In this episode of pplpod, we explore the astonishing rise and collapse of the Kingdom of Axum, the ancient African superpower that once stood alongside Rome, Persia, and China as one of the great empires of the third-century world. Centered in what is now Ethiopia and Eritrea, Axum controlled one of the most important trade choke points on Earth, built towering stone monuments that rivaled the engineering ambition of the pyramids, minted its own gold currency, and projected military power across the Red Sea into Arabia.
This episode traces how Axum transformed from a regional trading center into a global economic powerhouse by mastering the monsoon wind trade routes connecting the Mediterranean world to India. We examine the empire’s cosmopolitan culture, its massive stone stelae carved from single blocks of granite, its conversion to Christianity under King Ezana, and its surprising role in early Islamic history when it granted asylum to some of the first followers of Muhammad during the First Hijra.
Key topics covered:
Axum’s control of Red Sea and Indian Ocean trade
Giant stone stelae, gold coinage, and imperial architecture
King Ezana and Axum’s conversion to Christianity
The First Hijra and Axum sheltering early Muslims
Climate collapse, soil erosion, and the fall of the empire
Ultimately, this episode is about more than a forgotten kingdom. It is about how civilizations rise through geography, trade, engineering, and belief — and how even the world’s greatest powers can disappear when climate, economics, and political systems begin collapsing at the same time.
Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical sources accessed 6/9/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.
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