Mehal Sefari

Mehal Sefari
Active1850–1936
Country Ethiopian Empire
BranchArmy
TypeInfantry, cavalry, snipers, rapid deployment
RoleMulti-role, Imperial Bodyguard, cadre for larger Imperial Host
Size5 combat units roughly of brigade size
Part ofImperial Fitawrari (Commander-in-Field)
Garrison/HQAnkober, Addis Ababa
NicknameMehal Sefari
PatronEmperor of Ethiopia
EngagementsFirst Italo-Ethiopian War
Second Italo-Ethiopian War
Commanders
Commander in ChiefAtse (Emperor) of Ethiopia
Notable
commanders
Dedj Chacha
Dedj Beshah Aboye

Mehal Sefari (Amharic: መኻል ሰፋሪ) was the Ethiopian title for the specialized units of the imperial guard during the reign of Emperor Menelik II. The unit originated from Emperor Menelik II’s personal guard and has occasionally been associated in oral traditions with earlier elite troops serving under Emperor Tewodros II under Fitawrari Gebeyehu, an accomplished Ethiopian military commander and lord protector of the crow, though there is no documentary evidence confirming this connection. As Gebeyehu's military unit was among the last that remained loyal to Tewodros when most of his army left, the assumption is not unreasonable if not conclusive. The title "Mehal Sefari" however was not used by any of Tewodros' units, nor by any other previous military unit. The title translates to "center campers" and alludes to the location the unit encamped in Menelik's expeditionary encampments. This organizational pattern echoed the older Ethiopian tradition of the kätäma, a mobile royal camp that served as both court and military headquarters: “The centre of power was at the time without fixed capital and the seat of the moving capital was known as kätäma.” Some have also suggested that the unit was used to come between (mehal) battling armies of the nobility; however, no historical sources substantiate this claim, as military engagements among nobles typically required imperial sanction. Aleme Eshete observes that “the ‘Mahal Safari’ movement may be taken as the first signal that alerted the Ethiopian Government of a Bolshevik-type popular movement,” indicating that the term later took on broader political connotations.