After the death of Pope Paul III on 10 November 1549, the Sacred College of Cardinals of the Catholic Church entered an unprecedented two-month conclave. As the faithful waited, the secluded cardinals produced sixty inconclusive ballots. Their protracted deliberations reflected the divisions within the College, which encompassed disagreements over the response to the Protestant Reformation as well as rivalries between supporters of the Holy Roman Empire and the Kingdom of France.Footnote 1 After five fruitless weeks, one participant reported in his diary that on 7 January, an agitated African emerged at the balcony of the Sistine Chapel and looked down upon the assembly, exclaiming, “Very Reverend Lords, the conclavists have shut the doors, and thus now you must either starve or arrive at a decision about choosing a pope[!]”Footnote 2 For some of the gathered princes of the Church, the outburst was surely a shock. But for the Roman Curia, the interlocutor was a familiar figure: it was abba Täsfa Ṣeyon (1510–1553), the Ethiopian cleric also known as Pietro Abissino or Indiano.Footnote 3 No interloper, he was a conclave sacrist, client of the deceased pope, and adviser to the Tridentine Catholic elite, and his proximity to Paul III was such that he attended the latter's funeral wearing the ceremonial black cloth reserved for the friends of the pontiff.Footnote 4
Täsfa Ṣeyon hailed from the tumultuous Horn of Africa. Fleeing the conflict between the Christian kingdom of Ethiopia and the Sultanate of ʿAdal, he reached the Italian peninsula in the mid-1530s after a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.Footnote 5 Greeted by a small diasporic community of co-religionists and other Eastern Christians in Rome, he became ensconced at Santo Stefano degli Abissini, the Ethiopian residence in the vicinity of St. Peter's Basilica. He distinguished himself through his multilingual erudition, entrepreneurial spirit, and political acumen, and ultimately became a familiar of Pope Paul III, the powerful patriarch of the Farnese family and the head of an organised Vatican effort to produce knowledge about Ethiopia and its distinctive Orthodox (täwaḥedo) Christian tradition. This enterprise represents the effective foundation of Ethiopian studies in Europe, a key branch of the developing field of Middle East–focused orientalist scholarship. As his intercession in the Sistine Chapel suggests, Täsfa Ṣeyon was the most influential African in the sixteenth-century Catholic Church.
This article surveys Täsfa Ṣeyon's complex career and legacy in Europe and Ethiopia, emphasising his position in the intellectual networks of sixteenth-century Rome on the one hand, and his impact upon modern Ethiopianist and Ethiopian scholarship on the other. It juxtaposes a range of archival and published sources in European and Ethiopian languages. These include materials at the Vatican Library, most notably Täsfa Ṣeyon's own Geʿez and Latin publications,Footnote 6 his marginalia in its Geʿez codices, the correspondence of his curial contacts, and the records of Santo Stefano, as well as the papal ledgers at the Archivio di Stato di Roma and the writings of his Italian collaborators. These sixteenth-century materials buttress later attestations of his significance in the overlapping fields of Ethiopianist orientalism and Ethiopian vernacular historiography. These include, in the first instance, the foundational works of the modern academic field of Ethiopia-focused Semitic studies, which drew substantially upon one of Täsfa Ṣeyon's publications, and in the second instance, the earliest outward-looking examples of modern Amharic historical writing, which re-envisioned him as an avatar of Ethiopia's place in the world.
Though this documentary record is rich, the existing scholarship is uneven. The first studies of the Ethiopian community of early modern Rome were produced by colonial-era Italian researchers keen to illustrate the historical longevity of Italo-Ethiopian relations,Footnote 7 and they are marred by Eurocentric notions of diasporic Ethiopians as accidental purveyors of ancient texts or epitomes of Roman universalism. More recent works have transcended this framework.Footnote 8 There are only two articles specifically focused on Täsfa Ṣeyon: Euringer's analysis of his epitaph, and Lefevre's essential collection of primary sources.Footnote 9 These valuable but now dated preliminary studies complement more recent scholarship, which includes the concise but important sketch by Bausi and Fiaccadori in the Encyclopaedia Aethiopica,Footnote 10 Zuurmond's close analysis of the textual features and influence of one of Täsfa Ṣeyon's publications,Footnote 11 several short discussions of this same text,Footnote 12 and brief references in other works.Footnote 13
The present article adds to this small literature by contending that Täsfa Ṣeyon played a critical role in the foundation of Ethiopia-focused scholarship in Europe, and further, that his work reveals the lineal connection between the Vatican-sponsored orientalist projects of the sixteenth century, or philologia sacra, and the increasingly academic and colonial-inflected research of the modern era, or philologia orientalis.Footnote 14 Recent studies have reassessed the early modern roots of orientalist scholarship, looking beyond cultural and material transactions to consider the heterogeneity and legacy of early humanist and Church-based research on Africa, East Asia, and the Levant,Footnote 15 and parallel inquiries have considered the interplay between ethnology and antecedent forms of proto-ethnographic cultural description.Footnote 16 Collectively, this revisionist scholarship challenges the conception of these fields as specifically modern, secular, and Enlightenment-based, as Edward Said once proposed.Footnote 17 It has additionally documented the critical role of extra-European actors in the development of early orientalist studies: diasporic Asians and Africans were librarians, copyists, advisers, teachers, translators, editors, and authors of influential works, and in these myriad roles shaped or tried to shape European knowledge of their homes in highly politicised contexts.Footnote 18 They met and taught their European counterparts, participated in the printing of prestige specialist works, commented on European representations of their societies and religions, intervened in interconfessional controversies, and in some cases faced intense sanctions for their views. In these respects, they were the metropolitan analogues of the broader network of imperial intermediaries who profoundly shaped the production and circulation of European knowledge about the wider world, and additionally, the early modern counterparts of the later generations of African and Asian intellectuals who contributed to and critiqued Western orientalist and anthropological research.Footnote 19
Specifically, this article argues that Täsfa Ṣeyon was a crucial player in a Vatican effort to harness Ethiopia- and Eastern Christian–focused learning to the Tridentine project of establishing supremacy over the Protestant and Orthodox worlds. This role developed through his personal connection to Pope Paul III and Marcello Cervini, later Pope Marcellus II. Täsfa Ṣeyon was also an authoritative adviser to humanist scholars and Church authorities concerned with key areas of early orientalist inquiry, specifically the emerging scripture- and mission-related interests in Semitic languages and Eastern Christian doctrine.Footnote 20 Finally, and most significantly, he was an important scholar in his own right, producing the editio princeps of the Geʿez New Testament as well as Latin publications on the liturgy and baptismal rite of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. These contributions endured. In the centuries after his death, his edition of the New Testament became a canonical Geʿez source for European researchers, despite its idiosyncrasies, and it eventually underpinned the modern German historical and linguistic scholarship that is commonly viewed as the foundation of Ethiopianist Semitic studies. At the same time, his position as the head of Santo Stefano and his peerless achievements in that role made him a powerful symbol of diasporic identity for later Ethiopian and Eritrean intellectuals seeking to understand the nature of their relationship with the West. In all these respects, his biography illustrates the modern reverberations of an early modern connected history.Footnote 21
