Showing posts with label fact EMPRESSE OF ETHIOPIA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fact EMPRESSE OF ETHIOPIA. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Pharaohs


Hieroglyphics could be the best source of investigating tools where to find out the Ethiopians presence in the amazing ancient Egyptian civilization. When I come across to the meaning of some hieroglyphics like 'qeter' for time, 'woha' for fish, truly admired the person who strives to unlock the mystery from that unique and unusual writing system. But he just picked out the sea animal for 'woha' instead of the water and 'qeter' for time, where as its real meaning in todays Ethiopian language is noon. Even some of the ancient ceremonial practices such as burial are parallel with what we can see in Ethiopia today. I am a firm believer that the Pharaohs, the sciences and their languages had been pure Ethiopian, but nothing else.



the following article is copied from ancientweb Click here for more

'About eight hundred years before Christ, the Ethiopian armies began invading Egypt. They were not powerful adversaries, but there was no united power to oppose them. Year after year they won their way further down the Nile, re-assimilating the Egyptian culture as they advanced. They became the chief rulers of upper Egypt. And at length we find the proud record of their king, Piankhi, stating that the princes of lower Egypt, who were at war among themselves, appealed to him as a protector. He assumed the title of Pharaoh, and marching from end to end of the land reduced it all to obedience (727 B.C.). Even the priesthood thankfully accepted him as the one man who could bring order out of all the turmoil. He was crowned at Thebes with all the ancient ceremonials. A Libyan captain had already sat upon the proud throne of the ancient gods; now it was held by an Ethiopian.

More than one of the Pharaohs of this Ethiopian dynasty are mentioned in Bible history. The most important of them after Piankhi was Taharqua, the Biblical Tirhakah. Neither he nor any other ruler succeeded in establishing much authority over the fighting princes, Libyan and Egyptian, who dwelt in the Nile delta, but Tirhakah did gather them all for an incursion into Palestine. There he made alliance with King Hezekiah of Judah and with King Luliya of Tyre, and defeated and plundered the cities which opposed him. He thus brought down upon himself the wrath of the conquering Assyrians, who had seized Syria and Israel, and who objected to having any one but themselves thus snatch the spoils of Asiatic war.'

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

MAKEDA, QUEEN OF SHEBA (The symbol of Beauty) (960 B.C.)

( by Legrand H. Clegg II )

"I am black but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, As the tents of Kedar, As the curtains of Solomon, Look not upon me because I am black Because the sun hath scorched me." (Song of Solomon)

Although most of Black history is suppressed, distorted or ignored by an ungrateful modern world, some African traditions are so persistent that all of the power and deception of the Western academic establishment have failed to stamp them out. One such story is that of Makeda, the Queen of Sheba, and King Solomon of Israel. Black women of antiquity were legendary for their beauty and power. Especially great were the Queens of Ethiopia. This nation was also known as Nubia, Kush, Axum and Sheba. One thousand years before Christ, Ethiopia was ruled by a line of virgin queens. The one whose story has survived into our time was known as Makeda, "the Queen of Sheba." Her remarkable tradition was recorded in the Kebar Nagast, or the Glory of Kings, and the Bible. The Bible tells us that, during his reign, King Solomon of Israel decided to build a magnificent temple. To announce this endeavor, the king sent forth messengers to various foreign countries to invite merchants from abroad to come to Jerusalem with their caravans so that they might engage in trade there. At this time, Ethiopia was second only to Egypt in power and fame. Hence, King Solomon was enthralled by Ethiopia's beautiful people, rich history, deep spiritual tradition and wealth. He was especially interested in engaging in commerce with one of Queen Makeda's subjects, an important merchant by the name of Tamrin.1 Solomon sent for Tamrin who "packed up stores of valuables including ebony, sapphires and red gold, which he took to Jerusalem to sell to the king."2 It turns out that Tamrin's visit was momentous. Although accustomed to the grandeur and luxury of Egypt and Ethiopia, Tamrin was still impressed by King Solomon and his young nation. During a prolonged stay in Israel, Tamrin observed the magnificent buildings and was intrigued by the Jewish people and their culture. But above all else, he was deeply moved by Solomon's wisdom and compassion for his subjects. Upon returning to his country, Tamrin poured forth elaborate details about his trip to Queen Makeda. She was so impressed by the exciting story that the great queen decided to visit King Solomon herself.3 To understand the significance of state visits in antiquity in contrast to those of today, we must completely remove ourselves from the present place and time. In ancient times, royal visits were very significant ceremonial affairs. The visiting regent was expected to favor the host with elaborate gifts and the state visit might well last for weeks or even months. Even by ancient standards, however, Queen Makeda's visit to King Solomon was extraordinary. In I Kings 10:1-2, the Bible tells us: "1. And when the Queen of Sheba heard of the fame of Solomon concerning the name of the Lord, she came to prove him with hard questions. "2. And she came to Jerusalem with a very great train, with camels that bear spices and very much gold, and precious stones. And when she was come to Solomon she communed with him of all that was in her heart." I Kings 10:10 adds: "She gave the king 120 talents of gold, and of spices very great store and precious stones; there came no more such abundance of spices as these which the Queen of Sheba gave to King Solomon." We should pause to consider the staggering sight of this beautiful Black woman and her vast array of resplendent attendants travelling over the Sahara desert into Israel with more than 797 camels plus donkeys and mules too numerous to count. The value of the gold alone, which she gave to King Solomon, would be $3,690,000 today and was of much greater worth in antiquity. King Solomon, and undoubtedly the Jewish people, were flabbergasted by this great woman and her people. He took great pains to accommodate her every need. A special apartment was built for her lodging while she remained in his country. She was also provided with the best of food and eleven changes of garments daily. As so many African leaders before her, this young maiden, though impressed with the beauty of Solomon's temple and his thriving domain, had come to Israel seeking wisdom and the truth about the God of the Jewish people. Responding to her quest for knowledge, Solomon had a throne set up for the queen beside his. "It was covered with silken carpets, adorned with fringes of gold and silver, and studded with diamonds and pearls. From this she listened while he delivered judgments."4 Queen Makeda also accompanied Solomon throughout his kingdom. She observed the wise, compassionate and spiritual ruler as he interacted with his subjects in everyday affairs. Speaking of the value of her visit with the King and her administration for him, Queen Makeda stated: "My Lord, how happy I am. Would that I could remain here always, if but as the humblest of your workers, so that I could always hear your words and obey you.

