Abstract
A. Catherine D'Andrea, Andrea Manzo, Michael J. Harrower, and Alicia L. Hawkins
The Pre-Aksumite and Aksumite Settlement of NE Tigrai, Ethiopia
Journal of Field Archaeology 33 (2008) 151--176
The first systematic archaeological survey conducted in NE Tigrai has
produced new insights into the settlement history of the Pre-Aksumite
and Aksumite kingdoms (800 B.C.--A.D. 700) of northern Ethiopia.
Results of settlement data and ceramic and lithic artifact analyses
from Gulo-Makeda indicate that the region experienced marked continuity
in site occupations through time, suggesting a degree of political and
economic stability that contrasts to the Aksum-Yeha regions. Cultural
links to Eritrea including Matara and the Ancient Ona culture are
evident in ceramics dating to Pre-Aksumite and later Middle to Late
Aksumite times. Sites in Gulo-Makeda are strategically located along
historically known trade routes in areas with moderate to high water
flow potential, suggesting that control of trade and high agricultural
productivity were factors in the development of elite groups in the
region. Gulo-Makeda grew from having a culturally peripheral role in
the Pre-Aksumite kingdom to being a center of some importance during
Classic Aksumite times, as evidenced by the presence of elite trade
artifacts.
Volume 33 Number 2 (Summer 2008)
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Last modified: 30 May 2008