The intriguing Gadla Abuna Aragawi: a window and clue into lost Aksumite history

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Originally posted on my blog:

https://historyinthehorn.wordpress....a-window-and-clue-into-lost-aksumite-history/

The accurate history of the Empire of Aksum has been lost. This is undeniable for two reasons. The first reason is simply that much of the documentation has been destroyed in the last 1200 years of calamitous wars that have befallen Ethiopia. The second and more significant reason is deliberate rewriting of Ethiopian history to glorify to the dynasty of Yekuno Amlak, which went on to found the medieval state of Abyssinia in 1270 which is, like the Capetian monarchy is the basis of modern France, the basis of modern Ethiopia.

This rewriting ranges from the subtle to the extreme. For instance Yekuno Amlak was a descendant of the son of Del Naod, who reigned before the invasion of Gudit and the destruction of Aksum in the 9th century. The sack of Aksum by Gudit was a critical turning point in Ethiopian history, the significance of which has been diminished as other more recent turning points have come and gone, but about 1100 years ago or thereabouts a woman named Yodit or Gudit, who was a queen of the Beta Israel, sacked Aksum and ruled as Empress of the Aksumite Empire for about 40 years. Now if you study the history, this happened more than a century after the reign of Del Naod, who began his reign in the year 861. We know this because Debre Istafanos Monastary was founded in the 7th year of Del Naod in 868. The Coptic Pope of Alexandria Pope Philotheos sent a new Metropolitan of Aksum to Ethiopia in 985 and Gudit was defeated very shortly thereafter.

The Aksumite dynasty would limp along for another 200 years until the dynasty ended and the Zagwe dynasty would assume the throne through marriage to Terdae Gabaz and take the throne in 1137. The Zagwe rule would last for a little over a century until Yekuno Amlak, a powerful regional lord from the south, would overthrow the Zagwe in a coup d’etat and two year war and seize the throne for himself in 1270.

The rewriting began somewhat immediately, where Del Naod was made the last king of Aksum, after which time there was a 333 year rule of the Zagwe (who were in league with Gudit in this revised history, as the Beta Israel and the Zagwe were of related ethnic groups). Also in this revised history, the dynasty was not just the kings of Aksum but also the sons of the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon, thus renaming the dynasty the Solomonic Dynasty. This claim is not present in any Aksumite inscriptions or monuments and appears shortly after 1270.

In order to have a dynasty that stretched back to King Solomon’s time and also to erase the senior branch of the Aksumite dynasty from history, the king lists were terminally altered into unintelligibility to the point where they bear no resemblance to the historical coinage, inscriptions or church histories. For political convenience, history was destroyed.

However in the church records, which are a parallel and independent authority, we find grains of historicity. And this is where we come to the Gadla Abuna Aragawi or the Acts of Father Aragawi, one of the church leaders during the active period of the 6th century, in the heart of the era we are discussing, the late Aksumite era. The book is mainly about Abuna Aragawi, as you would imagine, but delves into a very revealing passage of history where it makes an extremely important statement:

“In the 8th year of Emperor Bazen, was the advent of Christ. Between Emperor Bazen and Abreha and Azbeha there were 19 kings and 244 years. Between Abreha and Azbeha and Gabra Masqal there were 9 kings and 124 years, for a total of 368 years.”

Due to the way the king lists have been formatted to stretch into antiquity, the first line has been traditionally interpreted to mean that in the 8th year of Bazen, Christ was born, meaning the beginning of his reign was 8 BCE. However, the early parts of the king lists, around king Bazen, is one of the few areas where recognizable historical kings like Gedur (who reigned in the 3rd century), Afilya (or Aphilas, who reigned after Gedur) and Awsena (Ousanas, who reigned after Afilya and before Ezana) can be found. This offers an alternative interpretation of this passage, that the archaeological records are correct and Aksum is a kingdom founded in the 2nd and 3rd centuries CE, and Bazen is in fact Ezana.

If one takes this interpretation of the passage and the era of Ezana, the 244 year span between the beginning of Ezana and the end of Abreha and Azbeha becomes very interesting. Azbeha in this scenario is of course Kaleb, the emperor who invaded Yemen to defeat Dhu Nuways, and Abreha is his church-building brother who marched on Mecca and died in the Year of the Elephant, 569. Aksum converted to Coptic Christianity in 333 CE, so if this is the 8th year of Ezana, meaning his reign began in 325, this is exactly 244 years prior to the Year of the Elephant and the death of Azbeha’s (Kaleb’s) brother Abreha, nicknamed “Scarface” or al-Ashrar by the Arabs.

Moving forward in time to the reign of Gabra Masqal, this puts the end of his reign in 693, around the time when the Aksum Empire fell apart into civil war approximately around the year 700 when his descendants and the descendants of his brother Israel (founder of the Beta Israel or House of Israel) began fighting, which circles back to Queen Gudit invading and destroying Aksum 250 years later.

