fbpx
Wikipedia

Phoenicia

Coordinates: 34°07′25″N 35°39′04″E / 34.12361°N 35.65111°E / 34.12361; 35.65111

Phoenicia (/fəˈnɪʃə, fəˈnʃə/)[4] was an ancient thalassocratic civilization originating in the Levant region of the eastern Mediterranean, primarily located in modern Lebanon.[5][6] The territory of the Phoenicians extended and shrank throughout history, with the core of their culture stretching from Tripoli in northern Lebanon to Mount Carmel in modern Israel.[7] Beyond their homeland, the Phoenicians extended throughout the Mediterranean, from Cyprus to the Iberian Peninsula.

Phoenicia
Φοινίκη
Phoiníkē (Greek)
2500 BC[1]–64 BC
Map of the Phoenicia region in green.
CapitalNone; dominant cities were Byblos (2500–1000 BC) and Tyre (900–550 BC)[2]
Common languagesPhoenician, Punic
Religion
Canaanite religion
Demonym(s)Phoenician
GovernmentCity-states ruled by kings, with varying degrees of oligarchic or plutocratic elements; oligarchic republic in Carthage after c. 480 BC[3]
Well-known kings of Phoenician cities 
• c. 1800 BC (oldest attested king of Lebanon proper)
Abishemu I
• 969 – 936 BC
Hiram I
• 820 – 774 BC
Pygmalion of Tyre
Historical eraClassical antiquity
• Established
2500 BC[1]
• Tyre becomes dominant city-state under the reign of Hiram I
969 BC
• Carthage founded (in Roman accounts by Dido)
814 BC
• Pompey conquers Phoenicia and rest of Seleucid Empire
64 BC

The Phoenicians were a Semitic-speaking people of somewhat unknown origin who emerged in the Levant around 3000 BC.[8] The term Phoenicia is an ancient Greek exonym that most likely described one of their most famous exports, a dye also known as Tyrian purple; it did not correspond precisely to a cohesive culture or society as it would have been understood natively.[9] It is debated whether Phoenicians were actually distinct from the broader group of Semitic-speaking peoples known as Canaanites.[10][11] Historian Robert Drews believes the term "Canaanites" corresponds to the ethnic group referred to as "Phoenicians" by the ancient Greeks;[12] archaeologist Jonathan N. Tubb argues that "Ammonites, Moabites, Israelites, and Phoenicians undoubtedly achieved their own cultural identities, and yet ethnically they were all Canaanites", "the same people who settled in farming villages in the region in the 8th millennium BC."[13]: 13–14 

The Phoenicians came to prominence in the mid-12th century BC, following the decline of most major cultures in the Late Bronze Age collapse. They were renowned among contemporaries as skilled traders and mariners, becoming the dominant commercial power for much of classical antiquity. The Phoenicians developed an expansive maritime trade network that lasted over a millennium, helping facilitate the exchange of cultures, ideas, and knowledge between major cradles of civilization such as Greece, Egypt, and Mesopotamia. After its zenith in the ninth century BC, the Phoenician civilization in the eastern Mediterranean slowly declined in the face of foreign influence and conquest; its presence endured in the central and western Mediterranean until the mid-second century BC.

The Phoenicians were organized in city-states, similar to those of ancient Greece, of which the most notable were Tyre, Sidon, and Byblos.[14][15] Each city-state was politically independent, and there is no evidence the Phoenicians viewed themselves as a single nationality.[16] The Phoenicians established colonies and trading posts across the Mediterranean; Carthage, a settlement in northwest Africa, became a major civilization in its own right in the seventh century BC. Phoenician society and cultural life centered on commerce and seafaring; while most city-states were governed by some form of kingship, merchant families likely exercised influence through oligarchies.

The Phoenicians were long considered a lost civilization due to the lack of indigenous written records, and only since the mid-20th century have historians and archaeologists been able to reveal a complex and influential civilization.[17] Their best known legacy is the world's oldest verified alphabet, whose origin was connected to that of the Hebrew script via the Proto-Sinaitic script,[18][page needed] and which was transmitted across the Mediterranean and used to develop the Arabic script and Greek alphabet and in turn the Latin and Cyrillic alphabets.[19][20] The Phoenicians are also credited with innovations in shipbuilding, navigation, industry, agriculture, and government. Their international trade network is believed to have fostered the economic, political, and cultural foundations of Classical Western civilization.[21]

Etymology

Being a society of independent city-states, the Phoenicians apparently did not have a term to denote the land of Phoenicia as a whole;[22] instead, demonyms were often derived from the name of the city an individual hailed from (e.g., Sidonian for Sidon, Tyrian for Tyre, etc.) If the Phoenicians did possess an etymon to denote the land overall, some scholars believe that they would have used "Canaan" and therefore referred to themselves as "Canaanites".[23] According to one reconstruction, the Honeyman inscription, dated to c. 900 BCE by William F. Albright, seems to contain a reference to the Phoenician homeland, calling it Pūt (Phoenician: 𐤐𐤕).[24] Poenulus, a Latin comedic play written in the early second century BCE, appears to preserve a Punic term for "Phoenicians" which may be reconstructed as *Pōnnīm.[25]

The name Phoenicians, like Latin Poenī (adj. poenicus, later pūnicus), comes from Greek Φοινίκη (Phoiníkē). The word φοῖνιξ phoînix (not to be confused with the mythical bird phoenix, which shares this spelling) meant variably "Phoenician person", "Tyrian purple, crimson" or "date palm." Homer used it with each of these meanings.[26] It is difficult to ascertain which meaning came first, but it is understandable how Greeks may have associated the crimson or purple color of dates and dye with the merchants who traded both products. A derivative, po-ni-ki-jo, is already attested in Mycenaean Greek Linear B from the 2nd Millennium BC. In these records, it means "crimson" or "palm tree" and does not denote a group of people.[27] Likewise, obelisks at Karnak describe Thutmose III smiting the prominent men of Retjenu (the region of Canaan and Syria) and a land belonging to what it calls the fnḫw, which is sometimes identified with Phoenicia, as it would represent a reasonable point of origin for the Linear B term po-ni-ki-jo, and seems to be the plural form of the Ancient Egyptian word for "carpenter", fnḫ, befitting of the crucial station Phoenicia served in the lumber trade of the Levant.[28]

History

Since little has survived of Phoenician records or literature, most of what is known about their origins and history comes from the accounts of other civilizations and inferences from their material culture excavated throughout the Mediterranean. The scholarly consensus is that the Phoenicians' period of greatest prominence was 1200 BC to the end of the Persian period (332 BC).[29]

The Phoenician Early Bronze Age is largely unknown.[30] The two most important sites are Byblos and Sidon-Dakerman (near Sidon), although, as of 2021, well over a hundred sites remain to be excavated, while others that have been are yet to be fully analysed.[30] The Middle Bronze Age was a generally peaceful time of increasing population, trade, and prosperity, though there was competition for natural resources.[31] In the Late Bronze Age, rivalry between Egypt, the Mittani, the Hittites, and Assyria had a significant impact on Phoenicians cities.[31]

Origins

The Canaanite culture that gave rise to the Phoenicians apparently developed in situ from the earlier Ghassulian chalcolithic culture. Ghassulian itself developed from the Circum-Arabian Nomadic Pastoral Complex, which in turn developed from a fusion of their ancestral Natufian and Harifian cultures with Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) farming cultures, practicing the domestication of animals during the 8.2 kiloyear event, which led to the Neolithic Revolution in the Levant.[32] The Late Bronze Age state of Ugarit is considered quintessentially Canaanite archaeologically,[33] even though the Ugaritic language does not belong to the Canaanite languages proper.[34][35]

The fourth-century BC Greek historian Herodotus claimed that the Phoenicians had migrated from the Erythraean Sea around 2750 BC and the first-century AD geographer Strabo reports a claim that they came from Tylos and Arad (Bahrain and Muharraq).[36][37][38][39] Some archaeologists working on the Persian Gulf have accepted these traditions and suggest a migration connected with the collapse of the Dilmun civilization ca. 1750 BC.[37][38][39] However, most scholars reject the idea of a migration; archaeological and historical evidence alike indicate millennia of population continuity in the region, and recent genetic research indicates that present-day Lebanese derive most of their ancestry from a Canaanite-related population.[40]

Emergence during the Late Bronze Age (1479–1200 BC)

The first known account of the Phoenicians relates to the conquests of Pharaoh Thutmose III (1479–1425 BC). The Egyptians targeted coastal cities which they wrote belonged to the Fenekhu, "carpenters", such as Byblos, Arwad, and Ullasa for their crucial geographic and commercial links with the interior (via the Nahr al-Kabir and the Orontes rivers). The cities provided Egypt with access to Mesopotamian trade and abundant stocks of the region's native cedarwood. There was no equivalent in the Egyptian homeland.[41]

By the mid-14th century BC, the Phoenician city-states were considered "favored cities" to the Egyptians. Tyre, Sidon, Beirut, and Byblos were regarded as the most important. The Phoenicians had considerable autonomy, and their cities were reasonably well developed and prosperous. Byblos was the leading city; it was a center for bronze-making and the primary terminus of precious goods such as tin and lapis lazuli from as far east as Afghanistan. Sidon and Tyre also commanded interest among Egyptian officials, beginning a pattern of rivalry that would span the next millennium.

The Amarna letters report that from 1350 to 1300 BC, neighboring Amorites and Hittites were capturing Phoenician cities, especially in the north. Egypt subsequently lost its coastal holdings from Ugarit in northern Syria to Byblos near central Lebanon.

Ascendance and high point (1200–800 BC)

Sometime between 1200 and 1150 BC, the Late Bronze Age collapse severely weakened or destroyed most civilizations in the region, including the Egyptians and Hittites. The Phoenicians appear to have weathered the crisis relatively well, emerging as a distinct and organized civilization in 1230 BC. The period is sometimes described as a "Phoenician renaissance."[42] They filled the power vacuum caused by the Late Bronze Age collapse by becoming the sole mercantile and maritime power in the region, a status they would maintain for the next several centuries.[10]

The recovery of the Mediterranean economy can be credited to Phoenician mariners and merchants, who re-established long-distance trade between Egypt and Mesopotamia in the 10th century BC.[43]

Early into the Iron Age, the Phoenicians established ports, warehouses, markets, and settlement all across the Mediterranean and up to the southern Black Sea. Colonies were established on Cyprus, Sardinia, the Balearic Islands, Sicily, and Malta, as well as the coasts of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula.[44] Phoenician hacksilver dated to this period bears lead isotope ratios matching ores in Sardinia and Spain, indicating the extent of Phoenician trade networks.[45]

By the tenth century BC, Tyre rose to become the richest and most powerful Phoenician city-state, particularly during the reign of Hiram I (c. 969–936 BC). During the rule of the priest Ithobaal (887–856  BC), Tyre expanded its territory as far north as Beirut and into part of Cyprus; this unusual act of aggression was the closest the Phoenicians ever came to forming a unitary territorial state. Once his realm reached its largest territorial extent, Ithobaal declared himself "King of the Sidonians," a title that would be used by his successors and mentioned in both Greek and Jewish accounts.[46]

The Late Iron Age saw the height of Phoenician shipping, mercantile, and cultural activity, particularly between 750 and 650 BC. The Phoenician influence was visible in the "orientalization" of Greek cultural and artistic conventions.[10] Among their most popular goods were fine textiles, typically dyed with Tyrian purple. Homer's Iliad, which was composed during this period, references the quality of Phoenician clothing and metal goods.[10]

Foundation of Carthage

Carthage was founded by Phoenicians coming from Tyre, probably initially as a station in the metal trade with the southern Iberian Peninsula.[47][page needed] The city's name in Punic, Qart-Ḥadašt (𐤒𐤓𐤕 𐤇𐤃𐤔𐤕‎), means "New City".[48] There is a tradition in some ancient sources, such as Philistos of Syracuse, for an "early" foundation date of around 1215 BC—before the fall of Troy in 1180 BC. However, Timaeus, a Greek historian from Sicily c. 300 BC, places the foundation of Carthage in 814 BC, which is the date generally accepted by modern historians.[49] Legend, including Virgil's Aeneid, assigns the founding of the city to Queen Dido. Carthage would grow into a multi-ethnic empire spanning North Africa, Sardinia, Sicily, Malta, the Balearic Islands, and southern Iberia, but would ultimately be destroyed by Rome in the Punic Wars (264–146 BC) before being rebuilt as a Roman city.[citation needed]

Vassalage under the Assyrians and Babylonians (858–538 BC)

 
Two bronze fragments from an Assyrian palace gate depicting the collection of tribute from the Phoenician cities of Tyre and Sidon (859–824 BC). British Museum.

As a mercantile power concentrated along a narrow coastal strip of land, the Phoenicians lacked the size and population to support a large military. Thus, as neighboring empires began to rise, the Phoenicians increasingly fell under the sway of foreign rulers, who to varying degrees circumscribed their autonomy.[46]

The Assyrian conquest of Phoenicia began with King Shalmaneser III. He rose to power in 858 BC and began a series of campaigns against neighboring states. The Phoenician city-states fell under his rule, forced to pay heavy tribute in money, goods, and natural resources. Initially, they were not annexed outright—they remained in a state of vassalage, subordinate to the Assyrians but allowed a certain degree of freedom.[46] This changed in 744 BC with the ascension of Tiglath-Pileser III. By 738 BC, most of the Levant, including northern Phoenicia, were annexed; only Tyre and Byblos, the most powerful city-states, remained tributary states outside of direct Assyrian control.

Tyre, Byblos, and Sidon all rebelled against Assyrian rule. In 721 BC, Sargon II besieged Tyre and crushed the rebellion. His successor Sennacherib suppressed further rebellions across the region. During the seventh century BC, Sidon rebelled and was destroyed by Esarhaddon, who enslaved its inhabitants and built a new city on its ruins. By the end of the century, the Assyrians had been weakened by successive revolts, which led to their destruction by the Median Empire.

The Babylonians, formerly vassals of the Assyrians, took advantage of the empire's collapse and rebelled, quickly establishing the Neo-Babylonian Empire in its place. Phoenician cities revolted several times throughout the reigns of the first Babylonian King, Nabopolassar (626–605 BC), and his son Nebuchadnezzar II (c. 605–c. 562 BC). In 587 BC Nebuchadnezzar besieged Tyre, which resisted for thirteen years, but ultimately capitulated under "favorable terms".[50]

Persian period (539–332 BC)

 
Phoenicians build pontoon bridges for Xerxes I of Persia during the second Persian invasion of Greece in 480 BC. (1915 drawing by A. C. Weatherstone)

In 539 BC, Cyrus the Great, king and founder of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, took Babylon.[51] As Cyrus began consolidating territories across the Near East, the Phoenicians apparently made the pragmatic calculation of "[yielding] themselves to the Persians."[52] Most of the Levant was consolidated by Cyrus into a single satrapy (province) and forced to pay a yearly tribute of 350 talents, which was roughly half the tribute that was required of Egypt and Libya.[53]

The Phoenician area was later divided into four vassal kingdoms—Sidon, Tyre, Arwad, and Byblos—which were allowed considerable autonomy. Unlike in other empire areas, there is no record of Persian administrators governing the Phoenician city-states. Local Phoenician kings were allowed to remain in power and given the same rights as Persian satraps (governors), such as hereditary offices and minting their coins.[51][54]

 
Achaemenid-era coin of Abdashtart I of Sidon, who is seen at the back of the chariot, behind the Persian King.

