Ethiopia requires its residents to register their motor vehicles and display vehicle registration plates.[1] Current plates feature Ge'ez text.

Image First issued Design Slogan Serial format Serials issued Notes
1950s AB 12345 Addis Ababa
1980-1989 4 A/B 12345 Government owned vehicle
2000s 1 AB over 12345 Addis Ababa

Italian Africa (1913-1941)

The very first Italian registration plates, from 1913 to the end of the 1920s, were rectangular, with a white background and with the name or initials of the colony in red followed by the registration number, on a single line, but the documentation on this is fragmentary. For the Italian colonial troops, however, special military service plates were used with the initials SOM (Somalia) or T (Tripolitania) in front.[2] Subsequently, until 1935, the Italian colonies used white plates on black with a colonial code on the first line, and up to 5 numbers on the second line. The numbers, in relief, were assigned serially and the plates were made of metal, with the fasces as a seal. The colonial codes were:

Between 1937 and 1941 there was an Italian governorate in Ethiopia and in those years a new type of Italian license plate was issued. They were exactly the same as the previous ones, but they had three squares on the left, colored top to bottom green, white and red, like the Italian flag, with the letters AOI (Africa Orientale Italiana) for Italian East Africa inside. The front plates resembled standard Italian front license plates, as these were smaller, and only sometimes had the colored squares like the rear license plates.[3] The abbreviations used to indicate the origin are:

References

  1. "License Plates of Ethiopia".
  2. "Targhe a Roma".
  3. "Escursioni esteri". 3 October 2022.
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