100 - A Vulture’s View of Ethiopia
Richard Edes Harrison trained as an architect, but became known as an illustrator for Time (from 1932 onwards) and other national news magazines. His specialty was cartography, applying unusual perspectives and orientations to maps to present information about the global flow of oil, the network of global communications cables or the geographic lay-out of potential battlegrounds (many of his maps were made in the run-up to and during World War Two). Harrison also worked as a cartographic consultant for the US government and lectured at several universities on cartography.
Much of Harrison’s best work was done from 1940 onwards for Fortune magazine, where his characteristic signature was the expansion of the bird’s-eye view to worldwide settings. A selection of Harrison’s Fortune-maps was published in 1944 as ‘Look at the World – The Fortune Atlas for World Strategy’. Out of print nowadays, but I managed to find a copy via Amazon.
This map’s not in it, though – possibly because by 1944, the Ethiopian conflict as prefigured in this map had already played out. In any case, I can’t find the exact date for this map on the site where I found it. The ‘vulture’s view’ and the intriguing legends (*) give it the appearance of a treasure map. The article accompanying the map, reproduced here, also has a very Indiana Jonesy feel to it.
“ETHIOPIA AT STAKE. A Portfolio of Maps Expounding the Strategical Position of the Oldest Unconquered Nation in the West.”
“From the flat, unfruitful, fever-stricken tip of eastern Africa, where the Red Sea empties into the Indian Ocean, there rises a huge natural escarpment which, if its cliffs were not 8,000 to 10,000 feet high, would appear to be man-made, so definitely does it separate the coastal desert from the hinterland. The plateau on top of it is a maze of mountains, some of which rise to 25,000 feet, as cool and fruitful as the seacoast is hot and barren. This is Ethiopia. Remote, all but impregnable, it is a land against whose cliffs the waves of empire have beaten in vain for 3,000 years, the oldest independent nation among those of the West, which Homer referred to as the country in which the sun sets and the gods hold their banquets.”
“Ethiopia achieved its independence in the eleventh century B.C. and it conquered Egypts in the eighth to found the twenty-fifth Egyptian dynasty. It has twice been seriously invaded. The Roman General Gaius Petronius sacked Napata in 24 B.C., which was then the Ethiopian capital but lies in what is now the Ango-Egyptian Sudan. No other invasion was successful until 1868, when Great Britain made war on Ethiopia, and with an expeditionary force of 30,000 men got as far as Magdala. But they did not follow up on their success.”
“The Ethiopians fought off the great Persian Cambyses about 525 B.C. And as Africa’s only native Christian people, they have withstood savage attacks by surrounding Mohammedans. They have twice repelled Italy – once in 1887 when an Ethiopian army surrounded 500 Italian troops at Dogali and killed about 400 of them; and once in 1896, when an Italian army of 14,500 men was overwhelmed by an Ethiopian force of more than 100,000 at Adowa.”
“From the mountain fastness of his ancestors, claiming to stem from King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, the spiritual, studious Emperor of Ethiopia, who works at a big modern desk surrounded by modern files in the midst of his howling tribes, has suddenly emerged as a man of portentous affairs. Without attempting to expound the intricate international politics in which he has become involved, FORTUNE herewith presents a portfolio of eight maps bearing upon the crisis he has aroused. Illustrating every important geographical angle of the situation, these may be used as ready reference maps in following the moves of the three major chess players, Mussolini, Haile Selassie and Downing Street.”
“Our portfolio includes:
1. Bird’s-Eye view of Ethiopia (below), looking southwest from the land of Yemen on the tip of the Arabian peninsula. This map is especially designed to show the Ethiopian terrain in detail and to give a graphic idea of the difficulties confronting an invader.
2. Africa the melon, opposite page 84, showing Ethiopia’s strategic importance in the biggest of the southern continents.
3. Ethiopia mapped again, this time to show the important military centers and the possible lines of attack.
4. The Mediterranean Sea, showing the powers aligned against Italy – a useful map in case of naval engagements.
5. Arabia and the Red Sea.
6. Geographical distribution of the Moslem peoples.
7. The Nile basin in relation to Lake Tana.
8. Lake Tana itself.”
(*) Such as:
Deepest Ethiopia – concerning which little is known.
