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Thursday, July 18, 2013

The Queen of Sheba, The Kingdom of D'mt and Sabean Kingdom : Agamé (part 2)


Salomon de Bray, 1657
The Queen of Sheba is known to Ethiopians as Makeda and I will likely interchangeably refer to her as Makeda and the Queen of Sheba throughout this post

In Ethiopian tradition the Queen of Sheba would have reigned around the time of the Kingdom of D'mt and she is said to have  hailed from the Agamé region  of Ethiopia born to the  Irob people .   The Irob people are an ethnic group who occupy a predominantly highland, mountainous area in northeastern Tigray by the same name. 

There has long been an argument over whether the 'real' Queen of Sheba  either  lived and reigned in Yemen,  or  lived and reigned in Ethiopia.   Those conflicting theories are starting to be challenged though.   While in conversation in Adigrat I frequently heard that there are reasons to question whether her kingdom might have stretched across the two territories.   There are  similar cross Red Sea working theories  for where "The Land of Punt" was located.   Excavations do suggest a connection between the two peoples, there is a smattering of Sabean pottery in northern Ethiopia and Sabean script written here and there. 

 It has been suggested that one specific site currently being excavated may be the  ruins of a massive underground residence of the Queen of Sheba .   A group of archeologists have begun uncovering the ruins in Gulo-makeda which is a district found right next to Irob.   The district's name is derived from the Queen of Sheba's Ethiopian name, "Makeda".   There is evidence that  a sophisticated community of people have been residing in Gulo-makeda for 3,000 years .
 
grounds of a church in Gulomakeda
Still shot from documentary footage
Access to the site is protected both by an old church in town and the Tigray Tourism office who you have to notify of your intent to visit.   It is  an active archeological site after all and in my opinion that only added to the excitement.   It was wonderful to visit a site off the beaten path.   Deep down in the ruins there is  a clear engraving of a cross with ge'ez symbol meaning "sa"  which the priest tells me he believes is more proof it was the Queen of Sheba's residence.   There are working theories that what has been uncovered so far is a storage and living room and that the compound is  actually quite vast .   
  

In 2008 a group from the University of Hamburg excavated underneath Dungur Palace in Axum (west of Agamé) and found the base of a much earlier structure they believe may also have been  a residence of Makeda's .   Dungur Palace has been locally and popularly known as a palace of Makeda's but the visible ruins most people visit had been dated at a much later time frame than when Makeda lived.   Who knows what a wealth of discovery lies beneath Dungur

Inside Dungur Palace in Axum
If you randomly ask in the Agamé region about Makeda you are likely to hear many stories of her.   The claim to be from the Solmonic line through the son of Makeda has been a  centrally important part of Ethiopia's feudal history .   Governors in Tigray often claimed to be descendants.   Descent from Solomon was practically seen as a  prerequisite  for the position of Emperor in the country.   One of the reasons Emperor Menelik married Empress Taitu was because she hailed from an aristocratic family that was related to the Solomonic dynasty.   Haile Selassie claimed a connection, although I have been told that his connection is often seen as a bit sketchier than other rulers.   Emperor Yohannes claimed Solomonic blood in a couple of ways, one was through his father's grandmother, the other was through his mother's mother who was from the aristocratic line of the  Shum  of Agamé, the House of Agamé .   These details led great credibility to his rule.   

Makeda is said to have given birth to her son Menelik on the banks of the Mai Bela river.   The Mai Bela river was located in Asmara and it was filled in during 1936-37 in order to create a major traffic route, now called Mai Bela Avenue.

Emperor Yohannes

The strong widespread belief that The House of Agamé came from the Queen of Sheba's line  quite certainly helped preserve its long legacy of influence   in the region.   The House of Agamé was simultaneously seen as  a threat  to every ambitious heart wanting to rule large sections of the country and  a House to align oneself with , marry into or claim connection to (even in the most remote way) in order to ensure public opinion was on your side and you retained your privileged position for as long as possible.   The public's commitment to members of the House of Agamé remained so strong throughout the many generations that even in  1936  there was a recognition that it would not be a good idea for Mussolini's troops to slight the family because they had 'exercised command for generations' and had too much 'authority and prestige'.*     Bizunesh Atsbeha  would have been a little girl around then and her mom and dad, Kassa and Atsbeha would have indeed still been fairly influential in the region at that time. 
 
It is not only the feudalist history in Ethiopia that has been shaped by the stories of Makeda, she is also a heavyweight in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.    The Ark of the Covenant coming to Axum is tied to her story and the story of her son  .   The Kebra Negast or the The Glory of the Kings is a 14th century textual account of the origins of the Solmonic line in Ethiopia and it is considered by many Ethiopian Christians and Rastafarians to be an inspired and a reliable work.   As Edward Ullendorff explained in the 1967 Schweich Lectures, "The Kebra Nagast is not merely a literary work, but—as the Old Testament to the Hebrews or the Qur'an to the Arabs—it is the repository of Ethiopian national and religious feelings."   The story of Makeda and how the Ark of the Covenant  came to Ethiopia has been described as  the center piece  of the Kebra Nagast.   The Ark itself is considered to be so central in the Ethiopian Orthodox faith that it is actually believed  a church is just a building and not really a church  unless it has a replica of the Ark, an item called the tabot  A tabot that was brought into the  monumentally important  Battle of Adwa is said to have helped the Ethiopians win against the Italians.   A win that decisively ended any European power's dream of colonizing the country. 

