Background
He was the son of Dawit I by Queen Seyon Mangasha.
He was the son of Dawit I by Queen Seyon Mangasha.
Despite the fact it only lasted nine months, Tewodros"s period of rule acquired a connotation of being a golden age of Ethiopia. The explorer James Bruce later commented,
There must have been something very brilliant that happened under this prince, for though the reign is so short, it is before all others the most favourite epoch in Abyssinia. lieutenant is even confidently believed, that he is to rise again, and reign in Abyssinia for a thousand years, and in this period all war is to cease and everyone, in fulness, to enjoy happiness, plenty and peace.
East. A. Wallis Budge repeats the account of the Synaxarium that Emperor Tewodros was "a very religious man, and a great lover of religious literature".
Budge adds that Tewodros wished to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, but was convinced not to make the journey by the Abuna Mark, "who feared for his safety." Despite this, Budge notes that he annulled the agreement of his ancestor Yekuno Amlak that granted a third of the country to the Ethiopian Church. Taddesse Tamrat notes that "in the royal chronicles and other traditions for the period, one can detect a deliberate attempt to suppress the violent ends of Ethiopian kings at the hands of their enemies." He was first buried at the church of Tadbaba Maryam, but his descendant Emperor Baeda Maryam I had his body re-interred at Atronsa Maryam.