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Najashi

(redirected from Armah)
King Najashi of Aksum
Armah.jpg
King of Aksum
PredecessorGersem
SuccessorKwestantitos
Personal Information
BornAsham
Around 560 CE
Kingdom of Axum
Died631 (aged 70–71)
Negash, Kingdom of Axum
(present-day Ethiopia)
ReligionIslam (disputed) , formerly Christianity

Armah (Ge'ez: አርማህ) or Aṣḥamah (Arabic: أَصْحَمَة‎),[1] also known as Al-Najāshī (Arabic: ٱلنَّجَاشِيّ‎), was the ruler of the Kingdom of Aksum who reigned from 614–631 CE. He is primarily known through the coins that were minted during his reign.[2] It has been suggested that it was either he or more probably his father who gave shelter to the Muslim emigrants around 615–616 at Axum.[3]

Accounts

Traditionnal Muslim sources indicate that the Islamic prophet Muhammad prayed an absentee funeral prayer (Arabic: صَلَاة الْغَائِب‎, romanizedṢalāt al-Ġāʾib) in Madinah[1] which is performed upon a dead Muslim if they die in a place with no Muslims to pray for the dead. This is one of the justifications provided by Muslims that Al-Najashi died as a Muslim.[4]

Scholar of ancient Ethiopia, Stuart Munro-Hay (1947–2004), stated that either Armah or Gersem was the last Axumite king to issue coins. Bronze coins from the reign of Armah depict him as a full-length figure enthroned, with Christian cross motifs throughout.[5]

Artifacts

Armah's silver coins have an unusual reverse, showing a structure with three crosses, the middle one gilded. Munro-Hay quotes W.R.O. Hahn as suggesting that this is an allusion to the Holy Sepulchre, as a reference to the Persian capture of Jerusalem in 614.[6]

See also

  • Najashi (disambiguation)

References

  1. ^ a b al-Bukhari, Imam (2013). Sahih al-Bukhari: The Early Years of Islam》Chapter:THE BEGINNINGS OF ISLAM; Section:XIV THE DEATH OF THE NEGUS. Translated by Muhammad Asad. The Other Press. p. 179. ISBN 978-967-506-298-8. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  2. ^ A letter to Antoine d'Abbadie, dated 8 January 1869, mentions a coin of this ruler. Rubenson, Sven, ed. (2 September 2000). Acta Aethiopica, Vol. III: Internal Rivalries and Foreign Threats, 1869–1879. Addis Ababa: Addis Ababa University Press. p. 3. ISBN 0-765-80728-9.
  3. ^ M. Elfasi; Ivan Hrbek (1988). Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century. UNESCO. p. 560. ISBN 9789231017094.
  4. ^ https://sunnah.com/search/?q=negus
  5. ^ Markowitz, Mike (22 July 2014). "The Coinage of Aksum". CoinWeek. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  6. ^ Munroe-Hay, Stuart C. (24 June 1991). Aksum: An African Civilization of Late Antiquity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 91. ISBN 0748601066.
  • Atkins, Brian; Juel-Jensen, Bent (1988). "The Gold Coinage of Aksum: Further Analyses of Specific Gravity, A Contribution to Chronology". Numismatic Chronicle (148).

External links

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