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Book
Aksum : richerche di topografia generale
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Year: 1938 Publisher: Roma : Pontificio Istituto Biblico,

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Book
Aksum und der Untergang Meroë's
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Year: 1972 Publisher: [Münster] : Timp,

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Ancient African civilizations: Kush and Axum
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ISBN: 1558761470 1558761489 Year: 2000 Publisher: Princeton (N.J.) Wiener

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Book
Essai sur l'histoire antique d'Abyssinie. : Le royaume d'Aksum et ses voisins d'Arabie et de Meroe;
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Year: 1926 Publisher: Paris, P. Geuthner,

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Book
Aksum and Nubia
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ISBN: 9780814760666 9780814762783 9780814762837 081476066X 0814762786 0814762832 Year: 2013 Publisher: New York, NY

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Aksum and Nubia assembles and analyzes the textual and archaeological evidence of interaction between Nubia and the Ethiopian kingdom of Aksum, focusing primarily on the fourth century CE. Although ancient Nubia and Ethiopia have been the subject of a growing number of studies in recent years, little attention has been given to contact between these two regions. Hatke argues that ancient Northeast Africa cannot be treated as a unified area politically, economically, or culturally. Rather, Nubia and Ethiopia developed within very different regional spheres of interaction, as a result of which t


Book
Foundations of an African civilization : Aksum & the Northern Horn, 1000 BC-AD 1300
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9781847010414 1847010415 9781846158735 178204289X 1846158737 1847010881 Year: 2012 Volume: *1 Publisher: Woodbridge ; Rochester James Currey

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Focuses on the Aksumite state of the first millennium AD in northern Ethiopia and southern Eritrea, its development, florescence and eventual transformation into the so-called medieval civilisation ofChristian Ethiopia. This book seeks to apply a common methodology, utilising archaeology, art-history, written documents and oral tradition from a wide variety of sources; the result is a far greateremphasis on continuity than previous studies have revealed. It is thus a major re-interpretation of a key development in Ethiopia's past, while raising and discussing methodological issues of the relationship between archaeology and other historical disciplines; these issues, which have theoretical significance extending far beyond Ethiopia, are discussed in full.
The last millennium BC is seen as a time when northern Ethiopia and parts of Eritrea were inhabited by farming peoples whose ancestry may be traced far back into the local 'Late Stone Age'. Colonisation from southern Arabia, towhich defining importance has been attached by earlier researchers, is now seen to have been brief in duration and small in scale, its effects largely restricted to élite sections of the community. Re-consideration of inscriptions shows the need to abandon the established belief in a single 'Pre-Aksumite' state. New evidence for the rise of Aksum during the last centuries BC is critically evaluated.
Finally, new chronological precision is provided for the decline of Aksum and the transfer of centralised political authority to more southerly regions. A new study of the ancient churches -both built and rock-hewn - which survive from this poorly-understood period emphasises once again a strong degree of continuity across periods that were previously regarded as distinct.

David W. Phillipson is Emeritus Professor of African Archaeology and former Director of the University Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, Cambridge. In 2014 he was made an Associate Fellow of the Ethiopian Academy of Sciences.

Published in association with the British Institute in Eastern Africa.

Ethiopia: Addis Ababa University Press

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