Fichièr:The Ezana Stone (2840202630).jpg

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Fichièr d'origina(1 998 × 3 024 pixèl, talha del fichièr: 2,8 Mo, tipe MIME: image/jpeg)

Descripcion

Descripcion

This tablet, situated in a field and well below today's ground surface, is believed to have been erected some time during the first half of the fourth century of the current era by King Ezana of Axum in what is now called Ethiopia.

The monument is interesting for several reasons. First, it is one of the few ancient written records to come from pre-Islamic Africa, Egypt being the other major source of inscriptions.

Second, the text on the Ezana Stone is written in several languages. If you Google this monument, you'll be told the monument is trilingual: Greek, which at the time was the lingua franca in many parts of the ancient world; Ge'ez, an ancient Ethiopian language that is still a liturgical language of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and others, and Sabaean, an Old South Arabian language used in what is now Yemen and in parts of Eritrea and northern Ethiopia.

However, the actual facts are much more interesting than this. Please see the comment below from fellow flickerite YomArkegzi, who explains how the text is actually bilingual, something I wasn't aware of even though I visited the site with a guide and researched this monument on the Web after my return.

Third, unless I'm mistaken, the stone stands more or less where it was originally erected (or at least where it came to rest in antiquity), instead of gracing a hushed and elegant museum gallery in, say, Rome, Berlin or London, or, god forbid, a billionaire's private collection.

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King Ezana ruled the Axumite Kingdom during the first half of the fourth century of the current era.

Ezana is known principally for having converted to Christianity, paving the way for the eventual Christianization of Ethiopia.

King Ezana also left his mark in the annals of history by invading the Kingdom of Kush in what is now southern Sudan. Sources differ on whether King Ezana conquered and put an end to the Kingdom of Kush, or merely inflicted damage that, along with other factors, led to the Kingdom of Kush's decline.

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What does the tablet say, you ask? Well, I wasn't able to find a clear answer to that question. It appears King Ezana erected several "Ezana Stones" during his reign, including one in what is now southern Sudan.

My default answer would have been that the monument records King Ezana's conversion to Christianity and/or his victories over the Kushites, because that seems to be the consensus on the Internets.

However, I am grateful to viewer and contributor YomArkegzi, who explained the text "is actually on a campaign against the Beja in what is now NE Sudan that the inscription is about. There was a rebellion there which he suppressed; he relocated 4400 of the rebelling people and confiscated some of their cattle."
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The Ezana Stone

Autor A. Davey from Where I Live Now: Pacific Northwest

Publicat jos licéncia(s)

w:oc:Creative Commons
atribucion
Aqueste fichièr es jos licéncia Creative Commons licéncia generica atribucion 2.0
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This image, originally posted to Flickr, was reviewed on 5 October 2012 by the administrator or reviewer File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske), who confirmed that it was available on Flickr under the stated license on that date.
Public domain
Public domain
Aquest fitxer és en el domini públic en els Estats Units. Això és aplicable a obres dels EUA on el copyright ha expirat, sovint perquè la seva primera publicació va ser abans de l'1 de gener de 1929. Vegeu aquesta pàgina per a més detalls.

United States
United States
Podria ser que aquesta imatge no estigui en el domini públic fora dels Estats Units (especialment on no s'aplica la regla del termini més curt per obres dels EUA, com Canada, la Xina continental (no a Hong Kong ni Macau), Alemanya, Mèxic i Suïssa). El creador i any de publicació són informació essencial i s'han de proporcionar. Vegeu Viquipèdia:Drets d'autor per a més detalls.
Public domain

Aquest material està en domini públic als Estats Units i als altres països on el dret d'autor s'estén per 100 anys (o menys) després de la mort de l'autor.


Cal incloure una etiqueta de domini públic als Estats Units per indicar perquè aquesta obra és en domini públic als Estats Units.

Llegendes

Afegeix una explicació d'una línia del que representa aquest fitxer
The inscription Aizana or the stone of King Aizana mentions the victories over the peoples and the overthrow of the Meroe Kingdom in Sudan

Elements representats en aquest fitxer

subjècte representat

Nikon D70 catalan

0.01666666666666666666 segonda

número f catalan

3,5

18 mil·límetre

1 000

Istoric del fichièr

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Data e oraMiniaturaDimensionsUtilizaireComentari
actual5 octobre de 2012 a 17.41Miniatura per la version del 5 octobre de 2012 a 17.411 998×3 024 (2,8 Mo)File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske)Transferred from Flickr by User:Elitre

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