Having made this connection I frantically looked through all the king lists to find one with 19 names inclusive between Bazen and Abreha/Azbeha and no such list exists, and in any case the lists that do exist the names in this era do not match historical records like the pre-Bazen ones do (which were I assume so ancient as to be safe to include in king lists without people noticing chronological discrepancies and so embedded in legend that their absence would be noticed).
 

madaxweyne

madaxweyne
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no doubt much of ethiopian history was re written
people even claim
that habeshas are from yemen and thous the dynasty was not of native African origin

when we all know that habeshas are agaw who where cultrally influenced by Semitic languages and thous are just cushites who apporpriated cultral influences
and christianity is one of those as well and the claim of decent from Solomon
 
The very first Habesha kingdom centered at Adulis was formed by Yemeni conquerors, but after this was a long process of cultural conquest of African people over to the Habesha language and culture, so Ethiopian people are overwhelmingly of native African descent, but speak an indisputably south Arabian language.
 
The very first Habesha kingdom centered at Adulis was formed by Yemeni conquerors, but after this was a long process of cultural conquest of African people over to the Habesha language and culture, so Ethiopian people are overwhelmingly of native African descent, but speak an indisputably south Arabian language.


which ethiopian language is south arabian?
 

madaxweyne

madaxweyne
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The very first Habesha kingdom centered at Adulis was formed by Yemeni conquerors, but after this was a long process of cultural conquest of African people over to the Habesha language and culture, so Ethiopian people are overwhelmingly of native African descent, but speak an indisputably south Arabian language.
their is nor recorded evidence of yemeni conquerors

its more of a cultral influence the theory of yemeni conquerors has been dubunkt by local habesha scholars
it was a white supremacist 19th century lie

thier is simply no evidence of a large scale invasion nor is any of it recorded whats known is a cultral influences taking place by way of small insignificant cultural exchanges

the aksumite dynasty was more of a local dynasty made of of ethio semitic speaking agaw cushite and was built upon an earlier dynasty the damot dynasty and was continuation of that dynasty
 
their is nor recorded evidence of yemeni conquerors

its more of a cultral influence the theory of yemeni conquerors has been dubunkt by local habesha scholars
it was a white supremacist 19th century lie

thier is simply no evidence of a large scale invasion nor is any of it recorded whats known is a cultral influences taking place by way of small insignificant cultural exchanges

the aksumite dynasty was more of a local dynasty made of of ethio semitic speaking agaw cushite and was built upon an earlier dynasty the damot dynasty and was continuation of that dynasty
South Semitic languages do not originate in the HOA, the only way it could have spread to the HOA is via South Arabians conquering the region & bringing with them their culture & language. Gradually, the new South Arabian/Sabean rulers assimilated the Cushite masses into their Habesha culture & some mixing happened as well.

Over time, the South Arabian rulers heavily mixed with Cushites to the extent where today there's hardly any pure Sabean Habeshas left & the Habesha culture became localised and the vast majority of Habesha dna is still Cushitic with some South Arabian admixture.
 

madaxweyne

madaxweyne
VIP
South Semitic languages do not originate in the HOA, the only way it could have spread to the HOA is via South Arabians conquering the region & bringing with them their culture & language. Gradually, the new South Arabian/Sabean rulers assimilated the Cushite masses into the Habesha culture & some mixing happened as well.

Over time, the South Arabian rulers heavily mixed with Cushites to the extent where today there's hardly any pure Sabean Habeshas left & the Habesha culture became localised and the vast majority of Habesha dna is still Cushitic with some South Arabian admixture.
where is the evidence of south Arabian rulers??

newsflash? they dont exist just local ethio semitic cushitic rulers

i never said that semitic originated in the horn it came from yemen that doesnt mean an invasion happend and aksum is forighn

aksum was built upon an earlier kingdom the kingdom of damot and never came from the outside it was strictly a local dynasty
 
There is genetic input from Yemen into the Ethiopian highlands, there is the Arabian story of the invasion of Africa by Ifriqis Dhu-al-Idh'ar, who is coincidentally also the father of Bilqis who the Arabs consider the same woman as Makeda the mother of the first king of Aksum.

The Monumentum Adulitanum describes the conquest of what would be the Aksumite Empire by the unnamed king of Adulis, possibly the Gedur of the Aksumite king lists.
 

madaxweyne

madaxweyne
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Amharic, Harari, Gurage (various dialects), Tigray and Tigrinya
bullshit story you gave me

that never happend still no evidence of an invasion all made up with no actual evidence or facts of it happening

take this for example ethiopian scholars debunking youre eurocentric veiws of ethiopia

(A Eurocentric interpretation of Ethiopian History led to the misconception of Horn of Africa people being of supposed 'Semitic origin') [by: Messay Kebede, University of Dayton; International Journal of Ethiopian Studies]

he explains how the theory that Ethioemitic-language speakers of the northern Ethiopian Highlands were ancient foreigners from Southwestern Arabia has been disputed by most modern indigenous Horn African scholars like Messay Kebede and Daniel E. Alemu. Most Habeshas may speak a Semitic-language, nevertheless they are culturally and genetically Cushitic peoples.