The Phoenicians remained a core asset to the Achaemenid Empire, particularly for their prowess in maritime technology and navigation;[51] they furnished the bulk of the Persian fleet during the Greco-Persian Wars of the late fifth century BC.[55] Phoenicians under Xerxes I built the Xerxes Canal and the pontoon bridges that allowed his forces to cross into mainland Greece.[56] Nevertheless, they were harshly punished by the Persian King following his defeat at the Battle of Salamis, which he blamed on Phoenician cowardice and incompetence.[57]

In the mid-fourth century BC, King Tennes of Sidon led a failed rebellion against Artaxerxes III, enlisting the help of the Egyptians, who were subsequently drawn into a war with the Persians.[58] The resulting destruction of Sidon led to the resurgence of Tyre, which remained the dominant Phoenician city for two decades until the arrival of Alexander the Great.

Hellenistic period (332–152 BC)

Phoenicia was one of the first areas to be conquered by Alexander the Great during his military campaigns across western Asia. Alexander's main target in the Persian Levant was Tyre, now the region's largest and most important city. It capitulated after a roughly seven month siege, during which many of its citizens fled to Carthage.[59] Tyre's refusal to allow Alexander to visit its temple to Melqart, culminating in the killing of his envoys, led to a brutal reprisal: 2,000 of its leading citizens were crucified and a puppet ruler was installed.[60] The rest of Phoenicia easily came under his control, with Sidon surrendering peacefully.[61]

 
A naval action during Alexander the Great's Siege of Tyre (332 BC). Drawing by André Castaigne, 1888–89.

Alexander's empire had a Hellenization policy, whereby Hellenic culture, religion, and sometimes language were spread or imposed across conquered peoples. However, Hellenisation was not enforced most of the time and was just a language of administration until his death. This was typically implemented through the founding of new cities, the settlement of a Macedonian or Greek urban elite, and the alteration of native place names to Greek.[59] However, there was no organized Hellenization in Phoenicia, and with one or two minor exceptions, all Phoenician city-states retained their native names, while Greek settlement and administration appear to have been very limited.[59]

The Phoenicians maintained cultural and commercial links with their western counterparts. Polybius recounts how the Seleucid King Demetrius I escaped from Rome by boarding a Carthaginian ship that was delivering goods to Tyre.[59] The adaptation to Macedonian rule was likely aided by the Phoenicians' historical ties with the Greeks, with whom they shared some mythological stories and figures; the two peoples were even sometimes considered "relatives."[59]

When Alexander's empire collapsed after his death in 323 BC, the Phoenicians came under the control of the largest of its successors, the Seleucids. The Phoenician homeland was repeatedly contested by the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt during the forty-year Syrian Wars, coming under Ptolemaic rule in the third century BC.[50] The Seleucids reclaimed the area the following century, holding it until the mid-first 2nd century BC. Under their rule, the Phoenicians were allowed a considerable degree of autonomy and self-governance.[50]

During the Seleucid Dynastic Wars (157–63 BC), the Phoenician cities were mainly self-governed. Many of them were fought for or over by the warring factions of the Seleucid royal family. Some Phoenician regions were under the control and influence of the Jews, who revolted and succeeded in defeating Seleucids in 164 BC.

The Seleucid Kingdom, including Phoenicia, was seized by Tigranes the Great of Armenia in 82 BC, ending the Hellenistic influence on the region.

With their strategically valuable buffer state absorbed into a rival power, the Romans intervened and conquered the territory in 62 BC. Shortly after that, the territory was incorporated into the Roman province of Syria. Phoenicia became a separate province in the third century AD. With the Roman invasion, whatever political autonomy Phoenicians had was dissolved, and the region was romanized. The Roman Empire ruled the province up to the 640s when the Muslim Arabs invaded the region successfully, and a process of Islamisation and Arabisation started.[citation needed]

Demographics

The people now known as Phoenicians, similar to the neighboring Israelites, Moabites and Edomites, were a Canaanite people. Canaanites are a group of ancient Semitic-speaking peoples that emerged in the Levant in at least the third millennium BC.[10] Phoenicians did not refer themselves as such but rather are thought to have referred to themselves as "Kenaʿani", meaning Canaanites.[62]

One 2018 study of mitochondrial lineages in Sardinia concluded that the Phoenicians were "inclusive, multicultural and featured significant female mobility," with evidence of indigenous Sardinians integrating "peacefully and permanently" with Semitic Phoenician settlers. The study also found evidence suggesting that south Europeans may have settled in the area of modern Lebanon.[63]

Genetic studies

A 2008 study led by Pierre Zalloua found that six subclades of Haplogroup J-M172 (J2)—thought to have originated between the Caucasus Mountains, Mesopotamia and the Levant—were of a "Phoenician signature" and present amongst the male populations of coastal Lebanon as well as the wider Levant (the "Phoenician Periphery"), followed by other areas of historic Phoenician settlement, spanning Cyprus through to Morocco. This deliberate sequential sampling was an attempt to develop a methodology to link the documented historical expansion of a population with a particular geographic genetic pattern or patterns. The researchers suggested that the proposed genetic signature stemmed from "a common source of related lineages rooted in Lebanon".[64] Another study in 2006 found evidence for the genetic persistence of Phoenicians in the Spanish island of Ibiza.[65]

In 2016, the rare U5b2c1 maternal haplogroup was identified in the DNA of a 2,500-year-old male skeleton excavated from a Punic tomb in Tunisia. The lineage of this "Young Man of Byrsa" is believed to represent early gene flow from Iberia to the Maghreb.[66]

According to a 2017 study published by the American Journal of Human Genetics, present-day Lebanese derive most of their ancestry from a Canaanite-related population, which therefore implies substantial genetic continuity in the Levant since at least the Bronze Age.[67][68] More specifically, the research of geneticist Chris Tyler-Smith and his team at the Sanger Institute in Britain, who compared "sampled ancient DNA from five Canaanite people who lived 3,750 and 3,650 years ago" to modern people, revealed that 93 percent of the genetic ancestry of people in Lebanon came from the Canaanites (the other 7 percent was of a Eurasian steppe population).[69]

In a 2020 study published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, researchers have shown that there is substantial genetic continuity in Lebanon since the Bronze Age interrupted by three significant admixture events during the Iron Age, Hellenistic, and Ottoman period, each contributing 3–11 percent of non-local ancestry to the admixed population.[70]

Economy

Trade

 
Major Phoenician trade networks (c. 1200–800 BC)

The Phoenicians served as intermediaries between the disparate civilizations that spanned the Mediterranean and Near East, facilitating the exchange of goods and knowledge, culture, and religious traditions. Their expansive and enduring trade network is credited with laying the foundations of an economically and culturally cohesive Mediterranean, which would be continued by the Greeks and especially the Romans.[43]

Phoenician ties with the Greeks ran deep. The earliest verified relationship appears to have begun with the Minoan civilization on Crete (1950–1450 BC), which together with the Mycenaean civilization (1600–1100 BC) is considered the progenitor of classical Greece.[71] Archaeological research suggests that the Minoans gradually imported Near Eastern goods, artistic styles, and customs from other cultures via the Phoenicians.

To Egypt the Phoenicians sold logs of cedar for significant sums,[72] and wine beginning in the eighth century. The wine trade with Egypt is vividly documented by shipwrecks discovered in 1997 in the open sea 50 kilometres (30 mi) west of Ascalon, Israel.[73] Pottery kilns at Tyre and Sarepta produced the large terracotta jars used for transporting wine. From Egypt, the Phoenicians bought Nubian gold.

 
Phoenician sarcophagi found in Cádiz, Spain, thought to have been imported from the Phoenician homeland around Sidon.[74][75] Archaeological Museum of Cádiz.

From elsewhere, they obtained other materials, perhaps the most crucial being silver, mostly from Sardinia and the Iberian Peninsula. Tin for making bronze "may have been acquired from Galicia by way of the Atlantic coast of southern Spain; alternatively, it may have come from northern Europe (Cornwall or Brittany) via the Rhone valley and coastal Massalia." [76] Strabo states that there was a highly lucrative Phoenician trade with Britain for tin via the Cassiterides, whose location is unknown but may have been off the northwest coast of the Iberian Peninsula.[77]

Industry

 
Phoenician metal bowl with hunting scene (8th century BC). The clothing and hairstyle of the figures are Egyptian. At the same time, the subject matter of the central scene conforms with the Mesopotamian theme of combat between man and beast. Phoenician artisans frequently adapted the styles of neighboring cultures.

Phoenicia lacked considerable natural resources other than its cedar wood. Timber was probably the earliest and most lucrative source of wealth; neither Egypt nor Mesopotamia had adequate wood sources. Unable to rely solely on this limited resource, the Phoenicians developed an industrial base manufacturing a variety of goods for both everyday and luxury use.[10] The Phoenicians developed or mastered techniques such as glass-making, engraved and chased metalwork (including bronze, iron, and gold), ivory carving, and woodwork.[78]

The Phoenicians were early pioneers in mass production, and sold a variety of items in bulk. They became the leading source of glassware in antiquity, shipping thousands of flasks, beads, and other glass objects across the Mediterranean.[79] Excavations of colonies in Spain suggest they also used the potter's wheel.[80] Their exposure to a wide variety of cultures allowed them to manufacture goods for specific markets.[78] The Iliad suggests Phoenician clothing and metal goods were highly prized by the Greeks.[10] Specialized goods were designed specifically for wealthier clientele, including ivory reliefs and plaques, carved clam shells, sculpted amber, and finely detailed and painted ostrich eggs.

Tyrian purple

 
An Etruscan tomb (c. 350 BC) depicting a man wearing an all-purple toga picta.

The most prized Phoenician goods were fabrics dyed with Tyrian purple, which formed a major part of Phoenician wealth. The violet-purple dye derived from the hypobranchial gland of the Murex marine snail, once profusely available in coastal waters of the eastern Mediterranean Sea but exploited to local extinction. Phoenicians may have discovered the dye as early as 1750 BC.[81] The Phoenicians established a second production center for the dye in Mogador, in present-day Morocco.[82]

The Phoenicians' exclusive command over the production and trade of the dye, combined with the labor-intensive extraction process, made it very expensive. Tyrian purple subsequently became associated with the upper classes. It soon became a status symbol in several civilizations, most notably among the Romans. Assyrian tribute records from the Phoenicians include "garments of brightly colored stuff" that most likely included Tyrian purple. While the designs, ornamentation, and embroidery used in Phoenician textiles were well-regarded, the techniques and specific descriptions are unknown.[78]

Mining

Mining operations in the Phoenician homeland were limited; iron was the only metal of any worth. The first large-scale mining operations probably occurred in Cyprus, principally for copper. Sardinia may have been colonized almost exclusively for its mineral resources; Phoenician settlements were concentrated in the southern parts of the island, close to sources of copper and lead. Piles of scoria and copper ingots, which appear to predate Roman occupation, suggest the Phoenicians mined and processed metals on the island. The Iberian Peninsula was the richest source of numerous metals in antiquity, including gold, silver, copper, iron, tin, and lead.[83][page needed] The significant output of these metals during the Phoenician and Carthaginian occupation strongly implied large scale mining operations.[83][page needed] The Carthaginians are documented to have relied on slave labor for mining, though it is unknown if the Phoenicians as a whole did so.[83][page needed]

Viticulture

The most notable agricultural product was wine, which the Phoenicians helped propagate across the Mediterranean.[84] The common grape vine may have been domesticated by the Phoenicians or Canaanites, although it most likely arrived from Transcaucasia via trade routes across Mesopotamia or the Black Sea. Vines grew readily in the coastal Levant, and wine was exported to Egypt as early as the Old Kingdom period (2686–2134 BC). Wine played an important part in Phoenician religion, serving as the principal beverage for offerings and sacrifice.[84] An excavation of a small Phoenician town south of Sidon uncovered a wine factory used from at least the seventh century BC, which is believed to have been aimed for an overseas market.[84] To prevent oxidation, vessels were sealed with a layer of olive oil, pinewood, and resin.[citation needed]

The Phoenicians established vineyards and wineries in their colonies in North Africa, Sicily, France, and Spain,[84] and may have taught winemaking to some of their trading partners. The ancient Iberians began producing wine from local grape varieties following their encounter with the Phoenicians. Iberian cultivars subsequently formed the basis of most western European wine.[85]

Shipbuilding

 
Warship with two rows of oars, in relief from Nineveh, (c. 700 BC).
 
Two Assyrian representations of ships, which could represent Phoenician vessels

As early as 1200 BC, the Phoenicians built large merchant ships.[citation needed] During the Bronze Age, they developed the keel.[citation needed] Pegged mortise-and-tenon joints proved effective enough to serve as a standard until late into the Roman Empire.[citation needed]

The Phoenicians were possibly the first to introduce the bireme, around 700 BC.[86] An Assyrian account describes Phoenicians evading capture with these ships.[citation needed] The Phoenicians are also credited with inventing the trireme, which was regarded as the most advanced and powerful vessel in the ancient Mediterranean world, and was eventually adopted by the Greeks.[46]

The Phoenicians developed several other maritime inventions. The amphora, a type of container used for both dry and liquid goods, was an ancient Phoenician invention that became a standardized measurement of volume for close to two thousand years. The remnants of self-cleaning artificial harbors have been discovered in Sidon, Tyre, Atlit, and Acre.[87] The first example of admiralty law also appears in the Levant.[88] The Phoenicians continued to contribute to cartography into the Iron Age.[89]

In 2014, a 12 metres (39 ft) long Phoenician trading ship was found near Gozo island in Malta. Dated 700 BC, it is one of the oldest wrecks found in the Mediterranean. Fifty amphorae, used to contain wine and oil, were scattered nearby.[90][91][92]

Important cities and colonies

 
Map of Phoenician (yellow labels) and Greek (red labels) colonies around 8th to 6th century BC (with German legend)

The Phoenicians were not a nation in the political sense. However, they were organized into independent city-states that shared a common language and culture. The leading city-states were Tyre, Sidon, and Byblos. Rivalries were expected, but armed conflict was rare.

Numerous other cities existed in the Levant alone, many probably unknown, including Beiruta (modern Beirut) Ampi, Amia, Arqa, Baalbek, Botrys, Sarepta, and Tripolis. From the late tenth century BC, the Phoenicians established commercial outposts throughout the Mediterranean, with Tyre founding colonies in Cyprus, Sardinia, Iberia, the Balearic Islands, Sicily, Malta, and North Africa. Later colonies were established beyond the Straits of Gibraltar, particularly on the Atlantic coast of Iberia. The Phoenicians may have explored the Canary Islands and the British Isles.[10] Phoenician settlement was primarily concentrated in Cyprus, Sicily, Sardinia, Malta, northwest Africa, the Balearic Islands, and southern Iberia.

