British Military Administration (Eritrea)
British Military Administration in Eritrea | |||||||||
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| 1941–1952 | |||||||||
Flag | |||||||||
| Capital | Asmara | ||||||||
| Government | Military administration | ||||||||
| Chief Administrator | |||||||||
• 1941–1943 | William Scupham | ||||||||
• 1943–1948 | Denis Wickham | ||||||||
• 1948 | Eric de Candole | ||||||||
• 1948–1950 | Geoffrey Gamble | ||||||||
| History | |||||||||
| 25 February 1941 | |||||||||
| 15 September 1952 | |||||||||
| Currency | pound | ||||||||
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| History of Eritrea |
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| Eritrea portal |
The British Military Administration in Eritrea was established following the Allied victory over Italy at the Battle of Keren in 1941. From 1941 to 1950, the political direction of Eritrea remained uncertain until the U.N. commission reached its compromise solution. With no clear consensus among the Allies on the Italian colony’s post‑war status, Britain governed the territory under military administration until formally relinquishing control only in 1950.
During all of this period of British control, authorities undertook extensive dismantling of Italian‑built infrastructure as war reparations, while grappling with competing political visions for Eritrea’s future: proposals to partition it along religious lines, Soviet-backed trusteeship ideas, and Arab appeals for an independent state.