Ethiopian Manuscript Microfilm Library, HMML Project ID EMML, Manuscript No. 1180
This Geʿez language manuscript was created between 1889 and 1890. This date is precise, based on the scribe noting the date in the manuscript. The royal ruler's name mentioned in the manuscript is Menilek II.
This manuscript's last known location (i.e., where it was microfilmed or digitized at some point in the past forty years) is the repository of Trinity Cathedral in Makkāklaňňā, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
To view the manuscript, go to the digital copy.
This manuscript has a high number of Marian miracle stories: 139. Also, 123 have stanzas or hymns at their end, marked with a ♫ in the table below, under Other Aspects.
This manuscript has a lot of paintings of Marian miracle stories: 46. To see the paintings in this manuscript, go to its PEMM Paintings by Manuscript page.
These paintings are digitized and available online but only in black and white.
This manuscript has a total of 177 folios and 289 scans. It has 2 columns per page and approximately 24 lines per column.
The stories in this manuscript were cataloged by Jeremy R. Brown.
The PEMM abbreviation for this manuscript is EMML (HMML) 1180.
The Beta Maṣāḥǝft abbreviation for this manuscript is EMML1180. Other shelfmarks and/or abbreviations for this manuscript include EMML 1180.
The paintings in this manuscript were painted by Elyas Haylu (1861, d. early 1900s), one of Ethiopia’s most prominent artists during Emperor Menilek's era. He was one of the first Ethiopian artists to study painting in France. For more information, see the Encyclopaedia Aethiopica entry on this artist.
Regarding this manuscript's repository:
The Ethiopian Manuscript Microfilm Library (EMML) was a microfilming project carried out in Ethiopia in the 1970s-1990s. The project photographed 9,238 manuscripts prior to its conclusion in 1994. The collection has over five hundred Täˀammərä Maryam manuscripts. This project revolutionized Ethiopian Studies through the thousands of manuscripts made available for research and the ten volumes of catalogs prepared by William F. Macomber and Getatchew Haile. There is no institution that holds a complete set of the EMML microfilms, although the majority of the microfilms are available at the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML). HMML has the largest collection of electronic and microfilmed Ethiopian/Eritrean manuscripts in the world. There is an ongoing digitization effort at HMML to make the entirety of the EMML collection available online in their Reading Room. View more information about collections at HMML, including EMML.
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