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Clyde Winters
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BLOOMBERG -- A team of archaeologists from the University of Hamburg said they discovered the Queen of Sheba's palace and an altar that may have once held the Ark of the Covenant in Axum, Ethiopia.

http://www.selamta.net/Queen%20Sheba's%20Palace.jpg

A Christian king built a new palace over the 10th-century B.C. structure, which probably didn't survive for very long, the university said in a statement. The altar, oriented toward the star Sirius, has two columns and may have been where the Ark of the Covenant, the holiest treasure of early Judaism, was kept until the first temple was built in Axum, the researchers said.

``The special significance of this altar must have been handed down over centuries,'' the statement said. ``This is shown by the many sacrifices found around this spot.''

The Ark of the Covenant, featured in the Indiana Jones movie ``Raiders of the Lost Ark,'' was kept in Jerusalem for centuries, according to the Old Testament. After Jerusalem was conquered by the Babylonians in the 6th century B.C., the ark's fate isn't documented in the Bible and it entered the realm of legend.

Ethiopian Christians contend that the ark left Jerusalem much earlier -- during the realm of Solomon -- and was brought to Ethiopia, where it has long been enshrined in a church and is now accessible only to its guardian, a monk. This theory was explored by the British author Graham Hancock in ``The Sign and the Seal.''

Fate of the Ark

The Hamburg team led by Helmut Ziegert has for nine years been investigating the origins of the Ethiopian state and the Ethiopian orthodox church. The central purpose of the field trip was to find out how Judaism arrived in Ethiopia in the 10th century B.C., and to seek clues to the present location of the Ark of the Covenant, the university said.

The palace built over the Queen of Sheba's home was also aligned with the star Sirius, the statement said. The researchers conjecture that the second palace was built by Menelik, who, legend has it, was the son of Sheba and King Solomon.

The results of the Hamburg field trip suggest that together with Judaism and the Ark of the Covenant, a cult worshipping Sirius came to Ethiopia and practiced its religion until about 600 A.D., the university said.

According to the Old Testament, God ordered Moses to build the Ark of the Covenant, a box made of acacia wood and plated with gold. It is believed to have contained the tablets listing the Ten Commandments.

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Sundjata
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^^Very interesting, thanx for posting that clide. Though I'm not sure of the significance of Sirius, but several African cultures seem to have held that star in high regard as a focal point of their religious beliefs. Not sure either why this specific altar would have housed the Queen of Sheba. Was it Carbon dated, or was there any other evidence that may have pointed to this specific palace as that of Makeda?
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meninarmer
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Good article Clyde, but isn't it rather late?

I recall seeing a History Channel special 6-8 months back on the Ark in Ethiopia which had Helmut Ziegert following the trail of the Ark to one outdoor abandoned location, and finally to a second church in Ethiopia where the Ark is said to be hidden today.
It was a small church surrounded by a small fence and guarded by a small group of not too well armed locals. Helmut spoke to them from the other side of the fence and they refused to allow him in.
I'm not sure if it's the same site as in your article.

Were any artifacts found at the site connecting it into The Queen of Sheba or Menelik?

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Clyde Winters
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I can't really answer this question--we only have the newspaper articles about the find instead of an archaeology report.

.

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C. A. Winters

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Bettyboo
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Bullshyt. The Queen of Sheba was from "SHEBA". Sheba was located in modern Arabia.
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beyoku
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^ that is debatable. The problem seems to be there are multiple Sheba's and at the time of the queen of "Sheba" the 2 places in question - African Horn and Yemen had a relationship that could have been intertwined. It has also been suggested that the queen came from Egypt.
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Bettyboo
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quote:
Originally posted by astenb:
^ that is debatable. The problem seems to be there are multiple Sheba's and at the time of the queen of "Sheba" the 2 places in question - African Horn and Yemen had a relationship that could have been intertwined. It has also been suggested that the queen came from Egypt.

The Queen of Sheba was from "SHEBA". It was located in Arabia. She was Ethiopian in origin, but was not from "Africa". She hailed from the "Middle East".
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rockytsang
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