"How happy I am when I interrogate you! How happy when you answer me. My whole being is moved with pleasure; my soul is filled; my feet no longer stumble; I thrill with delight.

"Your wisdom and goodness," she continued, "are beyond all measure. They are excellence itself. Under your influence I am placing new values on life. I see light in the darkness; the firefly in the garden reveals itself in newer beauty. I discover added lustre in the pearl; a greater radiance in the morning star, and a softer harmony in the moonlight. Blessed be the God that brought me here; blessed be He who permitted your majestic mind to be revealed to me; blessed be the One who brought me into your house to hear your voice.

Solomon had a harem of over 700 wives and concubines, yet, he was enamored by the young Black virgin from Ethiopia. Although he held elaborate banquets in her honor and wined, dined and otherwise entertained her during the length of her visit, they both knew that, according to Ethiopian tradition, the Queen must remain chaste. Nevertheless, the Jewish monarch wished to plant his seed in Makeda, so that he might have a son from her regal African lineage. To this end the shrewd king conspired to conquer the affection of this young queen with whom he had fallen in love. When, after six months in Israel, Queen Makeda announced to King Solomon that she was ready to return to Ethiopia, he invited her to a magnificent farewell dinner at his palace. The meal lasted for several hours and featured hot, spicy foods that were certain to make all who ate thirsty and sleepy (as King Solomon had planned.) Since the meal ended very late, the king invited Queen Makeda to stay overnight in the palace in his quarters. She agreed as long as they would sleep in separate beds and the king would not seek to take advantage of her. He vowed to honor her chastity, but also requested that she not take anything in the palace. Outraged by such a suggestion, the Queen protested that she was not a thief and then promised as requested. Not long after the encounter, the Queen, dying of thirst, searched the palace for water. Once she found a large water jar and proceeded to drink, the King startled her by stating: "You have broken your oath that you would not take anything by force that is in my palace. The Queen protested, of course, that surely the promise did not cover something so insignificant and plentiful as water, but Solomon argued that there was nothing in the world more valuable than water, for without it nothing could live. Makeda reluctantly admitted the truth of this and apologized for her mistake, begging for water for her parched throat. Solomon, now released from his promise, assuaged her thirst and his own, immediately taking the Queen as his lover."6 The following day as the Queen and her entourage prepared to leave Israel, the King placed a ring on her hand and stated, "If you have a son, give this to him and send him to me." After returning to the land of Sheba, Queen Makeda did indeed have a son, whom she named Son-of-the-wise-man, and reared as a prince and her heir apparent to the throne. Upon reaching adulthood, the young man wished to visit his father, so the Queen prepared another entourage, this time headed by Tamrin. She sent a message to Solomon to anoint their son as king of Ethiopia and to mandate that thenceforth only the males descended from their son should rule Sheba. Solomon and the Jewish people rejoiced when his son arrived in Israel. The king anointed him as the Queen had requested and renamed him Menelik, meaning "how handsome he is." Though Solomon had many wives, only one had produced a son, Rehoboam, a boy of seven. So the king begged Menelik to remain, but the young prince would not. Solomon therefore called his leaders and nobles and announced that, since he was sending his first born son back to Ethiopia, he wanted all of them to send their firstborn sons "to be his counselors and officers." And they agreed to do so. Menelik asked his father for a relic of the Ark of the Covenant to take back with him to the land of Sheba. It is said that while Solomon intended to provide his son with a relic, the sons of the counselors, angry at having to leave their homes and go to Sheba with Menelik, actually stole the real Ark and took it to Ethiopia. Menelik returned to Sheba and, according to tradition, ruled wisely and well. And his famous line has continued down to the 20th century when, even now, the ruler of Ethiopia is the "conquering lion of Judah" descended directly from King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.