Phoenician colonization

To facilitate their commercial ventures, the Phoenicians established numerous colonies and trading posts along the coasts of the Mediterranean. Phoenician city states generally lacked the numbers or even the desire to expand their territory overseas. Few colonies had more than 1,000 inhabitants; only Carthage and some nearby settlements in the western Mediterranean would grow larger.[93] A major motivating factor was competition with the Greeks, who began expanding across the Mediterranean during the same period.[94] Though largely peaceful rivals, their respective settlements in Crete and Sicily did clash intermittently.[95]

The earliest Phoenician settlements outside the Levant were on Cyprus and Crete, gradually moving westward towards Corsica, the Balearic Islands, Sardinia, and Sicily, as well as on the European mainland in Genoa and Marseilles.[96] The first Phoenician colonies in the western Mediterranean were along the northwest African coast and on Sicily, Sardinia and the Balearic Islands.[97] Tyre led the way in settling or controlling coastal areas.[98]

Phoenician colonies were fairly autonomous. At most, they were expected to send annual tribute to their mother city, usually in the context of a religious offering. However, in the seventh century BC the western colonies came under the control of Carthage,[99][100] which was exercised directly through appointed magistrates.[101] Carthage continued to send annual tribute to Tyre for some time after its independence.

Society and culture

Since very little of the Phoenicians' writings have survived, much of what is known about their culture and society comes from accounts by contemporary civilizations or inferences from archaeological discoveries. The Phoenicians had much in common with other Canaanites, including language, religion, social customs, and a monarchical political system centered around city-states. However, by the early Iron Age (roughly 1300 BC), they had emerged as distinct people. Their culture, economy, and daily life were heavily centered on commerce and maritime trade. Their propensity for seafaring brought them into contact with numerous other civilizations.

Politics and government

 
Tomb of King Hiram I of Tyre, located in the village of Hanaouay in southern Lebanon.

The Phoenician city-states were fiercely independent in both domestic and foreign affairs.[citation needed] Formal alliances between city-states were rare. The relative power and influence of city-states varied over time. Sidon was dominant between the 12th and 11th centuries BC and influenced its neighbors. However, by the tenth century BC, Tyre rose to become the most powerful city.

At least in its earlier stages, Phoenician society was highly stratified and predominantly monarchical. Hereditary kings usually governed with absolute power over civic, commercial, and religious affairs. They often relied upon senior officials from the noble and merchant classes; the priesthood was a distinct class, usually of royal lineage or leading merchant families. The King was considered a representative of the gods and carried many obligations and duties concerning religious processions and rituals. Priests were thus highly influential and often became intertwined with the royal family.

Phoenician kings did not commemorate their reign through sculptures or monuments. Their wealth, power, and accomplishments were usually conveyed through ornate sarcophagi, like that of Ahiram of Byblos. The Phoenicians kept records of their rulers in tomb inscriptions, which are among the few primary sources still available. Historians have determined a clear line of succession over centuries for some city-states, notably Byblos and Tyre.

Starting as early as 15th century BC, Phoenician leaders were "advised by councils or assemblies which gradually took greater power".[61] In the sixth century BC, during the period of Babylonian rule, Tyre briefly adopted a system of government consisting of a pair of judges with authority roughly equivalent to the Roman consul, known as sufetes (shophets), who were chosen from the most powerful noble families and served short terms.[102][61]

 
19th-century depiction of Phoenician sailors and merchants. The importance of trade to the Phoenician economy led to a gradual sharing of power between the King and assemblies of merchant families.

In the fourth century BC, when the armies of Alexander the Great approached Tyre, they were met not by its King but by representatives of the commonwealth of the city. Similarly, historians at the time describe the "inhabitants" or "the people" of Sidon making peace with Alexander.[61] When the Macedonians sought to appoint a new king over Sidon, the citizens nominated their candidate.[61]

Law and administration

After the King and council, the two most important political positions in virtually every Phoenician city-state were governor and commander of the army. Details regarding the duties of these offices are sparse. However, it is known that the governor was responsible for collecting taxes, implementing decrees, supervising judges, and ensuring the administration of law and justice.[46] As warfare was rare among the most mercantile Phoenicians, the army's commander was generally responsible for ensuring the defense and security of the city-state and its hinterlands.

 
Stela from Tyre with Phoenician inscriptions (c. 4th century BC). National Museum of Beirut.

The Phoenicians had a system of courts and judges that resolved disputes and punished crimes based on a semi-codified body of laws and traditions. Laws were implemented by the state and were the responsibility of the ruler and certain designated officials. Like other Levantine societies, laws were harsh and biased, reflecting the social stratification of society. The murder of a commoner was treated as less severe than that of a nobleman, and the upper classes had the most rights; the wealthy often escaped punishment by paying a fine. Free men of any class could represent themselves in court and had more rights than women and children, while slaves had no rights. Men could often deflect punishment to their wives, children, or slaves, even having them serve their sentence in their place. Lawyers eventually emerged as a profession for those who could not plead their case.

As in neighboring societies at the time, penalties for crimes were often severe, usually reflecting the principle of reciprocity; for example, the killing of a slave would be punished by having the offender's slave killed. Imprisonment was rare, with fines, exile, punishment, and execution the main remedies.

Military

As with most aspects of Phoenician civilization, there are few records of their military or approach to warfare. Compared to most of their neighbors, the Phoenicians generally had little interest in conquest and were relatively peaceful.[103] The wealth and prosperity of all their city-states rested on foreign trade, which required good relations and a certain degree of mutual trust. They also lacked the territory and agricultural base to support a population large enough to raise an army of conquest. Instead, each city had an army commander in charge of a defensive garrison. However, the specifics of the role, or city defense, are unknown.

Language

The Phoenician language was a member of the Canaanite branch of the Northwest Semitic languages. Its descendant language spoken in the Carthaginian Empire is termed Punic. Punic was still spoken in the fifth century AD and known to St. Augustine of Hippo.

Alphabet

 
Sarcophagus of Ahiram, which bears the oldest inscription of the Phoenician alphabet. National Museum of Beirut

Around 1050 BC,[35] the Phoenicians developed a script for writing their own language. The Canaanite-Phoenician alphabet consists of 22 letters, all consonants (and is thus strictly an abjad).[20] It is believed to be a continuation of the Proto-Sinaitic (or Proto-Canaanite) script attested in the Sinai and in Canaan in the Late Bronze Age.[104][105] Through their maritime trade, the Phoenicians spread the use of the alphabet to Anatolia, North Africa, and Europe.[10][106] The name Phoenician is by convention given to inscriptions beginning around 1050 BC, because Phoenician, Hebrew, and other Canaanite dialects were largely indistinguishable before that time.[35][19] Phoenician inscriptions are found in Lebanon, Syria, Israel, Palestine, Cyprus and other locations, as late as the early centuries of the Christian era.

The alphabet was adopted and modified by the Greeks probably in the eighth century BC. This most likely did not occur in a single instance but the process of commercial exchange.[107] The legendary Phoenician hero Cadmus is credited with bringing the alphabet to Greece. However, it is more plausible that Phoenician immigrants brought it to Crete,[108] whence it gradually diffused northwards.

Art

Phoenician art was largely centered on ornamental objects, particularly jewelry, pottery, glassware, and reliefs.[109] Large sculptures were rare; figurines were more common. Phoenician goods have been found from Spain and Morocco to Russia and Iraq; much of what is known about Phoenician art is based on excavations outside Phoenicia proper. Phoenician art was highly influenced by many cultures, primarily Egypt, Greece, and Assyria. Greek inspiration was particularly pronounced in pottery, while Egyptian styles were most reflected in ivory work.[109]

Phoenician art also differed from its contemporaries in its continuance of Bronze Age conventions well into the Iron Age, such as terracotta masks.[110] Phoenician artisans were known for their skill with wood, ivory, bronze, and textiles.[111] In the Old Testament, a craftsman from Tyre is commissioned to build and decorate the legendary Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem, which "presupposes a well-developed and highly respected craft industry in Phoenicia by the mid-tenth century BC".[110] The Iliad mentions the embroidered robes of Priam’s wife, Hecabe, as "the work of Sidonian women" and describes a mixing bowl of chased silver as "a masterpiece of Sidonian craftsmanship."[citation needed] The Assyrians appeared to have valued Phoenician ivory work in particular, collecting vast quantities in their palaces.[112]

Phoenician art appears to have been indelibly tied to Phoenician commercial interests.[78] They have crafted goods to appeal to particular trading partners, distinguishing not only different cultures but even socioeconomic status classes.[78]

Women

 
Female figurines from Tyre (c.1000–550 BC). National Museum of Beirut.

Women in Phoenicia took part in public events and religious processions, with depictions of banquets showing them casually sitting or reclining with men, dancing, and playing music.[113] In most contexts, women were expected to dress and behave more modestly than men; female figures are almost always portrayed as clothed from head to feet, with the arms sometimes covered as well.

Although they rarely had political power, women took part in community affairs. They had some voice in the popular assemblies that began to emerge in some city-states.[114] At least one woman, Unmiashtart, is recorded to have ruled Sidon in the fifth century BC.[46] The two most famous Phoenician women are political figures: Jezebel, portrayed in the Bible as the wicked princess of Sidon, and Dido, the semi-legendary founder and first queen of Carthage. In Virgil's epic poem, the Aeneid, Dido is described as having been the co-ruler of Tyre, using cleverness to escape the tyranny of her brother Pygmalion and to secure an ideal site for Carthage.

Religion

 
Figure of Ba'al with raised arm, 14th–12th century BC, found at ancient Ugarit (Ras Shamra site), a city at the far north of the Phoenician coast. Musée du Louvre

The religious practices and beliefs of Phoenicia were generally common to those of their neighbors in Canaan, which in turn shared characteristics common throughout the ancient Semitic world.[115][116] Religious rites were primarily for city-state purposes; payment of taxes by citizens was considered in the category of religious sacrifices.[117] The Phoenician sacred writings known to the ancients have been lost.[118]

Several Canaanite practices are attested in ancient sources and mentioned by scholars, such as temple prostitution[119] and child sacrifice.[120] Special sites known as "Tophets" were allegedly used by the Phoenicians "to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire," and are condemned by Yahweh in the Hebrew Bible, particularly in Jeremiah 7:30–32, and in 2nd Kings 23:10 and 17:17. Notwithstanding these and other important differences, cultural and religious similarities persisted between the ancient Hebrews and the Phoenicians. [121]

Canaanite religious mythology does not appear as elaborate as their Semitic cousins in Mesopotamia. In Canaan the supreme god was called El (𐤀𐤋, "god").[122] The son of El was Baal (𐤁𐤏𐤋, "master", "lord"), a powerful dying-and-rising storm god.[123] Other gods were called by royal titles, such as Melqart, meaning "king of the city",[124] or Adonis for "lord".[125] Such epithets may often have been merely local titles for the same deities.

The Semitic pantheon was well-populated; which god became primary evidently depended on the exigencies of a particular city-state.[126][127] Melqart was prominent throughout Phoenicia and overseas, as was Astarte, a fertility goddess with regal and matronly aspects.

Religious institutions in Tyre called marzeh (𐤌𐤓𐤆𐤄, "place of reunion"), did much to foster social bonding and "kin" loyalty. Marzeh held banquets for their membership on festival days, and many developed into elite fraternities. Each marzeh nurtured congeniality and community through a series of ritual meals shared among trusted kin in honor of deified ancestors.[128] In Carthage, which had developed a complex republican system of government, the marzeh may have played a role in forging social and political ties among citizens; Carthaginians were divided into different institutions that were solidified through communal feasts and banquets. Such festival groups may also have composed the voting cohort for selecting members of the city-state's Assembly.[129][130]

