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Lalibela: Ethiopia's Carved Stone Churches and Their Secret
Description
This episode takes you to the heart of Ethiopia's medieval rock-hewn churches of Lalibela, carved from solid volcanic tuff in the 12th and 13th centuries. We explore who built them and why, focusing on King Lalibela himself—a figure shrouded in legend. Did he really carve eleven churches in 24 years with angelic help? We separate fact from hagiography, discussing the engineering marvel of structures like Bet Medhane Alem, the largest monolithic church in the world, and Bet Giyorgis, the cross-shaped masterpiece. We delve into the Zagwe dynasty's role, the political rivalries with the Solomonic line, and why Lalibela was intended as a 'New Jerusalem' in response to Muslim conquests in the Holy Land. Lucas and Luna also consider the enduring mystery of how these churches were built without modern tools, using only chisels and hammers, and what the site means for Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity today. A rich, specific conversation that goes beyond the tourist postcard.