Debre Zeyit | |
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Coordinates: 10°35′N 35°48′E / 10.583°N 35.800°E | |
Country | Ethiopia |
Region | Benishangul-Gumuz |
Zone | Metekel Zone |
Elevation | 2,097 m (6,880 ft) |
Population (2005) | |
• Total | 4,179 |
Time zone | UTC+3 (EAT) |
Debre Zeyit (also known as Wenbera) is a town in western Ethiopia. Located in the Metekel Zone of the Benishangul-Gumuz Region, Debre Zeit has a latitude and longitude of 10°35′N 35°48′E / 10.583°N 35.800°E with an elevation of 2097 meters above sea level.
The town was visited in 1900 by the American traveller Oscar T. Crosby, who mentions the presence of a market and an Ethiopian military outpost.[1] Crosby knew the settlement as Wenbera, as did the consul R E Cheesman, who stayed there for a few days in April 1927. He described the settlement as "a large village of a few hundred houses and is important chiefly for its market and as a centre for caravan traffic. One set of merchants plies between there and Roseires in the Sudan, and another goes to the Abyssinian main plateau; both carry the famous coffee grown at Kitar in Wanbera district. We had reached an altitude where the Amhara can live, but the population is strongly oromo."[2]