ERI COM

ERI COM I wish for all freedom, peace and justice. If you like, please subscribe to me on YouTube. Thank you very much.
(1)

https://youtube.com/?si=vTKLB6-GIFBxKpJk

إريتريا 🇪🇷 Eritrea 🥰🇪🇷 -Sudan 🇸🇩🥰 Somalia 🇸🇴🥰 فوق كل شيء الحرية والسلام والعدالة
above all freedom and peace and justice

01/12/2025

Best Eritrea flag clothes men and women - Eritrea? ⭐ Eritrea, Flagge ❗ Shopping

30/11/2025
29/11/2025

I love Eritrea? ⭐ Eritrea, Love ❗ Flagge

27/11/2025

😥😥😥😥😥😥 😭😭😭😭😭 RIP -
26/11/2025

😥😥😥😥😥😥 😭😭😭😭😭 RIP -

እተን ብዙሕ ፍሽኽ ዝብላ ደቂኣንስ ኣብ ውሽጠን ብዙሕ ቃንዛ ዘለወን RIP merry habteyNey bahaki zehezen u 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

Adresse

Munich
80336

Öffnungszeiten

Montag 07:00 - 00:00
Dienstag 07:00 - 00:00
Mittwoch 07:00 - 00:00
Donnerstag 07:00 - 00:00
Freitag 07:00 - 11:00
Samstag 00:00 - 23:45
Sonntag 00:15 - 23:30

Webseite

https://youtu.be/RGMQthK2gvM?si=6F82_0SZbrvMjluJ, https://yo

Benachrichtigungen

Lassen Sie sich von uns eine E-Mail senden und seien Sie der erste der Neuigkeiten und Aktionen von ERI COM erfährt. Ihre E-Mail-Adresse wird nicht für andere Zwecke verwendet und Sie können sich jederzeit abmelden.

Service Kontaktieren

Nachricht an ERI COM senden:

Teilen

Tigre Eritrea History

History

The Tigre are a nomadic pastoralist community living in the northern, western, and coastal highlands of Eritrea (Gash-Barka, Anseba, Northern Red Sea regions of Eritrea and other regions too), as well as areas in eastern Sudan. The Tigre speak the Tigre language, which belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afroasiatic family. They are not ethnically homogeneous; diversity is mainly along familial and clan lines. The Tigre ethnic group is broken into the Beni-Amer, Beit Asgede, Ad Shaikh, Mensa, Beit Juk, and Marya peoples.

The original speakers of the Tigre language were mainly Muslims, reflecting cultural exchange with neighboring Ethiopia.[2] The first Tigre converts to Islam were those who lived on islands in the Red Sea and adopted Islam in the 7th century during the religion's earliest years. Mainland Tigre adopted Islam much later on including as late as the 19th century.[15] During World War II, many Tigre served in the Italian Colonial army, part of the period of Italian Eritrea.[2]

The Tigre are closely related to the Tigrayans of Eritrea,[15] as well as the Beja (particularly the Hadendoa).[16] There are also a number of Eritreans of Tigre origin living across the Middle East, North America, the United Kingdom and Australia