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Ephraim Isaac (born 29 May 1936) is an Ethiopian scholar of ancient Ethiopian Semitic languages and of African and Ethiopian civilizations. He founded the Institute of Semitic Studies, which he directs from his home in Princeton, NJ, [1] and is the chair of his Ethiopian Peace and Development Center.
Ethiopian studies began a new era in 1963 when the Institute of Ethiopian Studies was founded on the campus of Haile Selassie University (which was later renamed Addis Ababa University). [4] The heart of the IES is the library, containing a wide variety of published and unpublished materials on all types of matters related to Ethiopia and the ...
For Ethiopians who held or hold academic positions at universities or research institutes, see Category:Ethiopian academics (see debate of July 2022) Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Sylvia was a friend of Haile Selassie and published Ethiopia, a Cultural History in 1955. In 1956, she and Richard moved to Ethiopia. [6] He began working at the University College of Addis Ababa, and in 1962 was the founding director of the Institute of Ethiopian Studies. [7] He also edited the Journal of Ethiopian Studies and the Ethiopia ...
Timnit Gebru (born 1983), Ethiopian-American computer scientist and former co-lead of the Google Ethical Artificial Intelligence Team. Mitiku Haile (born 1951), professor of soil science and founding president at Mekelle University. Sossina M. Haile (born 1966), professor of materials science and chemical engineering at the California Institute ...
Taddesse Tamrat (Amharic: ታደሰ ታምራት; 4 August 1935 – 23 May 2013) [1] [2] was an Ethiopian historian and scholar of Ethiopian studies. [3] He is best known as the author of Church and State in Ethiopia 1270–1520 (1972, Oxford University Press ISBN 0198216718), a book which has dominated the field of Ethiopian studies.
The Ethnological Museum houses anthropological, musicological and cultural objects. The Ethnological Museum is the first university museum in Ethiopia. [1] The Museum is located in the main Campus of Addis Ababa University which houses the Institute of Ethiopian Studies.
Traditional Ethiopian savants, on the one hand, have declared that 'We were Jews before we were Christians', while more recent, well-documented, Ethiopian hypotheses, notably by two Ethiopian scholars, Dr Taddesse Tamrat and Dr Getachew Haile...put much greater emphasis on the manner in which Christians over the years converted to the Falasha ...