Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern Ethiopia

This study aims to explore Däbrä Aron, a least known monastic rock-cut church of the 14th century of Christian Ethiopia. Däbrä Aron is named after abba Aron, a famous Ethiopian monk, the founder and hewer of the monastery, which is established at Däbrä Daret, a mountain situated along the upper cou...

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Main Author: Tsegaye Ebabey Demissie
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Catholic Academy in Warsaw 2020-11-01
Series:Warszawskie Studia Teologiczne
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Online Access:https://czasopismowst.pl/index.php/wst/article/view/242
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author Tsegaye Ebabey Demissie
author_facet Tsegaye Ebabey Demissie
author_sort Tsegaye Ebabey Demissie
collection DOAJ
description This study aims to explore Däbrä Aron, a least known monastic rock-cut church of the 14th century of Christian Ethiopia. Däbrä Aron is named after abba Aron, a famous Ethiopian monk, the founder and hewer of the monastery, which is established at Däbrä Daret, a mountain situated along the upper course of Täkkäzze River. It is a monastery that integrates troglodytic and mountainous monastic landscapes. Like Däbrä Gol, where Aron experienced his monastic life, Däbrä Daret was centre for coenobitic monastic life and opposition against immoral practices of Solomonic kings who in different times exiled Aron and other monastic men. The church is excavated in to a white soft tuff rock and it is one of the few instances for the declining rock-church tradition of the Solomonic period. Expansion works are made internally by using gudəb, abba Aron’s ax-like excavation tool which is still preserved in the church. It has a complex layout constituting different parts – elongated anteroom, aisles, nave, tripartite sanctuary and compartmented chapels – separated by unevenly shaped columns with rough capitals and arches. This cave is unique largely by its səqurät, aperture of the cave’s roof opened into the sky. The nave’s səqurät, rectangular in shape, allows, except rainfall droplets, entrance of sunlight into the church. The reputation of Däbrä Aron is partly associated with the acceptance of this feature as icon of the architectural excellence and spiritual devotion of abba Aron by whom many Christians were attracted into his monastic life. The cave also has an engraved processional cross decorated with symbolical trifoliate motifs.
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spelling doaj-art-1053b94581cd49b3a1394a384dbc6c0c2025-02-03T18:49:03ZdeuCatholic Academy in WarsawWarszawskie Studia Teologiczne0209-37822719-75302020-11-0133110.30439/WST.2020.1.11Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern EthiopiaTsegaye Ebabey Demissie0College of Social Sciences and Humanities, Hawassa University, EthiopiaDepartment of Anthropology This study aims to explore Däbrä Aron, a least known monastic rock-cut church of the 14th century of Christian Ethiopia. Däbrä Aron is named after abba Aron, a famous Ethiopian monk, the founder and hewer of the monastery, which is established at Däbrä Daret, a mountain situated along the upper course of Täkkäzze River. It is a monastery that integrates troglodytic and mountainous monastic landscapes. Like Däbrä Gol, where Aron experienced his monastic life, Däbrä Daret was centre for coenobitic monastic life and opposition against immoral practices of Solomonic kings who in different times exiled Aron and other monastic men. The church is excavated in to a white soft tuff rock and it is one of the few instances for the declining rock-church tradition of the Solomonic period. Expansion works are made internally by using gudəb, abba Aron’s ax-like excavation tool which is still preserved in the church. It has a complex layout constituting different parts – elongated anteroom, aisles, nave, tripartite sanctuary and compartmented chapels – separated by unevenly shaped columns with rough capitals and arches. This cave is unique largely by its səqurät, aperture of the cave’s roof opened into the sky. The nave’s səqurät, rectangular in shape, allows, except rainfall droplets, entrance of sunlight into the church. The reputation of Däbrä Aron is partly associated with the acceptance of this feature as icon of the architectural excellence and spiritual devotion of abba Aron by whom many Christians were attracted into his monastic life. The cave also has an engraved processional cross decorated with symbolical trifoliate motifs. https://czasopismowst.pl/index.php/wst/article/view/242Monasticismrock-cut churchesDäbrä Aronabba Aronhistoryarchitecture
spellingShingle Tsegaye Ebabey Demissie
Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern Ethiopia
Warszawskie Studia Teologiczne
Monasticism
rock-cut churches
Däbrä Aron
abba Aron
history
architecture
title Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern Ethiopia
title_full Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern Ethiopia
title_short Däbrä Aron: A Rock-cut Monastic Church, Mäqet District of Northern Ethiopia
title_sort dabra aron a rock cut monastic church maqet district of northern ethiopia
topic Monasticism
rock-cut churches
Däbrä Aron
abba Aron
history
architecture
url https://czasopismowst.pl/index.php/wst/article/view/242
work_keys_str_mv AT tsegayeebabeydemissie dabraaronarockcutmonasticchurchmaqetdistrictofnorthernethiopia