World heritage site. For visitors to Ethiopia, this label most likely evokes images of grandeur and awe. Think for example of Lalibela's singularly ornate rock-hewn churches or the breathtaking landscape of Simien Mountains National Park. White the Tiya Stelae Field is equally a world heritage site, its scale is altogether more modest than that of its better known brethren.
Tiya is located about 80km south of Addis Ababa on the road
to Butajira, and the trip there is memorable in its own right, as are most road
trips in Ethiopia. Leaving Addis' Bole district mid-morning in a chartered
minivan - an Ethiopian tourism industry mainstay on roads where 4WD is not
required - we almost immediately became snarled in the capital's ever-worsening
traffic.
Weaving our way past pedestrians, bajaji (as three-wheel taxis are known locally), broken down trucks and a donkey which had decided that the middle of a four-lane road was as good a place as any to take a nap, we finally breached Addis' sprawling suburbs and emerged into the open countryside.
Roadside scene on the Addis-Butajira Highway |
Weaving our way past pedestrians, bajaji (as three-wheel taxis are known locally), broken down trucks and a donkey which had decided that the middle of a four-lane road was as good a place as any to take a nap, we finally breached Addis' sprawling suburbs and emerged into the open countryside.
The landscape south of Addis is beautiful: rolling hills,
lush vegetation and small farmsteads, studded with the occasional volcanic plug
and (not so attractive) roadside village. Passing through one of these villages
we had the memorable experience of a massively obese man walking into the
middle of the road, holding out his arms and blocking our vehicle no matter how
our driver tried to navigate around him. As pedestrians and their animals
walked by as though nothing odd was happening, our driver finally accepted
defeat and handed over a couple crumpled notes and the man went on his way.
Most people visiting Tiya on a day-trip from the capital
make two stops en route. The first is the Paleolithic site of Melka Kunture.
About one kilometre west of the highway down a rough track, the site apparently
features a fine museum containing many impressive stone age artefacts. I say
apparently because we did not get to see the museum ourselves, arriving too
late in the day and finding the entrance gates already locked.
We had better luck at our second stop at Adadi Maryam, which
has the distinction of being the most southerly of Ethiopia's
rock-hewn churches. Located on high ground about 30 kilometres west of the main
road, Adadi Maryam is thought to date from the 13th century CE, and was
reputedly built by King Lalibela himself. Whether this is true or not, the
church remained in use for the next three hundred years, when it fell into
disrepair until it was rediscovered by Emperor Menelik II in the late 19th
century.
Although the church is a popular pilgrimage destination for
Ethiopian Christians, there was little road traffic on the day of our visit,
apart from the occasional herd of sheep and goats and a few farmers heading
home after a morning spent tending to their fields. However, as the farmland
gave way to the outskirts of Adadi. where the eponymous church is located, we
discovered why we had seen so few people on the way in: everyone seemed already
to be in the village, buying, selling or just walking about at the local weekly
market. Dozens of donkeys and horses were tied up on either side of the road as
we approached the market square, and soon the way forward was entirely blocked
with a mass of people. Yet our driver crawled along, with people moving out of
our path good-naturedly, and soon we arrived at the church gates.
Adadi Maryam Church |
Interior of Adadi Maryam Church |
The Tiya stelae field, entered via a brightly coloured gate
in a low-slung barbed wire fence, consists of 46 standing stones, regarding
which remarkably little is known. Erected between the 10th and 15th centuries
CE, they are of much more recent vintage than the obelisks of Aksum,
yet their meaning and significance remains shrouded in mystery. The stelae vary
in height with the tallest reaching five metres, and they include both anthropomorphic
and phallic shapes. Most also bear elaborately carved symbols, variously
reminiscent of swords, leaves and human figures.
Tiya stelae field |
Tiya stela detail |
Sword motif on Tiya stela |
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