Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Ezana of Axum: The Emperor Who Made Ethiopia Christian
Description
Long before Lalibela or Gondar, there was Axum — and one man changed its course forever. Emperor Ezana, who ruled in the 4th century CE, converted the kingdom to Christianity after a childhood tutored by the Syrian slave-missionary Frumentius. But Ezana wasn't just a convert: he was a conqueror who subdued the kingdom of Meroë to the north and the Beja nomads of the eastern desert, inscribing his victories in Ge'ez, Sabaean, and Greek on stelae that still stand today. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Ezana's rise, his expansion of Axum's Red Sea trade network, the mysterious crown of the god Mahrem, and the political calculus behind making a foreign faith the state religion. They also dig into the contemporary Greek account of Frumentius's mission by the historian Rufinus, and the controversial theory that Ezana may have been the king who destroyed the Kushite capital at Meroë. If you've enjoyed our earlier episodes on Zara Yaqob and Amda Seyon, this is the story of the emperor who laid the bedrock for everything that followed.