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By trading with India.

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Q: Why did aksum become so powerful?
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Related questions

Why do you think Aksum was such a powerful kingdom?

No


Did the Kilwa and the aksum grow powerful through trade?

yes


How did Aksum location and interaction with other regions affect its development?

Aksum is the name of a powerful, urban Iron Age Kingdom in Ethiopia, that flourished in the centuries before and after the time of Christ. It location made it prosper because the surrounding nations were so underdeveloped.


Why did kush suffer so much in the war of Aksum?

He discovered that his wife was already married to Aksum


Why has the President of the US become such a powerful person in the world?

They are so powerful because US is such a powerful country.


What statement is true about Kilwa and Aksum They were Christian kingdoms They were Muslim kingdoms They were city-states on the coast They grew powerful through trade?

They grew powerful through trade.


How did Thebes become so powerful?

by joining forces with other powerful city-states


Why did the Roman Empire become so powerful?

Because of TRADING


How did the Aztecs become so powerful?

by conquering other lands


Why was adula an important city in aksum?

Adula was an important city in Aksum because the Roman Empire need gold to make coins, so the Roman ships often docked it in Adula. That is why Adula was an important city in Aksum.


How did the Tudors become so powerful?

Because they just MAJICLY DID . OKAY


What were the effects of the Muslim invasion on aksum?

Aksum had converted to Christianity in the intervening centuries, so the conquest of the Sudan by Muslim forces effectively isolated the Aksumite Christians from the rest of the Christian World and resulted in the creation of the unique Ethiopian Tawhedo Church. Furthermore, the arrival of Islam on both Ethiopia's northern and eastern flanks effectively cut-off Aksum from the sea-trade that had made it historically powerful, making the subsequent Abbysinian Kingdoms weaker than their Aksumite forebearers.