THE QUEEN OF SHEBA
Transcription
THE QUEEN OF SHEBA
WB2014-42-45-Makeda_AH edit 1/19/15 2:04 AM Page 42 BY ELAINE K. PHILLIPS MAKEDA, THE QUEEN OF SHEBA Her epic quest for wisdom became a legend and birthed a nation. “I wouldn’t have believed it if I hadn’t seen it for myself.” WIKIMEDIA COMMONS — Queen of Sheba, 1 Kings 10:7 4 2 | WOMEN IN THE BIBLE WB2014-42-45-Makeda_AH edit 1/19/15 2:04 AM Page 43 MAKEDA, THE QUEEN OF SHEBA H This 12th-century fresco in an Ethiopian rock church depicts Makeda as a warrior queen. Interestingly, a medieval fresco in a church in Gondar, Ethiopia, shows St. George in a strikingly similar pose. ow far are you willing to go for answers to your questions? Would you stumble across the room to your smartphone’s Google search app? Drive to your local library? How about ride horseback the 2,000 miles from Los Angeles to Chicago? If you’re Makeda, Queen of Sheba, you’ll go even farther. AN EPIC JOURNEY Makeda and her retinue rode through Jerusalem’s gates, their dusty camels swaying with the weight of folded tents, clay pots and sheep-gut water sacks. Her servants carried ebony crates of precious stones, spices and gold—gifts for Solomon, king of Israel, whose wisdom and wealth were acclaimed as far away as Saba’. When Queen Makeda heard the tales, she had to go see it for herself. So for 2,900 miles, she trekked the Nile from Ethiopia; for 2,900 miles, her soldiers guarded their queen from lions, and her treasure from bandits. But now they swapped their twohanded bronze swords for their decorative, scythe-like shotels; Makeda wanted “a grand and showy entrance” (1 Kings 10:2). In Jerusalem, Queen Makeda hoped not only to see proof of Solomon’s splendor, but also to forge a key political partnership based on common values: wisdom and justice. Quick Facts • Lived: 10th century BC in Sheba (Saba’), modern-day Ethiopia or Yemen • Appears in: 1 Kings 10 and 2 Chronicles 9 • Popular Legacy: A central figure in Ethiopian and Arabian culture, Queen Makeda of Sheba also features in Solomon and Sheba (1959) and other Hollywood films. THE BURDEN OF PROOF Makeda found Solomon more than willing to display his wisdom and wealth. He welcomed Makeda into his palace, where she “talked about all the things that she cared about” and Solomon “answered everything she put to him—nothing stumped him” (1 Kings 10:3). Their conversation appears to have covered economics, politics and religion, given what Solomon highlights on the tour of his court: his home and cutlery, his top officials and his burnt Mother of a Nation In contrast to the sparse biblical account, the Kebra Nagast—the Ethiopian holy book, translated into English in 1922 by E. A. W. Budge— records Makeda’s life in detail. In the Kebra Nagast, Makeda longed to visit Solomon because she was “smitten with the love of wisdom.” Then, after discussing Abrahamic theology and the Mosaic Law with Solomon, Makeda abandoned her sun-worship and trusted in the God of Israel. But that was just the beginning. Solomon—who rejected the Lord in favor of his wives one chapter later in 1 Kings—tricked her into sleeping with him. When she left, he gave her a signet ring to pass on to their child, should she have a son. Nine months later, she did and named him “BaynaLeḥkem.” Twenty years later, Makeda sent her son to Israel to meet his father, who rechristened him “Menyelek” (also Menelik) and had Zadok the Priest anoint him king of Ethiopia. When Solomon abandoned God, Menyelek returned to Ethiopia with the ark of the covenant as a sign that God had in turn abandoned Solomon. Until the 20th century, the Ethiopian monarchy claimed its descent from Menyelek and its divine right to rule from the ark of the covenant. Makeda is so central to Ethiopian culture that, as historian Michael Wood points out, the story was written into the Ethiopian Constitution in 1955. WOMEN IN THE BIBLE | 4 3 WB2014-42-45-Makeda_AH edit 1/19/15 2:04 AM Page 44 These five ancient pillars are almost all that’s left of the ancient Baran Temple, near where Makeda may have ruled her kingdom from Marib, in modern Yemen. We’re often encouraged to take things “on faith,” as if faith negates evidence; or to trust solely in logic, as if physical evidence debunks faith. But Makeda’s story suggests