Axum had protected Muslims from persecution
hi
According to some Islamic traditions, the people of Axum offered shelter to the family of the Muslim prophet Muhammad during his exile from Mecca from 622 to 630 CE. For this reason, Axum was left untouched while Muslim armies conquered the surrounding areas.
As a center of a marine trading power of the Aksumite Kingdom. Historical records are otherwise unclear.
The rise of Muslim cities, The decline of Judaism, and an increase in wealth and trade of Axum's neighboring kingdoms. the only one it didn't lead to was C, The Bantu uniting all of Africa.
It is Aksum not, Axum -_- ... They built Obelisks
The Kingdom of Aksum did some major trading with the Romans and Ancient India, also,æthey were a hub of commerce. And, they minted their own currency.
Axum is now where modern day Ethiopia is.
Kaleb of Axum died in 540.
The civilization that interrupted Axum's Red Sea trade was the rise of the Islamic Caliphates in the 7th century. The expansion of Islam led to the establishment of new trade routes and control over key ports, particularly along the Arabian Peninsula and the East African coast. This shift diminished Axum's influence in the region, as Muslim traders began to dominate maritime trade in the Red Sea. As a result, Axum's economy suffered due to the loss of trade dominance.
Axum was the center of the marine trading power known as the Aksumite Kingdom, which predated the earliest mentions in Roman era writings. Around 356 CE, its ruler was converted to Christianity by Frumentius.
Axum was not isolated from trade