The political focal point of Ethiopia appears to have slowly moved toward the southern and eastern pieces of the Tigray area (the northernmost of the nine locales of Ethiopia) in the Post-Aksumite period. A couple holy places here have been likely credited to this period, yet ensuing variations joined with the powerlessness to get consents to lead archeological reviews make dating troublesome. It appears to be reasonable that holy places kept on being worked as well as cut (cut) out of rock. A gathering of funerary hypogea (underground loads) in the Hawzien plain (in northern Ethiopia) may have been changed into chapels during the post-Aksumite period. This could be the situation for houses of worship like Abreha-we-Atsbeha (underneath) and Tcherqos Wukro (the canvases in these temples presumably date from a later period). As per nearby oral customs, few iron crosses date to the Aksumite or Post-Aksumite periods, however the shortfall of solid dating strategies and the way that such crosses were delivered basically until the sixteenth hundred years, makes it very challenging to check these cases.
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