All Object Lessons
Money & Trade

The Aksumite Coin: Africa's Christian Empire in Gold

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, ethics, citizenship, art, language
Core question How did one African kingdom — named by an ancient Persian prophet as one of the four great powers of the world — use small gold coins to tell the story of its trade, its faith, and its place in the ancient world?
Aksumite coins, made between 270 and 630 CE in what is now northern Ethiopia and Eritrea. The Kingdom of Aksum was named by the Persian prophet Mani as one of the four great powers of the ancient world. King Ezana's coins around 333 CE were the first to use the Christian cross. Photo: www.britishmuseum.org / Wikimedia Commons / CC0
Introduction

In the Persian Empire, around the year 240 CE, a religious teacher named Mani wrote a list of the four great powers of the world. He named Rome, Persia, China — and Aksum. Three of these are familiar to most students. The fourth was a major African kingdom that flourished in what is now northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, and is much less widely known. Aksum had been growing in power since at least the first century CE. By the third century, when Mani wrote, it controlled a network of cities and towns, several major ports, and trade routes that stretched from sub-Saharan Africa to India. Aksum's main port, Adulis on the Red Sea coast, was a major hub of Indian Ocean trade. Aksumite ships carried African gold, ivory, exotic animals, frankincense, and slaves north to Egypt and Rome and east to Yemen, Arabia, and India. In return, they received Roman wine, glass, fabrics, and metal goods, plus Indian textiles, spices, and gemstones. From about 270 CE, under King Endubis, Aksum began minting its own coins. This was extraordinary. No other sub-Saharan African state in antiquity issued its own coinage. (Some North African states under Roman influence had minted coins earlier; Aksum was independent.) The Aksumite coins were made in gold, silver, and bronze. The gold coins were almost the same weight as the Roman aureus — clear evidence that Aksum was trading with Rome and wanted its coins to be acceptable in Roman markets. The coins were inscribed in Greek (the international trade language) on the gold pieces, with the king's head and a personal motto. Around 333 CE, King Ezana converted to Christianity. He was tutored as a child by a Syrian Christian named Frumentius, who became the first bishop of Aksum. Ezana's later coins replaced the older crescent-and-disc symbols (representing the pre-Christian Aksumite religion) with the Christian cross. This was one of the very first uses of the Christian cross on any coinage anywhere in the world — possibly slightly before the Christian coins of the Roman Emperor Constantine. Aksum continued minting Christian coins for another three centuries. As the kingdom declined in the 7th century, the coinage stopped. But the kingdom's legacy continued: modern Ethiopia traces its identity directly to Aksum; the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, one of the oldest Christian denominations in the world, traces its lineage to King Ezana's conversion; and the Ge'ez language survives today as the liturgical language of Ethiopian Christianity. This lesson asks who the Aksumites were, what their coins teach us, and why this great African civilisation has been so often overlooked in standard 'world history'.

