The
Aksumite state emerged at about the beginning of the
Christian era, flourished during the succeeding six or seven
centuries, and underwent prolonged decline from the eighth
to the twelfth century A.D. Aksum's period of greatest power
lasted from the fourth through the sixth century. Its core
area lay in the highlands of what is today southern Eritrea,
Tigray, Lasta (in present-day Welo), and Angot (also in
Welo); its major centers were at Aksum and Adulis. Earlier
centers, such as Yeha, also continued to flourish. At the
kingdom's height, its rulers held sway over the Red Sea
coast from Sawakin in present-day Sudan in the north to
Berbera in present-day Somalia in the south, and inland as
far as the Nile Valley in modern Sudan. On the Arabian side
of the Red Sea, the Aksumite rulers at times controlled the
coast and much of the interior of modern Yemen. During the
sixth and seventh centuries, the Aksumite state lost its
possessions in southwest Arabia and much of its Red Sea
coastline and gradually shrank to its core area, with the
political center of the state shifting farther and farther
southward. Inscriptions
from Aksum and elsewhere date from as early as the end of
the second century A.D. and reveal an Aksumite state that
already had expanded at the expense of neighboring peoples.
The Greek inscriptions of King Zoskales (who ruled at the
end of the second century A.D.) claim that he conquered the
lands to the south and southwest of what is now Tigray and
controlled the Red Sea coast from Sawakin south to the
present-day Djibouti and Berbera areas. The Aksumite state
controlled parts of Southwest Arabia as well during this
time, and subsequent Aksumite rulers continually involved
themselves in the political and military affairs of
Southwest Arabia, especially in what is now Yemen. Much of
the impetus for foreign conquest lay in the desire to
control the maritime trade between the Roman Empire and
India and adjoining lands. Indeed, King Zoskales is
mentioned by name in the Periplus of the Erythrean Sea (the
Latin term for the Red Sea is Mare Erythreum), a Greek
shipping guide of the first to third centuries A.D., as
promoting commerce with Rome, Arabia, and India. Among the
African commodities that the Aksumites exported were gold,
rhinoceros horn, ivory, incense, and obsidian; in return,
they imported cloth, glass, iron, olive oil, and
wine. During
the third and fourth centuries, the traditions related to
Aksumite rule became fixed. Gedara, who lived in the late
second and early third centuries, is referred to as the king
of Aksum in inscriptions written in Gi'iz (also seen as
Ge'ez), the Semitic language of the Aksumite kingdom. The
growth of imperial traditions was concurrent with the
expansion of foreign holdings, especially in Southwest
Arabia in the late second century A.D. and later in areas
west of the Ethiopian highlands, including the kingdom of
Meroë. Meroë
was centered on the Nile north of the confluence of the
White Nile and Blue Nile. Established by the sixth century
B.C. or earlier, the kingdom's inhabitants were black
Africans who were heavily influenced by Egyptian culture. It
was probably the people of Meroë who were the first to
be called Aithiopiai ("burnt faces") by the ancient Greeks,
thus giving rise to the term Ethiopia that considerably
later was used to designate the northern highlands of the
Horn of Africa and its inhabitants. No evidence suggests
that Meroë had any political influence over the areas
included in modern Ethiopia; economic influence is harder to
gauge because ancient commercial networks in the area were
probably extensive and involved much long-distance
trade. Sometime
around A.D. 300, Aksumite armies conquered Meroë or
forced its abandonment. By the early fourth century A.D.,
King Ezana (reigned 325-60) controlled a domain extending
from Southwest Arabia across the Red Sea west to Meroë
and south from Sawakin to the southern coast of the Gulf of
Aden. As an indication of the type of political control he
exercised, Ezana, like other Aksumite rulers, carried the
title negusa nagast (king of kings), symbolic of his rule
over numerous tribute-paying principalities and a title used
by successive Ethiopian rulers into the mid-twentieth
century. The
Aksumites created a civilization of considerable
distinction. They devised an original architectural style
and employed it in stone palaces and other public buildings.
They also erected a series of carved stone stelae at Aksum
as monuments to their deceased rulers. Some of these stelae
are among the largest known from the ancient world. The
Aksumites left behind a body of written records, that,
although not voluminous, are nonetheless a legacy otherwise
bequeathed only by Egypt and Meroë among ancient
African kingdoms. These records were written in two
languages--Gi'iz and Greek. Gi'iz is assumed to be ancestral
to modern Amharic and Tigrinya, although possibly only
indirectly. Greek was also widely used, especially for
commercial transactions with the Hellenized world of the
eastern Mediterranean. Even more remarkable and wholly
unique for ancient Africa was the minting of coins over an
approximately 300-year period. These coins, many with inlay
of gold on bronze or silver, provide a chronology of the
rulers of Aksum. One of
the most important contributions the Aksumite state made to
Ethiopian tradition was the establishment of the Christian
Church. The Aksumite state and its forebears had certainly
been in contact with Judaism since the first millennium B.C.
and with Christianity beginning in the first century A.D.
These interactions probably were rather limited. However,
during the second and third centuries, Christianity spread
throughout the region. Around A.D. 330- 40, Ezana was
converted to Christianity and made it the official state
religion. The variant of Christianity adopted by the
Aksumite state, however, eventually followed the Monophysite
belief, which embraced the notion of one rather than two
separate natures in the person of Christ as defined by the
Council of Chalcedon in 451. Little is
known about fifth-century Aksum, but early in the next
century Aksumite rulers reasserted their control over
Southwest Arabia, though only for a short time. Later in the
sixth century, however, Sassanian Persians established
themselves in Yemen, effectively ending any pretense of
Aksumite control. Thereafter, the Sassanians attacked
Byzantine Egypt, further disrupting Aksumite trade networks
in the Red Sea area. Over the next century and a half, Aksum
was increasingly cut off from its overseas entrepôts
and as a result entered a period of prolonged decline,
gradually relinquishing its maritime trading network and
withdrawing into the interior of northern
Ethiopia. Origins
and the Early Periods <<<
Contents
>>> The
Early Islamic Period
Library of Congress Country Study The
Aksumite State
Library of Congress Country Study
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