From Däbrä Libanos to the Eternal City
Täsfa Ṣeyon was a steward and exemplar of the rich intellectual culture of medieval Ethiopia. In his writing,Footnote 22 he introduced himself as an alumnus of Däbrä Libanos monastery, a leading centre of Orthodox Christian learning in the Ethiopian highlands.Footnote 23 Founded in the fourteenth century by abunä Täklä Haymanot, Däbrä Libanos played a major role in the religious and political life of the kingdom, and its abbot, the eč̣č̣ägé, was the highest ranking domestic ecclesiastic in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, subordinate only to the Coptic metropolitan. When Täsfa Ṣeyon entered the monastery in the early sixteenth century, it was led by the erudite eč̣č̣ägé ʿEnbaqom, a Yemeni-Ethiopian convert to Orthodox Christianity who would later advise Emperor Gälawdéwos.Footnote 24 Together, the abbot and brethren presided over a period of Geʿez literary efflorescence which encompassed the standardisation of the hagiography (gädl) of Täklä Haymanot,Footnote 25 the preparation of original exegetic works like the anti-Islamic treatise Anqäṣä amin,Footnote 26 and the translation of Arabic Christian literature, such as the commentary of St. John Chrysostom, the computational treatise of Abū Šākir b. Abī 1-Karam Buṭrus b. al-Muhaḏḏib, the pseudo-Buddhist epic of Baralaam and Josaphat, and the universal history of Ǧirǧis al-Makīn b. al-ʿAmīd.Footnote 27 As a young initiate, Täsfa Ṣeyon witnessed or contributed to this project of intercultural textual transmission, which transformed the canon of Ethiopian church scholarship, and in his later years, he invoked eč̣č̣ägé ʿEnbaqom in his own work and adopted the monastic title malḫezo, both suggestions of his elevated position at the monastery.Footnote 28
Däbrä Libanos eventually led him to the institutions of secular power.Footnote 29 In a letter to one of his Roman collaborators, Täsfa Ṣeyon identified himself as “the secretary [ṣäḥafé] of Aṣnaf Sägäd,” the regnal name of Emperor Gälawdéwos, and he told another European colleague that he had taught the Portuguese representative Pêro da Covilhã “many things of the world” in the court of Emperor Lebnä Dengel, the father of Gälawdéwos.Footnote 30 These statements suggest that Täsfa Ṣeyon served the royal family in an administrative role, possibly as a scribe or annalist subordinate to the court historian (ṣähafé teʾezaz), a position ultimately assumed by his monastic superior eč̣č̣ägé ʿEnbaqom.Footnote 31 Since Täsfa Ṣeyon left Ethiopia before the accession of Gälawdéwos in 1540, he was likely attached to the court during the prior reign of Lebnä Dengel, when the heir was a minor. Such a connection is suggested by the royal chronicle of Gälawdéwos, which describes the latter's rigorous childhood church education, and additionally by the precedent of the anonymous chronicler of Emperor Bäʾedä Maryam, who served the royal family as a preceptor and inter-generational dynastic annalist.Footnote 32 Täsfa Ṣeyon was thus part of the intellectual elite who adorned royal power.
This role placed him in a precarious position during an era of religious strife. In 1532, as wars raged between local Muslims and Christians and their Ottoman and Portuguese allies, the army of Aḥmad b. Ibrāhīm al-Ġāzī destroyed Däbrä Libanos and its scriptorium.Footnote 33 It was for this reason that Täsfa Ṣeyon later called him “the poisoning one,” or maśarri.Footnote 34 As the forces of Lebnä Dengel battled the ʿAdal invaders, several of Täsfa Ṣeyon's monastic brethren made the pilgrimage to Egypt and the Holy Land, and he followed their example in the 1530s, possibly because of the destruction of Däbrä Libanos. After the subsequent martyrdom of its abbot eč̣č̣ägé Yoḥannes,Footnote 35 the monastery was abandoned by the Church for 160 years.Footnote 36 Even centuries later, its literary achievements in the sixteenth century and the calamity of its destruction weighed upon the Christian faithful.Footnote 37
From Jerusalem, Täsfa Ṣeyon next made the pilgrimage to Rome. He may have done so with some knowledge of the Ethiopian community at Santo Stefano, which was available at Emperor Lebnä Dengel's court from either resident Europeans or returned Ethiopian pilgrims.Footnote 38 One of four church-cum-hospice structures owned by the Chapter of St. Peter, Santo Stefano had long hosted clerics serving in St. Peter's Basilica, and by the late fifteenth century, a fluctuating number of Ethiopians resided there, against the will of the title holder.Footnote 39 When Täsfa Ṣeyon arrived decades later, it was incontrovertibly associated with the Ethiopian community: the Romans renamed it Santo Stefano dei Mori or Santo Stefano degli Indiani, while the Ethiopians christened it Däbrä Qeddus Esṭifanos, employing the Geʿez monastic nomenclature to refer to their adopted residence as “the Mount of Saint Stephen.”Footnote 40
Some Ethiopians made the complex a permanent home, while others stopped briefly en route to more distant religious shrines. For this reason, the size of the community at Santo Stefano fluctuated considerably: between the 1510s and 1530s, the number of residents was reportedly between six and thirty-eight, and when Täsfa Ṣeyon arrived in the mid-1530s, it was home to a dozen pilgrims.Footnote 41 But despite its small size, Santo Stefano was probably the best-known community of free Africans in early modern Europe. Its residents were noticed by Muḥammad al-Wazzān al-Fāsī, better known as Leo Africanus, who lived in Rome in the 1520s and wrote in his “Della descrittione dell'Africa” (1550) of “certain religious who are friars and have their faces branded; they can be seen throughout Europe but especially in Rome.”Footnote 42 As this comment suggests, Santo Stefano had become one of many Roman spaces associated with a specific stranger population, exemplifying the cosmopolitanism produced by the city's emergence as a multiethnic pilgrim centre.Footnote 43
The Tangled Roots of Ethiopianist Knowledge
Täsfa Ṣeyon arrived at a favourable juncture in Ethiopian–European relations. Medieval European interest in Ethiopia derived from the Latin quest for the mythic Christian sovereign named Prester John. Initially associated with Asia, Prester John was by the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries linked to northeast Africa. This discursive metamorphosis reflected two intertwined trends: the increased reporting of traders and missionaries in the East, who refuted the notion of a Christian potentate in Asia; and the trickle of Ethiopian pilgrims and diplomatic emissaries to the Italian and Iberian peninsulas, who claimed they hailed from a powerful but beleaguered Christian empire, obliquely accepting the identification with the fabled sovereign. This association afforded Ethiopians hospitality as pilgrims and value as informants, improving their inherently vulnerable position as strangers, and by the late fourteenth century, their contacts with Latin scholars eager for information about the region began to directly shape the European conception of Africa.Footnote 44 This Ethiopian engagement with Europe coincided with the escalating European interest in the non-Western world.
