[MSN] Ethiopia's president has sent Queen Elizabeth II a formal request for the remains of a prince who died in Britain more than a century ago.
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Mon Jun 4 05:53:46 CEST 2007
Ethiopia seeks prince's remains
By Elizabeth Blunt
BBC News, Addis Ababa
Ethiopia's president has sent Queen Elizabeth II a formal request for the
remains of a prince who died in Britain more than a century ago.
The royal household at Windsor Castle, where Prince Alemayehu was buried, is
said to be considering the request.
President Woldegiorgis Girma hopes the prince's bones can be reburied for
millennium celebrations in September.
Ethiopia has been waging a lively campaign to get back historic treasures
looted during the last two centuries.
Father's suicide
Its most striking success has been in recovering a massive stone obelisk
from Axum, carried off to Rome by Mussolini's army.
But the campaign now has a new impetus.
Ethiopia's calendar is more than seven years behind that of the rest of the
world - here, it is still 1999 and Ethiopians are planning to mark what they
believe is the 2000 anniversary of the birth of Christ with big celebrations
in September.
[Prince Alemayehu] was buried at Windsor Castle, with Queen Victoria
describing as "too sad" his short life and early death
Now the Ethiopian president has put in a formal request for the return of
the remains of Prince Alemayehu.
His father, the Emperor Tewodros II, committed suicide after his defeat by
the British at the Battle of Magdala in 1868.
The young boy was taken to Britain and sent to boarding school and officers'
training school at Sandhurst, but died at the age of 18.
He was buried at Windsor Castle, with Queen Victoria describing as "too sad"
his short life and early death.
The Ethiopian embassy in London says Windsor is now considering their
request.
The young prince was not the only thing the British took from Magdala - they
reportedly needed 15 elephants and nearly 200 mules to carry away the
treasures that Tewodros had accumulated.
Many of them are still in Britain and the Queen has some of them - notably
six of the very finest illuminated manuscripts, which are part of the royal
collection in Windsor Castle.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/6716921.stm
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