Tabot (
Ge'ez ታቦት
tābōt, sometimes spelled
tabout), is a
Ge'ez (as well as
Ethio-Semitic) word referring to
a replica of the
Tablets of Law, onto
which the
Biblical Ten Commandments were inscribed, used in
the practices of the
Ethiopian Orthodox
Church.
Tabot can also refer to a replica of the
Ark of the Covenant. The word
tsellat (Ge'ez: ጽላት
ṣallāt, modern
ṣellāt) refers only to a replica of the Tablets, but is
less commonly used.
According to
Edward Ullendorff,
the word
tabot is derived from the Jewish
Aramaic, or more specifically "Jewish
Palestinian Aramaic", word
tebuta (
tebota), which
in turn is derived from the
Hebrew
tebah. "The concept and function of the
tabot
represent one of the most remarkable areas of agreement with Old
Testament forms of worship."
A
tabot is usually six inches (15
cm) square, and may be made from
alabaster,
marble, or wood
from an
acacia tree -- although David Buxton
states the maximum length of 40 cm is more common. It is always
kept in ornate coverings to hide it from public view. In an
elaborate procession, which has often reminded literate onlookers
of the sixth chapter of
2 Samuel where King
David leads the people dancing before the Ark,
the
tabot is carried around the church
courtyard on the patronal feast day, and also on
the great Feast of
Timket (known as
Epiphany or Theophany in Europe).
Buxton describes one such procession, on the festival of
Gabra Manfas Qeddus:
- To the uninstructed onlooker the climax of the service came at
the end, when the tabot or ark was brought out, wrapped in
coloured cloths, carried on the head of a priest. As it appeared in
the doorway the women raised the ilil, a prolonged and piercing cry of joy. At
first the tabot remained motionless, accompanied by
several processinal crosses and their attendant brightly colored
canopies, while a group of cantors (dabtara) performed the liturgical dance so
beloved of the Abyssinians. The dancing over, a procession formed
up, headed by the tabot, and slowly circled the church
three times in a counter-clockwise direction. Finally the
tabot was carried back into the sanctuary; all was over
and the assembly broke up.
Although
Ethiopia
was never
colonized by the British, many tabots were looted by them
during the 1868 Expedition
to Abyssinia, which is a cause of anger among
Ethiopians. During the looting of the Ethiopian capital
of Magdala
in 1868, British soldiers took hundreds of
tabots. The return in February 2002 of one of these,
discovered in the storage of St. John's Episcopal Church in
Edinburgh
, was a cause of public rejoicing in Addis Ababa
.
See also
Notes
- Edward Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible (Oxford:
University Press for the British Academy, 1968), pp. 82, 122
- Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible, p. 82
- David Buxon, The Abyssinians (New York: Praeger,
1970), p. 162
- For example, Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible, p.
83; Buxton, The Abyssinians, p. 32.
- Donald N. Levine, Wax and Gold: Tradition and Innovation in
Ethiopian Culture, (Chicago: University Press, 1972), p.
63.
- Buxton, The Abyssinians, p. 65
- "Ethiopian joy as church returns Ark of Covenant;
Handover may" by Jenifer Johnston, The Sunday
Herald, January 27, 2002 (hosted by Find Articles)
- "Ethiopia: Returning a Tabot" by Odhiambo
Okite, Christianity Today, 22 April
2002
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