The new brokered understanding of Ethiopia first emerged in Venice. The vast commercial network of the port city made it a natural hub for the dissemination of knowledge about the wider world, and its links with the Eastern Mediterranean facilitated the arrival of Ethiopian pilgrims from Egypt, Crete, and the Holy Land. In 1402, the first documented Ethiopian embassy reached Latin Europe, and this undertaking produced the Iter de Venetiis ad Indiam, an anonymous itinerary describing the route from the lagoon to Prester John's kingdom, complemented by an Amharic-Italian lexicon, the first such work for an Ethiopian Semitic language.Footnote 45 In the 1440s, the mapmaker Fra Mauro Camaldolese produced his famous Mappamundi, whose impressively accurate rendering of the Horn of Africa he attributed to the testimony of “those who grew up here, who are prelates.”Footnote 46 A few decades later, Alessandro Zorzi produced an extra-European geographic compendium, which included multiple itineraries linking Ethiopia to Cairo and Jerusalem obtained from Ethiopian visitors to the Republic.Footnote 47 These Venetian projects complemented the products of other hubs of protean Ethiopianist knowledge, most notably Florence and Naples. When taken together, they represent fragmentary contributions to an emerging Ethiopianist library, the first corpus of European works dedicated to an African society south of the Sahara.Footnote 48
This preliminary phase of Ethiopianist knowledge production derived from chance and personal initiative. In nearly every case, well-positioned European geographers interested in the wider world seized the opportunity to acquire rare information from itinerant Ethiopians. By the early sixteenth century, however, European interest in Ethiopia began to transcend such geographic curiosity through the emerging field of philologia sacra, which looked beyond Hebrew to the Semitic languages of Eastern Christianity in order to more deeply elucidate the scriptures.Footnote 49 This shift towards a distinct field of European oriental studies is exemplified by the 1513 edition of the Ethiopian Psalter, which contains the Geʿez version of the Book of Psalms, and which represents the first printed text in an African language, predating an Arabic edition of the Book of Hours by one year.Footnote 50 The Psalter's publisher was Johannes Potken of Cologne, a papal secretary in the Roman Curia who developed an interest in Geʿez, which he tendentiously identified as Chaldean.Footnote 51 This led him to the Ethiopians of Santo Stefano, where he studied the language with a resident named Tomas Wäldä Samuʿél. Using a manuscript delivered by a fifteenth-century Ethiopian delegation, the two collaborated on an edition of Mäzmurä dawit, or the Geʿez Psalms,Footnote 52 printed by the prominent Silber brothers.Footnote 53
This was a watershed achievement. Most notably, the work contained the first printed autobiographical statement by an African author. In an interpolated leaf featuring red and black ink, a Geʿez text announced:
This Psalter [dawit] was printed in the city of Rome by Johannes Potken, German and elder [prépositos] of the Church of Saint George of the city of Cologne of Germany, and with him, I Tomas Wäldä Samuʿél, monk [gädamawi] and pilgrim of Jerusalem, on the seventh of the month of Ḫamlé, the year of our Lord Jesus Christ, son of God and the Virgin Mary, 1513 Amen.Footnote 54
This statement suggests several important developments. Before this collaboration, Ethiopians acted as informants for European interlocutors who limited themselves to presenting corrupted fragments of mediated Ethiopian knowledge. The production of the Psalter, in contrast, required an intensive and sustained investment of time and resources, and a substantial partnership between a European, who could navigate the institutional side of the printing process, and an Ethiopian, who could prepare a reliable text, review the type and proofs, and provide a suitable contextual apparatus. This last point is a little-noticed but highly significant feature of the Psalter as an example of linguistic scholarship: its first pages contain an introduction to the Ethiopic script (fidäl), the ha-hu sequence, and Geʿez pronunciation as well as grammar. As these contextual materials, their intended European reader, and the larger project suggest, Tomas Wäldä Samuʿél exemplified a new role for Ethiopians in their intellectual interactions with Europeans: he was not a purveyor of information but an intellectual agent with a clearly articulated authorial identity, and a direct participant in the unfolding print revolution and developing field of Eastern Christian–focused research.
The publication of the Psalter coincided with a diplomatic development that similarly transformed European knowledge of Ethiopia. In 1514, the Armenian-Ethiopian ambassador Matéwos arrived in Lisbon and persuaded the Crown to dispatch a mission to Emperor Lebnä Dengel, which departed the following year. A flood of publications celebrating the discovery of the realm of Prester John followed, adding reports of current events in Ethiopia to the comparatively scholarly works discussed above. In 1516 and 1518, Andrea Corsali, the papal representative in the Portuguese delegation, sent two letters to Rome that were printed and widely circulated,Footnote 55 and in 1520, the governor and auditor general of the Estado da Índia dispatched two letters to Lisbon announcing contact with representatives of the Ethiopian ruler, which were promptly printed.Footnote 56 The following year, King Manuel I published a pamphlet announcing the Portuguese discovery of Prester John,Footnote 57 and in 1532, after the Portuguese legation returned to Lisbon, the courtier and Ethiopia-enthusiast Damião de Góis published a short account of Matéwos's visit almost two decades prior.Footnote 58 In the decades immediately following the groundbreaking Psalter and the mission of Matéwos, the Latin Catholic elite displayed clear symptoms of Prestermania.
Täsfa Ṣeyon, the World Historian, and the Spirituale
It was in this changing political and intellectual context that Täsfa Ṣeyon reached the eternal city. Whether because of his erudition or familiarity with the role of the scholarly adviser of the powerful, his earlier career in the Ethiopian highlands prepared him to look beyond the diasporic confines of Santo Stefano. Within a few years, Täsfa Ṣeyon became a critical intermediary in the arena of Ethiopian–European relations and the related institutionalisation of Ethiopia-focused knowledge production. For the Curia and the small community of Catholic orientalists focused on understanding the languages and texts of Eastern Christianity, Täsfa Ṣeyon was the resident Roman authority on Ethiopia, Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity, and the real Prester John.
This new role began with his intervention in the case of João Bermudes, the former barber-bleeder of the Portuguese mission to Emperor Lebnä Dengel. As the Jesuit Alfonso Salmeron later told Ignatius Loyola,
A Portuguese man [Bermudes] had come from Prester John's India in the company of two [Ethiopian] emissaries who brought letters from the prince for the pope. It seems that one of the emissaries died on the journey here and the other one died near Venice; and so, the Portuguese man brought the letters to Rome, for the pope. Friar Pedro [Täsfa Ṣeyon], who is from there, was asked to read them.Footnote 59
In Rome, Bermudes told an astonishing tale. He had remained in the war-torn highlands until the mid-1530s, when the emperor returned him to Europe to obtain military support for the Christian kingdom. However, unbeknownst to Lebnä Dengel, Bermudes covertly expanded this mandate: once in Rome, he claimed that abunä Marqos, the dying metropolitan, had named him as his ecclesiastic successor.Footnote 60 This was preposterous on several levels: Bermudes not only lacked suitable qualifications, but the Ethiopian Church had since its inception been headed by a Coptic bishop appointed by the Patriarch of Alexandria in consultation with the residents of the monastery of Saint Anthony, and this metropolitan of Ethiopia, or abun, had never named his own successor.
Bermudes's arrival led to the summoning of Täsfa Ṣeyon, who was tasked with translating his letters. Given the latter's unique qualifications, he was likely additionally asked to assess the claims of Bermudes and explain the workings of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, then obscure to Europeans. As a learned scholar from an Ethiopian monastery and an alumnus of the royal court, Täsfa Ṣeyon would have found it easy to persuade a likely already sceptical Curia to reject the barber-bleeder's bid for ecclesiastical power—though Bermudes later boasted that Paul III appointed him not only abun of Ethiopia but also “Patriarch and Pontifex” of Alexandria.Footnote 61 In reality, his aggrandising claim was rejected by the Vatican—to say nothing of the Ethiopian Church. This outcome suggests that Täsfa Ṣeyon helped expose a prominent fraud, thereby becoming the resident Vatican expert on Ethiopia.
