St. Justin de Jacobis and his dealing with the Coptic Christians of Ethiopia (original) (raw)
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Aethiopica, 2014
In November–December 2012, the team of the Ethio-SpaRe project found a letter written by the Coptic Metropolitan Peṭros (1881–1917) in 1904. The letter was copied into one of the books housed in the Qǝddǝst Maryam monastery in Qäqäma. It deals with the Trinitarian and Christological doctrines and is addressed to the clergy of Tǝgray. Because of its historical significance, the present article aims at editing and commenting this document.
A bibliography on Christianity in Ethiopia
2003
Image on the front cover: Roof of the 12 th century rock-hewn church of Béta Giorgis in Lalibela, northern Ethiopia 2. Christian Texts, Manuscripts, Hagiographies 2.1 Sources, bibliographies, catalogues 2.2 General and comparative studies on Ethiopian religious literature 2.3 On saints 2.4 Hagiographies and related texts 2.5 Ethiopian editions and translations of the Bible 2.6 Editions and analyses of other religious texts 2.7 Ethiopian religious commentaries and exegeses 3. Ethiopian Christian Art and Architecture 3.1 General issues 3.2 Manuscript illumination 3.3 Paintings and icons 3.4 Religious material culture: crosses, textiles, carvings, jewelry 3.5 Church architecture and design 3.6 Biographical studies of painters and artists
The Jesuit Mission in Ethiopia (16th-17th Centuries): an Analytical Bibliography
The mission carried out by the Society of Jesus in the Ethiopian highlands from 1556 to 1632 has been for the last two decades object of an important number of publications. The interest for the political and religious activities of the missionaries has gained momentum; there is hardly a meeting on the history of Ethiopia that does not include at least one contribution dedicated to this issue. The bibliography on this mission is growing at an increasing pace. An essay reviewing the main scholarly trends and providing the most complete list of titles was, thus, heavily needed. Serious research is based on a sober knowledge of what has been produced and an awareness of what remains still to be studied. It is our hope that this work will contribute to both goals.
Hagiographies and the History of Medieval Ethiopia
History in Africa, 1981
The hagiographic literature of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church may be divided into two major categories: the translated lives of the saints and martyrs of the early Christian church and the lives of local saints. The essentially foreign works, which constitute the first of these groups, will be of only peripheral concern in this paper. While books such as Barlaam and Joasaph, The Life of St. George, and The Conflict of Severus did serve as models for the traditions dealing with local saints, they are of little interest to the student of Ethiopian history.The most interesting of these local hagiographies are those about saints who lived between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries. These traditions, which recount the lives of some kings and many monastic leaders, are of great importance for the reconstruction of the history of medieval Ethiopia. As Conti Rossini has written, The more I preoccupy myself with the history of Ethiopia, the more I realize the importance of the study of lo...
Muslim Partners, Catholic Foes: The Selective Isolation of Gondarine Ethiopia
Northeast African Studies, 2012
This paper is dedicated to an appraisal of Ethiopia’s relations with the Catholic and Muslim worlds in the aftermath of the failed Jesuit mission in the country (1555–1632). It contrasts Ethiopia’s policy of isolation from Catholic Europe and the resulting failures of the Franciscan order to re-establish a missionary presence in the Horn with the Ethiopian monarchy’s proactive pursuit of diplomatic ties with various Muslim societies of the Red Sea and Indian Ocean basins.