The object
Origin
The Kingdom of Aksum (also spelled Axum), centred in modern northern Ethiopia and Eritrea. Coins were minted at Aksum, the capital city. The kingdom flourished from about 100 CE to 700 CE, with its peak in the 4th to 6th centuries.
Period
Aksumite coins were minted from about 270 CE under King Endubis to about 630 CE under the last kings. About 18 named kings are known from the coinage. Coins were made in gold (chrysos), silver (argyros), and bronze (lepton).
Made of
Gold (high purity, often over 90 percent), silver, and bronze (copper alloy). Some silver and bronze coins were partly gilded with gold to highlight specific symbols, especially the king's head or the cross. The technique used a mercury-gold mixture that was then heated.
Size
Aksumite gold coins were about 15 to 21 mm in diameter and weighed 2.5 to 2.8 grams (about half a Roman aureus). Silver coins were smaller and lighter. Bronze coins varied in size. All were small enough to fit in the palm of a hand.
Number of objects
About 15,000 to 20,000 Aksumite coins survive today across museum and private collections worldwide. Major collections are held by the British Museum (London), the Walters Art Museum (Baltimore), the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford), and the Aksum Museum (Ethiopia). Many were found in southern Arabia (modern Yemen) and India, showing the wide reach of Aksumite trade.
Where it is now
Major museum collections worldwide. The British Museum has one of the most complete collections, catalogued by Stuart Munro-Hay in 1999. Collections also exist at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, and the Aksum Museum in Ethiopia, which holds many local finds.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Aksum is one of the great African civilisations that has been historically underemphasised in Western teaching. How will you correct this without overcorrecting?
  2. The Christian heritage of Ethiopia is one of the oldest in the world. How will you handle this with the same respect you would give to other ancient Christian traditions?
  3. Modern Ethiopia and Eritrea both claim Aksum as part of their heritage, sometimes in tension with each other. How will you handle this honestly?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
In the year 240 CE, the Persian religious teacher Mani — founder of the religion called Manichaeism — wrote a list of what he saw as the four great powers of the world. He named Rome, Persia, and China. The fourth was Aksum. This is striking. Most modern world history textbooks barely mention Aksum, if they mention it at all. Yet a contemporary Persian observer ranked it alongside the empires we treat as the great civilisations of the ancient world. What did Mani see that modern textbooks have missed? Mani was looking from Persia, in the centre of the trade routes connecting Europe, Africa, and Asia. From his vantage point, he could see Aksum's ships coming up the Red Sea, Aksumite goods circulating in markets, Aksumite gold flowing into Persia and Rome. He saw a major trading kingdom that controlled a key route between sub-Saharan Africa and the rest of the ancient world. Aksum had been growing for centuries. Archaeological evidence shows the Pre-Aksumite culture in the region from at least 1000 BCE. The Kingdom of D'mt may have been an early predecessor in the same area, possibly with cultural ties to Saba (in modern Yemen) across the Red Sea. By the 1st century CE, the Roman writer of the 'Periplus of the Erythraean Sea' (a guide to Red Sea trade) describes Aksum as a major power, with the port of Adulis as a key trade hub, exporting ivory, tortoise shell, rhinoceros horn, and other African goods. Why might one African kingdom rise to be one of the world's four great powers?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several factors together. Geography: Aksum sat at the northern tip of the Ethiopian Highlands, with control of trade routes from the African interior down to the Red Sea coast. The port of Adulis (near modern Massawa in Eritrea) was a perfect Indian Ocean trade hub. Resources: Aksum had access to gold from the African interior, ivory from elephants, and other goods that the Roman world wanted. Agriculture: the highlands were fertile, supporting a large population (perhaps 20,000-30,000 in the city of Aksum itself, with hundreds of thousands in the kingdom). Trade networks: Aksumite ships and merchants reached Rome, Persia, India, and Sri Lanka. Cosmas Indicopleustes, a 6th-century Greek-Egyptian merchant who travelled to India, saw Aksumite coins in everyday use there. Political organisation: a strong centralised monarchy with a clear hierarchy and a legal system. The kings were sometimes called 'Negus' (the same root as the modern title 'Negus' for Ethiopian emperors). Aksum also conquered parts of southern Arabia (modern Yemen) in the 6th century, briefly controlling territory on both sides of the Red Sea. The combination of geography, resources, trade, and organisation produced one of antiquity's major empires. Students should see that 'world history' as taught in many Western schools has often missed this. The Manichaean list of four great powers reminds us what was visible to people at the time: not just Rome, Persia, and China, but also Aksum. Recovering this is part of telling a more honest world history.

2
In about 270 CE, the Aksumite king Endubis began minting coins. This was a major decision. Coinage requires a stable government, access to precious metals, the technical skill to produce uniform coins, and a trading economy that needs them. Aksum had all four. The coins were made in three metals. Gold coins (called chrysos) for international trade, weighing about 2.5 to 2.8 grams — almost exactly half a Roman aureus. Silver coins (argyros) for medium-value transactions. Bronze coins (lepton) for everyday use within the kingdom. The gold coins were of remarkable purity, often over 90 percent gold. Some silver and bronze coins were partly gilded with gold to highlight specific symbols. The coins were inscribed in two languages. Gold coins, intended for international trade, were inscribed in Greek — the international trade language of the time, used across the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean. Silver and bronze coins, used mainly within the kingdom, were sometimes in Greek and increasingly in Ge'ez (the local Aksumite language, ancestor of modern Amharic and Tigrinya). The coins typically read 'King of the Aksumites' (in Greek: BACILEUC AXWMITWN; in Ge'ez: similar meaning). The early coins, before Christianity, showed pre-Christian religious symbols. The most common was the disc-and-crescent symbol — a sun disc with a crescent moon below or beside it, representing the major Aksumite deities including Mahrem (the war god), Astar (the sky god), and Beher (the sea god). These symbols connected to the wider South Arabian and Near Eastern religious traditions of the time. Why might Aksum mint coins in three metals and two languages?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because Aksum was a sophisticated trading economy with both internal and external commerce. The three metals served different markets. Gold coins were valuable enough to use in international trade — paying for Indian textiles or Roman wine, where small change would be impractical. Silver coins served medium-value transactions, perhaps paying soldiers or buying market goods in larger quantities. Bronze coins served everyday transactions within Aksum — buying bread, vegetables, or small services. The same three-tier system was used by the Roman Empire (gold aureus, silver denarius, bronze sestertius and as) and many other ancient states. The two languages reflect Aksum's international position. Greek was the lingua franca of Mediterranean and Indian Ocean trade — Roman merchants, Egyptian Greeks, Syrian Christians, and Indian and Yemeni traders all knew Greek. Aksumite gold coins inscribed in Greek were instantly readable across the trading world. Ge'ez, the local language with its own writing system (still used today in Ethiopia), was the language of the Aksumite people themselves. Coins for internal use could be inscribed in Ge'ez. The bilingual coinage shows a state that was both confident in its own identity (Ge'ez) and deeply engaged with international trade (Greek). The Greek inscriptions also tell us about Aksumite literacy. Someone in Aksum was producing carefully designed coins with accurate Greek lettering. The Aksumite kings could read Greek (and probably also Ge'ez and possibly Sabaean, the South Arabian language). The Aksumite court included scribes, scholars, and religious teachers who worked in multiple languages. This was a literate kingdom in deep contact with the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean worlds. Students should see that Aksumite coinage is evidence of a sophisticated civilisation. The coins are not just money; they are statements of a kingdom that knew its place in the ancient world and wanted to be visible in it.