This new role was exemplified by Täsfa Ṣeyon's subsequent collaboration with two Italian scholars caught up in the Prestermania: the learned prelates Paolo Giovio and Ludovico Beccadelli. The two probably developed their interest in the region through their involvement in the 1532–33 papal consistory in Bologna, when Pope Clement received Francisco Álvares, chaplain of the Portuguese mission to Ethiopia.Footnote 62 Álvares claimed to have received the emperor's pledge of obedience to Rome, and offered as proof the first letters from an Ethiopian ruler to the pontiff, ostensibly confirming the fealty of the long-sought Prester John. In an era of Protestant challenge, the declaration epitomised the legitimacy and universality sought by the embattled papacy,Footnote 63 and the sensational event was publicised through a widely circulated pamphlet titled Legatio David Aethiopiae Regis, reprinted in multiple languages.Footnote 64
Giovio seems to have contributed to this anonymous publication. Its introductory essay claimed he had translated the correspondence and was additionally planning to translate a Portuguese manuscript Álvares had brought to Bologna.Footnote 65 This was in all likelihood a copy of the latter's famous travel narrative, which was published in Portugal in 1540 as Verdadeira informação das terras do Preste João das Indias.Footnote 66 It was the first European eyewitness account of the assumed Prester John and one of the earliest proto-ethnographic descriptions of the societies of the Horn, the complement of the ethno-geographic manuals that aided European expeditions in the wider Indian Ocean arena.Footnote 67 It circulated widely after 1559 through its inclusion in the first volume of Giovanni Battista Ramusio's influential Delle navigationi et viaggi, which also included Corsali's letters and the royal epistles from the Legatio.Footnote 68
Although Giovio never actually translated the manuscript, he continued to develop his interest in Ethiopia. After joining the Curia and becoming a close adviser of Pope Clement, he was privy to current overseas intelligence, including reports about the slow progress of the Portuguese mission, as well as the reserve of Ethiopian knowledge at Santo Stefano. This privileged position led him to contact Täsfa Ṣeyon, whose testimony eventually informed a Prester-inflected historiographical fusion of medieval fantasy and the latest cutting-edge Ethiopian scholarship.Footnote 69 In his magnum opus, Historiarum sui temporis (1550), Giovio offered a brief “Description of Africa” that mixed conventional accounts of troglodytes and other physiognomic oddities with a nuanced discussion of Ethiopia and its recent history.Footnote 70 Giovio explained that the latter derived from Álvares and “Pietro Abissino, man of illustrious and honourable ingenuity, [who] with great humanity and faithfulness told me the notable things about Abyssinians.”Footnote 71 Either informant could have shaped Giovio's descriptions of topics such as Emperor Lebnä Dengel's life and daily routine, but only Täsfa Ṣeyon could have provided the prelate with such a convincingly laudatory overview of his homeland of Šäwa, on the basis of which Giovio boldly asserted that the Šäwans “preceded all Abyssinians in astuteness, ingenuity, sobriety, customs and good-living,” and “rule no different than Venetian gentlemen!”Footnote 72
Giovio's accumulative Ethiopian pastiche and panoptic historiographical fusion of European and non-European knowledge exemplify a larger sixteenth-century shift from universal to world historiography.Footnote 73 At a time when most local historians wrote dynastic histories based on archival sources and official chronicles, and when universal historians conceptualised world history from the perspective of an outward-looking home society, Giovio instead exploited Rome's emerging role as a cosmopolitan crossroads to synthesise and aggregate the testimonies of foreign visitors and the products of the expanding Vatican information network. Yet this distinctive historical method also set Giovio apart from the growing number of sixteenth-century orientalists whose principal concern was the mastery of Semitic languages in order to deepen scriptural understanding. In contrast to the latter, Giovio purported to be motivated by a more worldly simple curiosity, adding that he described Ethiopia so as to distract readers from “so many bloody wars and sad events.”Footnote 74 In short, if his study in many respects typified the innovative world historiography of the era, his references to medieval lore about Ethiopia and Africa failed to account for the most recent reports from the Horn as well as the developing European understanding of Eastern Christian traditions.
In this, he differed from his contemporary Beccadelli. A Bolognese erudite famed for his literary accomplishments and remarkable ecclesiastical career, Beccadelli joined Giovio at the Bologna hearing as secretary to Cardinal Gasparo Contarini. The latter was a leading member of the spirituali, a circle of lay and ordained figures committed to humanism, ecumenism, and church reform, and whose broad intellectual interests and personal quest for transcendence and salvation have led to their characterisation as a “religious republic of letters.”Footnote 75 The spirituali critiqued the state of the Church and sought accommodation with the Protestants, and this drew some of them towards the concept of union with Eastern Christianity.Footnote 76 They were opposed by the zelanti, who rejected such accommodation and championed strict Catholic orthodoxy. For his part, Contarini saw Eastern Christianity as a model for Protestant reconciliation, and shortly before his death, this question led him to summon abba Yoḥannes, an Ethiopian cleric then residing in Venice.Footnote 77 While the motives for this invitation are unclear, they can plausibly be interpreted as a reflection of Contarini's favourable orientation towards Orthodox Christianity.
It was through Contarini that Beccadelli was introduced to the spirituali and their ecumenism. In 1539, Beccadelli's interest in Ethiopia crystallised when he acquired an anonymous and reportedly disorganised Italian version of Álvares's narrative, most likely an unpublished translation of the manuscript the recently deceased chaplain had brought from Bologna to Rome. Armed with this source, Beccadelli completed an improved version of Álvares's work in 1542, two years after the Portuguese edition appeared. In its dedication, he explained:
[I] ordered, divided, and made it as much clear as I could, only by adding a few things in certain places, where our Ethiopians in Rome disagree with what is written. Because you must know that to be faithful to the truth and my satisfaction, I confirmed it with our good Ethiopian, fra Pietro [abba Täsfa Ṣeyon], and others of his [Ethiopians].Footnote 78
These consultations with Täsfa Ṣeyon and the other residents of Santo Stefano resulted in forty-two “additions” of original commentary on Álvares's text.Footnote 79 This was an innovation: if Giovio somewhat haphazardly fused ancient and modern accounts in a grand historical survey, Beccadelli instead edited a cutting-edge eyewitness account of Ethiopia, rich with historical and proto-ethnographic observations which he vetted and complemented through interviews with diasporic Ethiopians. This was a specialist work fusing travel narrative and scholarship. Yet at its core, Beccadelli's Ramusio-esque re-edition and elaboration of Álvares's work reflected the era's contentious religious politics. His consultations with Täsfa Ṣeyon and his colleagues clarified aspects of Ethiopian Orthodox doctrine and practice deemed troubling by the Vatican, and his revisions sought to preempt and assuage critics of Ethiopian Christianity amid the era's increasing conservatism.Footnote 80
Most notably, his research led him to dismiss the theological relevance of Ethiopian practices such as annual baptism, which he explained was performed not as a sacrament but simply “to commemorate the baptism of Christ.” As for the practices of scarification and tattooing, Beccadelli related that the monks explained “they were done to improve the eyesight, for different traditions, and for beauty,” and that “brother Pietro [Täsfa Ṣeyon] said that they are done . . . to distinguish themselves from other tribes, as much of Ethiopia regards as enemies those ancient Jews who came to Ethiopia with the son of Solomon [Menilek I].” Beccadelli also reported several details about Däbrä Libanos likely derived from Täsfa Ṣeyon, including the fact that “the mother of Prester John” had entered it as a nun.Footnote 81 Given Täsfa Ṣeyon's proximity to the Vatican and awareness of its ongoing politico-doctrinal struggles, one can only speculate if his dialogue with the prelate aimed to subtly influence the shifting currents of the day with respect to Ethiopian Christianity and ecumenical politics. What is more certain is that Beccadelli framed his discussion to preempt accusations of Ethiopian heresy, and that his work and the broader spirituali anxiety about the nature of Eastern Christianity anticipated future Catholic debates about the nature of Asian religions that appeared to predate the Abrahamic traditions.Footnote 82
Ethiopia and Tridentine Orientalism
In the aftermath of the Portuguese delegation's return from Ethiopia in 1527, the European discourse on Prester John and Ethiopian Christianity mutated: ecumenism and celebration yielded to scepticism and intransigence. This transformation reflected two parallel but distinct developments: Ethiopia's manifest geopolitical weakness and the growing doctrinal intolerance of the Latin Catholic world. The Portuguese missions to Ethiopia revealed a beleaguered kingdom on the brink of defeat and in dire need of military aid: Emperor Lebnä Dengel seemed the antithesis of the mighty Prester John, and his successor Emperor Gälawdéwos fared only slightly better. After Christóvão da Gama, son of the famed explorer and leader of the Portuguese military expedition sent to support the failing monarchy, was captured and executed by the forces of ʿAdal in 1542, the combined Ethiopian-Portuguese forces regrouped and managed to defeat and repel the invaders and their Ottoman allies from the highlands. However, the surviving Christian kingdom bore little resemblance to either its former self or the mythic European ideal. Despite the Prestermania of the day, it was clear to Portuguese authorities that the Ethiopian reality defied expectations.