The Phoenicians made votive offerings to their gods, namely in the form of figurines and pottery vessels.[131] Hundreds of figurines and fragments have been recovered from the Mediterranean, often spanning centuries between them, suggesting they were cast into the sea to ensure safe travels.[131] Since the Phoenicians were predominantly seafaring people, it is speculated that many of their rituals were performed at sea or aboard ships. However, the specific nature of these practices is unknown.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Bentley, Jerry H.; Ziegler, Herbert F. (2000). Traditions & Encounters: From the Beginnings to 1500. McGraw Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-004949-9.
  2. ^ Aubet 2001, pp. 18, 44.
  3. ^ Carthage and the Carthaginians, R. Bosworth Smith, p. 16
  4. ^ "Phoenicia". Collins English Dictionary.
  5. ^ Kitto, John (1851). A Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature. Adan and Charles Black.
  6. ^ Malaspina, Ann (2009). Lebanon. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4381-0579-6.
  7. ^ Meir Edrey (2019). Phoenician Identity in Context: Material Cultural Koiné in the Iron Age Levant. Alter Orient und Altes Testament. Vol. 469. Germany: Ugarit-Verlag – Buch- und Medienhandel Münster. pp. 23–24. ISBN 978-3-86835-282-5.
  8. ^ "Phoenicia | Definition, Location, History, Religion, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-08-29.
  9. ^ "Who Were The Phoenicians? | History Today". www.historytoday.com. Retrieved 2020-04-20.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Scott, John C (2018). "The Phoenicians and the Formation of the Western World". Comparative Civilizations Review. 78 (78).
  11. ^ Quinn (2017), pp. 24, 204.
  12. ^ Drews, Robert (1998). "Canaanites and Philistines". Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. 23 (81): 39–61. doi:10.1177/030908929802308104. S2CID 144074940.
  13. ^ Tubb, Johnathan N. (1998). Canaanites. British Museum People of the Past. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806131085. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  14. ^ Aubet (2001), p. 17.
  15. ^ "Phoenicia". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2017-08-09.
  16. ^ Quinn (2017), pp. 201–203.
  17. ^ Markoe (2000), pp. 10–12.
  18. ^ Coulmas 1996.
  19. ^ a b Markoe (2000), p. 111.
  20. ^ a b Fischer, Steven Roger (2004). A history of writing. Reaktion Books. p. 90.
  21. ^ Niemeyer, Hans G. (2004). "The Phoenicians and the Birth of a Multinational Mediterranean Society". In Rollinger, Robert; Ulf, Christoph (eds.). Commerce and Monetary Systems in the Ancient World. Stuttgart: Franz Stiener Verlag. pp. 246, 250.
  22. ^ Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.).” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/phoe/hd_phoe.htm (October 2004)
  23. ^ Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Phoenicia". Encyclopedia Britannica, 20 Aug. 2020, https://www.britannica.com/place/Phoenicia. Accessed 9 January 2022.
  24. ^ Honeyman, A. M. “The Phoenician Inscriptions of the Cyprus Museum” Iraq, vol. 6, no. 2, 1939, pp. 104–108 see p.106-107, number 8.
  25. ^ Naveh, Joseph. Israel Exploration Journal, vol. 51, no. 1, 2001, pp. 113–15. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/27926965. Accessed 27 Aug. 2022.
  26. ^ "Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, φοῖνιξ". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  27. ^ Quinn (2017), p. 48.
  28. ^ James P. Allen (2010) Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs, 2nd edition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-51796-6, p. 345.
  29. ^ Jigoulov 2021, p. 13
  30. ^ a b Jigoulov 2021, p. 18
  31. ^ a b Jigoulov 2021, pp. 18–9
  32. ^ Zarins, Juris (1992). "Pastoral Nomadism in Arabia: Ethnoarchaeology and the Archaeological Record—A Case Study". In Bar-Yosef, O.; Khazanov, A. (eds.). Pastoralism in the Levant. Madison: Prehistory Press. ISBN 0-9629110-8-9.
  33. ^ Tubb, Jonathan N. (1998), "Canaanites" (British Museum People of the Past)
  34. ^ Woodard, Roger (2008). The Ancient Languages of Syria-Palestine and Arabia. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-68498-9.
  35. ^ a b c Naveh, Joseph (1987). "Proto-Canaanite, Archaic Greek, and the Script of the Aramaic Text on the Tell Fakhariyah Statue". In Miller; et al. (eds.). Ancient Israelite Religion. ISBN 0-8006-0831-3.. Coulmas (1996).
  36. ^ Herodotos Histories 1.1, 2.44 & 7.89; Strabo, Geography 16.3.4.
  37. ^ a b Bowersock, G.W. (1986). "Tylos and Tyre. Bahrain in the Graeco-Roman World". In Khalifa, Haya Ali; Rice, Michael (eds.). Bahrain Through The Ages – the Archaeology. Routledge. pp. 401–2. ISBN 0-7103-0112-X.
  38. ^ a b Rice, Michael (1994). The Archaeology of the Arabian Gulf. Routledge. p. 20. ISBN 0-415-03268-7.
  39. ^ a b R. A. Donkin (1998). Beyond Price: Pearls and Pearl-fishing : Origins to the Age of Discoveries, Volume 224. p. 48. ISBN 0-87169-224-4.
  40. ^ Haber, Marc; Doumet-Serhal, Claude; Scheib, Christiana; Xue, Yali; Danecek, Petr; Mezzavilla, Massimo; Youhanna, Sonia; Martiniano, Rui; Prado-Martinez, Javier; Szpak, Michał; Matisoo-Smith, Elizabeth; Schutkowski, Holger; Mikulski, Richard; Zalloua, Pierre; Kivisild, Toomas; Tyler-Smith, Chris (2017). "Continuity and Admixture in the Last Five Millennia of Levantine History from Ancient Canaanite and Present-Day Lebanese Genome Sequences". American Journal of Human Genetics. 101 (2): 274–282. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.06.013. PMC 5544389. PMID 28757201.
  41. ^ Markoe (2000), pp. 1–19.
  42. ^ Stieglitz, Robert (1990). "The Geopolitics of the Phoenician Littoral in the Early Iron Age". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 129 (9).
  43. ^ a b Bentley, Jerry H. (1999). "Sea and Ocean Basins as Frameworks for Historical Analysis". Geographical Review. 89 (2): 215–219. doi:10.1111/j.1931-0846.1999.tb00214.x.
  44. ^ Barnes, William H. (1991). Studies in the Chronology of the Divided Monarchy of Israel. Atlanta: Scholars Press. pp. 29–55.
  45. ^ Chamorro, Javier G. (1987). "Survey of Archaeological Research on Tartessos". American Journal of Archaeology. 91 (2): 197–232. doi:10.2307/505217. JSTOR 505217. S2CID 191378720.
  46. ^ a b c d e f History, Captivating (2019). "The Phoenicians: A Captivating Guide to the History of Phoenicia and the Impact Made by One of the Greatest Trading Civilizations of the Ancient World". Captivating History. ISBN 9781647482053.
  47. ^ Warmington (1964).
  48. ^ Charles-Picard, Gilbert; Picard, Colette (1968). Vie et Mort de Carthage [The Life and Death of Carthage] (in French). Paris: Hachett. pp. 28–35.
  49. ^ Lancel, Serge (1995). Carthage. Translated by Antonia Nevill. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 20–23.
  50. ^ a b c "Lebanon – Assyrian and Babylonian domination of Phoenicia". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-04-22.
  51. ^ a b c Katzenstein, Jacob (1979). "Tyre in the Early Persian Period (539-486 B.C.E.)". The Biblical Archaeologist. 42 (1): 31. doi:10.2307/3209545. JSTOR 3209545. S2CID 165757132.
  52. ^ Herodotus. The Histories, Book III. pp. §19.
  53. ^ Herodotus. The Histories, Book III. pp. 218, §91.
  54. ^ MAMcIntosh (2018-08-29). "A History of Phoenician Civilization". Brewminate. Retrieved 2020-04-20.
  55. ^ Herodotus. The Histories, Book V. pp. §109.
  56. ^ Herodotus. The Histories, Book VII. pp. §23.
  57. ^ Herodotus. The Histories, Book VIII. pp. §90.
  58. ^ "LacusCurtius • Diodorus Siculus — Book XVI Chapters 40‑65". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 2020-04-20.
  59. ^ a b c d e Millar, Fergus (2006). "The Phoenician Cities". The Phoenician Cities: A Case-Study of Hellenisation. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 32–50. doi:10.5149/9780807876657_millar.8. ISBN 9780807830307. JSTOR 10.5149/9780807876657_millar.8.
  60. ^ "Alexander's Siege of Tyre, 332 BCE". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2019-03-07.
  61. ^ a b c d e Stockwell, Stephen (2010). "Before Athens: Early Popular Government in Phoenician and Greek City States". Geopolitics, History, and International Relations (2): 128–129.
  62. ^ "Phoenicia". britannica.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  63. ^ "Ancient Phoenician life was mixed and multicultural". Cosmos Magazine. 10 January 2018. Retrieved 2020-04-25.
  64. ^ Zalloua, Pierre A.; et al. (2008). "Identifying Genetic Traces of Historical Expansions: Phoenician Footprints in the Mediterranean". American Journal of Human Genetics. 83 (5): 633–642. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2008.10.012. PMC 2668035. PMID 18976729.
  65. ^ Tomàs, Carme (2006). "Differential maternal and paternal contributions to the genetic pool of Ibiza Island, Balearic Archipelago". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 129 (2): 268–278. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20273. PMID 16323196.
  66. ^ Matisoo-Smith, Elizabeth A.; Gosling, Anna L.; Boocock, James; Kardailsky, Olga; Kurumilian, Yara; Roudesli-Chebbi, Sihem; et al. (25 May 2016). "A European Mitochondrial Haplotype Identified in Ancient Phoenician Remains from Carthage, North Africa". PLoS ONE. 11 (5): e0155046. Bibcode:2016PLoSO..1155046M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0155046. PMC 4880306. PMID 27224451.
  67. ^ Harb, Marc; et al. (July 2017). "Continuity and Admixture in the Last Five Millennia of Levantine History from Ancient Canaanite and Present-Day Lebanese Genome Sequences". American Journal of Human Genetics. 101 (2): 274–282. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.06.013. PMC 5544389. PMID 28757201.
  68. ^ Abed, Mira (27 July 2017). "The DNA of ancient Canaanites lives on in modern-day Lebanese, genetic analysis shows". Los Angeles Times.
  69. ^ Abed, Mira (27 July 2017). "The DNA of ancient Canaanites lives on in modern-day Lebanese, genetic analysis shows". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 5 August 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  70. ^ Haber, Marc; Nassar, Joyce; Almarri, Mohamed A.; Saupe, Tina; Saag, Lehti; Griffith, Samuel J.; Doumet-Serhal, Claude; Chanteau, Julien; Saghieh-Beydoun, Muntaha; Xue, Yali; Scheib, Christiana L.; Tyler-Smith, Chris (2020). "A Genetic History of the Near East from an aDNA Time Course Sampling Eight Points in the Past 4,000 Years". American Journal of Human Genetics. 107 (1): 149–157. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.05.008. PMC 7332655. PMID 32470374.
  71. ^ Braudel, Fernand (2001). Memory and Mediterranean. Translated by Reynolds, Sian. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 112–113.
  72. ^ Cunliffe (2008), pp. 241–2.
  73. ^ Stager, L. E. (2003). "Phoenician shipwrecks in the deep sea". Sea routes: From Sidon to Huelva: Interconnections in the Mediterranean, 16th–6th c. BC. pp. 233–248. ISBN 978-960-7064-40-0.
  74. ^ A. B. Freijeiro, R. Corzo Sánchez, Der neue anthropoide Sarkophag von Cadiz. In: Madrider Mitteilungen 22, 1981.
  75. ^ Lapuente, P.; Rodà, I.; Gutiérrez Garcia‐M, A.; Brilli, M. (June 2021). "Addressing the controversial origin of the marble source used in the Phoenician anthropoid sarcophagi of Gadir (Cadiz, Spain)". Archaeometry. 63 (3): 467–480. doi:10.1111/arcm.12623. S2CID 225150177.
  76. ^ Markoe (2000), p. 103.
  77. ^ Hawkes, Christopher (1977). "Britain and Julius Caesar". Proceedings of the British Academy (63): 124–192.
  78. ^ a b c d e Markoe, Glenn; McGovern, Patrick E. (March 1990). "A Nation of Artisans". Archaeology. 43 (2): 32–33. JSTOR 41765806.
  79. ^ Herm, Gerhard (1975). The Phoenicians. Translated by Hiller, Catherine. New York: William Morrow. p. 80.
  80. ^ Moore, Karl; Lewis, David (1999). Birth of the Multinational. Copenhagen: Copenhagen Business School Press. p. 85.
  81. ^ St. Clair, Kassia (2016). The Secret Lives of Colour. London: John Murray. pp. 162–164.
  82. ^ History, Captivating (2019). The Phoenicians: A Captivating Guide to the History of Phoenicia and the Impact Made by One of the Greatest Trading Civilizations of the Ancient World. p. 60. ISBN 978-1647482053.
  83. ^ a b c Rawlinson (1889).
  84. ^ a b c d "2,600-year-old wine 'factory' unearthed in Lebanon". History & Culture. 2020-09-14. Retrieved 2020-09-15.
  85. ^ Sechrist, Robert. Planet of the Grapes: A Geography of Wine. pp. 6–7.
  86. ^ "Galley | ship". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  87. ^ Haggi, Arad (2010). "Report on Underwater Excavation at the Phoenician Harbour, Atlit, Israel". International Journal of Nautical Archaeology (39): 283.
  88. ^ Wachsmann, Shelley (1998). Seagoing Ships & Seamanship in the Bronze Age Levant. College Station, TX: Texas A & M University Press. pp. 300, 51, 323–325, 332.
  89. ^ Woolmer, Mark (2011). Ancient Phoenicia: An Introduction. London: Bristol Classical Press. p. 84.
  90. ^ Gambin, Timmy (October 2017). (PDF) (Report). University of Malta. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 November 2020. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  91. ^ Klein, Christopher. "2,700-Year-Old Phoenician Shipwreck Discovered". HISTORY. Retrieved 2020-04-23.
  92. ^ Lorenzi, Rossella (28 August 2014). "2,700-Year-Old Phoenician Shipwreck Discovered". Seeker.
  93. ^ Hansen, Mogens Herman (2000). "Conclusion: The Impact of City-State Cultures on World History". A Comparative Study of Thirty City-state Cultures: An Investigation. Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab. pp. 601–602. ISBN 978-87-7876-177-4. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  94. ^ Eric H. Cline; Mark W. Graham (27 June 2011). Ancient Empires: From Mesopotamia to the Rise of Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-521-88911-7. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  95. ^ David Sacks; Oswyn Murray; Lisa R. Brody (1 January 2009). Encyclopedia of the Ancient Greek World. Infobase Publishing. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-4381-1020-2. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  96. ^ Waldman, Carl; Mason, Catherine (2006). Encyclopedia of European Peoples. Infobase Publishing. p. 586. ISBN 978-1-4381-2918-1. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  97. ^ Smith, Richard L. (31 July 2008). Premodern Trade in World History. Routledge. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-203-89352-4. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  98. ^ Naylor, Phillip Chiviges (1 July 2009). North Africa: A History from Antiquity to the Present. University of Texas Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-292-77878-8. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  99. ^ Swartz, B. K.; Dumett, Raymond E. (1 January 1980). West African Culture Dynamics: Archaeological and Historical Perspectives. Walter de Gruyter. p. 236. ISBN 978-3-11-080068-5. Retrieved 17 February 2013.
  100. ^ Garnsey, P. D. A.; Whittaker, C. R. (15 February 2007). Imperialism in the Ancient World: The Cambridge University Research Seminar in Ancient History. Cambridge University Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-521-03390-9. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  101. ^ P. Roberts (1 October 2004). HSC Ancient History. Pascal Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-74125-179-1. Retrieved 17 February 2013.
  102. ^ Crawley Quinn, Josephine (2018). "A New Phoenician World". In Search of the Phoenicians. Princeton University Press. pp. 153–175. doi:10.2307/j.ctvc77kkd.13. ISBN 9780691195964. JSTOR j.ctvc77kkd.13.
  103. ^ Pritchard, James B.; Edey, Maitland A. (1974). Introduction to The Sea Traders. New York: Time-Life Books. p. 7.
  104. ^ Cross, Frank Moore (1980). "Newly Found Inscriptions in Old Canaanite and Early Phoenician Scripts". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The American Schools of Oriental Research. 238 (238 (Spring, 1980)): 1–20. doi:10.2307/1356511. JSTOR 1356511. S2CID 222445150.
  105. ^ Millard, A. R. (1986). "The Infancy of the Alphabet". World Archaeology. 17 (3): 390–398. doi:10.1080/00438243.1986.9979978.
  106. ^ Beck, Roger B.; Black, Linda; Krieger, Larry S.; Naylor, Phillip C.; Shabaka, Dahia Ibo (1999). World History: Patterns of Interaction. Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell. ISBN 978-0-395-87274-1.
  107. ^ Moscati (1965).
  108. ^ Jeffery, L. H. (1976). The Archaic Greece: The Greek city-states 700–500 BC. Ernest Benn Ltd & Tonnbridge.
  109. ^ a b "Phoenician Art". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  110. ^ a b Markoe, Glenn E. (August 1990). "The Emergence of Phoenician Art". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (279): 13–26. doi:10.2307/1357205. JSTOR 1357205. S2CID 163353156.
  111. ^ "The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.)". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  112. ^ "Furniture plaque carved in high relief with two Egyptianizing figures flanking a volute tree, c. 9th–8th century B.C." www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  113. ^ Holst (2011), p. 31.
  114. ^ Holst (2011), p. 44.
  115. ^ Moscati (1957), e.g., p. 40 & 113.
  116. ^ Smith (1956), pp. 1–15.
  117. ^ Gaster (1965), pp. 113–143, 114–5.
  118. ^ Harden (1962), pp. 83–4.
  119. ^ Brandon (1970), pp. 512–513.
  120. ^ Brandon (1970), p. 448.
  121. ^ Brandon (1970), p. 173.
  122. ^ Brandon (1970), p. 258 ("El").
  123. ^ Here, Baal was used instead of the storm god's name Hadad. Brandon (1970), pp. 315, 28, 124
  124. ^ Moscati (1957), pp. 113–4.
  125. ^ Brandon (1970), pp. 29–30.
  126. ^ Brandon (1970), pp. 173, 501.
  127. ^ Carlyon, Richard (1981). A Guide to the Gods. New York. pp. 311–333.
  128. ^ Markoe (2000), p. 120.
  129. ^ Warmington (1964), p. 148.
  130. ^ Smith (1956), pp. 33–43.
  131. ^ a b "Long-lost Phoenician figurines could reveal secrets to ancient cult". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 2020-09-11.

