The Ethiopian Orthodox Church is the Christian church that still uses Ge'ez, the script of the ancient Aksumite Empire, as its liturgical language, showing an unbroken line of African Christianity that began when King Ezana made Aksum the first African society to adopt Christianity.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Church is a Christian institution whose roots go back to the Aksumite Empire (in present-day Eritrea and Ethiopia), the first African society to adopt Christianity. King Ezana converted around the fourth century, long before European missionaries or colonialism ever reached most of Africa. The church's signature feature, and the one the CED cares most about, is that it still conducts worship in Ge'ez, the written script of ancient Aksum.
That detail matters more than it might seem. A church using a 1,600-plus-year-old African script today is living evidence of cultural continuity. It proves African Christianity wasn't imported through colonization or the transatlantic slave trade. Aksum chose Christianity on its own terms, and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church carries that choice forward into the present.
This term lives in Topic 1.4 (Africa's Ancient Societies) in Unit 1: Origins of the African Diaspora. It directly supports learning objective AP African American Studies 1.4.B, which asks you to explain why Africa's ancient societies are culturally and historically significant to Black communities. EK 1.4.B.1 names the church explicitly. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church is your go-to evidence for the claim that Africans adopted Christianity independently, before and apart from European influence. It also feeds into EK 1.4.B.2, because African American writers from the late eighteenth century onward pointed to examples like this to counter racist stereotypes and prove African cultural sophistication. In other words, this church does double duty on the exam, working as ancient African history and as a building block of African American intellectual history.
Keep studying AP® African American Studies Unit 1
Aksumite Empire (Unit 1)
The church is the Aksumite Empire's most visible legacy. Aksum rose around 100 BCE as a Red Sea trade power, adopted Christianity under King Ezana, and that religious tradition survived the empire itself. When a question asks how Aksum still matters today, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church is the answer.
Ge'ez (Unit 1)
Ge'ez is the ancient Aksumite script, and the church is the institution that kept it alive as a liturgical language. The two terms almost always show up together. Think of Ge'ez as the evidence and the church as the institution preserving it.
King Ezana (Unit 1)
Ezana is the starting point of this whole story. His decision to adopt Christianity made Aksum the first African society to do so, and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church is the direct descendant of that choice.
Black Pharaohs (Unit 1)
Both terms serve the same exam purpose under LO 1.4.B. Nubia's twenty-fifth dynasty and Aksum's independent Christianity are the two big examples African American writers used to prove ancient Africa produced powerful, sophisticated societies, countering racist stereotypes.
Multiple-choice questions hit this term from two angles. The factual angle asks what script the church uses (Ge'ez) or how the church maintains its connection to ancient Aksum. The conceptual angle is the one to watch for. Questions ask what the continued use of Ge'ez demonstrates, and the answer is continuity and independent African Christianity, meaning Christianity adopted beyond the influence of colonialism or the transatlantic slave trade. You may also see it framed through African American intellectual history, where writers cited the church as proof of African cultural sophistication. No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but it works well as specific evidence in any short-answer or essay response about why ancient African societies matter to Black communities.
These get tangled because they appear in the same EK sentence. Ge'ez is the script and language of ancient Aksum. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church is the institution that still uses Ge'ez in worship today. If the question asks about a language or script, the answer is Ge'ez. If it asks about the church or institution preserving Aksumite Christianity, the answer is the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Church still uses Ge'ez, the script of the ancient Aksumite Empire, as its main liturgical language.
The church traces back to King Ezana, whose conversion made Aksum the first African society to adopt Christianity.
The church proves Africans adopted Christianity on their own terms, before and beyond the influence of colonialism or the transatlantic slave trade.
Its continued use of Ge'ez is the exam's classic example of cultural continuity from ancient Africa to the present day.
From the late eighteenth century onward, African American writers cited examples like this to counter racist stereotypes and showcase African cultural sophistication.
It's the Christian church descended from the Aksumite Empire that still uses Ge'ez as its liturgical language. The CED uses it as proof of cultural continuity from ancient Aksum to today and of Christianity adopted independently by Africans.
No. Aksum adopted Christianity under King Ezana around the fourth century, making it the first African society to do so, well over a thousand years before European colonization of Africa. That independence is exactly why the CED highlights it.
The Aksumite Empire was the ancient society (emerged around 100 BCE in present-day Eritrea and Ethiopia) that first adopted Christianity. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church is the religious institution that grew out of Aksumite Christianity and still exists today.
Ge'ez, the script of the ancient Aksumite Empire. This is a common multiple-choice question, and the bigger concept it tests is continuity between ancient African Christianity and the present.
Starting in the late eighteenth century, African American writers used ancient African examples in sacred and secular texts to counter racist stereotypes. The church served as evidence of African cultural sophistication and independent Christian development.
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