Abstract

ABSTRACT This essay centers on one African woman, Ṭaytu Bǝṭul (1851–1918), and argues that her path to empowerment has a significant African and Ethiopian precedent. African scholars write about how African women have obtained authority through shifting aspects of their identities through the religious, economic and political spheres. The Ethiopian precedent is seen in the lives of historical Ethiopian women like Mǝntǝwwab, Mänän, and Wällätä Petros. Using the relevant primary and secondary sources, I continue to argue that Ṭaytu used the strategies that served these women in the past, such as the prominent position of women in African religions, imperial marriages of her relatives throughout her and her husband’s growing Empire, and her central place in her husband’s inner circle to create, maintain and expand her influence culminating in her governing the nation for years after a series of strokes incapacitated her husband Mǝnilǝk II.

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