By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
Contacts between the lands which became to be known as Ethiopia and 
India date back to the dawn of history. The two countries, though 
geographically remote from one another, had largely complimentary 
economies. Ethiopia was a source of gold, ivory and slaves, all three of
 them in great demand in India. India by contrast produced cotton and 
silk, pepper and other spices, all in great demand in Ethiopia, as well 
as some manufactured articles consumed by the elite.
Trade Winds
Communications between the two countries, or regions, were 
facilitated by the Trade Winds. These blew, in the summer months, from 
north to south in the Red 
Sea, and then, across the Indian Ocean, from 
south-west to north-east. Winds, in the winter months, blew in the 
opposite direction. Such winds were important throughout the age of 
sailing boats, for they thrust vessels from the Ethiopian coast to that 
of India in the summer, and brought them back in the winter.
Commerce between Ethiopia and India also owed much to the fact that 
the seas between them formed part of a major international trade route, 
which linked the Mediterranean – and Roman – world with that of the 
East, including China.
Ancient Times
Indian contacts with the Red Sea coast of Africa are poorly 
documented for very early times, but probably date back long before the 
Christian era. In the first century AD the record, however, gains 
clarity. The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, a Graeco-Egyptian trade 
manual, states that Indian trade with the Red Sea area was largely based
 on Ariak, i.e. north-western India, as well as the Gulf of Cambay, 
Barugaza, or modern Broach, and, to a lesser extent, Limurak, or country
 of the Tamils.
Indian commerce, according to the Periplus, extended to many 
localities situated to the west of the sub-continent. At the mouth of 
the Red Sea the island of Sokotra, then known as Dioskouridou, was thus 
frequented by some Indian traders. This island, most of whose 
inhabitants spoke a tongue akin to Ethiopia’s classical language Ge‘ez, 
traded, the Periplus states, with both Limurak and Barugaza, and was 
permanently settled by a number of Indians.
Further west, on the Horn of African coast, the great port of Malao, 
today’s Berbera, likewise apparently dealt in a large quantity of cloth,
 almost certainly imported from India.
Adulis
Adule, or Adulis, the main port of the Aksumite empire, which was 
situated further west again, within the confines of the Red Sea, also 
traded extensively with India. The Periplus, discussing this ancient 
Ethiopian commerce, explains that “from the inner parts of Ariak” were 
imported:
Indian iron and steel.
The broader Indian cloth called monakh
Cloth called sagmatognai.
Belts
Garments called gaunakai
Mallow cloth
A little muslin
Coloured lac”
Arhaeological Evidence
The importance of such trade is confirmed by archaeological evidence.
 Aksumite coins have been discovered, over the years, in several parts 
of south-west India, while a hoard of Indian Kushana money was found in 
the vicinity of the northern Ethiopian monastery of Dabra Damo.
The Coming of Christianity, and Changing Alphabets
On-going contacts across the Indian Ocean had an incidental, but 
crucially important, consequence in the religious and cultural field. 
Frumentius, a Christian youth from Syria bound for India, was 
shipwrecked off the Ethiopian coast, around 330AD, and was subsequently 
instrumental in converting the Aksumite realm to Christianity.
The period immediately following the coming of Christianity witnessed
 interesting cultural developments, which took place at roughly the same
 time on both sides of the Indian Ocean. The writing of the Ethiopian 
language, Ge‘ez, and of the Indian, Brahmi and Kharoshi, evolved in an 
almost identical manner, by the addition of small signs, or other 
modifications, to the basic consonantal letters, to express vowel 
sounds. The Ethiopian and Indian alphabets were thus both transformed 
into syllabaries. How these changes took place, and whether they were 
related to each other – as one may suspect, cannot, however, be 
established.
Contacts across the Indian Ocean, which were clearly important 
throughout this entire period, found expression, a century or so later, 
in the visit to India of a Bishop of Adulis, by name Moses. He travelled
 to the sub-continent in the company of a Coptic bishop from Egypt, to 
examine Brahmin philosophy.
Kosmos Indikopleustes
Continued commerce between Ethiopia and India was later documented, 
in the early sixth century, by an Egyptian trader-cum-monk, Kosmos 
Indikopleustes. He records that the Horn of Africa, which he calls 
Barbaria, produced frankincense, as well as “many other articles of 
merchandise”, which were exported to India. He adds that Taprobane, i.e.
 Ceylon, was visited by merchants from Adulis.
Further evidence of the significance of Aksumite trading with India 
is embodied in a Greek text, written by another Egyptian writer of the 
time. It states that the early sixth century Aksumite emperor Kaleb, 
when carrying out an expedition to South Arabia, in retaliation for the 
massacre of Christians at Nagran, made use of a number of vessels from 
India, as well as from several other countries.
