The Legitimising Project: The Coronation Rite and the Written Word (original) (raw)

The Legitimising Project: the Cornation Rite and the Written Word, Aethiopica 16 (2013) International Journal of Ethiopian and Eritrean Studies

The article and its argument are based on a hitherto unexplored Ethiopian chronicle, which offers a uniquely detailed description of a series of enthronement rites. The article explores and deciphers symbolism displayed in these acts, which was drawn from the past and remodelled to form ideological underpinning for the monarchy of Yo ann s IV (1872–89) and to legitimise his imperial project. The article argues that despite the fact that the record of these events is likely to have been ‘adjusted’ by Ethiopian chroniclers, their writings still points to what they thought should happen during a ritual in order for it to be effective. Consequently, the authors of the chronicle revealed to us the role of ritual in the legitimising project of late 19th-century Ethiopia.

The interpretation of Ethiopian cultural texts - the coronation of Haile Sillasie as a text

African Studies: Forging New Perspectives and Directions edited by Nina Pawlak, Hanna Rubinkowska-Anioł, Izabela Will., 2016

Haile Sillasie I was crowned Emperor of Ethiopia in 1930. During this ceremony, a very specific message of power was delivered to those who watched the spectacle. This article analyses the coronation as a cultural text and indicates the complexity and significance of some of the components of the event. It also asks a question about how constructing " modernity " in a time of great change at the turn of the 19 th and 20 th centuries was reflected in the coronation ceremony.

Promulgation and Registration of Royal Ethiopian Acts in Behalf of Political and Religious Institutions (Northern Ethiopia, Sixteenth Century)

Northeast African Studies 11, 2, 2011

The study scrutinize a corpus of 34 royal charters given to religious institutions and private persons of the Northern regions of the Ethiopian kingdom during the 16th century. This study sheds light on the prosopography of the bureaucracy, first, as well as on the role of the Aksum Ṣǝyon church as an interface between the monarchy and religious or political institutions in the north of the realm. We better understand the distribution of roles between crown servants, officials from the Aksum Ṣǝyon church where copies of the acts were made and kept, and the members of the clergy in the religious institutions concerned in the acts.

REFLECTIONS ON THE NOTIONS OF “EMPIRE” AND “KINGDOM” IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY ETHIOPIA: ROYAL POWER AND LOCAL POWER

Journal of Early Modern History, 2004

The purpose of this article is to re-interrogate the notions of “empire” and “kingdom” in seventeenth-century Ethiopia, attentive to the borrowings and models used by the sources, which are particularly rich for this period. But it is equally through a study of a person close to King Susneyos, the the ras Sealä Krestos, and the relations that he maintained with his sovereign, that we can reformulate these notions of “empire” and “kingdom.”

Re-imagining Empire: the Coronation of Yohannis IV as an Expression of Historical Memory

In this paper I investigate how the historical memory the Ethiopian Empire was used to further the task of imperial reconstruction and form an ideological underpinning for the monarchy of Yohannis IV. I utilize hitherto unexplored Ethiopian chronicles that provide new insights into the dynamics of late nineteenth-century Ethiopian kingship. I pay particular attention to Yohannis’s coronation ceremony in 1872 as an example of the mobilization of imperial ideology. Attention is drawn to the fact that Yohannis mobilized a range of historic symbols derived from the glorious past of the Ethiopian monarchy and the church. His policy was a response to a need for new ideology adapted to the chal- lenges of the late 19th century. It was re-imagined from the memory of what was believed to be ancient customs. The pageantry of the Axumite ritual displayed symbols, slogans and ideas of the past that Yohannis mobilized to legitimize his imperial project.

The foundation of the church Däbrä Ṭǝbäb Bäʾatä Maryam as reflected in original documents and Ethiopian historiography: The role of the written word in traditional customary law dominated by orality.

During a period of internal struggle and decline of royal power at the end of the 18th century, the Ethiopian emperor Täklä-Haymanot II founded the church Däbrä-Ṭǝbäb Bäʾata in Gondär. The motif for this foundation, as well as its statutes and privileges, are to be found in historical narratives and in preserved documents. Two chronicles compiled by Liq Aṭqu in the Rüppell collection of the “Stadt- und Universitätsbibliothek Frankfurt” give a detailed account of the event. This historical report indicates the institutions and even manuscripts where the juridical documents about the act of foundation had to be inscribed according to the custom and procedures of traditional law. A fortunate case allowed that manuscripts once housed in churches and monasteries in Gondär – sackings and plunders notwithstanding – have survived till our days and are preserved and accessible. The article aims at a reconstruction of the historical event in as much details as given in the narratives and documents. At the same time the juridical laws, customs and procedures that are behind the preserved texts and documents are put in evidence and explained.

The Disputed Life of the Saintly Ethiopian Kings ʾAbrǝhā and ʾAṣbǝḥa

Scrinium, 2016

The discovery of an Amharic document written by a church scholar from the monastery of Dimā Giyorgis in Eastern Goǧǧām (Ethiopia) throws fresh light on the circumstances and disputes behind the composition of the Life of the Ethiopian twin brother kings ʾAbrǝhā and ʾAṣbǝḥa, as well as on the Dǝrsāna ʿUrāʾel ('Homily of Uriel'). The legendary characters of the Life and the events it narrates, along with its manuscript tradition, are analysed in detail. The Amharic 'Dimā Document' together with a royal letter concerning the Dǝrsāna ʿUrāʾel is edited with an annotated English translation. Keywords Ethiopic hagiography – philology – Aksum – Dimā Giyorgis – Marṭula Maryam – Uriel ʾAbrǝhā and ʾAṣbǝḥa reigned on Aksum before all other kings without succeeding one to the other, without any division, on one throne and in one sovereignty , with one command and with one sceptre. Their primacy is not through birth or through kingship but through receiving Baptism and Holy Communion.