About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Wereta, Kemise, Dabat, Wolleka, Dengel Ber, Semien Mountains National Park, Mekane Berhan, Injibara, Wadla, Addis Zemen, Bashilo River, Faggeta Lekoma, Mida Woremo, Dessie Zuria, Antsokiyana Gemza, Ebenat, Begemder, Kutaber, Moretna Jiru, Finote Selam, Kuarit, Magdala, Kelala, Zikuala, Dehana, Ensaro, Sede, Hagere Mariamna Kesem, Adet, Debre Zebit, Hulet Ej Enese, Achefer, Sanja, Artuma Fursina Jile, Jama, Shewa Robit, Machakel, Dega Damot, Awabel, Filakit Gereger, Jabi Tehnan, Farta, Dima, Gojjam, Fasil Ghebbi, Marra Biete, Shendi, Ethiopia, Dinder River, Delgi, Wegeltena, Mitraha Island, Gondar Airport, Muja, Ethiopia, Dembiya, Lalibela Airport, Bahir Dar Airport, Mount Abuna Yosef, Tana Qirqos, Gelila Zakarias, Ancharo, Wag, Ayikel, Combolcha Airport, Mount Guna, Abuye Meda, Amhara Province, Angereb River, Zengena Lake, Rema Island, Sagarat, Amed Ber, Debre Tabor Airport, Mount Biuat, Debre Marqos Airport, Checheho River. Excerpt: Wereta (also transliterated as Woreta) is a town in northern Ethiopia. Located in the Debub Gondar Zone of the Amhara Region, east of Lake Tana and south of Addis Zemen, this town has a latitude and longitude of with an elevation of 1828 meters above sea level. It is the administrative center of Fogera woreda. Telephone service had reached Wereta by 1967, and as of 2007 the town has electrical service. In the 1990s, a new campus for the Wereta College of Agriculture was designed by National Consultants (chief architect Assefa Bekele), with a proposed budget of 60 million Birr. Located on top of a hill next to the road to Bahir Dar, the college has a capacity of 2000 students and graduated 269 students in 2004. Wereta appears in the Royal chronicles during the first reign of Emperor Tekle Giyorgis (1779-1784), as the place whence Ras Hailu Eshte fled after escaping imprisonment in Gondar...