Shared Culture
Such ancient contacts across the Indian Ocean seem to have found 
material expression in certain elements of a shared culture. These 
include the cultivation, on either side of the ocean, of both cotton and
 sugar; the presence in the two regions of zebu, or humped, cattle; the 
existence of “African” lions in the Gujarat area of north-west India; 
the erection of fairly similar megalithic stones, in for example 
Ethiopian Gurageland and the Indian Naga hills; the use, by weavers, of 
almost identical looms in both countries; similar dress (the Ethiopian 
shamma and the Indian sari); and highly spiced food (Ethiopian barbar 
and Indian curry).
Medieval Times
Trade between the Ethiopian region and India in the medieval period 
is relatively well documented. The Portuguese traveller, Tome Pires, 
writing of Cambay in the early sixteenth century, tells of the arrival 
there of “Abyssinians”, as well as Arabs, and describes the area’s trade
 with the main Gulf of Aden ports of Africa: Zayla and Berbera. His 
Bolognese contemporary, Ludovico di Varthema, likewise reports that 
Calicut was visited by merchants from Ethiopia, besides others from 
Arabia, Persia, Syria and Turkey.
Aden
Much of this trade centred at this time on the notable Arab 
commercial city of Aden. Varthema described it as “the great 
rendez-vous” for “all ships” coming from “India Major and Minor,” 
Ethiopia and Persia. The Venetian merchant Andrea Corsali likewise 
called Aden “the principal port of Arabia and Ethiopia”,while Barbosa 
reported that “many ships” arrived there from both Zayla and Berbera. 
Aden’s importance was also recognised by Brother Thomas, an Ethiopian 
visitor to Venice, who spoke of it as “the emporium of India” and “the 
gateway for all the spice and cloth and other things” brought by land to
 the then temporary Ethiopian capital, Barara. (Don’t, dear reader, ask 
where this was!)
Some Indian trade with Africa seem also to have passed by way of the 
Maldive islands, These were described by the fourteenth century Arab 
writer Dimashki as a stopping place for ships going to “Abyssinia”, 
besides Hormuz, Yaman, Mogadishu, and Zanj.
Massawa, Zayla, and Berbera
The three principal ports handling Ethiopian and Horn of African 
imports from India were then, as for centuries to come, Massawa, on the 
Red Sea, and Zayla and Berbera, as we have seen, on the Gulf of Aden 
coast.
Massawa, by this time already the main port of the Ethiopian 
highlands, was a place of sizable Indian trade, an was mentioned by the 
Portuguese, who report seeing “two Gujarat ships” there in 1520. 
Articles from India imported through the port were on sale, according to
 the Portuguese traveller Francisco Alvares, at the great market of 
Manadeley, in southern Tegray, where he saw “merchants of all nations”, 
among them “Moors [i.e. Muslims] of India”.
Zayla, according to Varthema, was likewise a place of “immense 
traffic”, especially in gold and ivory, which were exported to India, as
 well as to Persia, Arabia and Egypt. Indian goods imported through the 
port were taken, by camel caravan, to the “great mercantile city” of 
Gendebelu, where the Ethiopian monk Brother Antonio states that 
commodities were “brought from the whole of India”.
Berbera was visited, according to the Portuguese, Duarte Barbosa, by 
“many ships”, which carried “much merchandise” from Aden and Cambay, and
 returned with large quantities of African gold and ivory. Indian 
articles imported at the port were transported inland by camel, Corsali 
notes, to Ethiopia, which he termed “the country of churches”. The 
importance of this trade route was confirmed by Brother Thomas, who 
states that merchandise taken from Berbera to Shawa came from “Aden, 
Persia, Combaia [i.e. Cambay], and India”.
Some imports from India sometimes also reached the Ethiopian 
highlands by way of the Indian Ocean coast. Brother Thomas claims that 
“much merchandise” was brought there on ships of Cambay, and were later 
carried by caravan to Barara.
Penetrating the Ethiopian Interior
Indian imports, through one port or another, penetrated far into the 
Ethiopian interior. The chronicle of Emperor Zar’a Ya‘qob (1434-1468) 
tells of that monarch presenting silken vestments to the great monastery
 of Dabra Libanos, while Tome Pires observed that “the most prized 
things” in Abyssinia included coarse cloth from Cambay, as well as 
silks, also from India.
Emperor Galawdwos (1540-1559) later declared that the people of 
Damot, in the far south-west of the country, gave gold “in exchange for 
inferior and coarse Indian cloth”. Textiles then, as in Aksumite times, 
in fact constituted Ethiopia’s principal on-going import from India.
Indian silks throughout Ethiopia were highly regarded by all who 
could afford them, Emperor Lebn Dengel (1508-1540) for example was 
described, by Alvares, as “dressed in a rich mantle of (gold) brocade, 
and silk shirts of wide sleeves”. His consort, Queen Sabla Wangel, 
according to the Portuguese warrior Miguel de Castanhoso, was “all 
covered to the ground with silk, with a large flowing cloak… she was 
clothed in a very thin white Indian cloth”.The Abun, or head of the 
church, was likewise often dressed, Alvares says, in “a white cotton 
robe of fine thin stuff”, called casha, in India, “whence it came”.
 Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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