* thoughts about how the Agamé people and the House of Agamé dealt with the Italians invading their land in the 1890s and the Italian occupation in the 1930s deserve a separate post.  

02/19/16 Correction: A previous version of this blog post incorrectly labelled a depiction of Emperor Téwodros II as Emperor Yohannes.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The Queen of Sheba, The Kingdom of D'mt and Sabean Kingdom : Agamé (part 1)


The next couple of blog posts will be about the Kingdom of D'mt and the Queen of Sheba.   If you have never heard of the  Kingdom of D'mt , you're forgiven!   Not too much has been written about D'mt and quite frankly that's because there just isn't that much known about it yet.   I learned of and became intrigued by the Kingdom of D'mt when I heard about  the historical D'mt sites dotting the country side around the city of Adigrat  that archaeologists have yet to really document.   We do know that the Kingdom of D'mt dates way back to  1000 years before Christ  which makes it the earliest  known  kingdom to rise to power in Ethiopia. 

It is worth noting that "The Land of Punt" the Egyptians referred to 2,500 years before Christ is often ascribed (at least partially) to the north of Ethiopia, but its exact location has apparently not yet been satisfactorily determined. 


It isn't really clear  how or when the civilization ended and when it became the Aksumite kingdom . The Sabean Kingdom had some influence on the region although the full extent of its influence is unknown.  There is a belief that the Kingdom of D'mt and the Sabean Kingdom might have even  merged  at some point, but IF they did, it certainly did not last too long, a century at the very most. [1] 

Yeha is a small town in the north of Ethiopia that is believed to have been  the capitol of D'mt .   In town there are ruins of a beautiful tower  built over 2,600 years ago  known as the 'Temple of Yeha'.   It has been studied somewhat and is described as being in excellent condition considering its age.

British archaeologist David Phillipson attributes its "excellent preservation" to two factors, "the care with which its original builders ensured a level foundation, firmly placed on the uneven bedrock; and to its rededication -- perhaps as early as the sixth century AD -- for use as a Christian church."
Temple of Yeha
Great care taken in the construction

Built over 2,600 years ago

Length of temple.. and a beautiful view.

Entrance to Yeha compound (new)
 During the time of the Kingdom of D'mt we know that farmers were tilling land, crops like teff had been domesticated (I wrote about teff and a wee little bit about its history here: http://jhodgesagame.blogspot.ca/2013/06/injera-teff-and-ethiopian-highlands.html) and blacksmithing skills were in use and being developed.  

 
 The Sabean people who moved to Ethiopia  seem to have brought with them some extra sophisticated blacksmithing skills and they are believed to have pretty heavily influenced the Kingdom of D'mt's surge in blacksmithing.   In March of this year I had the opportunity to visit an  ancient iron forging site  where a scattering of iron and pottery can still be found all over the ground - all these many years later!   It is a site easily accessed off the main Adigrat - Addis Ababa road, just north of Idaga Hamos.   It is  not yet a properly documented and protected site  and it is unoccupied so kids seem to currently enjoy hanging in and around it.   It was pretty dirty inside when I visited, there was trash scattered about and a distinctly nauseating smell of urine.   Having said that, there were also symbols on the walls inside that were  clear signs of the D'mt kingdom  and it was pretty exciting to see a historical site which doesn't yet really officially register in the academic historical conversation about the Kingdom of D'mt.   There are plans to study the site in the near future. 
Still shot from documentary footage: pottery shards in front of the blacksmith site
I don't know what my assumptions about ancient historical sites in Agamé were up to this point, but it was surprising and remarkable to me to freely wander through SUCH an old site which is  so accessible  and is as of yet  undocumented  and  unprotected .

But then I heard from community members in Adigrat like the  legendary english teacher Tadesse Tefari  that the kids who play in the country side around Idaga Hamos (a town just south of Adigrat in the Agam
é Region) have discovered caves  full of ancient inscriptions and paintings .   An adult also accidentally fell into a cave full of paintings recently.   It is believed there  is an extensive network of tunnels and caves in the Idaga Hamos area  with these writings and images.   All of which have not yet been properly documented, cataloged or studied.

What I hear over and over from my friends in the Agam
é region is that it is a district crammed with historical sites.   Only a  portion of which have been cataloged .   An even smaller portion is accessible to the public in any informed manor.  

There are great hopes that much more will be learned as archaeologists explore the many sites scattered throughout the north of Ethiopia.  

A new university in Adigrat has plans to attract archaeological students from near and far to further grow their local documentation efforts.  


Next up, all about the Queen of Sheba (aka Makeda) and her connections to the Agamé region and House of Agamé ... 

Further Reading
There are some international academics currently working in these geographical areas.