3
Around 333 CE, something changed on the Aksumite coins. The disc-and-crescent symbol, used since King Endubis, disappeared. In its place came the Christian cross. The king at the centre of this change was Ezana. He was probably the son of the previous king, Ousanas. As a child, he was tutored by a Syrian Christian named Frumentius, who had been shipwrecked on the Red Sea coast and brought to the Aksumite court as a slave. Frumentius rose to become tutor to the royal family and eventually a trusted advisor. He converted Ezana to Christianity around 333 CE. Frumentius then went to Alexandria, the centre of Egyptian Christianity, where he was consecrated as the first bishop of Aksum. He returned to Ethiopia and established the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, which still exists today as one of the oldest Christian denominations in the world. Ezana's coins reflect his conversion. Early coins of his reign continue the disc-and-crescent symbol. Later coins show the cross — sometimes a simple cross, sometimes one held by the king or above his head. Some of his coins also include Christian phrases, like 'May this please the country' (in Greek) or 'By the grace of God' (later replaced by 'Christ is with us' under his successors). The timing is remarkable. The Roman Emperor Constantine had only recently converted to Christianity (around 312 CE) and his Christian coinage was just beginning to be developed. Ezana's Christian cross on Aksumite coins may be slightly earlier than any Roman Christian coin. Aksum and Rome were both adopting Christianity in the early 4th century, possibly in parallel rather than one following the other. This makes Aksum one of the earliest Christian states in the world. What does this teach us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

That the spread of Christianity was a global phenomenon, not just a European one. The early Christian world stretched from Britain to India, from Ireland to Ethiopia. The Aksumite, Armenian (converted around 301 CE), Georgian (converted around 327 CE), and Roman (converted by Constantine, 312 CE) states all became Christian within roughly the same period in the 4th century. The Ethiopian Church, traced directly to Ezana's conversion through Frumentius, has a continuous tradition of nearly 1,700 years. It uses Ge'ez as a liturgical language, has its own canon of scripture (slightly different from Western canons, including books like the Book of Enoch), its own calendar, and its own monasticism. Ethiopian monasteries like Debre Damo (founded by Saint Aregawi in the 6th century) preserved Christian texts and traditions through the medieval period. The wider point is that Christianity is not historically a 'European' religion. It started in the Middle East (Palestine, Syria, Egypt). It spread early to Africa (Egypt by the 1st century, Aksum by the 4th century, Nubia by the 6th century), to Asia (Armenia, Georgia, Syria, Iraq, India by the 4th century), and to Europe gradually. The Aksumite coins are evidence of one of the earliest African Christian states. Modern Ethiopia and Eritrea are heirs of this tradition. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church has about 50 million members today; the Eritrean Orthodox Church has about 3 million. Students should see that 'early Christianity' was geographically wide and culturally diverse from the very beginning. The Aksumite coins are one specific example.

4
Aksum's wealth depended on trade. The kingdom was at the centre of one of the great trade networks of the ancient world: the Red Sea and Indian Ocean trade. Aksumite ships carried African goods northward and eastward. From the African interior came gold (Aksum's main currency was gold), ivory, rhinoceros horn, hippopotamus hide, exotic animals like cheetahs and giraffes (sent as gifts to Roman and later Byzantine emperors), tortoise shell, frankincense and myrrh (for Roman religious and medical use), and slaves. From the kingdom itself came emerald-like beryl gemstones, salt, and crafted goods. From outside came Roman and Byzantine wine, olive oil, glass, fine textiles, metal tools and weapons. From Persia came silk and other fabrics. From India came cotton textiles, spices (especially black pepper, the same trade that brought pepper to Roman Britain — see the Hoxne pepper pot lesson), gemstones, and ironwork. From China indirectly came silk, which moved through Indian and Persian intermediaries. The trade was conducted through the port of Adulis. The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea (a Roman trade guide from about 50 CE) describes Adulis in detail, including the goods traded and the local customs. Cosmas Indicopleustes, a Greek-Egyptian merchant who travelled in the 6th century, describes seeing Aksumite coins in everyday use in the kingdom of Sri Lanka. Aksumite coins have been found archaeologically in Yemen (in the al-Madhariba hoard, with 868 Aksumite coins discovered in the 1980s), in southern India (sometimes pierced for use as jewellery), and across Egypt and the eastern Roman empire. In the 6th century, Aksum extended its power across the Red Sea. King Kaleb conquered the Himyarite kingdom in southern Arabia (modern Yemen) around 525 CE, partly to protect Christian populations there from a Jewish king who had massacred them. For a few decades, Aksum controlled territory on both sides of the Red Sea, the only African state ever to do so. Why might one African kingdom build such a wide trading network?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the geography made it possible and the politics made it valuable. Aksum was placed where African goods came down from the highland interior to the coast. Indian Ocean ships could reach Adulis from anywhere — Egyptian Greek merchants from Alexandria, Yemeni and Arabian traders from across the Red Sea, Persian merchants from the Persian Gulf, Indian merchants from the Malabar Coast. The Aksumites organised this commerce, built ports, minted coinage, maintained order along trade routes, and collected taxes. The wider point is that Indian Ocean trade was one of the great economic systems of the ancient world. It connected Africa, Arabia, Persia, India, Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia, and (less directly) China. Goods, people, ideas, and religions moved along these routes. Christianity reached India by the 4th century (the Saint Thomas Christians of Kerala still exist today). Buddhism reached Sri Lanka and Indonesia. Frankincense from Yemen reached Roman temples. Roman gold reached Indian merchants. Aksumite coins reached Sri Lanka. The Aksumite kingdom was one of the major nodes in this network. Its coins are physical evidence of its position. The same trade routes that brought Aksum its wealth also brought it Christianity (through Frumentius from the eastern Roman empire), eventually. The wealth and the religion came along the same maritime paths. Students should see that 'globalisation' is not a modern invention. The ancient Indian Ocean trade was a globalised economic system, with Aksum at its African end. End the discovery here. The kingdom flourished for centuries, then declined in the 7th century — partly because of the rise of Islam, which reshaped Red Sea trade, and partly because of internal pressures. The coinage stopped around 630 CE. But Aksum's legacy as the foundation of Ethiopian and Eritrean Christian civilisation continues today, almost 1,400 years later.

