By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
The classical, Byzantine, style of Ethiopian art, characteristic of 
the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, developed significantly in the 
seventeenth century. This was the so-called Gondar period, so named 
after the city of that name, in the north-west of the country, which 
became the capital of the Ethiopian realm in 1636.
This period, which witnessed the construction of the city’s famous 
castle-like palaces, and the development of a more urban form of court 
life, may likewise have seen the expansion, and reorganisation, of 
scriptoria for the making of manuscripts.
Art as Seen by the Artist
The period also coincided with a significant opening up of Ethiopian 
art, and in particular with the depiction of Ethiopian scenes, and 
Ethiopian life, as actually seen by the artist.
Ethiopian art in this period remained religious in both purpose and 
content, and continued to be devoted almost exclusively to Biblical and 
other religious themes. Paintings were, however, steadily being 
Ethiopianised. The old Ethiopian artistic rules, such as good persons 
being shown in full face, with two eyed, and evil people in profile, 
with one eye, were retained, and paintings continued to be devoid of 
perspective. It became, however, common to depict Biblical personages as
 dressed in Ethiopian clothing, riding mules or horses with typical 
Ethiopian saddles, stirrups (often to hold only the big toe!) and other 
trappings, as well as carrying contemporary Ethiopian spears, shields 
and other weapons. Banquet scenes would depict Ethiopian-style pots, the
 masob, or typical Ethiopian basket table, and the barelle, or Ethiopian
 drinking-glass. Ploughing would likewise be very visibly carried out by
 Ethiopian zebu, or humped, oxen, pulling traditional Ethiopian ploughs,
 and kings and queens would be wearing Ethiopianstyle crowns. Such 
paintings, unlike those of earlier times, are thus documents of 
fundamental importance for Ethiopian social history.
Islamic Manuscripts
This study has focused mainly on Ethiopian Christian manuscripts, 
which, from the quantitative point of view, represents the main corpus 
of the country’s traditional literature. Mention should, however, also 
be made to Ethiopian Islamic and Falasha, or Bta Esra’l, manuscripts.
Ethiopian Islamic manuscripts consisted mainly of copies of the 
Quran, and other works in Arabic, but also included a number of texts in
 Adare, or Harari, the local Semitic language traditionally spoken only 
within the walled city of Harar. Harari manuscripts, which resemble 
Islamic works produced elsewhere in the Horn of Africa, probably date 
back to the early centuries of the Muslim era. Few, if any, Harari 
manuscripts are, however, extant for the period prior the seventeenth 
century.
The first description of Harari manuscripts was written by the 
nineteenth century British traveller and Orientalist, Sir Richard 
Burton, translator of the Arabian Nights, who observed that “no Eastern 
country save Persia” could “surpass them in strength and appearance”.
Such manuscripts, like the Christian manuscripts described in the 
previous article, have tooled leather covers, but differ from the latter
 in that they were generally written on paper rather than on parchment. 
Unlike the Christian manuscripts they had leather flaps to cover, and 
protect, the back of the volume. Covers are often decorated with ornate 
floral designs, in a few instances with a quotation from the Quran, 
cursing anyone who illegally touched the manuscript.
Falasha Manuscripts
Falasha manuscripts, which like those of the Ethiopian Christian 
Church, were invariably made of parchment, and were written in Ge’ez. 
Falasha texts centred on the Old Testament, to the rigid exclusion of 
the New. Most Falasha writings were identical to those of the Ethiopian 
Christians. Falasha bindings, though not generally adorned with the 
Cross, were likewise generally similar to those of Christian 
manuscripts. This was scarcely surprising as many Falasha manuscripts 
were in fact written, and bound, by members of the Ethiopian Christian 
clergy.
Ethiopian Manuscripts Today
Ethiopia has a rich manuscript tradition.
Christian manuscripts cover a wide range of literature, including not
 only Bibles, religious service books, homilies, Biblical commentaries, 
and works on theology, but also writings on ecclesiastical and civil 
law, lives of saints, local as well as foreign, history, chronography 
and medicine.
Harari manuscripts likewise contain, in addition of the Quran, a 
wealth of other material, both religious and secular. The latter 
includes legal, historic, and other material.
Many Ethiopian manuscripts, particularly those of the Christian 
tradition, are furthermore important in that their beginning or end 
pages were used to record details of marriages and marriage settlements,
 land deeds and sales, inventories of property, and other such-like 
interesting information.
A Quarter of a Million Manuscripts
Ethiopia is the repository of an immense number of manuscripts. 
Printing was introduced into the country only at the end of the last 
century, so many Ethiopian churches and monasteries still rely largely 
on volumes in parchment. The country, which is almost the size of Spain 
and France combined, contains a total of around 30,000 churches and 
monasteries, few of which possess less than a dozen manuscripts each. It
 would therefore seem safe to assume that the country must be the 
repository of at least a quarter or a third of a million manuscript 
volumes.
Many Ethiopian mosques likewise still rely on manuscript Qurans. 
These, being for the most part written on paper, are considerably more 
fragile than Ethiopian Christian manuscripts, and therefore in even 
greater need of protection, and conservation.
The EMML
To preserve Ethiopia’s important historical and cultural heritage an 
ambitious project for the microfilming of Ethiopian manuscripts was 
initiated in 1971. Based on a partnership between the Ethiopian Orthodox
 Church, the Ethiopian Government, later represented by its Ministry of 
Culture, and St John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota, it led to 
the establishment, in 1973, of a Ethiopian Manuscript Microfilm Library,
 generally referred to by its initials, EMML.The last volume to be 
published to date, Volume X, has reached manuscript number 5,000, and 
there are many many more microfilms for which catalogues have still to 
be catalogued. It is, however, deplorable that actual microfilming by 
the EMML ceased some years ago, and the authorities concerned, as far as
 we are aware, do not seem to be giving the matter the serious attention
 it deserves.
Microfilming, of Christian manuscripts, has also been carried out, on
 a smaller scale, by other institutions, most notably by UNESCO.
Such work, important as it is, is still far from complete. 
Manuscripts in many parts of the country have still not been 
microfilmed. Much has still to be done to record the country’s 
historical, cultural, and especially artistic, heritage. This is the 
more urgent in that the opening up of tourism has been followed by 
increasingly frequent illegal sales of works of art.
Wanted: The Microfilming of Islamic Manuscripts
The EMML and UNESCO projects have up to now been restricted entirely 
to the microfilming of Ethiopian Christian manuscripts. It is 
imperative, as I have urged in previous atticles in “Addis Tribune”, 
that microfilming be extended to Harari, and other Islamic manuscripts. 
Being written, as already noted, on paper, their life expectation is far
 less than that of Ethiopian parchment manuscripts. A project for the 
systematic microfilming of Harai , and other Muslim manuscripts, is 
therefore long overdue.
Urgently Needed: The Photographing of Church Paintings
Ethiopia’s increasing wealth, so charcteristic of recent years, has 
produced a new economic climate in which many communities are restoring,
 and hence repainting, their churches. This is of course a simple remedy
 for the destruction of much of the country’s artistic heritage.
It is accordingly important to embark on a systematic, and ambitious,
 programme for the photographing of church paintings, as well to 
re-activate, the microfilming of manuscripts.
 Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
No comments:
Post a Comment