234:. A poisonous dragon escaped from the tree. Its poison was neutralised by the prayers of Samuel, and after having received 81 blows from the public, it died. At the end of the story, Samuel baptises the people, teaches them te orthodox faith and starts the construction of the church of Zem in the name of
150:
A baker of
Emperor Dawit I came to beg for the help of Abba Samuel, because he had burnt the king's bread in baking it. Samuel reassured the man and urged him to have faith. As soon as the king noticed the burned bread, he became angry and ordered the poor baker whipped. As the whip was about to land
129:
had had the adherents of Tekle
Haymanot deported, because they denounced the king's marriage with a concubine of his father. Andreyas was chased away to Krestos Fatar. After a fruitful life as a monk in Krestos Fatar he was called to the king a second time. This time, he was tortured together with
116:
with Tekle
Haymanot, his teacher and spiritual father. Samuel, as usual in spiritual education in Ethiopia, was ordained deacon, and later priest. Still later, after having become a monk, he left his teacher Tekle Haymanot to live a life of his own. Samuel was sent to the region of Yagmu which he
229:
tree. This tree bled like a woman once a month, and a serpent is lurked in its branches. Abba Samuel came to Zem to drive out the serpent and fell the tree. He succeeded in cutting the tree after having signed his face by the cross and after having set his axe to the stem in the name of the
214:), the fear of the people to cut this tree and the tree nearly fatally falling over them when it is felt. But by driving out the spirits, defeating the demons and by cutting the trees, Abba Samuel acquired the wood needed for the construction of doors, portals and roofs for his churches.
163:
over the territory of
Endagabton. On his way to his new duty, Samuel visited his homeland Zem, to visit his mother. She had become an old lady. Samuel brought her into the monastery of Wagag, where she spent the rest of her life as a nun. She died on the 6th of the month of
137:
ascended the throne in 1382, things changed, as the new
Emperor was more pious and favorable to the monk. Samuel had the opportunity to visit the grave of his father in Enasedestey, where he built a church, in which he reburied the bones of his father, at the foot of the
151:
on the baker's back, it broke in half. The royal executioner tried to hit him a second time with the remnant of the whip, but it split in half again. And so forth. When Dawit learnt that the baker was protected by Samuel, he was pacified and showed mercy.
201:
Many church building stories show the recurrent pattern of a demon or a pack of them dominating a territory, victory over the demons by Abba Samuel, baptism and conversion to the orthodox faith of the inhabitants and finally the building of a church.
205:
There are some remarkable stories in which trees play a role as focus of veneration for the non-Christianised people and as a hiding place for demons. They all show the recurring motifs of a tree inhabited by the pagan spirit
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When he dove into the water, he uncovered the snares of a demon named Qwetel in the form of a 40-metre (130 ft) piece of rope. Samuel brought it up on to dry land and repaired the roof of his church with it.
97:(a chronological impossibility as Tekle Haymanot had died before Samuel's birth) to the aging couple, Arsonwa became pregnant and gave birth to a son, with the help of a
310:, The International Journal of African Historical Studies, Board of Trustees, Boston University. Published by Boston University African Studies Center, 1991, p.544
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attributes at least ten churches and monasteries to him, and says he appointed numerous fellow believers as priests and leaders of the new communities.
93:, Abba Samuel's parents, Andreyas ("Andrew") and Arsonwa, longed for a child, but were almost too old to beget one. After a visit of the saint
171:
70:
69:) survives only in two 20th century manuscripts, both copies of a 16th-century revision of an earlier composition. He founded the monastery
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After building Hagere Maskal in the territory of Wagag, Samuel built further churches everywhere he travelled. He called the people to the
170:
in an unknown year, and was buried in Wagag. Samuel mourned by her grave for forty days and forty nights, and then purified himself in the
359:
194:. He asked the people to give him land to build them churches and monasteries, and also asked for building materials. The
187:
53:
living in the latter half of the 14th and the first decades of the 15th century. The source for his life is his
369:
112:
When Samuel was seven (or six) years of age, he was considered old enough to learn, leaving home to live in a
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in
Yazarzar, where he was buried. The year of his death is not mentioned. Seven months later, on the 27th of
86:
117:
renamed Wagag, "Dawn". There he built his first church, called Hagere Maskal, "Community of the Cross".
