Tsegaye gabre-medhin biography template
Remembering a Poet Laureate: Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin’s 75th Birthday Anniversary
Published by Tadias MagazineAugust 23rd, 2011in Events.Tadias Magazine
Events News
Tuesday, August, 23, 2011
New York (Tadias) – A special celebration honoring the life and work of Ethiopia’s Poet Laureate, the late Tsegaye Gebremedhin, will be held in Addis Ababa and Washington DC throughout the year.
“Family and friends of the late Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin are celebrating the poet’s 75th birthday anniversary and his work,” the press release states. “Author of around 34 plays in Amharic and about 10 plays in English, along with several volumes of poetry Gabre-Medhin is widely recognized as among Ethiopia’s most prolific and acclaimed writers. As part of an ongoing effort to keep his literary legacy alive, family and friends are organizing a year-long series of events in Addis Ababa and Washington DC.”
A few years ago, in an essay entitled A Short Walk Through His Literary Park, Professor Negussay Ayele described the writer’s earliest influences: “Poet Laureate Tsegaye is of the generation—numbering a dozen or so who are extant — of Ethiopian men of letters who were born during the crucible of the Fascist invasion of Ethiopia in the 1930s. As such, his early childhood gestation period was molded by the trauma of that war of aggression against which his patriot father fought. Born in the vicinity of Ambo and the environs of the source of Awash River in Shewa region, the young Tsegaye was also influenced and shaped by the subcultures, languages and the blending of his Oromo and Amhara heritages. Indeed, as he was to relate later on, he considers himself as one who represented an Ethiopian amalgam or bridge between the two cultures. And it did not take long for this child prodigy not only to absorb Oromifa and traditional Zema an Aethiopica 18 (2015) International Journal of Ethiopian and Eritrean Studies ________________________________________________________________ MAGDALENA KRZYŚANOWSKA, UniversitÃt Hamburg Review FASIL YITBAREK, Soaring on Winged Verse: The Life of Ethiopian PoetPlaywright Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin Aethiopica 18 (2015), 266߃269 ISSN: 2194߃4024 ________________________________________________________________ Edited in the Asien-Afrika-Institut Hiob Ludolf Zentrum fÛr £thiopistik der UniversitÃt Hamburg Abteilung fÛr Afrikanistik und £thiopistik by Alessandro Bausi in cooperation with Bairu Tafla, Ulrich BraukÃmper, Ludwig Gerhardt, Hilke Meyer-Bahlburg and Siegbert Uhlig Bibliographical abbreviations used in this volume A¨ £thFor Annales d߈¨thiopie, Paris 1955ff. £thiopistische Forschungen, 1߃35, ed. by E. HAMMERSCHMIDT, 36߃40, ed. by S. UHLIG (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner (1߃34), 1977߃1992; Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz (35߃40), 1994߃1995). AethFor Aethiopistische Forschungen, 41߃73, ed. by S. UHLIG (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1998߃2011); 74߃75, ed. by A. BAUSI and S. UHLIG (ibid., 2011f.); 76ff. ed. by A. BAUSI (ibid., 2012ff.). AION Annali dell߈Universit¿ degli studi di Napoli ߇L߈Orientale߈, Napoli: Universit¿ di Napoli ߇L߈Orientale߈ (former Istituto Universitario Orientale di Napoli), 1929ff. BSOAS Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (London, 1917ff.). CSCO Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium, 1903ff. EAe S. UHLIG, ed., Encyclopaedia Aethiopica, I: A߃C; II: D߃Ha; III: He߃N; in cooperation with A. BAUSI, eds, IV: O߃X (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2010); A. BAUSI in cooperation with S. UHLIG, eds, V: Y߃Z, Supplementa, Addenda et Corrigenda, Maps, Index (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010, 2014). EMML Ethiopian Manuscript Microfilm Library, Addis Ababa. JAH The Journal of African History, Cambridge 1960ff. JES Journal of Ethiopian Studies, Addis A Thoughts on Tsegaye’s Contributions and Legacies: A Summation neguaye@hotmail.com. Ethiopian novelist and poet (1936–2006) Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin (Amharic: ጸጋዬ ገብረ መድኅን; 17 August 1936 – 25 February 2006) was an Ethiopian poet and novelist. His novels and poems evoke retrospective narratives, fanciful epics, and nationalistic connotations. Gabre-Medhin is considered to be one of the most important Ethiopian novelists, along with Baalu Girma and Haddis Alemayehu. His books have been successful in commercial sales and in even academic theses. His works are solely based in Amharic and English. Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin was born in Bodaa village, near Ambo, Ethiopia, some 120 km from the capital Addis Ababa. He is an Oromo. As many Ethiopian boys do, he also learned Ge'ez, the ancient language of the church, which is an Ethiopian equivalent of Latin. He also helped the family by caring for cattle. He was still very young when he began to write plays while at the local elementary school. One of those plays, King Dionysus and the Two Brothers, was staged in the presence, among others, of Emperor Haile Selassie. Gabre-Medhin later attended the prestigious British Council-supported General Wingate school – named after British officer Orde Wingate. He subsequently attended the Commercial school in Addis Ababa, where he won a scholarship to Blackstone School of Law in Chicago in 1959. In 1960 he travelled to Europe to study experimental drama at the Royal Court Theatre in London and the Comédie-Française in Paris. Upon returning to Ethiopia, he devoted himself to managing and developing the Ethiopian National Theater – which institution staged an impressive memorial for its former director. During this time Gabre-Medhin travelled widely; he attended the first UNESCO-organised World Festival of Black Arts in Dakar, Senegal, and the Pan-African Cultural Festival [fr] in Algiers. In 1966, at the age of only 29, he was Fasil Yitbarek, Soaring on Winged Verse: The Life of Ethiopian Poet-Playwright Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin
Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin
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