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Axumite Kingdom



         


The Axumite Kingdom also known as Aksum Kingdom was an important trading nation in northeastern Africa, growing from circa the 5th century BC to become an important trading nation by the 1st century AD. It converted to Christianity (325 or 328 - various sources).

It was founded by a mix of peoples from Yemen and Greek colonists and traders that had established ports along the coast. Spreading Christian and Islamic influences eroded the kingdom between the 7th century and 10th centuries. The kingdom was forced inland, becoming more African and less Middle Eastern. It was eventually replacement by the Zagwe Kingdom.

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Geography

The Axumite Kingdom at its height extended across areas of what are today Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia, the Sudan and Yemen. The capital city of the kindgdom was Axum, dating back to 100 BC. Other important cities included Adulis and Matara.

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Society Structure

The Aksumites people represented a mix of Kushitic speaking people in Ethiopia and Semitic speaking people in southern Arabia who settled the territory across the Red Sea around 500 BC.

The Axumite kings had an official title negusa nagast - King of Kings. Axumite kings traced lineage back to times of David, Solomon and Queen of Sheba. This royal heritage was claimed by all emperors of Ethiopia until the last died in 1974.

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Foreign relations an economy

Axum traded with India and Rome (later Byzantium, which had a strong cultural influence upon Axum), exporting ivory, tortoise shell, gold and emeralds, and importing silk and spices. It utilised its position to profit on trade between various African (Nubia), Arabian (Yemen), and Indian states. It had a strong navy that dominated the Red Sea and reached India.

In 2nd century AD, Aksum acquired tribute states on the Arabian Peninsula across the Red Sea and conquered northern Ethiopia. In 4th century AD they conquered the Kingdom of Kush.

Axum remained a strong empire and trading power until the rise of Islam in the seventh century AD. However, because the Axumites had sheltered Muhammed's first followers, the Muslims never attempted to overthrow Axum as they spread across the face of Africa.

With time, Axum lost its priviliged position in the international and regional trade, but it still had good relations with all of its Muslim neighbors. Two Christian states north of Axum, Maqurra and Alwa, survived until the thirteenth century when they were finally forced by Muslim migration to become Islamic. Axum, however, remained untouched by the Islamic movements across Africa until the present day.

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Cultural achivements

The Axumite kingdom developed its own alphabet (Geez or Ge'ez).

It adopted Christianity in place of its former polytheistic religion under King Ezana around 325 AD. A legend has that at that time a foreign boy named Frumentius was made a slave of the royal court and later a tutor to the royal children. When the king died the queen asked Frumentius to help rule Axum. He had declined promised freedom and remained until the queen's son, Ezana, was old enough to rule. Frumentius established a number of Christian churches and when Ezana became king he made Christianity (Monophysite) the official religion of Axum. This custom of slave who teaches kings remained an important tradition for the next few hundred years.

The Ethiopic (or Abyssinian) Church has lasted until the present day. It is still a Monophysite church and its scriptures and liturgy are still in Ge'ez.

It was a cosmopolitan and culturally important state. It was a meeting place for a variety of cultures: Egyptian, Sudanic, Arabic, Middle Eastern, and Indian. The major Aksumite cities had Jewish, Nubian, Christian, and even Buddhist minorities.

At the early times of the kingdom, around 2500 years ago, a king ordered the construction of giant Obelisk of Axum.

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List of kings

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See also

History of Ethiopia

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