What this object teaches

An Aksumite coin is a coin minted by the Kingdom of Aksum, an African empire centred in modern northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, from about 270 CE to 630 CE. Aksum was named by the Persian prophet Mani around 240 CE as one of the four great powers of the ancient world, alongside Rome, Persia, and China. It was the only sub-Saharan African state in antiquity to issue its own coinage. Coins were made in gold (chrysos), silver (argyros), and bronze (lepton). Gold coins were used for international trade and were almost exactly half the weight of a Roman aureus, showing that Aksum traded with Rome. Coins were inscribed in Greek (international) and Ge'ez (local). Around 333 CE, King Ezana converted to Christianity, tutored by a Syrian Christian named Frumentius who became the first bishop of Aksum and founded what is now the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church — one of the oldest Christian denominations in the world. Ezana's coins are among the very first to use the Christian cross, possibly slightly earlier than Roman Christian coinage under Constantine. Aksum traded across the Red Sea and Indian Ocean from sub-Saharan Africa to India and Sri Lanka. Aksumite coins have been found in Yemen, India, and across the eastern Roman world. The kingdom briefly conquered Yemen in the 6th century. The coinage stopped around 630 CE as the kingdom declined, partly because of the rise of Islam and shifts in Red Sea trade. Modern Ethiopia and Eritrea both trace their identity to Aksum. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church has about 50 million members today, with the Eritrean Orthodox Church having about 3 million more. The Aksumite Obelisk, a 24-metre stone stele from the same kingdom, was looted by Italian forces in 1937 and only returned to Ethiopia in 2005.