Sources

  • Aubet, Maria Eugenia (2001). The Phoenicians and the West: Politics, Colonies and Trade. Translated by Turton, Mary. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79543-2. See , University of Liverpool.
  • Bondi, S. F. 1988. "The Course of History." In The Phoenicians, edited by Sabatino Moscati, 38–45. Milan: Gruppo Editoriale Fabbri.
  • Brandon, S.G.F., ed. (1970). Dictionary of Comparative Religion. New York City: Charles Scribner’s Son. ISBN 9780684310091.
  • Charles-Picard, Gilbert; Picard, Colette (1968). The Life and Death of Carthage. New York City: Taplinger. (Original French ed.: Vie et mort de Carthage Paris: Hatchette 1968){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Coulmas, Florian (1996). The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Writing Systems. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-21481-6.
  • Cross, Frank M. (1973). Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674091764.
  • Cunliffe, Barry (2008). Europe Between the Oceans; 9000 BC-AD 1000. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  • Elayi, J. 2013. Histoire de la Phénicie. Paris: Perrin
  • Gaster, Theodor H. (1965). "The Religion of the Canaanites". In Ferm, Vergilius (ed.). Ancient Religions. New York City: Citadel Pres. (Original ed.: Philosophical Library 1950){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Harden, Donald (1962). The Phoenicians. New York, NY: Frederick A. Praeger.
  • Jigoulov, Vadim S. (2021). The Phoenicians: Lost Civilizations. London: Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-789-14478-9.
  • Lancel, Serge (1995). Carthage. A History. Oxford: Blackwell. (Original ed. in French: Carthage. Paris: Librairie Artheme Fayard 1992){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Markoe, Glenn E. (2000). Peoples of the Past: Phoenicians. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-22614-2.
  • Moscati, Sabatino (1957). Ancient Semitic Civilizations. London, England: Elek Books.
  • Moscati, Sabatino (1965). The World of the Phoenicians. New York, NY: Frederick A. Praeger.
  • Quinn, Josephine Crawley (2017). In Search of the Phoenicians. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-8911-2.
  • Rawlinson, George (1889). The History of Phoenicia.
  • W. Röllig (1995), Phoenician and the Phoenicians in the context of the Ancient Near East, in S. Moscati (ed.), I Fenici ieri oggi domani : ricerche, scoperte, progetti, Roma, p. 203-214
  • Smith, W. Robertson (1956) [A. & C. Black, Edinburgh, 1889]. Lectures on the Religion of the Semites. New York: Meridian Library.
  • Soren, David; Khader, Aicha B.; Slim, Hedi (1990). Carthage. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9780671669027.
  • Warmington, Brian H. (1964). Carthage. Penguin (original ed.:Robert Hale 1960).

Further reading

  • Carayon, Nicolas, Les ports phéniciens et puniques, PhD Thesis, 2008, Strasbourg, France.
  • Cerqueiro, Daniel, Las Naves de Tarshis o quiénes fueron los Fenicios, Buenos Aires, Ed. Peq. Venecia, 2002, ISBN 987-9239-13-X.
  • Cioffi, Robert L., "A Palm Tree, a Colour and a Mythical Bird" (review of Josephine Quinn, In Search of the Phoenicians, Princeton, 2017, 360 pp., ISBN 978 0 691 17527 0), London Review of Books, vol. 41, no. 1 (3 January 2019), pp. 15–16.
  • Thiollet, Jean-Pierre, Je m'appelle Byblos, foreword by Guy Gay-Para, H & D, Paris, 2005, ISBN 2-914266-04-9.
  • Todd, Malcolm; Andrew Fleming (1987). The South West to AD 1,000 (Regional history of England series No.:8). Harlow, Essex: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-49274-5., for a critical examination of the evidence of Phoenician trade with the South West of the U.K.
  • Silva, Diógenes. "La literatura sobre fenicios en el territorio brasileño: orígenes y razones", PhD Thesis, Madrid - 2016. Available in https://eprints.ucm.es/39468/

External links

  • BBC Radio4 – In Our Time: The Phoenicians (audio archive)
  • Phoenician Alphabet
  • Sam Haselby (ed.). "Phoenicia: An imaginary friend to nations in need of ancestors". Josephine Quinn, associate professor in ancient history at Worcester College, University of Oxford. Aeon.

