Ancient Aksum
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"The central
government of Aksum
seemed strong enough to some to be considered the third world
power."1
Tekle Tsadik Mekouria
Following the decline of Meroe the powerful
Aksumite kingdom rose to their south. Around 330AD the nomadic Nubas
conquered a disintegrating Meroe;
the Aksum Empire hastily defeated the Nubas and took control of the
region.
Aksum had a unique cultural blend, much
like the Swahili coast; around 500BC South
Arabians settled on the Ethiopian plateau and the two
cultures evolved into one. According to The Heritage of World
Civilizations, a book written by Harvard and Yale historians,
"the people of Aksum, were the
product of a linguistic, cultural, and genetic mixing of African
Kushitic speakers with Semitic speakers from…south Arabia."2
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Power:
The prophet Mani (216-277) wrote that Aksum was one of the four greatest
empires of the world.3
The Aksum Empire stretched from Ethiopia into the Sudan and even across
the Red Sea into Southern Arabia; between 183-213AD two Aksumite Kings,
Gadara and Gadara's son, were the most powerful rulers in Southern
Arabia; Even as late as the 6th century AD the Aksumite rulers
appointed three South Arabian kings.4
Tekle Tsadik Mekouria wrote that, "The central
government of Aksum
seemed strong enough to some to be considered
the third world power."5
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Economy and Wealth:
"The position held by the Aksum
kingdom in world commerce," concluded University of Pennsylvania
State historian Y.M. Kobishanov, "was that of a first-rate
trading power."6
Aksum possessed one of the largest
exchanges of goods between Arabia, the Mediterranean, and the eastern
lands of the Indian Ocean; they also had major trading partners down
the coast of Africa and Africa's
hinterland.7
Ethiopia's Red Sea-ports included ivory, rhinoceros horns, hippopotamus
hides, monkeys, obsidian, slaves, turtle, gold dust, perfumes, live
animals, and emeralds. Axum's trading
vessels were so famous a Mesopotamian poet used the ships in an analogy
describing a royal caravan; he proclaimed that the ships, "prows
cuts through the foam of the water as a gambler divides the dust with
his hand."8
The Aksumites were not
averse to showing off their magnificent wealth; Julian reported that
the King of Ethiopia greeted him in fine linen garments, decorated with
gold and pearls, and that the king had a royal throne on a chariot
drawn by four elephants, while flutists played in the background.9
Aksum also had metal coins. Most of Aksum's coins had
mottoes such as "May the country be satisfied," and "Joy
to the People." These were clearly attempts to make the government
popular with the people.10
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Culture:
Between 350-360AD King Ezana--the Aksumite King who conquered the
Nubas--converted to Christianity. King Ezana wished to spread Christianity
throughout the empire, yet he knew he had to be pragmatic. For
political reasons, and for his safety, he never publicly abandoned Ethiopia's old Gods, much in the same
way Constantine
refused to abandon the Roman gods until he was on his deathbed--he
feared the old cults of Zeus and Ares.
The Aksumite Kingdom
enriched itself with the Greek culture, which it had much
exposure. Tekle Tsadik Mekouria,11
wrote that, "There were considerable commercial and cultural
exchanges between the two countries." The Greek and South Arabian
scripts were used until Aksum
developed its own written language, Ge'ez, in the 5th
century. "The Alphabet," Kobishanov tells us, "is
generally regarded as the outstanding achievement of the Aksumite
civilization."12
New England historian, Graham Connah pointed out that the,
"syllabry used for inscriptions grew less and less like the South
Arabian form which it had originated, and more and more like Ge'ez, the
ancestor of the Ethiopian languages…At first a consonantal syllabary,
it was not until the fourth century AD that a system of vocalization
was introduced and this was clearly an Ethiopian development."13
Aksum also had much contact with Rome. One ancient
inscription mentions an Aksumite viceroy who visited the Roman Emperor
and was received with great honors.14
Nine monks from the Byzantine Empire traveled to Aksum to spread Christianity. When
King Ezana decided to use Frumentius, a man who differed with Constantine on certain issues, as the head
bishopric of Aksum, Constantine wrote a letter to King
Ezana and his brother addressing them as his, "greatly honored
brothers."15
Despite Constantine's
displeasure Frumentius remained as head bishopric; records show that
the move was a success.
As Christianity spread so
did Christian philosophy; the Songs of Songs, the Proverbs, the Book of
the Wisdom of Solomon, the Wisdom of the Son of Sirach, etc. were used
instead of the Greek philosophy of Plato and Aristotle; Virgil, Seneca,
and Cicero were completely unknown in Aksum.
The world's original castle may be the Enda
Mika'el palace in Aksum.
The castle had four square towers, and stood four stories high. The
royal palaces were 120 meters by 80 meters
with heavy wooden doors and a flight of stairs.16
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Fall of Aksum
The decline of Aksum can be attributed
to the war between the Byzantium and Persia
empires--which badly hurt
trade--Islamic expansion, and declining
rainfall.17
Some would argue, though, that the Aksumite civilization didn't really
die, it merely transformed into medieval Ethiopia.
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1Ancient
civilizations of Africa/ UNESCO International Scientific Committee for
the Drafting of a General History of Africa;
editor, G. Mokhtar (London; Heinemann Educational Books; Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1981) 411
2The
Heritage of World Civilizations: Volume One: To 1650, 4th ed.
Editor, Owen, Cralyce. Upper
Saddle River, New Jersey:
Prentice-Hall Simon & Shuster, 1997, 189
3Davidson,
Basil. "The Ancient World and Africa:
Whose Roots?" Race and Class. A Journal for Black and Third World Liberation. 29.2, 1987, 7
4Ancient
civilizations of Africa/ UNESCO International Scientific Committee for the
Drafting of a General History of Africa;
editor, G. Mokhtar (London; Heinemann Educational Books; Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1981), 386
5Ibid,
411
6Ibid,
386
7Davidson,
Basil. African Kingdoms. New
York: Time, Inc., 1966 ,41
8Davidson,
Basil. African Kingdoms. New
York: Time, Inc., 1966, 42
9Davidson,
Basil. African Kingdoms. New
York: Time, Inc., 1966, 42
10Connah,
78
11Ancient
civilizations of Africa/ UNESCO International Scientific Committee for
the Drafting of a General History of Africa;
editor, G. Mokhtar (London; Heinemann Educational Books; Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1981), 404
12Ancient
civilizations of Africa/ UNESCO International Scientific Committee for
the Drafting of a General History of Africa;
editor, G. Mokhtar (London; Heinemann Educational Books; Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1981), 399
13Connah,
76
14Ancient
civilizations of Africa/ UNESCO International Scientific Committee for
the Drafting of a General History of Africa;
editor, G. Mokhtar (London; Heinemann Educational Books; Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1981), 406
15Ibid,
406
16James,
Peter and Thorpe, Nick. Ancient Inventions. (New York; Ballantine Books,
1995) 395
17Illiffe,
41
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