A single coherent narrative of Aksumite civilisation revealing the roots
of medieval Christian Ethiopia.
This well-illustrated book provides an up-to-date survey of a key period
in the history of northern Ethiopia and south-central Eritrea. It is
accessible to the general reader, but its comprehensive references and
guidance to controversies and research needs will render it invaluable
to specialists and students. It considers how the region's literate
communities arose and flourished during the last millennium BC, giving
rise to the Aksumite civilisation whose achievements and
intercontinental significance are increasingly recognised, and which
formed an integral but often neglected component of the Christian world
in Late Antiquity. Aksum is now seen as the ancestor of the
region'smedieval Christian kingdom whose churches and associated art
continue to attract many visitors to Ethiopia.
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