that wisdom holds both in tandem. According to 1 Kings 10:1, Makeda travelled to Jerusalem because she “heard about Solomon and his connection with the Name of God.” Instead of hearing rumors of Solomon’s wisdom and accepting them “on faith,” she traveled more than the distance between Los Angeles and Chicago. To undertake such a journey, Makeda must have valued both facts and faith. If she didn’t see facts as valuable, she wouldn’t have persevered on her 2,900mile quest. Only when she questioned Solomon thoroughly and inspected his palaces did Makeda believe the legends were true. “‘I wouldn’t have believed it if I hadn’t seen it for myself,” she says (1 Kings 10:7). But she must have believed that the rumors of Solomon’s wisdom could be true, or she’d never have risked the journey in the first place. Like Makeda, we need to let faith and facts work together to guide us to wisdom. 4 4 | WOMEN IN THE BIBLE ? Did you Know While both Ethiopia and Yemen claim Queen Makeda as their own, some historians suggest that her kingdom of Saba’ spanned both countries. offerings. The evidence of Solomon’s expansive expertise, the 1 Kings author writes, “confirmed” the stories and “took her breath away.” Moreover, Makeda considered Solomon’s wisdom and wealth as evidence that he was a benevolent and just ruler, blessed by God (1 Kings 10:9). A NEW BEGINNING Having observed Solomon’s wisdom and justice for herself, Makeda decided to draw up a treaty. The author of 1 Kings recorded an exchange of treasures: Makeda gave Solomon “four and a half tons of gold” and an unfathomable of amount of spices (1 Kings 10:10), whilst Solomon gave her “everything she asked for” (1 Kings 10:13). Gifts of this magnitude between royals likely indicated a political or economic agreement. Makeda wisely decided to ally herself with Solomon, confident that God would continue to use Solomon to bless Israel in breathtaking ways—and through Israel, Saba’ as well. According to Ethiopian tradition, Makeda returned home to found the royal dynasty from which the Ethiopian monarchy derived its lineage until the 20th century. LEFT: PHOTO BY WERNER FORMAN/UNIVERSAL IMAGES GROUP/GETTY IMAGES; MIDDLE: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS The Pursuit of Wisdom WB2014-42-45-Makeda_AH edit.CX 1/20/15 11:36 PM Page 45 MAKEDA, THE QUEEN OF SHEBA A Romantic Landscape with the Arrival of the Queen of Sheba by Samuel Coleman (1830). Just the Facts, Ma’am Considering Makeda’s love of evidence, it’s ironic that we have little proof of her own existence. While historians have previously claimed that South Arabian and Ethiopian civilizations couldn’t have produced a queen of such magnificence in the 10th century, new archeological evidence suggests otherwise: • A treasure-trove: In 2012, a team headed by archeologist Louise Schofield discovered a shaft into a 3,000 year-old gold mine in Northern Ethiopia, The Guardian reports. Nearby inscriptions in Sabaean, ruins of a temple to a lunar deity, and ancient human remains all point to the mine’s Sabaean origins, Schofield argues. • A buried palace: In 2008, archeologists uncovered what they believed to be the remains of Makeda’s palace at Axum in Northern Ethiopia, where Ethiopian tradition claims Menyelek housed the ark of the covenant. • An ancient temple: In Islamic tradition, Makeda, or “Bilqis,” ruled her kingdom from Marib in modern-day Yemen, where archeologists unearthed remains of the Temple of Bilqis that date from the 10th century BC. • A copper foundry: Twenty-five miles south of Marib, archeologists in the 1980s unearthed a copper foundry in the Wadi al-Jubah valley. If the foundry dates to the 13th century, as Dr. James A. Sauer told the New York Times, it represents another possible source of Makeda’s great wealth. WIKIMEDIA COMMONS Fun Fact Located within Jerusalem’s Christian Quarter, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher has a chapel dedicated to the Ethiopian Christian tradition. Inside, this magnificent painting depicts Makeda’s arrival in Jerusalem, flanked by gift-bearing servants and sword-bearing soldiers. It took Makeda and her 799 camels a total of 9 months and 5 days to complete the journey from Saba’ to Israel, according to the Kebra Nagast. WOMEN IN THE BIBLE | 4 5