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161:. During that time, he met with Catholic church officials in hopes of setting up a mission in Ethiopia and hopefully reclaim the throne. While many memorandums were written, no final decision was made, due to tensions between various groups in the church and European countries. The original goal after he left was to go to England, but that fell through, and only made it to
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was killed in 1606 by
Susenyos. He was Christian. His mother was named Nazarena. He had a brother named Cosme; together they were educated in the town of Aich on the island of MaroĹąe. He claimed, in 1629, when he alleges his father was killed, that his mother ordered the brothers to split some gold
165:, then to Paris in early 1635. There, he announced he wasn't going back to Ethiopia, but would stay there. He ordered his servant, Ignazio, to return home, but he died on the way. Zaga was supported by French Royalty while he lived in Paris. Zaga died of
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Kingdom, where he was received in the court of King Orbat. After a falling out with King Orbat over Zaga marrying his daughter, and the threat of death from
Susenyos, Zaga left for
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of
Ethiopia. Zaga Christ travelled extensively, living in Sudan, Egypt, Palestine, Greece, and later Italy. There he met the Pope and fell in love with the franciscan nun Caterina
92:) and was familiar with his whereabouts from there until his death. Rèchac's accounts came from an Italian manuscript, written by Zaga Christ himself when he was living in
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68:, who he corresponded with from the years of 1633 to 1637 with letters of love written in their own blood. Zaga Christ died the following year of
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and jewelry between them and flee. Cosme allegedly went south to
Monomotapa, ruled by an enemy of Ethiopia, and ultimately to the
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La Terre Sainte, ou, Description topographique tres-particuliere des Saints Lieux, & de la Terre de
Promission
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60:, was a seventeenth-century Ethiopian man who, after having been imprisoned, claimed to be the son of Emperor
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with the epitaph (translated from French) "Here lies the king of
Ethiopia\ The original or the copy."
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Depending on the author, Zaga Christ was born between 1610 and 1614. While he claimed King
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on April 22, 1638. He was buried next to a prince of
Portugal. He was buried at
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of 1632, where he was seen by Roger. For security reasons, he then left for
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Rerum aethiopicarum scriptores occidentales inediti a saeculo XVI ad XIX
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There are many accounts of his life story. The French
Franciscan friar
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while in France, where the letters were later discovered.
249:(in Portuguese). excudebat C. de Luigi. pp. 146â151.
269:. London, England: Hazell, Watson, and Viney. p.
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From
September 1632 until October 1634, he lived in
293:. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
18:Ethiopian politician and traveler (c.1610â1638)
290:Blank Darkness: Africanist Discourse in French
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121:. Zaga Christ himself went north to the
201:"The Strange Adventures of Zaga Christ"
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48:â April 22, 1638), also referred to as
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96:. The Catholic Patriarch of Ethiopia,
129:. He later left Cairo and arrived in
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243:Beccari, Camillo (January 1, 1913).
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233:, Paris: Antoine Bertier, 1664
199:Crawford, Osbert G.S. (1950).
145:by Father Paolo da Lodi, then
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321:17th-century Ethiopian people
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287:Miller, Christopher (1985).
263:Ingram, John Henry (1882).
141:. He was received into the
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147:Custodian of the Holy Land
27:Portrait of Zaga Christ
205:Sudan Notes and Record
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76:Accounts of his story
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266:Claimants to Royalty
84:met Zaga Christ in
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229:F. Eugene Roger,
119:Cape of Good Hope
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33:. Turin, 1635
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213:. Retrieved
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39:Zaga Christ
177:References
54:AtÉnatewos
211:: 287â296
153:In Europe
131:Jerusalem
114:YaËÉqob I
110:YaËÉqob I
104:Early Age
62:YaËÉqob I
315:Category
167:pleurisy
139:Nazareth
86:Nazareth
70:pleurisy
133:during
66:Massimi
297:
123:Sennar
56:, and
171:Rueil
163:Turin
127:Cairo
295:ISBN
217:2013
159:Rome
135:Lent
94:Rome
271:144
29:by
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