DateEventWhat changed
From about 1000 BCEPre-Aksumite culture in the Ethiopian HighlandsCultural foundations of what becomes the Aksumite kingdom
From about 100 CEKingdom of Aksum becomes a major Indian Ocean powerPeriplus of the Erythraean Sea describes Adulis as a major trade port
About 240 CEMani names Aksum one of the four great powers of the worldContemporary Persian recognition of Aksumite importance
About 270 CEKing Endubis begins minting Aksumite coinsFirst sub-Saharan African coinage; gold, silver, bronze in three tiers
About 333 CEKing Ezana converts to ChristianityCoins shift from disc-and-crescent to Christian cross; one of first Christian coinages in the world
About 525 CEKing Kaleb conquers Himyarite kingdom in YemenAksum briefly controls territory on both sides of the Red Sea
About 630 CELast Aksumite coins mintedCoinage stops as kingdom declines
700s-900s CEAksum gradually declinesTrade routes shift; Islamic powers control Red Sea; political fragmentation
1937Italian forces loot the Aksum ObeliskMajor contested heritage case begins
2005Italy returns the Aksum Obelisk to EthiopiaSuccessful restitution after long Ethiopian campaigning
TodayModern Ethiopia and Eritrea trace identity to AksumEthiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Churches continue Ezana's Christian tradition
Key words
Kingdom of Aksum
An African empire centred in modern northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, flourishing from about 100 CE to 700 CE. Named one of the four great powers of the ancient world by the Persian prophet Mani in the 3rd century. The only sub-Saharan African state in antiquity to issue its own coinage.
Example: The capital city, also called Aksum, is in the modern Tigray region of northern Ethiopia. It is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with the famous Aksum Obelisks and other monuments. The medieval Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion at Aksum claims to house the original Ark of the Covenant.
Ezana
King of Aksum from about 320 to 360 CE. Converted to Christianity around 333 CE under the influence of his tutor Frumentius. His coins are among the first to use the Christian cross. Considered the founder of Christian Ethiopia.
Example: Ezana wrote in three languages: Ge'ez (his own), Sabaean (the language of Yemen, then under Aksumite influence), and Greek. His inscriptions on stone monuments at Aksum are among the most important sources for early Aksumite history.
Frumentius
Syrian Christian (about 300-380 CE) who was shipwrecked as a youth on the Red Sea coast and brought to Aksum as a slave. Rose to be tutor to the royal family. Converted King Ezana to Christianity. Was consecrated as the first bishop of Aksum by Athanasius of Alexandria. Founded what is now the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.
Example: Frumentius is venerated as a saint in Ethiopian, Eritrean, and Coptic Orthodox traditions. His Ge'ez name is Abuna Salama ('our father of peace'). He is the foundational figure of Ethiopian Christianity.
Ge'ez
The ancient language of Aksum, ancestor of modern Amharic and Tigrinya. A Semitic language related to Arabic and Hebrew. Has its own writing system, called Fidel, with about 26 base characters and many variants. Still used today as the liturgical language of the Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Churches.
Example: Ge'ez was used on later Aksumite coins (especially silver and bronze) and on stone inscriptions. Modern Ethiopian Christian books, hymns, and liturgies are still in Ge'ez. About 90 million Ethiopians and Eritreans speak languages descended from Ge'ez.
Adulis
The main port of Aksum, near modern Massawa in Eritrea. A major hub of Indian Ocean trade for centuries. Described in detail by the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea (about 50 CE) and by Cosmas Indicopleustes (6th century).
Example: Goods passing through Adulis included African gold, ivory, frankincense, myrrh, and exotic animals (going out); Roman wine, glass, textiles, and metal goods (coming in); Indian textiles, spices, and gemstones (passing through). The port was a meeting place for African, Arab, Greek, Roman, Persian, and Indian merchants.
Aksum Obelisk
A 24-metre tall stone stele from the Kingdom of Aksum, originally one of many at the royal cemetery in Aksum. Looted by Italian forces in 1937 and erected in Rome. Returned to Ethiopia in 2005 after long campaigning.
Example: The Aksum Obelisks are massive single-stone steles carved with stylised representations of multi-storey buildings. The largest standing one is 21 metres tall. The looted obelisk that was returned in 2005 is one of the great recent restitution success stories.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of Aksum: pre-Aksumite culture (1000 BCE+), kingdom flourishes (100 CE+), Mani names it a great power (240 CE), coinage begins (270 CE), Ezana converts to Christianity (333 CE), Kaleb conquers Yemen (525 CE), coinage ends (630 CE), Aksum declines, Aksum Obelisk looted (1937) and returned (2005). The story spans nearly 3,000 years.
  • Geography: On a map of Africa and the Indian Ocean, mark Aksum (northern Ethiopia), Adulis (the port, in modern Eritrea), and the trade routes: north to Egypt and Rome, east to Yemen and India, south to East African coast. Discuss how geography enabled the Aksumite trading empire.
  • Citizenship: Modern Ethiopia and Eritrea both claim Aksum as part of their heritage. The two countries fought a major war from 1998 to 2000 and have had ongoing tensions. Discuss how shared heritage can be claimed by countries with conflicts. Are there other examples in your region?
  • Art / Design: Look at the design of an Aksumite coin: bust of king, wheat stalks, religious symbol (disc-and-crescent or cross), inscription. Discuss what each element communicates. Compare with modern Ethiopian and Eritrean coinage, which sometimes echoes these designs.
  • Religion: Discuss the spread of Christianity in the early centuries: Armenia (about 301 CE), Aksum (about 333 CE), Georgia (about 327 CE), Roman Empire (Constantine, 312 CE). Christianity is not a 'European' religion. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church has about 50 million members today; the Eritrean Orthodox Church has about 3 million.
  • Language: The Aksumite coins were inscribed in Greek (international) and Ge'ez (local). The Ge'ez writing system has 26 base characters, each modified by vowel marks to make a syllabary. Modern Amharic and Tigrinya use the same script. Discuss how writing systems carry cultural identity.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

There were no major African civilisations in antiquity outside Egypt.

Right

Aksum was a major civilisation in eastern Africa, named by the Persian prophet Mani as one of the four great powers of the ancient world (alongside Rome, Persia, and China). It was the only sub-Saharan African state in antiquity to issue its own coinage. Other major African civilisations included the kingdoms of Kush (Sudan), Ghana, Mali, and Songhai (West Africa), Great Zimbabwe (southern Africa), and many others.

Why

'No major African civilisations' is a colonial-era distortion. African history includes many major civilisations, with Aksum being one of the clearest examples.

Wrong

Christianity is a European religion.