phoenicia, other, uses, disambiguation, coordinates, 12361, 65111, 12361, 65111, ancient, thalassocratic, civilization, originating, levant, region, eastern, mediterranean, primarily, located, modern, lebanon, territory, extended, shrank, throughout, history, . For other uses see Phoenicia disambiguation Coordinates 34 07 25 N 35 39 04 E 34 12361 N 35 65111 E 34 12361 35 65111 Phoenicia f e ˈ n ɪ ʃ e f e ˈ n iː ʃ e 4 was an ancient thalassocratic civilization originating in the Levant region of the eastern Mediterranean primarily located in modern Lebanon 5 6 The territory of the Phoenicians extended and shrank throughout history with the core of their culture stretching from Tripoli in northern Lebanon to Mount Carmel in modern Israel 7 Beyond their homeland the Phoenicians extended throughout the Mediterranean from Cyprus to the Iberian Peninsula Phoenicia Foinikh Phoinike Greek 2500 BC 1 64 BCMap of the Phoenicia region in green CapitalNone dominant cities were Byblos 2500 1000 BC and Tyre 900 550 BC 2 Common languagesPhoenician PunicReligionCanaanite religionDemonym s PhoenicianGovernmentCity states ruled by kings with varying degrees of oligarchic or plutocratic elements oligarchic republic in Carthage after c 480 BC 3 Well known kings of Phoenician cities c 1800 BC oldest attested king of Lebanon proper Abishemu I 969 936 BCHiram I 820 774 BCPygmalion of TyreHistorical eraClassical antiquity Established2500 BC 1 Tyre becomes dominant city state under the reign of Hiram I969 BC Carthage founded in Roman accounts by Dido 814 BC Pompey conquers Phoenicia and rest of Seleucid Empire64 BCPreceded by Succeeded byCanaanitesHittite EmpireEgyptian Empire Syria Roman province The Phoenicians were a Semitic speaking people of somewhat unknown origin who emerged in the Levant around 3000 BC 8 The term Phoenicia is an ancient Greek exonym that most likely described one of their most famous exports a dye also known as Tyrian purple it did not correspond precisely to a cohesive culture or society as it would have been understood natively 9 It is debated whether Phoenicians were actually distinct from the broader group of Semitic speaking peoples known as Canaanites 10 11 Historian Robert Drews believes the term Canaanites corresponds to the ethnic group referred to as Phoenicians by the ancient Greeks 12 archaeologist Jonathan N Tubb argues that Ammonites Moabites Israelites and Phoenicians undoubtedly achieved their own cultural identities and yet ethnically they were all Canaanites the same people who settled in farming villages in the region in the 8th millennium BC 13 13 14 The Phoenicians came to prominence in the mid 12th century BC following the decline of most major cultures in the Late Bronze Age collapse They were renowned among contemporaries as skilled traders and mariners becoming the dominant commercial power for much of classical antiquity The Phoenicians developed an expansive maritime trade network that lasted over a millennium helping facilitate the exchange of cultures ideas and knowledge between major cradles of civilization such as Greece Egypt and Mesopotamia After its zenith in the ninth century BC the Phoenician civilization in the eastern Mediterranean slowly declined in the face of foreign influence and conquest its presence endured in the central and western Mediterranean until the mid second century BC The Phoenicians were organized in city states similar to those of ancient Greece of which the most notable were Tyre Sidon and Byblos 14 15 Each city state was politically independent and there is no evidence the Phoenicians viewed themselves as a single nationality 16 The Phoenicians established colonies and trading posts across the Mediterranean Carthage a settlement in northwest Africa became a major civilization in its own right in the seventh century BC Phoenician society and cultural life centered on commerce and seafaring while most city states were governed by some form of kingship merchant families likely exercised influence through oligarchies The Phoenicians were long considered a lost civilization due to the lack of indigenous written records and only since the mid 20th century have historians and archaeologists been able to reveal a complex and influential civilization 17 Their best known legacy is the world s oldest verified alphabet whose origin was connected to that of the Hebrew script via the Proto Sinaitic script 18 page needed and which was transmitted across the Mediterranean and used to develop the Arabic script and Greek alphabet and in turn the Latin and Cyrillic alphabets 19 20 The Phoenicians are also credited with innovations in shipbuilding navigation industry agriculture and government Their international trade network is believed to have fostered the economic political and cultural foundations of Classical Western civilization 21 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 Emergence during the Late Bronze Age 1479 1200 BC 2 3 Ascendance and high point 1200 800 BC 2 4 Foundation of Carthage 2 5 Vassalage under the Assyrians and Babylonians 858 538 BC 2 6 Persian period 539 332 BC 2 7 Hellenistic period 332 152 BC 3 Demographics 3 1 Genetic studies 4 Economy 4 1 Trade 4 2 Industry 4 2 1 Tyrian purple 4 2 2 Mining 4 2 3 Viticulture 4 2 4 Shipbuilding 5 Important cities and colonies 5 1 Phoenician colonization 6 Society and culture 6 1 Politics and government 6 2 Law and administration 6 3 Military 6 4 Language 6 4 1 Alphabet 6 5 Art 6 6 Women 7 Religion 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymology EditBeing a society of independent city states the Phoenicians apparently did not have a term to denote the land of Phoenicia as a whole 22 instead demonyms were often derived from the name of the city an individual hailed from e g Sidonian for Sidon Tyrian for Tyre etc If the Phoenicians did possess an etymon to denote the land overall some scholars believe that they would have used Canaan and therefore referred to themselves as Canaanites 23 According to one reconstruction the Honeyman inscription dated to c 900 BCE by William F Albright seems to contain a reference to the Phoenician homeland calling it Put Phoenician 𐤐𐤕 24 Poenulus a Latin comedic play written in the early second century BCE appears to preserve a Punic term for Phoenicians which may be reconstructed as Pōnnim 25 The name Phoenicians like Latin Poeni adj poenicus later punicus comes from Greek Foinikh Phoinike The word foῖni3 phoinix not to be confused with the mythical bird phoenix which shares this spelling meant variably Phoenician person Tyrian purple crimson or date palm Homer used it with each of these meanings 26 It is difficult to ascertain which meaning came first but it is understandable how Greeks may have associated the crimson or purple color of dates and dye with the merchants who traded both products A derivative po ni ki jo is already attested in Mycenaean Greek Linear B from the 2nd Millennium BC In these records it means crimson or palm tree and does not denote a group of people 27 Likewise obelisks at Karnak describe Thutmose III smiting the prominent men of Retjenu the region of Canaan and Syria and a land belonging to what it calls the fnḫw which is sometimes identified with Phoenicia as it would represent a reasonable point of origin for the Linear B term po ni ki jo and seems to be the plural form of the Ancient Egyptian word for carpenter fnḫ befitting of the crucial station Phoenicia served in the lumber trade of the Levant 28 History EditMain article History of Phoenicia Since little has survived of Phoenician records or literature most of what is known about their origins and history comes from the accounts of other civilizations and inferences from their material culture excavated throughout the Mediterranean The scholarly consensus is that the Phoenicians period of greatest prominence was 1200 BC to the end of the Persian period 332 BC 29 The Phoenician Early Bronze Age is largely unknown 30 The two most important sites are Byblos and Sidon Dakerman near Sidon although as of 2021 well over a hundred sites remain to be excavated while others that have been are yet to be fully analysed 30 The Middle Bronze Age was a generally peaceful time of increasing population trade and prosperity though there was competition for natural resources 31 In the Late Bronze Age rivalry between Egypt the Mittani the Hittites and Assyria had a significant impact on Phoenicians cities 31 Origins Edit Main articles Canaan Retjenu and Prehistory of the Levant The Canaanite culture that gave rise to the Phoenicians apparently developed in situ from the earlier Ghassulian chalcolithic culture Ghassulian itself developed from the Circum Arabian Nomadic Pastoral Complex which in turn developed from a fusion of their ancestral Natufian and Harifian cultures with Pre Pottery Neolithic B PPNB farming cultures practicing the domestication of animals during the 8 2 kiloyear event which led to the Neolithic Revolution in the Levant 32 The Late Bronze Age state of Ugarit is considered quintessentially Canaanite archaeologically 33 even though the Ugaritic language does not belong to the Canaanite languages proper 34 35 The fourth century BC Greek historian Herodotus claimed that the Phoenicians had migrated from the Erythraean Sea around 2750 BC and the first century AD geographer Strabo reports a claim that they came from Tylos and Arad Bahrain and Muharraq 36 37 38 39 Some archaeologists working on the Persian Gulf have accepted these traditions and suggest a migration connected with the collapse of the Dilmun civilization ca 1750 BC 37 38 39 However most scholars reject the idea of a migration archaeological and historical evidence alike indicate millennia of population continuity in the region and recent genetic research indicates that present day Lebanese derive most of their ancestry from a Canaanite related population 40 Emergence during the Late Bronze Age 1479 1200 BC Edit The first known account of the Phoenicians relates to the conquests of Pharaoh Thutmose III 1479 1425 BC The Egyptians targeted coastal cities which they wrote belonged to the Fenekhu carpenters such as Byblos Arwad and Ullasa for their crucial geographic and commercial links with the interior via the Nahr al Kabir and the Orontes rivers The cities provided Egypt with access to Mesopotamian trade and abundant stocks of the region s native cedarwood There was no equivalent in the Egyptian homeland 41 By the mid 14th century BC the Phoenician city states were considered favored cities to the Egyptians Tyre Sidon Beirut and Byblos were regarded as the most important The Phoenicians had considerable autonomy and their cities were reasonably well developed and prosperous Byblos was the leading city it was a center for bronze making and the primary terminus of precious goods such as tin and lapis lazuli from as far east as Afghanistan Sidon and Tyre also commanded interest among Egyptian officials beginning a pattern of rivalry that would span the next millennium The Amarna letters report that from 1350 to 1300 BC neighboring Amorites and Hittites were capturing Phoenician cities especially in the north Egypt subsequently lost its coastal holdings from Ugarit in northern Syria to Byblos near central Lebanon Ascendance and high point 1200 800 BC Edit Sometime between 1200 and 1150 BC the Late Bronze Age collapse severely weakened or destroyed most civilizations in the region including the Egyptians and Hittites The Phoenicians appear to have weathered the crisis relatively well emerging as a distinct and organized civilization in 1230 BC The period is sometimes described as a Phoenician renaissance 42 They filled the power vacuum caused by the Late Bronze Age collapse by becoming the sole mercantile and maritime power in the region a status they would maintain for the next several centuries 10 The recovery of the Mediterranean economy can be credited to Phoenician mariners and merchants who re established long distance trade between Egypt and Mesopotamia in the 10th century BC 43 Early into the Iron Age the Phoenicians established ports warehouses markets and settlement all across the Mediterranean and up to the southern Black Sea Colonies were established on Cyprus Sardinia the Balearic Islands Sicily and Malta as well as the coasts of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula 44 Phoenician hacksilver dated to this period bears lead isotope ratios matching ores in Sardinia and Spain indicating the extent of Phoenician trade networks 45 By the tenth century BC Tyre rose to become the richest and most powerful Phoenician city state particularly during the reign of Hiram I c 969 936 BC During the rule of the priest Ithobaal 887 856 BC Tyre expanded its territory as far north as Beirut and into part of Cyprus this unusual act of aggression was the closest the Phoenicians ever came to forming a unitary territorial state Once his realm reached its largest territorial extent Ithobaal declared himself King of the Sidonians a title that would be used by his successors and mentioned in both Greek and Jewish accounts 46 The Late Iron Age saw the height of Phoenician shipping mercantile and cultural activity particularly between 750 and 650 BC The Phoenician influence was visible in the orientalization of Greek cultural and artistic conventions 10 Among their most popular goods were fine textiles typically dyed with Tyrian purple Homer s Iliad which was composed during this period references the quality of Phoenician clothing and metal goods 10 Foundation of Carthage Edit Main articles Carthage Ancient Carthage History of Carthage and Punic Wars Carthage was founded by Phoenicians coming from Tyre probably initially as a station in the metal trade with the southern Iberian Peninsula 47 page needed The city s name in Punic Qart Ḥadast 𐤒𐤓𐤕 𐤇𐤃𐤔𐤕 means New City 48 There is a tradition in some ancient sources such as Philistos of Syracuse for an early foundation date of around 1215 BC before the fall of Troy in 1180 BC However Timaeus a Greek historian from Sicily c 300 BC places the foundation of Carthage in 814 BC which is the date generally accepted by modern historians 49 Legend including Virgil s Aeneid assigns the founding of the city to Queen Dido Carthage would grow into a multi ethnic empire spanning North Africa Sardinia Sicily Malta the Balearic Islands and southern Iberia but would ultimately be destroyed by Rome in the Punic Wars 264 146 BC before being rebuilt as a Roman city citation needed Vassalage under the Assyrians and Babylonians 858 538 BC Edit Main article Phoenicia under Babylonian rule Two bronze fragments from an Assyrian palace gate depicting the collection of tribute from the Phoenician cities of Tyre and Sidon 859 824 BC British Museum As a mercantile power concentrated along a narrow coastal strip of land the Phoenicians lacked the size and population to support a large military Thus as neighboring empires began to rise the Phoenicians increasingly fell under the sway of foreign rulers who to varying degrees circumscribed their autonomy 46 The Assyrian conquest of Phoenicia began with King Shalmaneser III He rose to power in 858 BC and began a series of campaigns against neighboring states The Phoenician city states fell under his rule forced to pay heavy tribute in money goods and natural resources Initially they were not annexed outright they remained in a state of vassalage subordinate to the Assyrians but allowed a certain degree of freedom 46 This changed in 744 BC with the ascension of Tiglath Pileser III By 738 BC most of the Levant including northern Phoenicia were annexed only Tyre and Byblos the most powerful city states remained tributary states outside of direct Assyrian control Tyre Byblos and Sidon all rebelled against Assyrian rule In 721 BC Sargon II besieged Tyre and crushed the rebellion His successor Sennacherib suppressed further rebellions across the region During the seventh century BC Sidon rebelled and was destroyed by Esarhaddon who enslaved its inhabitants and built a new city on its ruins By the end of the century the Assyrians had been weakened by successive revolts which led to their destruction by the Median Empire The Babylonians formerly vassals of the Assyrians took advantage of the empire s collapse and rebelled quickly establishing the Neo Babylonian Empire in its place Phoenician cities revolted several times throughout the reigns of the first Babylonian King Nabopolassar 626 605 BC and his son Nebuchadnezzar II c 605 c 562 BC In 587 BC Nebuchadnezzar besieged Tyre which resisted for thirteen years but ultimately capitulated under favorable terms 50 Persian period 539 332 BC Edit Main article Achaemenid Phoenicia Phoenicians build pontoon bridges for Xerxes I of Persia during the second Persian invasion of Greece in 480 BC 1915 drawing by A C Weatherstone In 539 BC Cyrus the Great king and founder of the Persian Achaemenid Empire took Babylon 51 As Cyrus began consolidating territories across the Near East the Phoenicians apparently made the pragmatic calculation of yielding themselves to the Persians 52 Most of the Levant was consolidated by Cyrus into a single satrapy province and forced to pay a yearly tribute of 350 talents which was roughly half the tribute that was required of Egypt and Libya 53 The Phoenician area was later divided into four vassal kingdoms Sidon Tyre Arwad and Byblos which were allowed considerable autonomy Unlike in other empire areas there is no record of Persian administrators governing the Phoenician city states Local Phoenician kings were allowed to remain in power and given the same rights as Persian satraps governors such as hereditary offices and minting their coins 51 54 Achaemenid era coin of Abdashtart I of Sidon who is seen at the back of the chariot behind the Persian King The Phoenicians remained a core asset to the Achaemenid Empire particularly for their prowess in maritime technology and navigation 51 they furnished the bulk of the Persian fleet during the Greco Persian Wars of the late fifth century BC 55 Phoenicians under Xerxes I built the Xerxes Canal and the pontoon bridges that allowed his forces to cross into mainland Greece 56 Nevertheless they were harshly punished by the Persian King following his defeat at the Battle of Salamis which he blamed on Phoenician cowardice and incompetence 57 In the mid fourth century BC King Tennes of Sidon led a failed rebellion against Artaxerxes III enlisting the help of the Egyptians who were subsequently drawn into a war with the Persians 58 The resulting destruction of Sidon led to the resurgence of Tyre which remained the dominant Phoenician city for two decades until the arrival of Alexander the Great Hellenistic period 332 152 BC Edit Phoenicia was one of the first areas to be conquered by Alexander the Great during his military campaigns across western Asia Alexander s main target in the Persian Levant was Tyre now the region s largest and most important city It capitulated after a roughly seven month siege during which many of its citizens fled to Carthage 59 Tyre s refusal to allow Alexander to visit its temple to Melqart culminating in the killing of his envoys led to a brutal reprisal 2 000 of its leading citizens were crucified and a puppet ruler was installed 60 The rest of Phoenicia easily came under his control with Sidon surrendering peacefully 61 A naval action during Alexander the Great s Siege of Tyre 332 BC Drawing by Andre Castaigne 1888 89 Alexander s empire had a Hellenization policy whereby Hellenic culture religion and sometimes language were spread or imposed across conquered peoples However Hellenisation was not enforced most of the time and was just a language of administration until his death This was typically implemented through the founding of new cities the settlement of a Macedonian or Greek urban elite and the alteration of native place names to Greek 59 However there was no organized Hellenization in Phoenicia and with one or two minor exceptions all Phoenician city states retained their native names while Greek settlement and administration appear to have been very limited 59 The Phoenicians maintained cultural and commercial links with their western counterparts Polybius recounts how the Seleucid King Demetrius I escaped from Rome by boarding a Carthaginian ship that was delivering goods to Tyre 59 The adaptation to Macedonian rule was likely aided by the Phoenicians historical ties with the Greeks with whom they shared some mythological stories and figures the two peoples were even sometimes considered relatives 59 When Alexander s empire collapsed after his death in 323 BC the Phoenicians came under the control of the largest of its successors the Seleucids The Phoenician homeland was repeatedly contested by the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt during the forty year Syrian Wars coming under Ptolemaic rule in the third century BC 50 The Seleucids reclaimed the area the following century holding it until the mid first 2nd century BC Under their rule the Phoenicians were allowed a considerable degree of autonomy and self governance 50 During the Seleucid Dynastic Wars 157 63 BC the Phoenician cities were mainly self governed Many of them were fought for or over by the warring factions of the Seleucid royal family