 1608 to 1632
Susenyos II,
Emperor of
Ethiopia for
about four months...
-
benefited Páez when
Susenyos I ****umed the
throne in 1607.
Susenyos invited him to his court,
where the two
became friends.
Susenyos made a
grant of land...
- with the
Catholic Church. The
Emperor Susenyos was
converted primarily by
Father Pedro Páez. In 1622,
Susenyos made
Catholicism the
state religion. The...