The Ottomans make Massawa the capital of …

Years: 1558 - 1558

The Ottomans make Massawa the capital of Habesh, a province that had been proclaimed in 1554, preceded by several generations of conflict between the Ottomans, who had been primarily concerned with Anatolia and Eastern Europe, and the Portuguese, who are the major power in the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean.

Due to resistance, as well as sudden and unexpected demands for more troops in the Mediterranean and on the border with Persia, the Ottoman authorities place the city and its immediate hinterlands under the control of one of the aristocrats of the Bellou people, whom they appoint Naib of Massawa and make answerable to the Ottoman governor at Suakin.

The Ottomans nevertheless build the old town of Massawa on Massawa Island into a prominent port on the Red Sea in typical Islamic Ottoman architecture, using dry corals for walls, roof and foundation as well as imported wood for beams, window shutters and balconies.

These buildings and the old town of Massawa remain to this day, despite having withstood both earthquakes and wars with aerial bombardment.

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