Friday, December 01, 2006

ነገስታት (እቴጌ ) ዘ ኢትዮጵያ

(EMPRESSE OF ETHIOPIA)
CANDACE
........ካለፈው የቀጠለ

ግብጽ የነገሰው የመጨረሻው ኩሽ(ኢትዮጵያ )ፈርኦን በጦርነት ድል በተደረገ ጊዜ, ያኔ የኢትዮጵያ ዋና ከተማ በነበረችው ናፓታ (ማራው) ነበር ፍርኦን ታውታሞን የሸሸው:: ይህች ከተማ የሮማውያን ሃይል እስከየት መሆኑን ለክታ ማሳየት የተቻልትን ሃያል ካንድክ (CANDACE) አስነስታለች:: ታሪክ ጸህፊዎች ጡንቸኛ በማለት ጥንካሬዋን የሚነግሩላት ንግስተ ኢትዮጵያ , ጦር ሜዳ ፍልሚያ ላይ አንድ አይኗ የተጎዳ አይናማ ነበረች::
የነጭ እና ጥቁር አባይ መነሻ ማወቅ የወደዱት ሮማዊውያን ወታደሮች የኢትዮጵያን ድንበር ጥሰው ማለፍ ነበረባቸው, ልክ ግብጽን በጣር ሃይላቸው እንዳስገበሩ ኢትዮጵያንም አስገብረው:: ንግስቲቱ አጼ ኦውገስተስ የላካቸውን ወታደሮች አባይ ትወጣን አስዋን ላይ የሮማውን ጦር ፍልሚያ ገጥማ ድል ታደርጋለች; የኦገስተስ ምስልን የያዘ ሃውልት በሙሉ በወታደሮችዋ እንዲወድም ይሆናል::

ሮማውያኖች ሃይላቸውን እንደገና አጠናክረው የመልሶ ማጥቃት ለማድረግ እስከ ናፓ ኢትዮጵያ ቢገቡም ዕቅዳቸው አልሰራ ለሁለተኛ ጊዜ:: ይህኛው ከቀድሞ የሮማን ጦር ይልቅ ከፍተኛ ውርደትን ተከናንብቦ ነበር:: ኢትዮጵያን በወረራ ድል የማድረጉን ጉዳይ ወደኋላ ተደርጎ ማስተባበያ እንዲሆን የኢትዮጵያዋ ንግስት ሰላም በመጠየቅዋ ንጉሰነገስት ኦውገስተስ ፈቅደዋል ሲባል ተነገር::

For More Details On The Article

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

ነገስታት (እቴጌ ) ዘ ኢትዮጵያ

(EMPRESSES OF ETHIOPIA)