Right

Christianity originated in the Middle East (Palestine, Syria) and spread early to Africa (Egypt by the 1st century, Aksum by the 4th century, Nubia by the 6th century) and Asia (Armenia, Georgia, Iraq, India by the 4th century). The Ethiopian Orthodox Church traces back to King Ezana's conversion in 333 CE — earlier than the conversion of most European peoples.

Why

Calling Christianity 'European' erases its African and Asian origins and continued African and Asian presence.

Wrong

Aksum was just a small regional kingdom.

Right

At its peak in the 4th to 6th centuries, Aksum controlled trade routes from sub-Saharan Africa to India, briefly conquered the Himyarite kingdom in Yemen (525 CE), traded across the Red Sea and Indian Ocean to Sri Lanka and beyond, and minted coins that were used as international currency. Mani specifically named it one of the four great powers of the world.

Why

Calling Aksum 'small' undersells what it actually was at its peak.

Wrong

Ezana converted to Christianity because of European missionaries.

Right

Ezana converted because of his tutor Frumentius, a Syrian Christian shipwrecked on the Red Sea coast and brought to Aksum as a slave. Frumentius was consecrated as bishop by Athanasius of Alexandria (an African Christian centre). The conversion was a Mediterranean and African event, not a European one.

Why

'European missionaries' is an anachronism that reads later European Christian missions back into ancient times. The actual story is one of African and Middle Eastern religious networks.

Teaching this with care

Treat Aksum as a major civilisation, not a footnote in 'world history'. The civilisation deserves serious attention. Pronounce 'Aksum' as 'AK-sum'. 'Ezana' as 'eh-ZAH-nah'. 'Frumentius' as 'fru-MEN-shi-us'. 'Ge'ez' as 'GEH-ez' (one syllable). 'Adulis' as 'ah-DOO-lis'. 'Negus' as 'NAY-goos'. 'Kaleb' as 'KAH-leb'. 'Himyarite' as 'HIM-yer-ite'. Be careful with the Ethiopia / Eritrea relationship. Both countries claim Aksum as part of their heritage. The actual ruins of the city are in modern Ethiopia. The port of Adulis is in modern Eritrea. The kingdom covered both. The two countries have had major conflicts including the 1998-2000 border war and ongoing tensions. Both have legitimate historical connection to Aksum. Be respectful of Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity. It is an ancient and continuous Christian tradition with about 50 million members. Many Ethiopians take it very seriously. Do not present it as exotic or unusual; treat it with the same respect as other major Christian denominations. The same applies to the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church (about 3 million members). Be honest about the complications. The Aksum Obelisk was looted by Italian forces in 1937 during the Italian occupation of Ethiopia under Mussolini. This was part of Italy's colonial project in East Africa. The obelisk was eventually returned in 2005 after long campaigning. Mention this honestly. Be careful with the Mani reference. Mani was the founder of Manichaeism, a religion that spread widely in the Persian world and beyond before being largely extinguished. He is the original source for the 'four great powers' list. Mention his role briefly without going into detail about Manichaean theology. Be honest about Aksum's slave trade. Aksum participated in the trade of slaves from sub-Saharan Africa to the Roman world and to South Arabia. This is part of the honest history. Mention briefly without dwelling. The Aksumite slave trade was one component of much wider ancient slave trades involving many states. If you have students of Ethiopian, Eritrean, or wider African heritage, give them space to share. The Aksum story is part of African history and should be celebrated as such. Avoid the lazy 'lost civilisation' framing. Aksum was not lost. Its descendants are still here. The Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Churches, the Ge'ez language tradition, the modern Ethiopian and Eritrean states all trace to Aksum. The continuity is real. Avoid the 'no one knows about Aksum' framing in a way that erases Ethiopian and Eritrean knowledge of their own history. Many Ethiopians and Eritreans know Aksum extremely well; what is missing is wider Western recognition. Finally, end on the present. The Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Churches are alive. The Ge'ez language is still used. Modern Ethiopia and Eritrea are real countries with real connections to this ancient kingdom. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Aksumite coin.

  1. What was the Kingdom of Aksum, and why is it important?

    Aksum was an African empire centred in modern northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, flourishing from about 100 CE to 700 CE. The Persian prophet Mani named it one of the four great powers of the ancient world (alongside Rome, Persia, and China). It was the only sub-Saharan African state in antiquity to issue its own coinage, and one of the earliest Christian states in the world.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the basic identification (African empire in Ethiopia/Eritrea) and at least one major significance (four great powers, Christian state, or African coinage).
  2. What languages and metals were used on Aksumite coins, and why?

    Coins were made in gold (chrysos, for international trade), silver (argyros, for medium-value transactions), and bronze (lepton, for everyday use). Gold coins were inscribed in Greek (the international trade language of the time, used across the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean). Silver and bronze coins were sometimes in Greek but increasingly in Ge'ez (the local Aksumite language, ancestor of modern Amharic and Tigrinya).
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the metals (with reasons) and the languages (with reasons).
  3. How and when did Aksum become Christian?