As Christian Ethiopia confronted one existential threat, Rome grappled with another: the Protestant Reformation. In 1541, Contarini tarnished his reputation through his failed efforts towards reconciliation at Regensburg, and the following year, Paul III acquiesced to the zelanti and established the Roman Inquisition, placing at its helm their unyielding ringleader Cardinal Gian Pietro Carafa, the future Pope Paul IV. This institutionalised intolerance transformed the Church's official position on Eastern Christianity and Ethiopian Orthodoxy in particular, a shift that had been apparent in Portugal since the late 1520s. If in Rome the authorities fixated on the Protestants, in Portugal the anxiety focused on the New Christians. The community of conversos grew considerably after the immigration of expelled Spanish Jews (1492) and the ensuing Portuguese policy of forced conversion (1496), and the messianic pretensions of David Reubeni in the 1520s excited a Jewish revival that vexed Christian authorities.Footnote 83
This charged context awaited the Ethiopian ambassador Ṣägga Zäʾab, who reached Lisbon in 1527 with the returning Portuguese delegation. An Italian-speaking monk and former liqä kahenat, or arch-priest, Ṣägga Zäʾab found a hostile Portuguese court. He was interrogated by its clerics, accused of Judaic heresy, and denied the possibility of completing what he claimed was his—and not Álvares's—mission to meet the pontiff on behalf of Emperor Lebnä Dengel.Footnote 84 Ṣägga Zäʾab eventually departed with Bermudes in the mission to relieve the emperor, and tellingly, Cardinal Afonso entrusted the Portuguese fabulist with a stern letter asking Lebnä Dengel to renounce heresy and “to conform to the Holy Church and to obey, in all things, the Catholic faith.”Footnote 85
As this missive suggests, and as Beccadelli was then realising, the growing awareness that Ethiopia defied Latin Catholic expectations had implications for the production of Ethiopianist knowledge. Unlike the societies of the New World and Asia, highland Ethiopia had at least initially seemed to possess a superficial resemblance to European Christendom, with an integrated church and state, a highly developed monastic culture and scribal tradition, and a poorly understood but lineally adjacent Eastern Christian faith. But the increasing contact and concomitant European understanding of Ethiopian doctrine revealed a far messier reality, and the latter's significance became an arena of charged scholarly disputation.
This point was obvious to Ṣägga Zäʾab. Trapped at court, he befriended the scholar Damião de Góis, who helped him smuggle and publish in Louvain his 1540 confession of faith, the scandalous Fides, Religio Moresque aethiopum.Footnote 86 Circulating widely in many editions, it offered European readers the first detailed account of Ethiopian Orthodox doctrine and the Ethiopian narrative of the Queen of Sheba, the Kebrä nägäśt, and additionally advanced a defence of the Ethiopian church and scathing critique of its Catholic counterpart. These sensational topics captivated Góis's mentor Erasmus of Rotterdam, who upon learning about Ṣägga Zäʾab's claims from his student, discussed them in his Ecclesiastes.Footnote 87 Portugal's Grand Inquisitor Cardinal Henrique eventually censored the Fides,Footnote 88 and in the ensuing decades, Góis was repeatedly denounced to the Inquisition and eventually sentenced to monastic confinement.Footnote 89 In Rome, meanwhile, Beccadelli's re-edition of the Álvares manuscript stalled and was never printed, most likely because of his inquisitorial fears. As these contemporaneous episodes suggest, the production of Ethiopianist knowledge now faced close oversight. If Góis and Beccadelli had used their scholarship and connections to Ṣägga Zäʾab and Täsfa Ṣeyon to accommodate Ethiopian Christianity to their ecumenical vision, the intervening politico-religious developments in Europe and the Horn produced an outpouring of Tridentine Ethiopianist orientalist scholarship that was more overtly instrumental.
The career of the prelate Marcello Cervini exemplifies this development. His rapid ecclesiastical ascent began as a client of the Farnese clan: after the elevation of Alessandro Farnese as Paul III in 1534 and his own ordination the following year, Cervini held several influential positions in the Curia, including papal secretary and legato a latere to the imperial court. Upon his elevation to the office of cardinal in 1539, he assumed a crucial role in the ongoing negotiations with the Protestant world, and after Contarini's failure at Regensburg, he became a chief architect of the Council of Trent (1545–1563). In 1546, he joined the board of directors of the Roman Inquisition, and finally, in 1555 he briefly ascended to the papacy as Marcellus II.
While pursuing this glittering Church career, Cervini cultivated his scholarly interests through editions of classical and patristic texts.Footnote 90 This pursuit led him to become a benefactor of the Vatican Library, of which he would become the first cardinal protector in 1548, and he was additionally a key agent in the revitalisation of the Roman printing industry. His parallel and somewhat contradictory roles as an influential proponent of Counter-Reformation Catholicism, on the one hand, and an unwavering humanist on the other, have generated controversy with respect to his position in the spirituali-zelanti struggle.Footnote 91 Adding to this complexity is the recent argument that his bibliophilic activities and interest in Eastern Christianity qualify him as an orientalist.Footnote 92 This characterisation is apt: though not an author himself, Cervini pursued and sponsored language- and text-based—as opposed to observed or reported—knowledge of Eastern Christianity and actively shaped the parameters of its production, and more specifically, he saw Ethiopianist scholarship as a useful intellectual weapon in the unfolding politico-religious showdown with the Protestants. For these reasons, however, it is also simplistic to suggest he was a “good and kind father of the Orient.”Footnote 93
Cervini's instrumentalisation of Ethiopia-focused scholarship developed in the 1540s, during his work at the Council of Trent. In an attempt to aid the Counter-Reformation agenda, the Cardinal paused his humanist intellectual and bibliophilic projects and redirected his attention and capital towards endeavours germane to his immediate political aims. Despite his long-standing interest in canonical classical texts, his first two sponsored publications were defences of papal authority: the letters of Nicholas I (1542) and Innocent III (1543), and Henry VIII's Defense of the Seven Sacraments (1543).Footnote 94 He next pursued the acquisition, study, and publication of Eastern Christian texts that could buttress his defence of papal supremacy at the Council, and to this undertaking he rallied Latin orientalists as well as the learned Eastern Christian diaspora in Rome. In the mid-1540s, Cervini supported the Syriac Orthodox deacon Petrus of Damascus during his sojourn in Rome, and eventually sent him to the German scholar Johann Widmannstetter to serve as an Arabic translator. In the late 1540s, Cervini likewise sponsored Petrus's coreligionist Moses of Mardin, and invested in the possibility of printing the Syriac New Testament.Footnote 95 These contacts developed in the context of the question of Catholic communion with Maronite and Syriac Orthodox Christians and the perceived utility of such a relationship to the Vatican as a model of interdenominational fraternity.