ኢትዮጵያ በጥንታዊነትዋን ቀደምት መሆንዋን የሚመሰክሩላት አበይት የታሪክ ምስክሮች አሉ :: የነበሩዋት ሥርወ -መንግስትታት ወይም ዳይናስቲስ በህግና በመንግስት አወቃቀር ና ስርዐት ህዝቦችዋ ከጥንት ጀምሮ የበላይነትን ስፍራ መያዛቸውን ይናገራሉ :: ሦስት ሺህ ዘመን ብለን የምንቆጥረው እንግዴ ከ ንግስተ ሳባ , መክዳ , ና ከንጉስ ሰለሞን ልጅ ንጉስ ቀዳማዊ ሚኒሊክ (=የንጉስ ልጅ ) ጀምረን እስከ ቀዳማዊ ኃ /ሥላሴ የነበረውን ዘመን ብቻ ነው :: ከሦስት ሺው ዘመናት በፊት የነበረችው ኢትዮጵያ እንደምን ነበረች የሚለውን አትኩሮት ጉልህ አድርጎ ማሳየት ነው የዚህ መጣጥፍ ግንባር ቀደም ሚና :: ( ታሪክን ወደኋላ ሄደን ስንመረምር የቀድሞዋ ኢትዮጵያ የመንን , ሊቢያን , የታችኛው አባይ /ናይል ና ከፊል /በጠቅላላ ሱዳንን ጭምር የምታጠቃልል መሆንዋን ከግንዛቤ ማስገባት ሊኖርብን ነው )::

የካንዳንስ (= የንግስቶች የንግስና የማዕረግ መጠሪያ ስም ) ዘመኖችን ኢትዮጵያ አሳልፋለች :: ወንዶች ነገስታት በሦስት ሺህ ው ዘመነናት ውስጥ እንደተፈራረቁ ሁሉ ከዚያ በፊት ንግስቶች በማያቋርጥ ሁኔታ ዘጠና ሰባት የሚደርሱ የተከበሩና የተፈሩ ሀያላን ከንግስት መክዳ ቀደም ብለው ገዝተዋል ::
በዝነኛነታቸው በጦርነት ስልት አዋቂነታቸው ታሪክ ሁሌ የሚያነሳቸው የነበሩም ነበሩ :: የነዚህ ንግስቶች ንግስና ያበቃው ይላሉ ጸሃፊዎች መክዳ , ንግስተ ሳባ ላይ እንደሆነ ይናገራሉ :: ኃያላን ስለምሆናቸው የተመዘገበ ለምሳሌ ያንዲቱን ታሪክ ይህን ይመስላል :: አለክሳንደር አለምን በማን አለብኝነት ሲያንበርክክ ና ክብርና ዝናን ሲቀዳጅ , በወቅቱ የኢትዮጵያ ካንደንስ (ንግስት ) የነበረችው በአለም ላይ በጦርነት ውጊያ መላቸው የአንቱታን ማዕረግ ከተቀዳጁት ጥቂት ተዋጊዎች አንዷ ነበረች :: ግብጽን (የላይኛው ?) አስገብሮ በጉጉት ይጠብቀው የነበረውን ና በንግስቲቱ ቀጥተኛ ትዕዛዝ በተጠንቀቅ የሚጠብቀውን የጥቁር ጦር ግን ኢትዮጵያን በመውረር መገናኛት አለክሳንደር ምርጫው አላደረገውም :: ያለውን ክብርና ሞግስ የማጣቱ በተለይ ደግም በሴት ጄነራል ከስጋት ጥሎት ነበር ::

ኢትዮጵያ በንግስቶች ዘመን በሃብት ና በኃይል የጠነከረች መሆንዋ ብቻ ሳይሆን እስከአሁን ድረስ ስማቸው የሚነገርላቸው የአውሮፓ የቅኔ ሰዎች በቅኔዎቻቸው አሞግሰዋታል :: በቅዱሳን መጻህፍት ስለፍርድ አዋቂዎቹ ስለሰለጠኑት ስለድንቆቹ ኢትዮጵያዊያን በተለያዪ ስፍራዎች በተለይ በመጽሐፍ ቅዱስ ብሉይ ኪዳን ውስጥ አይሌ ስፍራ ሰፍረው ይገኛሉ :: በሃዲስ ኪዳንም የአንዲቱን ካንደስ ንግስተ ኢትዮጵያ ታሪክ የሚዘክር በ ሃዋርያት ሥራ 8:27 ተጠቅሶ ይገኛል ::
ይቀጥላል .........amargna

Monday, November 27, 2006

EMPRESS OF ETHIOPIA

CANDACE

EMPRESS OF ETHIOPIA (332 B.C.)

Alexander reached Kemet (Ancient Egypt) in 332 B.C., on his world conquering rampage. But one of the greatest generals of the ancient world was also the Empress of Ethiopia. This formidable black Queen Candace, was world famous as a military tactician and field commander. Legend has it that Alexander could not entertain even the possibilty of having his world fame and unbroken chain of victories marred by risking a defeat, at last, by a woman. He halted his armies at the borders of Ethiopia and did not invade to meet the waiting black armies with their Queen in personal command.