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Home Aggregated RT

The Battle of Adwa: Ethiopia’s historic victory over European colonialism

by Admin
April 29, 2026
in RT, World
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The Battle of Adwa: Ethiopia’s historic victory over European colonialism
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Published: April 29, 2026 11:04 am
Author: RT

On March 1, 1896, Ethiopian forces crushed the Italian army, securing their nation’s independence and rewriting the history of colonial resistance

The Battle of Adwa was a blow against Italian colonialism in Ethiopia and a beacon of hope that illuminated the anti-colonial struggle across the globe. On March 1, 1896, in the small town of Adwa, the forces of Ethiopian Emperor Menelik II annihilated the invader – the Italian Army.

The Battle of Adwa was the height of the ‘Scramble for Africa’ when European powers carved up the continent with little regard to its existing kingdoms, peoples, and cultures. Italy, a relative latecomer to the imperial game, had established the colony of Eritrea on the Red Sea coast and set its sights on neighboring Ethiopia.

Two texts of the treaty

In 1889, Italy sought to expand its influence through the Treaty of Wuchale with Emperor Menelik II. The text of Article 17 in Italian stated that Ethiopia was obliged to conduct all foreign affairs through Italy, effectively making it an Italian protectorate. The version in Amharic, however, stated that Ethiopia could use the “good offices” of Italy if it wished – a matter of diplomatic convenience, not subjugation.

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The triumph of Adwa: An epic story of African victory over European colonizers

When Menelik discovered the deception caused by misinterpretation, he formally denounced of the treaty in 1893. Empress Taytu Betul, the emperor’s wife, a brilliant and shrewd leader in her own right, articulated the Ethiopian position by rejecting the treaty without hesitation, replying: “We too must retain our dignity… you want other countries to see Ethiopia as your protégé, but that would never be.”

After that, General Oreste Baratieri led his forces deep into Ethiopian territory. In response, Menelik issued a call to fight, rallying a vast army not just from his own Shewa region, but also from all corners of the empire. Amhara, Tigray, Oromo, and others formed a national coalition, which was a mosaic of Ethiopia’s peoples united by a common purpose. Menelik had secured modern rifles and artillery from Russia and France.

By early 1896, Menelik had assembled a massive force of up to 100,000 troops, compared with Italy’s army of 17,000 to 20,000 men. General Baratieri, facing the prospect of retreat or defeat and goaded by his officers who insisted that Italy would prefer the loss of two or three thousand men to a dishonorable retreat, launched a nighttime advance on February 29, 1896.

The battle: A day that shook the empire

The Italian plan fell apart in the darkness. At dawn, they stumbled into the massive Ethiopian encampment, disoriented and divided. Menelik and his 12 commanders, including Empress Taytu and Ras Mekonnen, seized the opportunity. They unleashed their army in a coordinated, overwhelming assault. Wave after wave of Ethiopian warriors, armed with modern rifles, lances, and swords, engulfed the isolated Italian columns.

The fighting was fierce and bloody, and by the afternoon, the battle was over. It left two Italian generals, Dabormida and Arimondi, dead, and a third, Albertone, captured. Over 4,000 Italian soldiers were killed, nearly 2,000 were captured, and all of their artillery was seized.

Ethiopian losses were significant but far lighter and laid the Italian dream of an East African empire in ruins on the slopes of Adwa. Italy was stunned; riots broke out in Rome. The European powers, who had so casually divided a continent, were forced to reckon with the reality that an African power had defeated a modern European army on the battlefield.

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The Battle of Adwa

For the world, and especially for people of African descent, Adwa was a powerful, undeniable refutation of the racist ideology of colonialism supremacy and black inferiority. At a time when nearly all of Africa was being subjugated, Ethiopia stood as a living symbol of resistance and dignity.

The victory also resonated deeply in the Caribbean and other part of globe where descendants of enslaved Africans found immense pride in the triumph. Adwa became a foundational event for the Pan-African movement, a concrete example of what African unity and self-determination could achieve.

The first president of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah, one of the founders of Pan-Africanism, proclaimed the victory “a turning point in African history, demonstrating that Africans can unite to defeat colonial powers.”

The subsequent Treaty of Addis Ababa formally recognized Ethiopia’s absolute sovereignty and independence, ensuring it would not be colonized while the rest of the continent was carved up.

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FILE PHOTO: Berlin Conference on the Congo issue, November 1884-February 1885, Germany.
Evil masterminds: Here’s how Europeans sealed Africa’s fate

The Adwa legacy

The victory at Adwa did not only free Ethiopia, but also shifted the historical narrative to another trajectory. It has helped Ethiopia, even today, develop its own narrative by supporting its citizens with great projects such as the Grand Ethiopia Renaissance Dam (GERD), Ethiopian Airlines, Green Legacy Initiatives, and others. Moreover, Adwa stands as a cornerstone holding Africans together in developing their own way of solving issues related to their continent, such as the Nile Basin initiative.

The Adwa victory affirmed that self-determination is non-negotiable and provided an unpredictable strategy to the African diaspora across the globe.

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