    Around 333 CE, King Ezana converted to Christianity. He had been tutored as a child by a Syrian Christian named Frumentius, who had been shipwrecked on the Red Sea coast and brought to Aksum as a slave. Frumentius was later consecrated as the first bishop of Aksum by Athanasius of Alexandria, founding what is now the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church. Ezana's later coins replaced the disc-and-crescent symbol with the Christian cross.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the date (about 333 CE / King Ezana) and the role of Frumentius.
  4. How did Aksumite coins reflect the kingdom's place in Indian Ocean trade?

    Aksumite gold coins were almost exactly half the weight of a Roman aureus, showing they were designed to be acceptable in Roman markets. Coins were inscribed in Greek (international) for trade and Ge'ez (local) for internal use. Aksumite coins have been found archaeologically in Yemen (the al-Madhariba hoard), in southern India, and across the eastern Roman world. Cosmas Indicopleustes saw them in everyday use in Sri Lanka in the 6th century.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the design choices (Roman weight standard, Greek inscriptions) and the international circulation (Yemen, India, Sri Lanka).
  5. What is the connection between Aksum and modern Ethiopia and Eritrea?

    Modern Ethiopia and Eritrea both trace their identity to Aksum. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church both descend directly from King Ezana's conversion in 333 CE. The Ge'ez language tradition continues as the liturgical language of these churches. Aksumite ruins, including the Aksum Obelisks, are now in northern Ethiopia and are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. About 50 million Ethiopian Orthodox Christians and 3 million Eritrean Orthodox Christians follow the tradition Frumentius and Ezana founded.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the religious continuity and the modern Ethiopian/Eritrean identity. Mentioning the Ge'ez language is a bonus.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. Mani named Aksum one of the four great powers of the world, but Aksum is rarely covered in standard 'world history'. Why might this be?

    This question is about the history of how history is told. Possible answers: Western historiography focused on Mediterranean and European civilisations; African history was systematically downplayed during the colonial era; Ethiopian sources were in Ge'ez, which few Western historians read; the kingdom declined and its records became inaccessible; Christianity in Ethiopia was treated as 'exotic' rather than mainstream; archaeological work in Ethiopia was limited until the 20th century. The deeper point is that 'world history' as we have inherited it is partial and was shaped by specific political and cultural priorities. Recovering Aksum and other African civilisations is part of telling a more honest history. Strong answers will see this as a real ongoing project.
  2. Christianity reached Ethiopia in the 4th century — earlier than most of Europe. What does this teach us about how religions spread?

    This question is about religious geography. Possible answers: religions spread along trade routes; merchants, missionaries, and migrants carried religions; the Indian Ocean and Red Sea were major networks; early Christianity was a Middle Eastern religion that spread south to Africa and east to Asia at the same time as it spread north to Europe; the historical map of Christianity is much wider than the modern stereotype suggests. The deeper point is that religions do not respect political boundaries. The same Indian Ocean trade routes that brought Aksum its gold also brought it Christianity. The Saint Thomas Christians in India, the Coptic Christians in Egypt, the Armenian Christians, the Georgian Christians, and the Ethiopian Christians all became Christian in roughly the same period as the Romans. Christianity is a global religion from its earliest centuries. Strong answers will see this clearly.
  3. The Aksum Obelisk was looted by Italy in 1937 and returned in 2005. Are there other heritage objects in your region that have similar histories?

