Topic:Asmara

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Asmara

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

Asmara , city (1996 est. pop. 400,000), capital of Eritrea, at an altitude of c.7,300 ft (2,225 m). The name also appears as Asmera. A commercial and industrial center, it is connected by rail and highway with the Red Sea port of Massawa . Textiles and clothing, processed meat, beer, shoes, and ceramics are the major industrial products. Asmara was a small village until the 1880s, when it became an Ethiopian regional administrative center. Occupied by the Italians in 1889, it became (1900) the capital of the Italian colony of Eritrea. In the 1930s, Asmara was rapidly developed as a base for the Italian invasion (1935-36) of Ethiopia; many Art Deco and other modern buildings survive from this period. In 1941 the city was taken by British forces. In 1950 the Eritreans, seeking independence from Ethiopia, reached an agreement with the government. But as Eritrean self-governance was withdrawn, the Eritrean Liberation Front was founded and an armed revolt ensued. Asmara's airport became key in the conflict as it was used by the Eritreans to obtain arms and supplies from outside supporters. It became a part of Eritrea with that country's independence (1993).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Eritrea's futurist secret.(ARTS & CULTURE)
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Eritrea: old world, new charm.
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Eritrea pulls itself up by its bootstraps: War-ravaged country smells success.(World)
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Letter from Asmara.
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Eritrea: The war on the dark side of the moon
The Independent - London; 7/11/2000; Thomas Keneally; 2289 words ; Little has changed since Thomas Keneally, author of Schindler's Ark, first visited Eritrea in 1987. Its people are still dying from hunger, disease and the on-off war with Ethiopia. And the West still behaves as if it is happening on another planet. Here the celebrated novelist reports from the Read more
In Asmara, all roads lead to Rome
International Herald Tribune; 9/16/2003; Marc Lacey; 1411 words ; 00-00-0000 There is a joke about an Asmarino, as the proud residents of this capital call themselves, who visits Italy and is surprised at how much the architecture there mimics the buildings back home. Naigzy Gebremedhin, an Asmara architect who has catalogued the city's historic buildings, Read more
Electrical engineering at the University of Asmara, Eritrea
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Asmara, Africa's Horn of Architectural Plenty
The Washington Post; 10/25/2003; Linda Hales; 1036 words ; The name Asmara may never ring like that of El Dorado. But high above the clouds over Eritrea, East Africa's newest capital city has treasures all its own. Through a quirk of colonial history, the city has been graced with one of the world's most remarkable concentrations of modernist architecture. Read more

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Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of World Cultures ... live around the world. The capital of Asmara, with a population of 400,000, has some ... high schools and colleges. Some people in Asmara and other cities speak Italian. 4 • ... the principal EOC house of worship in Asmara. There are some Roman Catholics, mostly ... Read more

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