364:
81:
Abba Samuel was born in 1350. Like the parents of many other saints, and reminiscent of the story of
126:
130:
his fellow-believers, and afterwards exiled. He died on the road and was buried in
Enasedestey.
258:
252:
166:
374:
8:
134:
346:, traduits par Stanislas Kur. Louvain, Secrétariat du CorpusSCO, 49 Ch. de Wavre, 1968.
247:
58:
42:
262:, his disciple Samra Krestos had his remains taken to Wagag and reburied him there.
90:
94:
82:
308:
Seen but Not Heard: Children and
Childhood in Medieval Ethiopian Hagiographies
353:
231:
235:
54:
160:
113:
102:
190:, mostly after having chased away the locally operating demons or
106:
98:
57:, most accessible in Stanislas Kur's French translation of the
297:, History in Africa, African Studies Association, 1981, p.114.
139:
50:
120:
279:
Hagiographies and the
History of Medieval Ethiopia,
295:Hagiographies and the History of Medieval Ethiopia
351:
225:There was a great tree in the land of Zem, a
154:
76:
65:. The original work (Ge'ez: ገድለ ሳሙኤል ዘወገግ
101:. The child was said to be born with the
49:(Ge'ez: ሳሙኤል ዘደብረ ወገግ), was an Ethiopian
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287:
352:
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222:One of these stories is, in brief:
125:In Samuel's father's time, Emperor
13:
181:
14:
386:
217:
121:Fate of Andreyas, Samuel's father
109:the child and called him Samuel.
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159:Dawit appointed Abba Samuel as
89:in the opening chapters of the
45:: አባ ሳሙኤል), or commonly called
344:Actes de Samuel de Dabra Wagag
326:
313:
300:
271:
63:Actes de Samuel de Dabra Wagag
1:
360:14th-century Ethiopian people
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105:in his right hand. The saint
7:
133:When the Ethiopian Emperor
16:Middle Ages Ethiopian saint
10:
391:
28:
21:
241:
155:Arsonwa, Samuel's mother
127:Amda Seyon I of Ethiopia
77:Early life and education
250:the 29th of the month
67:Gadla Sāmū'ēl za-Wagag
370:Christian hagiography
47:Samuel of Dabra Wagag
23:Samuel of Dabra Wagag
246:Abba Samuel died on
135:Dawit I of Ethiopia
334:Seen but not Heard
248:Ethiopian calendar
36:
35:
382:
365:Ethiopian saints
337:
330:
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317:
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18:
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306:Steven Kaplan,
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293:Steven Kaplan,
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182:Church building
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148:
123:
91:Books of Samuel
79:
24:
17:
12:
11:
5:
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348:
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219:
218:The daero tree
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188:Orthodox faith
183:
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147:
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122:
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103:Holy Communion
95:Tekle Haymanot
78:
75:
34:
33:
30:
26:
25:
22:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
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336:, p.548, 550.
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236:Our Lady Mary
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146:First miracle
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20:
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321:Gadla Samuel
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232:Holy Trinity
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66:
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46:
38:
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375:1350 births
172:Setal River
71:Debra Wagag
55:hagiography
39:Abba Samuel
354:Categories
266:References
61:original,
281:pp.110-1.
161:patriarch
114:monastery
332:Kaplan,
277:Kaplan,
107:baptised
99:midwife
87:Elkanah
323:, p.17
259:Genbot
253:Teqemt
83:Hannah
319:Kur,
242:Death
227:daero
196:Actes
140:Tabot
59:Ge'ez
51:saint
43:Ge'ez
212:Desk
210:(or
208:Dask
192:dask
167:Säne
85:and
32:1350
29:Born
356::
286:^
238:.
174:.
142:.
73:.
41:(
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