    This question places Aksum in the wider restitution conversation. Students may know about the Benin Bronzes (Nigeria), the Parthenon Marbles (Greece), the bust of Nefertiti (Egypt), the Zimbabwe Birds (now all returned), and many others. The deeper point is that the looting and partial return of cultural heritage from colonised regions is one of the great moral and political projects of the present. The Aksum Obelisk return in 2005 is one of the success stories. Many other cases remain unresolved. Strong answers will see this as ongoing work that students may help with in their own lives.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'Name three great empires of the ancient world.' Students will probably say Rome, Persia, and China or similar. Then say: 'In the year 240 CE, the Persian prophet Mani made his own list of four great powers — Rome, Persia, China, and Aksum. Aksum was a major African empire that few modern textbooks remember. We are going to find out about it.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe an Aksumite coin: small, gold or silver or bronze, showing the king with wheat stalks and a religious symbol. From about 270 CE to 630 CE. The only sub-Saharan African coinage in antiquity. Pause and ask: 'Why might a kingdom in northern Ethiopia mint its own coins?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the ideas of state organisation, international trade, and political identity.
  3. THE COINS AND THEIR MEANING (15 min)
    On the board, show the three metals (gold, silver, bronze) and two languages (Greek, Ge'ez). Discuss: Aksum had a sophisticated three-tier monetary system, like Rome. The bilingual inscriptions show a state both confident in its own identity and engaged with international trade. Then introduce the Christian shift: around 333 CE, King Ezana's coins replace the disc-and-crescent with the cross. Discuss: Aksum was one of the earliest Christian states in the world.
  4. TRADE AND DECLINE (10 min)
    Tell the story of Aksum's Indian Ocean trade. The port of Adulis. African goods going north and east. Roman, Persian, Indian goods coming in. Aksumite coins found in Yemen, India, Sri Lanka. King Kaleb conquering Yemen (525 CE). The decline starting in the 7th century, partly because of the rise of Islam. Coinage ending around 630 CE. The continuity of the Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Churches into the present. Discuss: what continues from Aksum today?
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the Aksumite coin teach us about how 'world history' is told?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'It teaches that the standard story has gaps. Aksum was a major civilisation. Its coins are evidence. Its descendants — the Ethiopians and Eritreans — continue its traditions today. About 50 million Christians follow the church King Ezana founded. The Ge'ez language is still used. The Aksum Obelisk, looted by Italy in 1937, came home in 2005. The story is alive. Telling it is part of telling a more honest world history.'
Classroom materials
The Four Great Powers
Instructions: On the board, draw four columns: Rome, Persia, China, Aksum. In small groups, students fill in what they know about each. They will find more in three columns than in the fourth. Discuss: why? End by saying that this is the same gap that Mani's list, written 1,800 years ago, was meant to challenge.
Example: In Mr Tadesse's class, students filled the Rome column easily, the Persia column with some effort, the China column with some general knowledge, and the Aksum column hardly at all. The teacher said: 'You have just discovered the gap in standard world history. Mani in 240 CE thought all four were equally great. Modern textbooks have lost this. Recovering Aksum is part of telling a more complete story.'
Read the Coin
Instructions: Show students a clear image of an Aksumite coin. Identify the elements: bust of king, wheat stalks, religious symbol (disc-and-crescent or cross), Greek inscription. Discuss what each element communicates. Compare with a modern Ethiopian or Eritrean coin to see how some elements continue.
Example: In Mrs Yohannes's class, students were struck by how much information was packed into a 15 mm gold coin. The teacher said: 'You have just read an ancient text. The coin is small, but every element communicates something — the king's authority, the agricultural wealth, the religion, the international position. Aksumite coins are some of the most information-dense objects of their period. Roman coins are similar; Aksumite coins were designed in conversation with them.'
Restitution Stories
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss the Aksum Obelisk: looted by Italy in 1937, returned to Ethiopia in 2005. Compare with other restitution cases (Benin Bronzes partly returned; Parthenon Marbles still in London; Zimbabwe Birds all now home). What patterns do they see? Strong answers will see that restitution is slow, contested, but possible.
Example: In one class, students built a quick chart of looted heritage objects and their current status. The teacher said: 'You have just mapped one of the great moral projects of our time. Looted heritage is being slowly returned, case by case, often after decades of negotiation. The Aksum Obelisk is one specific success story. Other cases remain unresolved. Some of you may live to help finish this work.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Hoxne pepper pot for another object connecting Aksumite trade to the wider Indian Ocean network.
  • Try a lesson on the Zimbabwe Birds for another major contested African heritage case where successful restitution has happened.
  • Try a lesson on the Benin Bronzes for another major African heritage case with partial recent returns.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on African civilisations of the medieval period — Aksum, Ghana, Mali, Songhai, Great Zimbabwe.
  • Connect this lesson to religious studies with a longer project on early Christianity, including the African and Asian Christian traditions.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of cultural restitution. The Aksum Obelisk is one specific success story; many cases remain unresolved.
Key takeaways
  • The Aksumite coin is a coin minted by the Kingdom of Aksum, an African empire centred in modern northern Ethiopia and Eritrea, from about 270 CE to 630 CE. Aksum was the only sub-Saharan African state in antiquity to issue its own coinage.
  • Aksum was named by the Persian prophet Mani around 240 CE as one of the four great powers of the ancient world, alongside Rome, Persia, and China. It controlled trade across the Red Sea and Indian Ocean from sub-Saharan Africa to India and Sri Lanka.
  • Aksumite coins were made in three metals (gold, silver, bronze) and two languages (Greek for international trade, Ge'ez for local use). Gold coins were almost exactly half the weight of a Roman aureus, designed to be acceptable in Roman markets.
  • Around 333 CE, King Ezana converted to Christianity under the influence of his tutor Frumentius, a Syrian Christian. Ezana's coins are among the very first to use the Christian cross, possibly slightly earlier than Roman Christian coinage. Aksum became one of the earliest Christian states in the world.
  • Modern Ethiopia and Eritrea both trace their identity to Aksum. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (about 50 million members) and the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church (about 3 million members) descend directly from Ezana's conversion. The Ge'ez language continues as the liturgical language.
  • The Aksum Obelisk, a 24-metre stone stele from the same kingdom, was looted by Italian forces in 1937 and only returned to Ethiopia in 2005. The return is one of the major recent restitution success stories.
Sources
  • Aksum: An African Civilisation of Late Antiquity — Stuart Munro-Hay (1991) [academic]
  • Catalogue of the Aksumite Coins in the British Museum — Stuart Munro-Hay (1999) [academic]
  • Aksumite Coins — collection page — British Museum / Smarthistory (2016) [institution]
  • The Return of the Aksum Obelisk — BBC News (2005) [news]
  • Aksumite Coinage and African Civilisation — Coinweek (2023) [news]