Tabot

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An Ethiopian priest carries a tabot during a Timkat ceremony.

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Tabot (Template:Langx, sometimes spelled tabout) is a replica of the Ark of the Covenant, and represents the presence of God, in Ethiopian Orthodox and Eritrean Orthodox Churches.[1][2]Template:Rp[3] Tabot may variously refer to an inscribed altar tablet (tsellat or tsilit; Ge'ez: ጽላት tsallāt, modern ṣellāt), the chest in which this tablet is stored (menbere-tabot, or throne of the tabot), or to the tablet and chest together.[1][4]

According to Edward Ullendorff, the Geʽez word tabot is derived from Aramaic Script error: No such module "Lang". tēḇoṯā, like Hebrew Script error: No such module "Lang". tēḇā.[5] Ullendorff stated that "The concept and function of the tabot represent one of the most remarkable areas of agreement with Old Testament forms of worship."[6]

Description

The tsellat is usually a Template:Convert square, and may be made from alabaster, marble or wood from an acacia tree, although longer lengths of upwards of Template:Convert are also common.[7] This tablet is inscribed with the name of Jesus, and that of the saint to whom it is dedicated.[1]

A bishop consecrates the tabot (not the church building itself),[2]Template:Rp and every church must have at least one tabot in order to conduct the liturgy.[8] The tabot is kept in the church's Holy of Holies (Qidduse Qiddusan or Bete Mekdes), where only the clergy may enter, and it is wrapped in ornate cloths to conceal it from public view.[8] Only bishops and priests are allowed touch or handle a tabot, or see it without its coverings.[1][4] If a layperson touches a tabot, a bishop must reconsecrate it before a church may use it again.[1]

The Eucharist is administered from the tabot.[1] During church festivals, such as the patronal feast day or during Timkat (known as Epiphany in English), the priests carry the tabot around the church courtyard in an elaborate procession reminiscent of 2 Samuel, chapter 6, in which King David leads the people dancing before the Ark.[8][9][10] David Buxton describes one such procession, on the festival of Gebre Menfes Kidus: Template:Quote

Looting and repatriation of tabots

An uncovered tabot at the Linden Museum in Stuttgart (2008).

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Although Ethiopia was never colonised by the British, many tabots were looted by British soldiers during the 1868 Expedition to Abyssinia, also known as the Battle of Magdala, and is a cause of anger among Ethiopians.[11]

The return in February 2002 of one looted tabot, discovered in the storage of St John's Episcopal Church in Edinburgh, was a cause of public rejoicing in Addis Ababa.[12][13] Another was returned in 2003 after Ian McLennan recognised the ancient tabot at an auction in London. He bought it and donated it to the government of Ethiopia.[14]

In February 2024, the Dean of Westminster Abbey agreed in principle to return the tabot which is sealed inside an altar in Westminster Abbey to Ethiopia. This is dependent on the consent of the Royal Household as the Monarch has jurisdiction over the Abbey.[15]

See also

References

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Additional sources
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Further reading

  • C.F. Beckingham and G.W.B. Huntingford, "Appendix III, The Tabot" in their translation of Francisco Alvarez, The Prester John of the Indies (Cambridge: Hakluyt Society, 1961), pp. 543–8.

External links

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  5. Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible (Oxford: University Press for the British Academy, 1968), pp. 82, 122
  6. Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible, p. 82
  7. David Buxton, The Abyssinians (New York: Praeger, 1970), p. 162
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  9. For example, Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible, p. 83; Buxton, The Abyssinians, p. 32.
  10. Donald N. Levine, Wax and Gold: Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopian Culture, (Chicago: University Press, 1972), p. 63.
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