It was against this backdrop that Cervini enlisted Täsfa Ṣeyon in his effort to strategically deploy Eastern Christian learning. The Cardinal's correspondence from Trent with his collaborators in Rome documents the connection. In one 1546 letter, Guglielmo Sirleto, the custodian of the Vatican Library, informed Cervini that Täsfa Ṣeyon had acquired and would translate a Geʿez manuscript containing the Nicene canons, which included “eighty-four [canons] beyond the twenty we already had,” one of which, Sirleto reported, “speaks of the primacy of the Roman Church above any other.”Footnote 96 Although we lack Cervini's reply, his approval for such an undertaking—and his esteem for his Ethiopian adviser—is demonstrated by another exchange from that same year, when he issued the following instructions to Bernardino Maffei, the secretary of Paul III:
I would like you to have the Indian [Ethiopian] and Maronite masses translated, to see if those provinces, converted by different apostles, have the same substance we have in terms of sacrifice, the intercession of saints, and the prayers for the dead. If I remember correctly brother Peter [Täsfa Ṣeyon] . . . told me they [Ethiopians] have in the mass all these things. When we will deal with these things, it will be better to be informed.Footnote 97
Though brief, these exchanges are revealing. Amid the conciliar negotiations, Cervini instructed his collaborators to enlist Täsfa Ṣeyon's expertise to procure, study, and print texts that could inform the upcoming battle for the fate of the Roman Church.
Either way, the orientalist-cardinal's collaboration with Täsfa Ṣeyon was qualitatively different from the latter's prior work with European scholars, let alone other past collaborations.Footnote 98 Potken, Giovio, Beccadelli, Góis, and the earliest geographers were motivated by distinct but fundamentally personal interests. Cervini, in contrast, did not personally engage in scholarship, but instead mobilised his institutional power and curial network towards the production of knowledge about Eastern and Ethiopian Christianity that was unprecedented in its coordination. In so doing, he thrust Täsfa Ṣeyon to the fore of Rome's emerging world of orientalist scholarship.
An Ethiopian Contribution to Philologia Sacra
Over the next decade, Täsfa Ṣeyon produced three major contributions to the developing field of Ethiopianist scholarship: his magnum opus Testamentum novum (1548–9), an edition of the Geʿez New Testament with additional texts and commentary; Modus baptizandi (1548–9), a Latin edition of the Ethiopian baptismal rite; and Missa qua Ethiopes communiter utuntur (1548–9), a Latin edition of the Ethiopian missal with commentary. This multistage undertaking involved a series of interconnected scholarly projects and enlisted his considerable network of contacts in the Roman Curia and Ethiopian diaspora.
A preliminary issue was source material. Ethiopian manuscripts typically reached Rome via Ethiopian pilgrims or the Levantine diaspora, and glimpses of Täsfa Ṣeyon's procurement efforts appear in his correspondence with Contarini's contact abba Yoḥannes. A polyglot from Venice-controlled Cyprus, the latter was connected to the Holy Land through Ethiopian and Venetian networks, and he apparently imported Geʿez manuscripts from the Ethiopian community of his native island: in 1548, for example, he informed Täsfa Ṣeyon that a manuscript had “arrived from Cyprus . . . in Venice,” via the island's archbishop.Footnote 99 Once obtained, the manuscripts were studied, corrected, and if necessary translated, in some cases through comparison. Sirleto described aspects of this undertaking in a letter to Cervini about the translation of the Ethiopian mass by Täsfa Ṣeyon and Yoḥannes, remarking “it is good to have many translations of the same matter, especially when they are by intelligent people, as S. Augustine also teaches in the book of Christian doctrine.”Footnote 100 The final stage was printing. In this, Täsfa Ṣeyon faced a particular challenge with the Testamentum, as he noted in its Geʿez preface: the project required the casting and use of fidäl moveable type that was unintelligible to the printers and which resulted in a considerable number of typographic errors.Footnote 101 This linguistic hurdle was compounded by the inexperience of the printers, since the Sack of 1527 had devastated the city's thriving printing industry, including the press of the experienced Silber brothers, who had produced the Psalter.Footnote 102 Täsfa Ṣeyon turned to the established Valerio Dorico, with whom he worked on the Testamentum between 1548 and 1549.Footnote 103 It was arduous work, as he lamented: “If you only knew the effort and pain we put into the making of this book! For two years, day and night I, Täsfa Ṣeyon, and Tänśeʾa Wäld, together with Zäsellasé, worked nonstop.”Footnote 104
This labour enjoyed Vatican support. Both the ledgers of the Apostolic Chamber, which record the papacy's public expenditures, and their counterparts in the Secret Treasury, which describe the pontiff's private expenses, document dozens of disbursements to Täsfa Ṣeyon and his companions.Footnote 105 For example, a 1538 transaction records provisions for “Indian [Ethiopian] friars,”Footnote 106 while a 1541 entry notes a payment of 30 scudi to dress an Armenian bishop and “the Indian [Ethiopian] friars who are behind San Pietro.”Footnote 107 Some disbursements specifically identify Täsfa Ṣeyon: he was the only Ethiopian mentioned by name in the personal ledger of Paul III and the family roll of Julius III, and was additionally the only member of Santo Stefano given disbursements for the entire community, a point that suggests the extent to which his position as a Farnese client shaped his relationship with other diasporic Ethiopians.Footnote 108 In 1548, he received “a subvention for certain Indian [Ethiopian] friars who will go to Jerusalem,”Footnote 109 and between 1545–48, the Secret Treasury made monthly disbursements of “one gold scudo to Pietro Indiano for this month's salary of his teacher,” his Latin tutor Antonio Lo Duca.Footnote 110 Finally, the Vatican appears to have subsidised the Testamentum itself: the Secret Treasury lists a disbursement of “twelve scudi in gold to the Indian [Ethiopian] friars to pay [for] the tin in order to print in their language,”Footnote 111 while Täsfa Ṣeyon explained in his preface that “the sum of money that I gave to make the type and to print is 50 gold wäqét,” an Ethiopian unit of measurement.Footnote 112 The latter was a considerable investment: in the period in question, one wäqét was the equivalent of an ox in Ethiopia and ten drachma, or 34 grams, of gold in Europe. Täsfa Ṣeyon's “contribution” was thus a small fortune, suggesting it was at least partially derived from his Vatican patrons.
The outcome of this intellectual and capital investment was groundbreaking. The Testamentum was a monumental five hundred page work, featuring red and black ink and extensive woodcut illustrations, and its contents included the following: a Latin and Geʿez introduction and dedication; an introduction to fidäl that drew upon and corrected the similar section of the Psalter; the Eusebian Canon Tables; the editio princeps of the Geʿez Gospels; selected epistles; the Acts of the Apostles, translated into Geʿez from Greek and Latin; the Anaphora; and a final dedication. It additionally features numerous colophons by Täsfa Ṣeyon, which generally indicate the date of completion, list the individuals involved, and offer thanks to a range of benefactors past and present. One of these, which follows the Gospel of John, is a more substantial page-long historical statement about Täsfa Ṣeyon and Ethiopia.
