Zaul people

Branch of Agew people in Eritrea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Zaul (ዛውል, Zɐʿwəl [zaʕwəl]) are an Agaw people and Tigrinya people who inhabit the southern and central regions of Eritrea, in a territory known as the Eritrean highlands. They are spread across several villages and have largely assimilated to other ethnic groups within the country.

Quick Facts ዛውል, Regions with significant populations ...
Zaul
ዛውል
Regions with significant populations
Central, Southern
Languages
Religion
Predominantly Christianity (Eritrean Orthodox Church, Catholicism, P'ent'ay) • Islam
Related ethnic groups
Agaw · Amhara · Beja · Beta Israel · Bilen · Saho · Tigrinya · Tigre[1]
Close

Overview

Zauls were one of the Agaw subgroups that made up the ruling class during the Zagwe dynasty (ዛጔ, directly translating to "Dynasty of the Agaw"). After the Solomonic dynasty succeeded the Zagwe dynasty in 1270, the Agaw were recompensed with permanent settlement in the historic district of Wag. Some of the Agaws migrated north of Ethiopia to modern-day Eritrea. The Agaw subgroups that settled in Kebessa and Senhit are known as the Gebre TarKe, Adkeme Mliga, Liban and Zaul.[2]

Demographics

Religion

The majority of Zauls belong to the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church. Others practice Eastern Catholicism and an even smaller population practice Protestantism or Islam.

Languages

Most Zauls speak Tigrinya, Tigre, or Bilen.[3] Other Agaw languages are spoken but used much less frequently.

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.