Two days at Aksum, capital of the Aksumite Empire (1st century BC – 7th AD) and one of the great trading powers of the ancient world. UNESCO since 1980 for the stelae fields — granite obelisks up to 33 metres tall, carved as funerary markers for Aksumite kings. The largest standing stele (24m, single block) was looted by Mussolini in 1937 and only returned in 2008. Church of St Mary of Zion nearby is — according to Ethiopian Orthodox tradition — the resting place of the Ark of the Covenant, guarded by one monk who never leaves the chapel.
"Standing at the foot of the 24m stele back from Rome — moving. Our guide Daniel was a former priest, told the Ark story with quiet authority."
"The chapel of the Ark — even from outside, you feel the weight of belief. The monk-guardian was reading scripture by the door."
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church says yes — has done since the 4th century. The chapel is closed to all but one monk who never leaves. No scientific verification has ever been permitted.
Aksum is in Tigray region. Travel here has fluctuated with conflict — we only run trips when government & embassy advisories rate the area safe. We'll confirm at booking; if not we substitute Gondar.
Yes — full Historic Circuit. See our Lalibela and Simien Mountains tours. Combined 11-day from $3,490/pp.