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Amba (landform)

Steep-sided, flat-topped mountain in Ethiopia, usually harboring various settlement From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Amba (landform)
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An amba (Amharic: ዐምባ āmbā, Tigrinya: እምባ imbā) is a characteristic landform in Ethiopia. It is a steep-sided, flat-topped mountain, often the site of villages, wells, and their surrounding farmland. Such settlements were frequently located on these amba plateaus because they were very defensible and often virtually inaccessible from the ground.

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Itai Sara, an amba in Degua Tembien
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An amba hillfort before its destruction in April 1868 after the Battle of Magdala

The original term in Amharic indicates a mountain fortress. Amba Geshen, for example, is a historically significant amba where members of royal families were kept under guard for their safety and to prevent their participation in plots against the sitting emperor. Other noted Ambas include Amba Aradam and Amba Alagi, sites of famous battles during the first and second Italo-Ethiopian Wars.

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Notable ambas

In 2008, a scientific mission identified on an amba near Harar, the Kundudo, one of just two feral horse populations in Africa.[1]

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See also

References

Sources

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