አንድምየለሸ ሁሉ አማረ “ወለጋን ኬኛ” ይላሉ፡፡ የጎረቤቶቻችን ድንቁርና አያስቅም?


Abe,
ኤርሚቲ aka Dawi ?Dawi wrote: ↑23 Apr 2021, 15:33Abe,
የአብዬን ለእምዬ መሆኑ ነው?![]()
The question is, what "luba" took Wolega? Was it "Bifole"?
Major Dawit didn't say? Did he?
He was just pointing out history nothing more but, you a known "falsifier" in this forum, jumped to deny history. It's just like TPLF; they robbed Wolkait/Tsegede from Amhara in recent history; Dr. Aregawi their founder admitted doing it and there are millions living who witnessed it but, TPLFites deny it & claim it's theirs all along, willing to die fighting for it. No body said you folks can't live & work there as Ethiopians; so, why commit suicide trying to grab the land is a mystery to me.
[[...Bifolé (1546–1554)
During the time of luba Bifolé, the Oromo migration achieved its first major success. While all previous movements had been minor raids on neighboring provinces, under Bifolé new raids were undertaken that began to weaken Ethiopian control. All of Dewaro was pillaged and Fetegar to its north was attacked for the first time.[4] Furthermore, according to Bahrey, the inhabitants of the pillaged areas were enslaved, becoming gebrs (Ge'ez: ገብር gabr; Amh. ግብር gebr, Tgn. ግብሪ gebri), a term referring more precisely to "tax-paying serfs", similar to the serfs in Ethiopia during feudal times. Emperor Gelawdewos, however, campaigned in the south as a result of these attacks. According to his chronicle, the Emperor defeated the Oromo incursions and made subject to his rule those he captured, preventing further attacks for some time, with further incursions reduced to skirmishes. The initial attacks were significant, however, on a much larger and more devastating scale to the Ethiopian dynasty. Despite his reprisals, Gelawdewos was troubled and was forced to settle refugees in a town of Wej north of Lake Zway, around 1550-1.[5]..
Early Expansions
The early expansions were characterized by sporadic raids by the Oromo on the frontiers of the Ethiopian kingdom. After capturing cattle and other booty, the raiding parties would quickly return to their homelands. Actual settlement of new territories would not begin until the lubaship of Meslé.[1] Luba (Ge'ez: ሉባ lūbā) is an "appointed" head of one of the five groups of the Oromo clans.[citation needed....]]
Dawi,Dawi wrote: ↑23 Apr 2021, 15:33Abe,
የአብዬን ለእምዬ መሆኑ ነው?![]()
The question is, what "luba" took Wolega? Was it "Bifole"?
Major Dawit didn't say? Did he?
He was just pointing out history nothing more but, you a known "falsifier" in this forum, jumped to deny history. It's just like TPLF; they robbed Wolkait/Tsegede from Amhara in recent history; Dr. Aregawi their founder admitted doing it and there are millions living who witnessed it but, TPLFites deny it & claim it's theirs all along, willing to die fighting for it. No body said you folks can't live & work there as Ethiopians; so, why commit suicide trying to grab the land is a mystery to me.
[[...Bifolé (1546–1554)
During the time of luba Bifolé, the Oromo migration achieved its first major success. While all previous movements had been minor raids on neighboring provinces, under Bifolé new raids were undertaken that began to weaken Ethiopian control. All of Dewaro was pillaged and Fetegar to its north was attacked for the first time.[4] Furthermore, according to Bahrey, the inhabitants of the pillaged areas were enslaved, becoming gebrs (Ge'ez: ገብር gabr; Amh. ግብር gebr, Tgn. ግብሪ gebri), a term referring more precisely to "tax-paying serfs", similar to the serfs in Ethiopia during feudal times. Emperor Gelawdewos, however, campaigned in the south as a result of these attacks. According to his chronicle, the Emperor defeated the Oromo incursions and made subject to his rule those he captured, preventing further attacks for some time, with further incursions reduced to skirmishes. The initial attacks were significant, however, on a much larger and more devastating scale to the Ethiopian dynasty. Despite his reprisals, Gelawdewos was troubled and was forced to settle refugees in a town of Wej north of Lake Zway, around 1550-1.[5]..
Early Expansions
The early expansions were characterized by sporadic raids by the Oromo on the frontiers of the Ethiopian kingdom. After capturing cattle and other booty, the raiding parties would quickly return to their homelands. Actual settlement of new territories would not begin until the lubaship of Meslé.[1] Luba (Ge'ez: ሉባ lūbā) is an "appointed" head of one of the five groups of the Oromo clans.[citation needed....]]