Shorter but no less timely were his other two works, the Modus Baptizandi and Missa, which were published in 1549 as a single volume with distinct title pages. Together, they detailed the Ethiopian baptismal rite and liturgy, with a dedication to Paul III and a preface featuring Emperor Gälawdéwos's 1548 letter to the pontiff. For its printing, which did not require fidäl type, Täsfa Ṣeyon turned to the renowned Antonio Blado, the official printer of the Apostolic Chamber in the early 1530s and a past recipient of commissions from Cervini.Footnote 113 Their subjects—Ethiopian mass and baptismal rituals—were then pressing topics at Trent: in 1547 Cervini told Sirleto that he was delighted to receive the translated mass from Täsfa Ṣeyon and Gualtieri, “the more gladly given that now in the Council the articles of the mass are being discussed.”Footnote 114
In sum, by the late 1540s Täsfa Ṣeyon was a prolific scholar and significant figure in the developing field of Eastern Christian–focused philologia sacra as well as the Roman printing landscape. In less than a decade, he made key texts and teachings of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church available to European readers for the first time, and there is inconclusive evidence that he hoped his publications would eventually reach readers in Ethiopia as well. Given that he was only in his late thirties when he fell sick and died, shortly after the printing of these works, one is left wondering about the nature of his future projects. His intellectual legacy, however, is more easily discerned.
Rediscovering Täsfa Ṣeyon
Täsfa Ṣeyon entered the modern academy through two Germans. The first was Hiob Ludolf, a seventeenth-century linguist, historian, and polymath who is widely regarded as the founder of the academic field of Ethiopian studies. A Leiden alumnus and adviser to the Duke of Saxe-Gotha, Ludolf was an admirer of Eastern Christianity, which he saw as proximate to the Lutheran Church, as well as an accomplished student of no less than six Semitic languages, including Geʿez, Syriac, and Arabic.Footnote 115 His Ethiopia-focused research culminated in a decade-long collaboration with abba Gorgoryos of Santo Stefano, a monk and former courtier of Emperor Susenyos, which in turn led to a series of major studies that remained influential for centuries, including a Geʿez dictionary and grammar, a monumental history of Ethiopia, and an even more daunting supplement to this history in the form of a commentary.Footnote 116
Täsfa Ṣeyon hides in the margins of this oeuvre.Footnote 117 Ludolf began his study of Ethiopia using the extant Ethiopianist library and Geʿez corpus in Europe, and his Geʿez skills earned the respect of Gorgoryos at their first encounter at Santo Stefano, where Ludolf passed the monks’ reading and translation test. The exam included scriptural passages, which tempts one to imagine queries based on the Testamentum.Footnote 118 More certain, however, is that Täsfa Ṣeyon's work shaped Ludolf's subsequent scholarship, though nowhere near to the degree of his successor Gorgoryos. This connection began with Ludolf's Lexicon aethiopico-latinum (1661), which devoted an entry to Täsfa Ṣeyon that noted the Testamentum and curiously bestowed upon him the ecclesiastical title qomos, or abbot/superior—a title or honorific that possibly reflected his actual or perceived status at Santo Stefano.Footnote 119 More substantially, this same work throughout offered illustrative usages via citations of the Gospels, effectively references to the Testamentum.
Täsfa Ṣeyon also appeared in Ludolf's equally enduring Historia Aethiopica (1681), which included a detailed chapter on Geʿez literature. In it, Ludolf offered readers a systematic overview of the Ethiopian scriptures that was unprecedented in its detail, and he began his treatment of the New Testament with a discussion of Täsfa Ṣeyon and his work, a review of the distinctions between the Testamentum and the conventional Ethiopian order of the scriptures, and Latin translations of several of Täsfa Ṣeyon's Geʿez commentaries.Footnote 120 He also used the Testamentum as a reference in his discussions of other topics,Footnote 121 and his Commentarius (1691), which elaborated on the Historia, contained further discussions of the volume, many correcting the discussions of other European scholars.Footnote 122 In short, the first major European study of the Ethiopian scriptures, a topic that had preoccupied Latin orientalists for over a century, rested on Täsfa Ṣeyon's foundational work. Together, Ludolf's Historia and Lexicon would remain standard references in Europe for the next two centuries, eventually underpinning the Ethiopia-related discussions of Enlightenment figures such as Denis Diderot.Footnote 123
Täsfa Ṣeyon was further integrated into the field of Ethiopian studies by August Dillman. A theologian, linguist, and philologist trained by the wide-ranging Heinrich Fleischer, Dillman was a prolific Ethiopianist and Old Testament scholar who exemplified the growing confidence of mid-nineteenth-century German orientalists that the scientific quality of their analysis made them the supreme European arbiters of non-Western truth.Footnote 124 Viewed by some today as a founder of the field, especially in terms of his contributions to Geʿez studies,Footnote 125 Dillman's reputation principally derives from his Old Testament translations and especially his Geʿez-Latin Lexicon Linguae Aethiopicae (1865), which replaced Ludolf's earlier work as the standard reference of its kind. In its introduction, Dillman offered readers a concise survey of his vast source material, adding that in his view the scriptures were without equal for the study of Geʿez, since they were “the foundation and norm of all Abyssinian literature, to which other authors aligned their way of speaking and writing.”Footnote 126 He then explained that in the case of the New Testament, he had reluctantly elected to use Täsfa Ṣeyon's error-strewn editio princeps instead of an alternative base manuscript, which effectively meant that the Testamentum underpinned his project. His innovative lexicon also compared translated Geʿez texts with their Greek, Latin, Hebrew, and Syriac counterparts, and additionally employed Ethiopian grammars, dictionaries, and marginal commentary on lexical topics. The result was a massive reference tool filled with Gospel citations derived from the Testamentum, and Dillman's widely read Lexicon effectively incorporated Täsfa Ṣeyon's magnum opus into the analytical apparatus of Semitic studies. By the early twentieth century, the prominence of the Testamentum was such that it served as the partial basis for two new European editions of the Geʿez gospels intended to aid the Capuchin missionary enterprise in Eritrea and Ethiopia.Footnote 127
This textual canonisation by European orientalists was followed by Täsfa Ṣeyon's rediscovery by modern Ethiopian intellectuals. This process began in 1924, when Crown Prince Täfäri Mäkonnen—the future Emperor Ḫaylä Śellasé—embarked on a historic European tour with a retinue of advisers and distinguished notables. As the first overseas mission of a de facto sovereign, the tour was a major milestone in Ethiopian statecraft,Footnote 128 and it was additionally significant since it followed Ethiopia's contentious admission to the League of Nations and unfolded amid the continuing challenges to its sovereignty within the liberal-imperial international system. Täfäri Mäkonnen and his delegation spent several months touring the major European capitals to considerable press fanfare, and they eventually reached Rome for direct talks with the new prime minister, Benito Mussolini.Footnote 129 The negotiations would prove to be the only face-to-face meeting of the two leaders.
