Katana VentraIP

Zagwe dynasty

The Zagwe dynasty (Amharic: ዛጔ መንግሥት) was a medieval Agaw monarchy that ruled the northern parts of Ethiopia and Eritrea. The Agaw are a Cushitic ethnic group native to the northern highlands of Ethiopia and neighboring Eritrea.[6] Centered at Roha (later named Lalibela), it ruled large parts of the territory from approximately 1137 to 1270 AD, when the last Zagwe King Za-Ilmaknun was killed in battle by the forces of the Amhara King Yekuno Amlak. The Zagwe are most famous for their king Gebre Meskel Lalibela, who is credited with having ordered the construction of the rock-hewn monolithic churches of Lalibela.

Zagwe dynasty
ዛጔ መንግሥት (Amharic)

Ethiopian
Habesha

 

 

1137

c. 930

1270

The name "Zagwe" is thought to derive from the ancient Ge'ez phrase Ze-Agaw, meaning "of the Agaw", in reference to the Mara Tekle Haymanot, the founder of the dynasty.[7] This term does not appear in contemporary sources, neither in indigenous documents nor in accounts of foreign observers.[8]


David Buxton has stated that the areas under the direct rule of the Zagwe kings apart from the centre of power in Lasta "probably embraced the highlands of modern Eritrea, Tigray, Wag and Bete Amhara and thence westwards towards Lake Tana (Begemder)."[9] Unlike the practice of later rulers of Ethiopia, Taddesse Tamrat argues that under the Zagwe dynasty the order of succession was that of brother succeeding brother as king, based on the Agaw laws of inheritance.

(13 years)

Mara Takla Haymanot

(40 years)

Yemrehana Krestos

(40 years)

Lalibela

(40 years)

Na'akueto La'ab

(8 years)

Harbai

Ethiopian historiography

History of Ethiopia

Kings of Axum

List of Emperors of Ethiopia

Derat, M.-L. (2018). L'énigme d'une dynastie sainte et usurpatrice dans le royaume chrétien d'Ethiopie, XIe–XIIIe siècle (in French). Brepolis.  978-2-503-57908-5.

ISBN

Muehlbauer, Mikael (2023). "An African "Constantine" in the Twelfth Century: The Architecture of the Early Zagwe Dynasty and Egyptian Episcopal Authority". Gesta. 62 (2): 127–152. :10.1086/725791.[1]

doi

Ethiopian History

Tekeste Negash, "The Zagwe period re-interpreted: post-Aksumite Ethiopian urban culture"