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From
Apollo:
Our understanding of the history of the emperors who ruled over late
medieval Ethiopia is still quite fragmentary but, as far as we can tell,
life at their courts was marked by violence, betrayal, and power
struggles. Perhaps the most prominent among these rulers, who belonged
to a house that rose to power in 1270 and traced its descent back to
King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, was Zar’a Ya‘eqob (r. 1434–68).
What is known about his reign has hitherto been gleaned mostly from
Ethiopic texts in ancient parchment manuscripts, some still preserved in
the country’s hard-to-access monasteries, others now in Western
collections. However, objects such as icons and wall paintings can also
provide insights into the culture and society of this period and,
through an interweaving of text and image, present a fuller account of
one of the most important rulers in Ethiopian history.
A retelling of his life could begin with a late 15th- or early
16th-century Ethiopic manuscript now kept in the Giovardiana library in
Veroli, the frontispiece of which bears an image of the Virgin and
Child. It contains a collection of texts known as the ‘Miracles of
Mary’. The nucleus of these stories about the miraculous interventions
of the Virgin, which vary in number and content in each manuscript, was
written in 12th-century France, but the work was translated into Arabic
in the 13th century, and into Ethiopic at the end of the 14th century at
the behest of Emperor Dawit II (r. 1382–1413), Zar’a Ya‘eqob’s father.
Because the Ethiopic version was soon enriched with local traditions
about the Virgin’s miraculous powers, it is a valuable source for
understanding the political and religious history of Ethiopia from the
15th century onwards.
One of the stories in the Giovardiana manuscript describes
the miraculous birth of Zar’a Ya‘eqob. According to this text, his
mother, Queen Egzi’ Kebra, had miscarried her first child and almost
lost him, too. Seized by spasms five weeks into her pregnancy, she asked
a priest called Athanasius to pray to the Virgin Mary on her behalf,
after which her pains ceased and about eight months later, in 1399, the
future emperor was born. Local traditions make this the first of many
miraculous interventions of the Virgin Mary into the life of Zar’a
Ya‘eqob, whose devotion to her reached the point of zealotry. (Read more.)
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