What followed was an extraordinary moment of historical recuperation. After a conference at the Palazzo Venezia and tour of the Museo Coloniale, the Ethiopian dignitaries visited the Vatican for an audience with Pius XI and a visit to St. Peter's. In the dramatic and highly stylised retelling of then-blatta Ḫeruy Wäldä Śellasé, the de facto minister of foreign affairs and the tour's erudite chronicler, the Ethiopian travelers eventually wearied of their Roman sightseeing and decided to stop in a quiet area behind the basilica.Footnote 130 They then discovered that this resting space was adjacent to Santo Stefano, then rechristened as the Pontifical Ethiopian College but still known to Ethiopians—and now Eritreans—as Däbrä Qeddus Esṭifanos. Ḫeruy explained to his Amharic-speaking readers that a pontiff had long ago given this monastery to the Ethiopian pilgrims, and then narrated how he and the Crown Prince were warmly greeted by its current residents, a group of Ethiopian and Eritrean Catholic students. According to Ḫeruy, their hosts delivered a series of richly symbolic and stylised Amharic, Tigrinya, and Geʿez speeches and songs concerning the greatness of Täfäri Mäkonnen and the ties of faith that linked the distinguished visitors and the monastery residents with distant Ethiopia and wider Christendom. In the world of the text, a supposedly chance discovery had produced profound historical understanding.
After this lavish reception, the visiting Ethiopian dignitaries toured the premises of Santo Stefano. Ḫeruy showed particular interest in the graves of the monastery's former residents, whose epitaphs he copied, translated into Amharic, and published in his printed account of the journey. This was the first account of Santo Stefano and its early modern residents for modern Ethiopian readers, and possibly the first domestic—as distinct from diasporic—reference to the residence in Ethiopian literature. Ḫeruy presented the six epitaphs of abba Habtä Maryam of Däbrä Gubaʾé, abba Täklä Haymanot of Däbrä Dima, abba Zäkonä, the monk Gäbrä Śennay, abba Yaʿeqob the follower of abunä Yosṭateyos, and finally Täsfa Ṣeyon.Footnote 131 Reflecting upon the devotion of these pilgrims and the historical significance of this diasporic Ethiopian space at the heart of fascist Italy and the centre of global Catholicism, Ḫeruy pithily remarked, “To find Ethiopian monasteries in Jerusalem and Rome is a reason for great pride to all the children of Ethiopia. And this [fact] explains why the Christianity of Ethiopia has lasted since many earlier times.”Footnote 132 Nearly five hundred years after Täsfa Ṣeyon's departure from Ethiopia and arrival at Santo Stefano, Ḫeruy textually repatriated him through the print medium they both celebrated, transforming him into a paragon of the Ethiopian ecumene.Footnote 133
In the decades to come, Ḫeruy's discovery renewed interest in Täsfa Ṣeyon and Santo Stefano among Ethiopian and Eritrean intellectuals who sought to understand the nature of Ethiopia's stormy relationship with the wider world. Some Geʿez Rite Eritrean Catholics, for example, viewed him as the forerunner of their non-Latin Catholic tradition—a position exemplified by Täklä Maryam Sämḥaray Sälim, who used Täsfa Ṣeyon's works to defend the Catholic Geʿez liturgy.Footnote 134 Non-Catholic Ethiopian scholars also began to consider Täsfa Ṣeyon's historical significance, following Ḫeruy's work as well as the developing European literature on Santo Stefano. In the mid-1960s, the eminent and widely read historian Täklä Ṣadeq Mäkwuriya discussed the monastery in his rich account of the reign of Emperor Gälawdéwos, which he understood within the conjuncture of the Ottoman-Portuguese imperial contest and the Catholic missionary enterprise in Ethiopia.Footnote 135 Some years later, on the eve of the Ethiopian revolution of 1974, the historian Alämé Ešäté began his study of Ethiopian diasporic history with a discussion of Täsfa Ṣeyon, who he suggested inaugurated an outward-looking educational quest that stretched from the early modern era through to the student movements of the 1960s.Footnote 136 In these same years, abba Samuel Asghedom, the Catholic rector of the Pontifical Ethiopian College, argued that Täsfa Ṣeyon and the other early modern residents of Santo Stefano offered a model of dialogic intercultural scholarly inquiry that could usefully instruct what had now become the interdisciplinary field of Ethiopia-focused area studies.Footnote 137 If Ludolf and Dillman had viewed Täsfa Ṣeyon as an instrument of Western understanding, these Ethiopian and Eritrean writers instead joined Ḫeruy in imagining him as a harbinger and synecdoche of Ethiopia's encounter with the West, in all its fraught complexity.
Conclusion
Arriving in Rome as a pilgrim and refugee, Täsfa Ṣeyon eventually became a leading Vatican authority on Ethiopia and Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity. In the decade after he reached the small community at Santo Stefano, he became a trusted adviser to the Curia during the stormy years of the Council of Trent, a favoured client of Paul III, and a close collaborator with future pontiff Cardinal Cervini, and he ultimately became a prominent participant in the emerging Catholic-led field of Eastern Christian–focused oriental studies. This short but unusual career had a rich legacy. Just before his sudden death at a relatively young age, his compatriots at Santo Stefano referred to him as “our spiritual father and master [mämḥer]” in the rules written to regulate life at their residence, and in a symbolic gesture, they chose to record these rules in their library's copy of his Testamentum.Footnote 138 In the decades that followed, his students and collaborators applied the knowledge derived from his teachings in their own works, and over the next three centuries, Täsfa Ṣeyon's magnum opus became a standard reference work for European researchers interested in Ethiopia and its Geʿez literary heritage.
This enduring impact suggests Täsfa Ṣeyon's fundamental similarity to other Bessarione-like early modern Eastern Christian knowledge brokers. These include Moses of Mardin, who resided alongside Täsfa Ṣeyon at Santo Stefano and was similarly a client of Cervini, and who additionally collaborated with Guillaume Postel and Johann Albrecht Widmannstetter on the editio princeps of the Syriac New Testament; Ignatius Naʿmatallah, the exiled Patriarch of Antioch who became the tutor of Joseph Scaliger; Yusuf ibn Abu Dhaqn, the Cairene Coptic convert to Catholicism who spurred the development of Coptic studies in Europe; and Būlus al-Haddār, the Maronite bibliographer and scholar widely viewed as a progenitor of Portuguese oriental studies. Like Täsfa Ṣeyon and the more famous Leo Africanus, these intermediaries were key agents of intercultural inquiry and educators of the first generations of early modern orientalists, even if these contributions were subsequently diminished by later Western specialists who dismissed the authority of these Eastern Christian interlocutors because of their perceived cultural hybridity and open connection to the Catholic missionary enterprise.Footnote 139
Täsfa Ṣeyon's intellectual influence and enduring publications contributed to the bourgeoning body of religiously-motivated orientalist learning that would in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century make Rome the leading centre of orientalist scholarship in Europe, laying the foundation for its ostensibly secular and academic Franco-German eighteenth-century successor. As Keller and Irigoyen-García have argued more broadly, this early modern meeting of European and extra-European minds generated something previously unknown to either: a European-dominated specialised field of orientalist learning predicated on authorial competition, linguistic competency, and the purported systematic and integrated analysis of extra-European societies through the study of their texts.Footnote 140 It is for this reason that Täsfa Ṣeyon deserves to be remembered as a founder of Ethiopian studies.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Abebe Ambatchew, Gianfranco Armando, Sanda Bob, David D. Daniels III, Ermias Zemichael, Kathleen Furr, Nikola Golubović, Gabriele Natta, and Ruth Iyob. This research was funded by an American Philosophical Society Franklin Research Grant, an American University of Sharjah Faculty Research Grant, and an American University of Sharjah Open Access Grant. Transliteration follows the Encyclopaedia Aethiopica (EA) system, substituting é for the fifth order and e for the sixth order vowels. Dates in the Ethiopian calendar are designated AM, forʿamätä meḥrät.