Some Phoenician regions were under the control and influence of the Jews who revolted and succeeded in defeating Seleucids in 164 BC The Seleucid Kingdom including Phoenicia was seized by Tigranes the Great of Armenia in 82 BC ending the Hellenistic influence on the region With their strategically valuable buffer state absorbed into a rival power the Romans intervened and conquered the territory in 62 BC Shortly after that the territory was incorporated into the Roman province of Syria Phoenicia became a separate province in the third century AD With the Roman invasion whatever political autonomy Phoenicians had was dissolved and the region was romanized The Roman Empire ruled the province up to the 640s when the Muslim Arabs invaded the region successfully and a process of Islamisation and Arabisation started citation needed Demographics EditThe people now known as Phoenicians similar to the neighboring Israelites Moabites and Edomites were a Canaanite people Canaanites are a group of ancient Semitic speaking peoples that emerged in the Levant in at least the third millennium BC 10 Phoenicians did not refer themselves as such but rather are thought to have referred to themselves as Kenaʿani meaning Canaanites 62 One 2018 study of mitochondrial lineages in Sardinia concluded that the Phoenicians were inclusive multicultural and featured significant female mobility with evidence of indigenous Sardinians integrating peacefully and permanently with Semitic Phoenician settlers The study also found evidence suggesting that south Europeans may have settled in the area of modern Lebanon 63 Genetic studies Edit See also Genetic history of the Middle East Canaan Genetic studies and Lebanese people Genetics A 2008 study led by Pierre Zalloua found that six subclades of Haplogroup J M172 J2 thought to have originated between the Caucasus Mountains Mesopotamia and the Levant were of a Phoenician signature and present amongst the male populations of coastal Lebanon as well as the wider Levant the Phoenician Periphery followed by other areas of historic Phoenician settlement spanning Cyprus through to Morocco This deliberate sequential sampling was an attempt to develop a methodology to link the documented historical expansion of a population with a particular geographic genetic pattern or patterns The researchers suggested that the proposed genetic signature stemmed from a common source of related lineages rooted in Lebanon 64 Another study in 2006 found evidence for the genetic persistence of Phoenicians in the Spanish island of Ibiza 65 In 2016 the rare U5b2c1 maternal haplogroup was identified in the DNA of a 2 500 year old male skeleton excavated from a Punic tomb in Tunisia The lineage of this Young Man of Byrsa is believed to represent early gene flow from Iberia to the Maghreb 66 According to a 2017 study published by the American Journal of Human Genetics present day Lebanese derive most of their ancestry from a Canaanite related population which therefore implies substantial genetic continuity in the Levant since at least the Bronze Age 67 68 More specifically the research of geneticist Chris Tyler Smith and his team at the Sanger Institute in Britain who compared sampled ancient DNA from five Canaanite people who lived 3 750 and 3 650 years ago to modern people revealed that 93 percent of the genetic ancestry of people in Lebanon came from the Canaanites the other 7 percent was of a Eurasian steppe population 69 In a 2020 study published in the American Journal of Human Genetics researchers have shown that there is substantial genetic continuity in Lebanon since the Bronze Age interrupted by three significant admixture events during the Iron Age Hellenistic and Ottoman period each contributing 3 11 percent of non local ancestry to the admixed population 70 Economy EditTrade Edit Major Phoenician trade networks c 1200 800 BC See also Phoenicians and wine The Phoenicians served as intermediaries between the disparate civilizations that spanned the Mediterranean and Near East facilitating the exchange of goods and knowledge culture and religious traditions Their expansive and enduring trade network is credited with laying the foundations of an economically and culturally cohesive Mediterranean which would be continued by the Greeks and especially the Romans 43 Phoenician ties with the Greeks ran deep The earliest verified relationship appears to have begun with the Minoan civilization on Crete 1950 1450 BC which together with the Mycenaean civilization 1600 1100 BC is considered the progenitor of classical Greece 71 Archaeological research suggests that the Minoans gradually imported Near Eastern goods artistic styles and customs from other cultures via the Phoenicians To Egypt the Phoenicians sold logs of cedar for significant sums 72 and wine beginning in the eighth century The wine trade with Egypt is vividly documented by shipwrecks discovered in 1997 in the open sea 50 kilometres 30 mi west of Ascalon Israel 73 Pottery kilns at Tyre and Sarepta produced the large terracotta jars used for transporting wine From Egypt the Phoenicians bought Nubian gold Phoenician sarcophagi found in Cadiz Spain thought to have been imported from the Phoenician homeland around Sidon 74 75 Archaeological Museum of Cadiz From elsewhere they obtained other materials perhaps the most crucial being silver mostly from Sardinia and the Iberian Peninsula Tin for making bronze may have been acquired from Galicia by way of the Atlantic coast of southern Spain alternatively it may have come from northern Europe Cornwall or Brittany via the Rhone valley and coastal Massalia 76 Strabo states that there was a highly lucrative Phoenician trade with Britain for tin via the Cassiterides whose location is unknown but may have been off the northwest coast of the Iberian Peninsula 77 Industry Edit Phoenician metal bowl with hunting scene 8th century BC The clothing and hairstyle of the figures are Egyptian At the same time the subject matter of the central scene conforms with the Mesopotamian theme of combat between man and beast Phoenician artisans frequently adapted the styles of neighboring cultures Phoenicia lacked considerable natural resources other than its cedar wood Timber was probably the earliest and most lucrative source of wealth neither Egypt nor Mesopotamia had adequate wood sources Unable to rely solely on this limited resource the Phoenicians developed an industrial base manufacturing a variety of goods for both everyday and luxury use 10 The Phoenicians developed or mastered techniques such as glass making engraved and chased metalwork including bronze iron and gold ivory carving and woodwork 78 The Phoenicians were early pioneers in mass production and sold a variety of items in bulk They became the leading source of glassware in antiquity shipping thousands of flasks beads and other glass objects across the Mediterranean 79 Excavations of colonies in Spain suggest they also used the potter s wheel 80 Their exposure to a wide variety of cultures allowed them to manufacture goods for specific markets 78 The Iliad suggests Phoenician clothing and metal goods were highly prized by the Greeks 10 Specialized goods were designed specifically for wealthier clientele including ivory reliefs and plaques carved clam shells sculpted amber and finely detailed and painted ostrich eggs Tyrian purple Edit An Etruscan tomb c 350 BC depicting a man wearing an all purple toga picta The most prized Phoenician goods were fabrics dyed with Tyrian purple which formed a major part of Phoenician wealth The violet purple dye derived from the hypobranchial gland of the Murex marine snail once profusely available in coastal waters of the eastern Mediterranean Sea but exploited to local extinction Phoenicians may have discovered the dye as early as 1750 BC 81 The Phoenicians established a second production center for the dye in Mogador in present day Morocco 82 The Phoenicians exclusive command over the production and trade of the dye combined with the labor intensive extraction process made it very expensive Tyrian purple subsequently became associated with the upper classes It soon became a status symbol in several civilizations most notably among the Romans Assyrian tribute records from the Phoenicians include garments of brightly colored stuff that most likely included Tyrian purple While the designs ornamentation and embroidery used in Phoenician textiles were well regarded the techniques and specific descriptions are unknown 78 Mining Edit Mining operations in the Phoenician homeland were limited iron was the only metal of any worth The first large scale mining operations probably occurred in Cyprus principally for copper Sardinia may have been colonized almost exclusively for its mineral resources Phoenician settlements were concentrated in the southern parts of the island close to sources of copper and lead Piles of scoria and copper ingots which appear to predate Roman occupation suggest the Phoenicians mined and processed metals on the island The Iberian Peninsula was the richest source of numerous metals in antiquity including gold silver copper iron tin and lead 83 page needed The significant output of these metals during the Phoenician and Carthaginian occupation strongly implied large scale mining operations 83 page needed The Carthaginians are documented to have relied on slave labor for mining though it is unknown if the Phoenicians as a whole did so 83 page needed Viticulture Edit The most notable agricultural product was wine which the Phoenicians helped propagate across the Mediterranean 84 The common grape vine may have been domesticated by the Phoenicians or Canaanites although it most likely arrived from Transcaucasia via trade routes across Mesopotamia or the Black Sea Vines grew readily in the coastal Levant and wine was exported to Egypt as early as the Old Kingdom period 2686 2134 BC Wine played an important part in Phoenician religion serving as the principal beverage for offerings and sacrifice 84 An excavation of a small Phoenician town south of Sidon uncovered a wine factory used from at least the seventh century BC which is believed to have been aimed for an overseas market 84 To prevent oxidation vessels were sealed with a layer of olive oil pinewood and resin citation needed The Phoenicians established vineyards and wineries in their colonies in North Africa Sicily France and Spain 84 and may have taught winemaking to some of their trading partners The ancient Iberians began producing wine from local grape varieties following their encounter with the Phoenicians Iberian cultivars subsequently formed the basis of most western European wine 85 Shipbuilding Edit Warship with two rows of oars in relief from Nineveh c 700 BC The Timber Transportation relief at the LouvreTwo Assyrian representations of ships which could represent Phoenician vessels As early as 1200 BC the Phoenicians built large merchant ships citation needed During the Bronze Age they developed the keel citation needed Pegged mortise and tenon joints proved effective enough to serve as a standard until late into the Roman Empire citation needed The Phoenicians were possibly the first to introduce the bireme around 700 BC 86 An Assyrian account describes Phoenicians evading capture with these ships citation needed The Phoenicians are also credited with inventing the trireme which was regarded as the most advanced and powerful vessel in the ancient Mediterranean world and was eventually adopted by the Greeks 46 The Phoenicians developed several other maritime inventions The amphora a type of container used for both dry and liquid goods was an ancient Phoenician invention that became a standardized measurement of volume for close to two thousand years The remnants of self cleaning artificial harbors have been discovered in Sidon Tyre Atlit and Acre 87 The first example of admiralty law also appears in the Levant 88 The Phoenicians continued to contribute to cartography into the Iron Age 89 In 2014 a 12 metres 39 ft long Phoenician trading ship was found near Gozo island in Malta Dated 700 BC it is one of the oldest wrecks found in the Mediterranean Fifty amphorae used to contain wine and oil were scattered nearby 90 91 92 Important cities and colonies Edit Map of Phoenician yellow labels and Greek red labels colonies around 8th to 6th century BC with German legend Main article List of Phoenician cities The Phoenicians were not a nation in the political sense However they were organized into independent city states that shared a common language and culture The leading city states were Tyre Sidon and Byblos Rivalries were expected but armed conflict was rare Numerous other cities existed in the Levant alone many probably unknown including Beiruta modern Beirut Ampi Amia Arqa Baalbek Botrys Sarepta and Tripolis From the late tenth century BC the Phoenicians established commercial outposts throughout the Mediterranean with Tyre founding colonies in Cyprus Sardinia Iberia the Balearic Islands Sicily Malta and North Africa Later colonies were established beyond the Straits of Gibraltar particularly on the Atlantic coast of Iberia The Phoenicians may have explored the Canary Islands and the British Isles 10 Phoenician settlement was primarily concentrated in Cyprus Sicily Sardinia Malta northwest Africa the Balearic Islands and southern Iberia Phoenician colonization Edit To facilitate their commercial ventures the Phoenicians established numerous colonies and trading posts along the coasts of the Mediterranean Phoenician city states generally lacked the numbers or even the desire to expand their territory overseas Few colonies had more than 1 000 inhabitants only Carthage and some nearby settlements in the western Mediterranean would grow larger 93 A major motivating factor was competition with the Greeks who began expanding across the Mediterranean during the same period 94 Though largely peaceful rivals their respective settlements in Crete and Sicily did clash intermittently 95 The earliest Phoenician settlements outside the Levant were on Cyprus and Crete gradually moving westward towards Corsica the Balearic Islands Sardinia and Sicily as well as on the European mainland in Genoa and Marseilles 96 The first Phoenician colonies in the western Mediterranean were along the northwest African coast and on Sicily Sardinia and the Balearic Islands 97 Tyre led the way in settling or controlling coastal areas 98 Phoenician colonies were fairly autonomous At most they were expected to send annual tribute to their mother city usually in the context of a religious offering However in the seventh century BC the western colonies came under the control of Carthage 99 100 which was exercised directly through appointed magistrates 101 Carthage continued to send annual tribute to Tyre for some time after its independence Society and culture EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Phoenicia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Since very little of the Phoenicians writings have survived much of what is known about their culture and society comes from accounts by contemporary civilizations or inferences from archaeological discoveries The Phoenicians had much in common with other Canaanites including language religion social customs and a monarchical political system centered around city states However by the early Iron Age roughly 1300 BC they had emerged as distinct people Their culture economy and daily life were heavily centered on commerce and maritime trade Their propensity for seafaring brought them into contact with numerous other civilizations Politics and government Edit Tomb of King Hiram I of Tyre located in the village of Hanaouay in southern Lebanon The Phoenician city states were fiercely independent in both domestic and foreign affairs citation needed Formal alliances between city states were rare The relative power and influence of city states varied over time Sidon was dominant between the 12th and 11th centuries BC and influenced its neighbors However by the tenth century BC Tyre rose to become the most powerful city At least in its earlier stages Phoenician society was highly stratified and predominantly monarchical Hereditary kings usually governed with absolute power over civic commercial and religious affairs They often relied upon senior officials from the noble and merchant classes the priesthood was a distinct class usually of royal lineage or leading merchant families The King was considered a representative of the gods and carried many obligations and duties concerning religious processions and rituals Priests were thus highly influential and often became intertwined with the royal family Phoenician kings did not commemorate their reign through sculptures or monuments Their wealth power and accomplishments were usually conveyed through ornate sarcophagi like that of Ahiram of Byblos The Phoenicians kept records of their rulers in tomb inscriptions which are among the few primary sources still available Historians have determined a clear line of succession over centuries for some city states notably Byblos and Tyre Starting as early as 15th century BC Phoenician leaders were advised by councils or assemblies which gradually took greater power 61 In the sixth century BC during the period of Babylonian rule Tyre briefly adopted a system of government consisting of a pair of judges with authority roughly equivalent to the Roman consul known as sufetes shophets who were chosen from the most powerful noble families and served short terms 102 61 19th century depiction of Phoenician sailors and merchants The importance of trade to the Phoenician economy led to a gradual sharing of power between the King and assemblies of merchant families In the fourth century BC when the armies of Alexander the Great approached Tyre they were met not by its King but by representatives of the commonwealth of the city Similarly historians at the time describe the inhabitants or the people of Sidon making peace with Alexander 61 When the Macedonians sought to appoint a new king over Sidon the citizens nominated their candidate 61 Law and administration Edit After the King and council the two most important political positions in virtually every Phoenician city state were governor and commander of the army Details regarding the duties of these offices are sparse However it is known that the governor was responsible for collecting taxes implementing decrees supervising judges and ensuring the administration of law and justice 46 As warfare was rare among the most mercantile Phoenicians the army s commander was generally responsible for ensuring the defense and security of the city state and its hinterlands Stela from Tyre with Phoenician inscriptions c 4th century BC National Museum of Beirut The Phoenicians had a system of courts and judges that resolved disputes and punished crimes based on a semi codified body of laws and traditions Laws were implemented by the state and were the responsibility of the ruler and certain designated officials Like other Levantine societies laws were harsh and biased reflecting the social stratification of society The murder of a commoner was treated as less severe than that of a nobleman and the upper classes had the most rights the wealthy often escaped punishment by paying a fine Free men of any class could represent themselves in court and had more rights than women and children while slaves had no rights Men could often deflect punishment to their wives children or slaves even having them serve their sentence in their place Lawyers eventually emerged as a profession for those who could not plead their case As in neighboring societies at the time penalties for crimes were often severe usually reflecting the principle of reciprocity for example the killing of a slave would be punished by having the offender s slave killed Imprisonment was rare with fines exile punishment and execution the main remedies Military Edit As with most aspects of Phoenician civilization there are few records of their military or approach to warfare Compared to most of their neighbors the Phoenicians generally had little interest in conquest and were relatively peaceful 103 The wealth and prosperity of all their city states rested on foreign trade which required good relations and a certain degree of mutual trust They also lacked the territory and agricultural base to support a population large enough to raise an army of conquest Instead each city had an army commander in charge of a defensive garrison However the specifics of the role or city defense are unknown Language Edit Main articles Phoenician language and Punic The Phoenician language was a member of the Canaanite branch of the Northwest Semitic languages Its descendant language spoken in the Carthaginian Empire is termed Punic Punic was still spoken in the fifth century AD and known to St Augustine of Hippo Alphabet Edit Main article Phoenician alphabet Sarcophagus of Ahiram which bears the oldest inscription of the Phoenician alphabet National Museum of Beirut Around 1050 BC 35 the Phoenicians developed a script for writing their own language The Canaanite Phoenician alphabet consists of 22 letters all consonants and is thus strictly an abjad 20 It is believed to be a continuation of the