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I need to write some thing for introducing my self

My name is Goitom kelem


I live in Ethiopia
I born in Axum
Then I need to say some thing about Axum and its civilization

The Axumite civilization was a Coptic pre-Christian state in Ethiopia, from about AD
100-800. The Axumites were known for massive stone stelae, copper coinage, and the
importance of their large influential port on the Red Sea, Aksum. Aksum was an
extensive state, with a farming economy, and deeply involved in trade by the first century
AD with the Roman empire. After Meroe shut down, Aksum controlled trading between
Arabia and Sudan, including goods such as ivory, skins and manufactured luxury goods.
Axumite architecture is a blend of Ethiopian and South Arabian cultural elements.

The Ark of the Covenant was a great shrine that contained the tablets of the Ten
Commandments that were received from God by Moses on Sinai. According to the Old
Testament, the Ark was made of acacia wood and overlaid with gold. It measured 1.15 m
long, 0.7 m wide and 0.7 m high and was carried by two long bars, also made of gold-
plated acacia wood. The Ark was guarded by cherubims that "spread forth their two
wings over of the place of the ark" (I Kings 8:7).

According to the Old Testament, the Israelites carried the Ark of the Covenant with them
wherever they went, and it contained great divine power that proved fatal to many. When
the Temple of Jerusalem was built, the Ark was enshrined there in the Holy of Holies and
only seen by the High Priest.

At some point, the Ark disappeared from Jerusalem. The mystery of what became of such
an important and sacred artifact continues to fascinate archaeologists, historians and
believers alike. There are no shortage of theories as to its fate and current location, which
include a Jerusalem tunnel and the top of Mt. Nebo in Jordan.

To Ethiopian Christians and Jews, the location of the Ark of the Covenant is no mystery.
According to the Ethiopian royal chronicles, the Ark left Jerusalem much earlier than
generally thought — in the days of King Solomon — and went to Ethiopia by the hand of
Menelik, the son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. (The Old Testament tells of
a meeting between the monarchs (1 Kings 10), but not a marriage or Prince Menelik.)

The Ark was then kept safe in Ethiopia over the millenia, carefully hidden during wars,
and today it is enshrined in a special treasury next to the Church of St. Mary of Zion in
Axum, Ethiopia.
This theory was popularized outside of Ethiopia through a 1990s book by British
journalist Graham Hancock entitled The Sign and the Seal: The Quest for the Lost Ark
of the Covenant. Hancock argues that after the Ark was brought to Ethiopia by Menelik,
it was kept there for 800 years by a Judaic cult. Then it was seized by the Knights
Templar, who thought that it was the Holy Grail. The Knights converted the Jews, who
then kept the Ark in a great church.

Several other researches have explored the possibility that the Lost Ark is in Ethiopia,
reaching various conclusions. In The Quest for the Ark of the Covenant, Stuart Munro-
Hay argues that Axum's shrine contains a stone altar that was probably produced long
ago as a replica of Moses' stone tablets.

Munro-Hay's theory is a variation of what seems to be the most common consensus of


scholars: there is something old and sacred enshrined at Axum, but it is probably not the
Ark of the Covenant.

The Ark of the Covenant was long enshrined in the Church of St. Mary of Zion at Axum,
and constructed specially for the purpose by Emperor Haile Selassie in the early 1960s

What to See

The Ark of the Covenant at Axum cannot be seen by anyone but the High Priest of
Axum, an elderly and especially holy monk who is charged with its care and preservation
for life. He cannot leave the small yard that surrounds the chapel, and he is expected to
name his successor on his deathbed. The present custodian with this privilege and burden
is named Abba Tesfa Mariam.

The authors of the abovementioned books on the Lost Ark were unsuccessful in their
attempts to gain access to the relic. In fact, not even the Ethiopian president is allowed to
see it. The Ark used to be taken out on a procession once a year, but due to the recent war
and tensions in the area, it remains locked in its shrine full-time.

One recent British explorer was told that these restrictions are for his own safety, for "if I
approached the Ark I would be punished - the theory is that would become invisible and
unleash upon me its terrible power - I would be killed outright, probably incinerated." He
was told that even seeing one of the blessed replicas placed in all Ethiopian churches
could have this effect.

What visitors can see is the building in which the Ark is kept. Referred to as a relic
chapel or the Treasury, it also contains the cathedral's treasures such as the crowns of
Ethiopian kings and silver processional crosses. The other treasures are regularly brought
out and displayed for visitors, but no one is allowed inside the building

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