'''Debre Libanos of Ham is the second-oldest monastery in Eritrea after Debre Sinia. It is part of the Eritrean Orthodox Church. It is a strict monastery, where the monks are expected to plow the fields. This monastery should not be confused with the Däbrä Libanos monastery of Ethiopia.
Location
It is located about 150 km southeast from Asmara: "in the historical district of Anbäsät Gäläba, Šəmäzana, in the present-day southern part of the province of Akkälä Guzay, Eritrea, close to the border with Agamä, Təgray" and near the village of Ham. Ham is the oldest settlement in the region. This location is in the modern regions of Debub or Gulo Makada. The monastery is also sometimes called Däbrä Wärq. Originally located in the village of Ham, the monastery was later moved to its present location perched on the edge of a cliff below the Ham plateau.
Founder and Age
This very ancient monastery is said to have been founded by the missionary Abbunä Libanos in the late fifth or early sixth century, within a hundred years of the conversion of the Horn of AfricaAksum Empire to Christianity. This founder is "one of the most important saints of the Aksumite period and renowned as one of the early founders of the monasticism and asceticism in Ethiopia." He is now a saint in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Church. This monastery includes a very rare copy of his hagiography, Gädlä Libanos. While many monasteries in the Horn of Africa claim to be ancient, this is one of the few which has actually been established to be ancient. The record of a land grant '' from EmperorLalibela, regnal name Gabra Masqal , giving land for the monastery, has survived. It is the very earliest extant land grant documents in the Horn of Africa.
Library
The Monastery of Däbrä Libanos has an important archive, with about 84 manuscripts. It contains one of the earliest manuscripts in the Horn of Africa: "The Golden Gospel". It is a metal-covered book of the Four Gospels of the Christian Bible, dating to the thirteenth century as evidenced by marginalia land charters that date back to then.
Mentions
A story in Täˀammərä Maryam says that miraculous water dripped from the ceiling of this monastery's churches.
Abbots
Its earliest abbots are:
Täsfa Ḥəywät or Zena Yoḥannəs, around 1209
Yərdəˀannä Krəstos or Ṣägga Mäṭaˁ, already in 1225 and up to 1268
Täkäśtä Bərhan or Śännay Mänfäs, in 1270
Asfəḥa or Efrem, 1200s to 1319
Ǝqbä Ǝgziˀ or Krəstos Abuhu; Gäbrä Krəstos or Yərdəˀannä Ǝgziˀ, from 1322 to Säyfä Arˁad’s reign
Burial
It also holds around 60 mummified bodies which are still in the process of being dated. The mummified bodies are wrapped in cloth, then tightly wrapped with animal skins of the same yellow cloth and animal skin that are worn by monks today. The few specimens of complete mummified remains have only the feet and hands exposed; the rest of the body was completely wrapped in skin. On the hands and feet, the skin and nail were very well preserved. The origin of mummification in Eritrea is likely Egypt, as Abba Libanos travelled through from Egypt, where the practice is common. According to oral tradition, the mummified skeleton remains found in the monasteries of Eritrea are bodies of religious individuals that inhabited them. The reason for mummification and the exact time when the practice was introduced are not known. But according to the oral tradition, the practice might have been introduced by about between the fifth and eight centuries CE together with the monks who were coming to Eritrea from the Middle East via Alexandria to expand Christianity.