The Abyssinian Campaign can refer to at least two different military campaigns. These campaigns are called Abyssinian because they occurred in Abyssinia, or what is now Ethiopia
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In November of 1934, Abyssinian territorial troops, accompanied by the Anglo-Ethiopian boundary commission, protested Italy's incursion.
The occupation was marked by recurring guerilla campaigns against the Italians, and reprisals which included mustard gas attacks against rebels and the murder of prisoners.
This was a short lived state, however, as Abyssinia was liberated from Italian control in the subsequent East African Campaign.