It may have represented a trading colony (trading post) or military installations in a symbiotic or military alliance between the Sabaens and Damot.

believe that Sabaean influence was minor, limited to a few localities, and disappearing after a few decades or a century

damot was a agaw state but was cultraly influenced by neighboring sabaens in some cultural military alliance they became close and lead to the establishment of ethio semitic speaking but agaws cushites
 
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The Monumentum Adulitanum describes many tribes conquered and the Agaws as just one of them, I believe there were many more tribes in the northern part that have ceased to exist as their cultures have been replaced with Habesh.
 

madaxweyne

madaxweyne
VIP
The Monumentum Adulitanum describes many tribes conquered and the Agaws as just one of them, I believe there were many more tribes in the northern part that have ceased to exist as their cultures have been replaced with Habesh.
replaced with habesh yes

but no mention of a band of south arabian warriors invading ethiopia its not even a recorded history its basicly just a work of fiction

it was definately a cultural influence to me the adulis talks of a king from adulis a habesh king and the the military campaigns of the semiticized agaws in assuring in a habesh culture on the rest of their people

it also mentions the subjugation of arabs and sabaens in yemen notice how they never called themselves sabaens or arab

and it was only mentioned when the adulis subjigated the neighboring arabs and sabaens
 
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replaced with habesh yes

but no mention of a band of south arabian warriors invading ethiopia its not even a recorded history its basicly just a work of fiction

it was definately a cultural influence to me the adulis talks of a king from adulis a habesh king and the the military campaigns of the semiticized agaws in assuring in a habesh culture on the rest of their people

it also mentions the subjugation of arabs and sabaens in yemen notice how they never called themselves sabaens or arab

and it was only mentioned when the adulis subjigated the neighboring arabs and sabaens

This is a part of history that is extremely obscure and involves classical Himyarite historical poetry.

The king involved is Abraha aka "Zu al-Manar" and his two sons al-Abd aka "Zu al-Idhar" and Afriqish (افريقش).

If you can read Arabic here is a version of the story on wikisource. I would love to give you an English version but none exists:
https://ar.wikisource.org/wiki/ملك_أبرهة

He was king of Zu Raidan and his son al-Abd (or in some stories Afriqish) conquered a part of Abyssinia around Adulis, which he became king of. Hundreds of years later one of the descendants of this king would conquer all of the Aksumite Empire and move his capital far inland.
 
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This story is later confused by Arab historians who equate Afriqish to the province of Africa or Ifriqiya and the "Berbers" he fought with North African Amazigh, and due to this never happening the story was dismissed as legendary.

The original text clearly states it was al-Abd who conquered and ruled in "al-Habesh" but people assume it was Afriqish who ruled "Africa" but it also clearly states Afriqish ruled Yemen while his father was away.

Anyways this al-Abd, literally 'the slave' was the first king of Adulis. Himyarite laqab names used Zu often which may correspond to the "Za" names of early Aksumite king lists.

There was however a much earlier south Arabian colonization of Ethiopia because the first tribe Adulis conquered was the Gaze, who ruled Daamat. This is why early Aksumite inscriptions were trilingual. Carved in South Arabian, Ge'ez and Greek (the trade language).

The Gaze or Agazi settled Ethiopia in the very distant past.
 

madaxweyne

madaxweyne
VIP
This is a part of history that is extremely obscure and involves classical Himyarite historical poetry.

The king involved is Abraha aka "Zu al-Manar" and his two sons al-Abd aka "Zu al-Idhar" and Afriqish (افريقش).

If you can read Arabic here is a version of the story on wikisource. I would love to give you an English version but none exists:
https://ar.wikisource.org/wiki/ملك_أبرهة

He was king of Zu Raidan and his son al-Abd (or in some stories Afriqish) conquered a part of Abyssinia around Adulis, which he became king of. Hundreds of years later one of the descendants of this king would conquer all of the Aksumite Empire and move his capital far inland.

i think this is just fiction like carawelo poetry is not factual evidence of history anyone can make it up

are Shakespeare's poems factual

thier was no zu raidan and the aksumites did not get conquerd by such an individual

it got replaced by the zagwe dynasty

also this al abd is a work of fiction he likely never existed as for the al abd guy nothing says he
originated in yemen and conquered the habesh

besides i dont trust poems their clearly just a work of fiction
 
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That's a good example as Shakespeare wrote a lot of historical fiction and while the stories were embellished they were based on real people and real events. The story of Abreha al-Manar and his two sons matches what we know of history I think it's real.
 
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