This is a list of the abunas of Ethiopia, the spiritual heads of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church. The Abuna is known officially as Patriarch and Catholicos of Ethiopia, Archbishop of Axum and Ichege of the See of Saint Taklehaimanot. The current Abuna, Mathias, acceded to this position on 28 February 2013.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church is part of the Oriental Orthodox communion, and it was granted autocephaly by Cyril VI, Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church, in 1959.
Bishops of Axum
Abune Selama I Kesatay Birhan (St. Frumentius) (c. 350–383)
Minas or Elyas
Abreham (late 4th century – early 5th century)
Petros
Abba Afse (late 5th century – early 6th century)
Qozmos (fl. early 6th century)
Euprepius (fl. early 6th century)
vacant (c. 537–562)
Metropolitan Archbishops of Axum and of All Ethiopia
Qerellos (620s – mid 7th century)
unknown
Yohannes (c. 820–840)
Yaqob I (fl. mid 9th century)
Salama Za-'Azeb (fl. 9th century)
Bartalomewos (fl. 10th century)
Peter (920s), opposed by Minas and Fiqtor
vacant (c. 940–970s)
Daniel (fl. late 10th century)
Fiqtor (fl. 11th century)
'Abdun, claimant
Sawiros (1077–1092)
Giyorgis I (fl. 1090s)
Mikael I (fl. early–mid 12th century)
Yaqob II
Gabra Krestos
Atnatewos (fl. late 12th century)
Mikael II (1206–1209), opposed by Hirun
Yeshaq (c. 1209–1225)
Giyorgis II (c. 1225)
Saint Tekle Haymanot (c. 13th century), according to tradition
Yohannes (XIII?) (fl. 14th century)
Yaqob (III?) (c. 1337–1344)
vacant (1344–1348)
Salama II (1348–1388)
vacant (1388-1398/9)
Bartalomewos (1398/9–1436)
Mikael and Gabriel (1438–1458)
vacant (1458–1481)
Yeshaq (1481– c. 1520)
Marqos (VI?) (1481– c. 1530)
João Bermudes (c. 1536–c. 1545), self-proclaimed Ethiopian Orthodox Abuna, and Catholic Patriarch of Ethiopia and Alexandria
Endyras (c. 1545–?)
Andrés de Oviedo (1557–1577), Catholic bishop
Marqos (VII?) (c. 1565)
Krestodolos I (c. 1590)
Petros (VI?) (1599?–1607), killed in battle
Simon (1608–1617), died 1624
Afonso Mendes (1622–1632), Catholic Patriarch, supported by Susenyos I and deposed by Fasilides
vacant (1632–1633)
Rezek (c. 1634)
Marqos (VIII?) (c. 1635–1672), deposed with Krestodolos
Krestodolos II (c. 1640–1672), deposed with Marqos
Sinoda (1672–1687)
vacant (1687–1689)
Marqos (IX ?) (1689–late 17th century)
Abba Mikael (1640–1699)
Marqos X (1694–1716)
vacant (1716–1718)
Krestodolos III (c. 1718–1745)
vacant (1745–c. 1747)
Yohannes XIV (c. 1747–1770)
Yosab III (1770–1803)
vacant (1803–c. 1808)
Makarios (fl. c. 1808)
vacant (c. 1808–1816)
Qerellos III (1816–1829)
vacant (1829–1841)
Salama III (1841–1867)
vacant (1867–1868)
Atnatewos II (1868–1876), died of wounds received at the Battle of Gura
Petros VII (1876–1889), died 1918
Mattheos X (1889–1926)
Qerellos IV (1926–1936), deposed following the Second Italo-Ethiopian War
Abraham (1937–1939), installed during the Italian occupation
Yohannes XV (1939–1945), installed during the Italian occupation
Qerellos IV (1945–1950), restored
Basilios (1951–1959)
On 13 July 1948, the Coptic Orthodox and Ethiopian churches reached an agreement that led to the elevation of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church to the rank of an Autonomous Church; allowing the Archbishop of All Ethiopia to consecrate on his own bishops and metropolitans for the Ethiopian Church and to form a local Holy Synod. The Archbishop, however, is consecrated by the Pope of Alexandria along with the members of the Holy Synod of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.
Gallery
Patriarchs and Catholicoi of All Ethiopia
In 1959, the Coptic Orthodox Church granted autocephaly to the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, and elevated the Archbishop to the Patriarchal dignity and was enthroned with the title of: Patriarch and Re'ese Liqane Papasat Echege (Catholicos) of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church. The title of Ichege (Supreme Abbot) of the See of St. Tekle Haymanot of Debre Libanos was subsumed into the Patriarchate. The title of Ichege was revived and the title of Archbishop of Axum was added to the Patriarchal titles in 2005, as Axum was the seat of Ethiopia's first Bishop, St. Frumentius, and thus the oldest see in the church.