Iyasu II
Iyasu II (Ge'ez: ኢያሱ; 21 October 1723 – 27 June 1755), throne name Alem Sagad (Ge'ez: ዓለም ሰገድ, "to whom the world bows"), was Emperor of Ethiopia from 1730 to 1755 as a member of the Solomonic dynasty.[1] Ascending the throne at age seven following the death of his father, Emperor Bakaffa, Iyasu II's minority saw his mother, Empress Mentewab, crowned as co-ruler and exercising de facto authority, an unprecedented assertion of empress maternal power in Ethiopian imperial history.[1][2] His reign maintained the cultural and architectural patronage of the Gondarine era, exemplified by Mentewab's construction projects in Gondar, including palaces and churches that symbolized dynastic legitimacy amid noble rivalries.[3] However, Iyasu's policies, advised by his mother, promoted Oromo integration through strategic marriages—such as his union with Welete Israel, daughter of an Oromo chief—which elevated Oromo nobles in the court and administration, fostering resentments among Amhara elites that eroded central authority.[4] A notable military venture in 1738 against Sennar ended in failure, damaging his reputation and highlighting limitations in imperial projection.[5] Critics, drawing from contemporary chronicles, portrayed Iyasu as personally ineffectual—earning the epithet "the Little"—with governance overshadowed by Mentewab's factionalism, including favoritism toward her Qwaran kin, which sowed seeds for the post-reign Zemene Mesafint, or Era of the Princes, marked by regional warlordism and dynastic strife.[6] Despite these challenges, the period preserved Solomonic continuity and Orthodox Christian dominance, with chronicles documenting political events and Christian-Muslim interactions under his rule.[7] Iyasu's death in 1755 without resolving these tensions paved the way for his Oromo-descended son Iyoas I's tumultuous succession, accelerating decentralization.[8]