Jijiga – reputedly, Ethiopia’s only night club here.
Kaffa – origin of the word ‘coffee’ – here the plant grows wild.
Radio Station ETA – Selassie’s feeble link with the world.
At Mt. Entoffo (?) the war drums are beaten – dense eucalyptus forests.
Danakil – “hell hole of creation”.
Tigre – iron deposits – Italy wants them.
(and finally, talk about Indiana Jonesy stuff: )
Here reposes the Ark of the Covenant.


Strange that there is no mention in the text of 1936, Mussolini, vulture etc as you hint as being the reference
Comment by lordhutton — April 8, 2007 @
A bit off when it came to the 25K-foot mountains, but a remarkable map nonetheless.
Comment by Peter — April 8, 2007 @
[...] - hie thee over to Strange Maps if you haven’t visited recently. The latest post is A Vulture’s View of Ethiopia - wonderful stuff. [...]
Pingback by Diary of a Mad Natural Historian » Bookshelf — April 9, 2007 @
Loks to me as if the map is from the beginning of the Italian invasion in late 1935 - or possibly even from the border disputes with Italian Somaliland in 1934. Refers to the “sudden emergence” of Haile Selassie and only 2 successful invasions in Ethiopia’s history (Mussolini’s would be the 3d). Interstingly the text seems to portray Selassie and Ethiopia as anything but an innocent victim of Mussolini’s aggression - Selassie is a man of “portentous affairs” - who has “become involved” in “intricate international politics”. In hindsight we’re used to Mussonlini as being portrayed as an evil aggressor, but this seems to indciate that at the time he was portrayed much more evenly or benignly (or at least given the benefit of the doubt), at least until he showed his hand by using gas warfare in the Ethiopian invasion.
Comment by Andy — April 9, 2007 @
Check out http://worldprocessor.com/catalog/world/ for a different world perspective
Comment by Frank — April 10, 2007 @
[...] Swift at The City Record publishes a map of Boston at the time of the American Revolution, and at Strange Maps you can see an unusual birds eye view of Ethiopa just before Mussolini’s [...]
Pingback by Investigations of a Dog » Military History Carnival #1 — April 12, 2007 @
There’s a book by Graham Hancock called “The Sign & The Seal” in which he says the Ark of the Covenant is where this map shows it to be. It was written in the late 90s (I think) and is pretty well-researched. If I remember it equates the Holy Grail with the Ark.
Great site.
Comment by slight — April 12, 2007 @
[...] Could I link to this site every week? Probably. Will I? Probably. To be honest, though, this map is pretty creepy. [strange maps] [...]
Pingback by I'll Be Out Watching the Phils Lose All Weekend, You Can Stay Home and Read This « Mr. Thursday’s Curious Mechanism — April 13, 2007 @
Halie Selasse published the most famous mobility order of all times right before WWII. He ordered all able bodied men to report for duty with a spear, a change of loincloths, a pot and a spoon. Those who had wives were to bring them along to cook and do laundry for those who had no wives. This was the shortest mobility order of all times, and left no stones unturned.
Comment by Mary — April 13, 2007 @
[...] As if They Weren’t Strange Enough… April 14, 2007 Posted by misterbuckets in Uncategorized. trackback …a whole site dedicated to strange maps. Included is a world map with the planets of the solar system hovering above certain countries according to their mass (for instance Jupiter is above Russia, Saturn above Canada, etc.), one showing the shrinking of a lake in Chad, and my personal favorite, a Vulture’s View of Ethiopia: [...]
Pingback by As if They Weren't Strange Enough... « chode school. — April 14, 2007 @
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Trackback by Beta mercaptoethanol — June 16, 2007 @
[...] grandfather, Richard Edes Harrison, made this by hand. I have a couple of pieces like this. I thought I’d share the [...]
Pingback by Benjamin Harrison » Maps! — November 13, 2007 @
Richard Edes Harrison was no less than a prophet.
I could imagine no better map that reflects the current situation in Ogaden, and in Ethiopia in general, than this map- ‘A Vulture’s View of Ethiopia’
Comment by Addisu — December 8, 2007 @