Proto Sinaitic or Proto Canaanite script attested in the Sinai and in Canaan in the Late Bronze Age 104 105 Through their maritime trade the Phoenicians spread the use of the alphabet to Anatolia North Africa and Europe 10 106 The name Phoenician is by convention given to inscriptions beginning around 1050 BC because Phoenician Hebrew and other Canaanite dialects were largely indistinguishable before that time 35 19 Phoenician inscriptions are found in Lebanon Syria Israel Palestine Cyprus and other locations as late as the early centuries of the Christian era The alphabet was adopted and modified by the Greeks probably in the eighth century BC This most likely did not occur in a single instance but the process of commercial exchange 107 The legendary Phoenician hero Cadmus is credited with bringing the alphabet to Greece However it is more plausible that Phoenician immigrants brought it to Crete 108 whence it gradually diffused northwards Art Edit See also Phoenician metal bowls and Nimrud ivories Phoenician art was largely centered on ornamental objects particularly jewelry pottery glassware and reliefs 109 Large sculptures were rare figurines were more common Phoenician goods have been found from Spain and Morocco to Russia and Iraq much of what is known about Phoenician art is based on excavations outside Phoenicia proper Phoenician art was highly influenced by many cultures primarily Egypt Greece and Assyria Greek inspiration was particularly pronounced in pottery while Egyptian styles were most reflected in ivory work 109 Phoenician art also differed from its contemporaries in its continuance of Bronze Age conventions well into the Iron Age such as terracotta masks 110 Phoenician artisans were known for their skill with wood ivory bronze and textiles 111 In the Old Testament a craftsman from Tyre is commissioned to build and decorate the legendary Solomon s Temple in Jerusalem which presupposes a well developed and highly respected craft industry in Phoenicia by the mid tenth century BC 110 The Iliad mentions the embroidered robes of Priam s wife Hecabe as the work of Sidonian women and describes a mixing bowl of chased silver as a masterpiece of Sidonian craftsmanship citation needed The Assyrians appeared to have valued Phoenician ivory work in particular collecting vast quantities in their palaces 112 Phoenician art appears to have been indelibly tied to Phoenician commercial interests 78 They have crafted goods to appeal to particular trading partners distinguishing not only different cultures but even socioeconomic status classes 78 Decorative plaque which depicts a fighting of man and griffin 900 800 BC Nimrud ivories Cleveland Museum of Art Ohio US Oinochoe 800 700 BC terracotta height 24 1 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Face bead mid 4th 3rd century BC glass height 2 7 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art Earring from a pair each with four relief faces late fourth 3rd century BC gold overall 3 5 x 0 6 cm Metropolitan Museum of ArtWomen Edit Female figurines from Tyre c 1000 550 BC National Museum of Beirut Women in Phoenicia took part in public events and religious processions with depictions of banquets showing them casually sitting or reclining with men dancing and playing music 113 In most contexts women were expected to dress and behave more modestly than men female figures are almost always portrayed as clothed from head to feet with the arms sometimes covered as well Although they rarely had political power women took part in community affairs They had some voice in the popular assemblies that began to emerge in some city states 114 At least one woman Unmiashtart is recorded to have ruled Sidon in the fifth century BC 46 The two most famous Phoenician women are political figures Jezebel portrayed in the Bible as the wicked princess of Sidon and Dido the semi legendary founder and first queen of Carthage In Virgil s epic poem the Aeneid Dido is described as having been the co ruler of Tyre using cleverness to escape the tyranny of her brother Pygmalion and to secure an ideal site for Carthage Religion EditMain article Canaanite religion See also Sanchuniathon Figure of Ba al with raised arm 14th 12th century BC found at ancient Ugarit Ras Shamra site a city at the far north of the Phoenician coast Musee du Louvre The religious practices and beliefs of Phoenicia were generally common to those of their neighbors in Canaan which in turn shared characteristics common throughout the ancient Semitic world 115 116 Religious rites were primarily for city state purposes payment of taxes by citizens was considered in the category of religious sacrifices 117 The Phoenician sacred writings known to the ancients have been lost 118 Several Canaanite practices are attested in ancient sources and mentioned by scholars such as temple prostitution 119 and child sacrifice 120 Special sites known as Tophets were allegedly used by the Phoenicians to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire and are condemned by Yahweh in the Hebrew Bible particularly in Jeremiah 7 30 32 and in 2nd Kings 23 10 and 17 17 Notwithstanding these and other important differences cultural and religious similarities persisted between the ancient Hebrews and the Phoenicians 121 Canaanite religious mythology does not appear as elaborate as their Semitic cousins in Mesopotamia In Canaan the supreme god was called El 𐤀𐤋 god 122 The son of El was Baal 𐤁𐤏𐤋 master lord a powerful dying and rising storm god 123 Other gods were called by royal titles such as Melqart meaning king of the city 124 or Adonis for lord 125 Such epithets may often have been merely local titles for the same deities The Semitic pantheon was well populated which god became primary evidently depended on the exigencies of a particular city state 126 127 Melqart was prominent throughout Phoenicia and overseas as was Astarte a fertility goddess with regal and matronly aspects Religious institutions in Tyre called marzeh 𐤌𐤓𐤆𐤄 place of reunion did much to foster social bonding and kin loyalty Marzeh held banquets for their membership on festival days and many developed into elite fraternities Each marzeh nurtured congeniality and community through a series of ritual meals shared among trusted kin in honor of deified ancestors 128 In Carthage which had developed a complex republican system of government the marzeh may have played a role in forging social and political ties among citizens Carthaginians were divided into different institutions that were solidified through communal feasts and banquets Such festival groups may also have composed the voting cohort for selecting members of the city state s Assembly 129 130 The Phoenicians made votive offerings to their gods namely in the form of figurines and pottery vessels 131 Hundreds of figurines and fragments have been recovered from the Mediterranean often spanning centuries between them suggesting they were cast into the sea to ensure safe travels 131 Since the Phoenicians were predominantly seafaring people it is speculated that many of their rituals were performed at sea or aboard ships However the specific nature of these practices is unknown See also EditCanaan Maronites Names of the Levant Phoenicianism Punic language Punics Theory of Phoenician discovery of the Americas Phoenician Punic literatureReferences EditCitations Edit Bentley Jerry H Ziegler Herbert F 2000 Traditions amp Encounters From the Beginnings to 1500 McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 004949 9 Aubet 2001 pp 18 44 Carthage and the Carthaginians R Bosworth Smith p 16 Phoenicia Collins English Dictionary Kitto John 1851 A Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature Adan and Charles Black Malaspina Ann 2009 Lebanon Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 0579 6 Meir Edrey 2019 Phoenician Identity in Context Material Cultural Koine in the Iron Age Levant Alter Orient und Altes Testament Vol 469 Germany Ugarit Verlag Buch und Medienhandel Munster pp 23 24 ISBN 978 3 86835 282 5 Phoenicia Definition Location History Religion amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 08 29 Who Were The Phoenicians History Today www historytoday com Retrieved 2020 04 20 a b c d e f g h i Scott John C 2018 The Phoenicians and the Formation of the Western World Comparative Civilizations Review 78 78 Quinn 2017 pp 24 204 Drews Robert 1998 Canaanites and Philistines Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 23 81 39 61 doi 10 1177 030908929802308104 S2CID 144074940 Tubb Johnathan N 1998 Canaanites British Museum People of the Past University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 9780806131085 Retrieved 9 October 2018 Aubet 2001 p 17 Phoenicia World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 2017 08 09 Quinn 2017 pp 201 203 Markoe 2000 pp 10 12 Coulmas 1996 a b Markoe 2000 p 111 a b Fischer Steven Roger 2004 A history of writing Reaktion Books p 90 Niemeyer Hans G 2004 The Phoenicians and the Birth of a Multinational Mediterranean Society In Rollinger Robert Ulf Christoph eds Commerce and Monetary Systems in the Ancient World Stuttgart Franz Stiener Verlag pp 246 250 Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art The Phoenicians 1500 300 B C In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2000 http www metmuseum org toah hd phoe hd phoe htm October 2004 Britannica The Editors of Encyclopaedia Phoenicia Encyclopedia Britannica 20 Aug 2020 https www britannica com place Phoenicia Accessed 9 January 2022 Honeyman A M The Phoenician Inscriptions of the Cyprus Museum Iraq vol 6 no 2 1939 pp 104 108 see p 106 107 number 8 Naveh Joseph Israel Exploration Journal vol 51 no 1 2001 pp 113 15 JSTOR http www jstor org stable 27926965 Accessed 27 Aug 2022 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon foῖni3 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2017 02 03 Quinn 2017 p 48 James P Allen 2010 Middle Egyptian An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs 2nd edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51796 6 p 345 Jigoulov 2021 p 13 a b Jigoulov 2021 p 18 a b Jigoulov 2021 pp 18 9 Zarins Juris 1992 Pastoral Nomadism in Arabia Ethnoarchaeology and the Archaeological Record A Case Study In Bar Yosef O Khazanov A eds Pastoralism in the Levant Madison Prehistory Press ISBN 0 9629110 8 9 Tubb Jonathan N 1998 Canaanites British Museum People of the Past Woodard Roger 2008 The Ancient Languages of Syria Palestine and Arabia New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 68498 9 a b c Naveh Joseph 1987 Proto Canaanite Archaic Greek and the Script of the Aramaic Text on the Tell Fakhariyah Statue In Miller et al eds Ancient Israelite Religion ISBN 0 8006 0831 3 Coulmas 1996 Herodotos Histories 1 1 2 44 amp 7 89 Strabo Geography 16 3 4 a b Bowersock G W 1986 Tylos and Tyre Bahrain in the Graeco Roman World In Khalifa Haya Ali Rice Michael eds Bahrain Through The Ages the Archaeology Routledge pp 401 2 ISBN 0 7103 0112 X a b Rice Michael 1994 The Archaeology of the Arabian Gulf Routledge p 20 ISBN 0 415 03268 7 a b R A Donkin 1998 Beyond Price Pearls and Pearl fishing Origins to the Age of Discoveries Volume 224 p 48 ISBN 0 87169 224 4 Haber Marc Doumet Serhal Claude Scheib Christiana Xue Yali Danecek Petr Mezzavilla Massimo Youhanna Sonia Martiniano Rui Prado Martinez Javier Szpak Michal Matisoo Smith Elizabeth Schutkowski Holger Mikulski Richard Zalloua Pierre Kivisild Toomas Tyler Smith Chris 2017 Continuity and Admixture in the Last Five Millennia of Levantine History from Ancient Canaanite and Present Day Lebanese Genome Sequences American Journal of Human Genetics 101 2 274 282 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2017 06 013 PMC 5544389 PMID 28757201 Markoe 2000 pp 1 19 Stieglitz Robert 1990 The Geopolitics of the Phoenician Littoral in the Early Iron Age Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 129 9 a b Bentley Jerry H 1999 Sea and Ocean Basins as Frameworks for Historical Analysis Geographical Review 89 2 215 219 doi 10 1111 j 1931 0846 1999 tb00214 x Barnes William H 1991 Studies in the Chronology of the Divided Monarchy of Israel Atlanta Scholars Press pp 29 55 Chamorro Javier G 1987 Survey of Archaeological Research on Tartessos American Journal of Archaeology 91 2 197 232 doi 10 2307 505217 JSTOR 505217 S2CID 191378720 a b c d e f History Captivating 2019 The Phoenicians A Captivating Guide to the History of Phoenicia and the Impact Made by One of the Greatest Trading Civilizations of the Ancient World Captivating History ISBN 9781647482053 Warmington 1964 Charles Picard Gilbert Picard Colette 1968 Vie et Mort de Carthage The Life and Death of Carthage in French Paris Hachett pp 28 35 Lancel Serge 1995 Carthage Translated by Antonia Nevill Oxford Blackwell pp 20 23 a b c Lebanon Assyrian and Babylonian domination of Phoenicia Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 04 22 a b c Katzenstein Jacob 1979 Tyre in the Early Persian Period 539 486 B C E The Biblical Archaeologist 42 1 31 doi 10 2307 3209545 JSTOR 3209545 S2CID 165757132 Herodotus The Histories Book III pp 19 Herodotus The Histories Book III pp 218 91 MAMcIntosh 2018 08 29 A History of Phoenician Civilization Brewminate Retrieved 2020 04 20 Herodotus The Histories Book V pp 109 Herodotus The Histories Book VII pp 23 Herodotus The Histories Book VIII pp 90 LacusCurtius Diodorus Siculus Book XVI Chapters 40 65 penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 2020 04 20 a b c d e Millar Fergus 2006 The Phoenician Cities The Phoenician Cities A Case Study of Hellenisation University of North Carolina Press pp 32 50 doi 10 5149 9780807876657 millar 8 ISBN 9780807830307 JSTOR 10 5149 9780807876657 millar 8 Alexander s Siege of Tyre 332 BCE World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 2019 03 07 a b c d e Stockwell Stephen 2010 Before Athens Early Popular Government in Phoenician and Greek City States Geopolitics History and International Relations 2 128 129 Phoenicia britannica com a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Ancient Phoenician life was mixed and multicultural Cosmos Magazine 10 January 2018 Retrieved 2020 04 25 Zalloua Pierre A et al 2008 Identifying Genetic Traces of Historical Expansions Phoenician Footprints in the Mediterranean American Journal of Human Genetics 83 5 633 642 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2008 10 012 PMC 2668035 PMID 18976729 Tomas Carme 2006 Differential maternal and paternal contributions to the genetic pool of Ibiza Island Balearic Archipelago American Journal of Physical Anthropology 129 2 268 278 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20273 PMID 16323196 Matisoo Smith Elizabeth A Gosling Anna L Boocock James Kardailsky Olga Kurumilian Yara Roudesli Chebbi Sihem et al 25 May 2016 A European Mitochondrial Haplotype Identified in Ancient Phoenician Remains from Carthage North Africa PLoS ONE 11 5 e0155046 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1155046M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0155046 PMC 4880306 PMID 27224451 Harb Marc et al July 2017 Continuity and Admixture in the Last Five Millennia of Levantine History from Ancient Canaanite and Present Day Lebanese Genome Sequences American Journal of Human Genetics 101 2 274 282 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2017 06 013 PMC 5544389 PMID 28757201 Abed Mira 27 July 2017 The DNA of ancient Canaanites lives on in modern day Lebanese genetic analysis shows Los Angeles Times Abed Mira 27 July 2017 The DNA of ancient Canaanites lives on in modern day Lebanese genetic analysis shows Los Angeles Times Retrieved 5 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Haber Marc Nassar Joyce Almarri Mohamed A Saupe Tina Saag Lehti Griffith Samuel J Doumet Serhal Claude Chanteau Julien Saghieh Beydoun Muntaha Xue Yali Scheib Christiana L Tyler Smith Chris 2020 A Genetic History of the Near East from an aDNA Time Course Sampling Eight Points in the Past 4 000 Years American Journal of Human Genetics 107 1 149 157 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2020 05 008 PMC 7332655 PMID 32470374 Braudel Fernand 2001 Memory and Mediterranean Translated by Reynolds Sian New York Alfred A Knopf pp 112 113 Cunliffe 2008 pp 241 2 Stager L E 2003 Phoenician shipwrecks in the deep sea Sea routes From Sidon to Huelva Interconnections in the Mediterranean 16th 6th c BC pp 233 248 ISBN 978 960 7064 40 0 A B Freijeiro R Corzo Sanchez Der neue anthropoide Sarkophag von Cadiz In Madrider Mitteilungen 22 1981 Lapuente P Roda I Gutierrez Garcia M A Brilli M June 2021 Addressing the controversial origin of the marble source used in the Phoenician anthropoid sarcophagi of Gadir Cadiz Spain Archaeometry 63 3 467 480 doi 10 1111 arcm 12623 S2CID 225150177 Markoe 2000 p 103 Hawkes Christopher 1977 Britain and Julius Caesar Proceedings of the British Academy 63 124 192 a b c d e Markoe Glenn McGovern Patrick E March 1990 A Nation of Artisans Archaeology 43 2 32 33 JSTOR 41765806 Herm Gerhard 1975 The Phoenicians Translated by Hiller Catherine New York William Morrow p 80 Moore Karl Lewis David 1999 Birth of the Multinational Copenhagen Copenhagen Business School Press p 85 St Clair Kassia 2016 The Secret Lives of Colour London John Murray pp 162 164 History Captivating 2019 The Phoenicians A Captivating Guide to the History of Phoenicia and the Impact Made by One of the Greatest Trading Civilizations of the Ancient World p 60 ISBN 978 1647482053 a b c Rawlinson 1889 a b c d 2 600 year old wine factory unearthed in Lebanon History amp Culture 2020 09 14 Retrieved 2020 09 15 Sechrist Robert Planet of the Grapes A Geography of Wine pp 6 7 Galley ship Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 04 19 Haggi Arad 2010 Report on Underwater Excavation at the Phoenician Harbour Atlit Israel International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 39 283 Wachsmann Shelley 1998 Seagoing Ships amp Seamanship in the Bronze Age Levant College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press pp 300 51 323 325 332 Woolmer Mark 2011 Ancient Phoenicia An Introduction London Bristol Classical Press p 84 Gambin Timmy October 2017 Between east and west The Phoenician shipwreck off Gozo PDF Report University of Malta Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2020 Retrieved 6 November 2020 Klein Christopher 2 700 Year Old Phoenician Shipwreck Discovered HISTORY Retrieved 2020 04 23 Lorenzi Rossella 28 August 2014 2 700 Year Old Phoenician Shipwreck Discovered Seeker Hansen Mogens Herman 2000 Conclusion The Impact of City State Cultures on World History A Comparative Study of Thirty City state Cultures An Investigation Kgl Danske Videnskabernes Selskab pp 601 602 ISBN 978 87 7876 177 4 Retrieved 5 April 2013 Eric H Cline Mark W Graham 27 June 2011 Ancient Empires From Mesopotamia to the Rise of Islam Cambridge University Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 521 88911 7 Retrieved 24 February 2013 David Sacks Oswyn Murray Lisa R Brody 1 January 2009 Encyclopedia of the Ancient Greek World Infobase Publishing p 76 ISBN 978 1 4381 1020 2 Retrieved 3 March 2013 Waldman Carl Mason Catherine 2006 Encyclopedia of European Peoples Infobase Publishing p 586 ISBN 978 1 4381 2918 1 Retrieved 23 February 2013 Smith Richard L 31 July 2008 Premodern Trade in World History Routledge p 65 ISBN 978 0 203 89352 4 Retrieved 3 March 2013 Naylor Phillip Chiviges 1 July 2009 North Africa A History from Antiquity to the Present University of Texas Press p 25 ISBN 978 0 292 77878 8 Retrieved 23 February 2013 Swartz B K Dumett Raymond E 1 January 1980 West African Culture Dynamics Archaeological and Historical Perspectives Walter de Gruyter p 236 ISBN 978 3 11 080068 5 Retrieved 17 February 2013 Garnsey P D A Whittaker C R 15 February 2007 Imperialism in the Ancient World The Cambridge University Research Seminar in Ancient History Cambridge University Press p 80 ISBN 978 0 521 03390 9 Retrieved 22 February 2013 P Roberts 1 October 2004 HSC Ancient History Pascal Press p 64 ISBN 978 1 74125 179 1 Retrieved 17 February 2013 Crawley Quinn Josephine 2018 A New Phoenician World In Search of the Phoenicians Princeton University Press pp 153 175 doi 10 2307 j ctvc77kkd 13 ISBN 9780691195964 JSTOR j ctvc77kkd 13 Pritchard James B Edey Maitland A 1974 Introduction to The Sea Traders New York Time Life Books p 7 Cross Frank Moore 1980 Newly Found Inscriptions in Old Canaanite and Early Phoenician Scripts Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The American Schools of Oriental Research 238 238 Spring 1980 1 20 doi 10 2307 1356511 JSTOR 1356511 S2CID 222445150 Millard A R 1986 The Infancy of the Alphabet World Archaeology 17 3 390 398 doi 10 1080 00438243 1986 9979978 Beck Roger B Black Linda Krieger Larry S Naylor Phillip C Shabaka Dahia Ibo 1999 World History Patterns of Interaction Evanston IL McDougal Littell ISBN 978 0 395 87274 1 Moscati 1965 Jeffery L H 1976 The Archaic Greece The Greek city states 700 500 BC Ernest Benn Ltd amp Tonnbridge a b Phoenician Art World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 2020 04 19 a b Markoe Glenn E August 1990 The Emergence of Phoenician Art Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 279 13 26 doi 10 2307 1357205 JSTOR 1357205 S2CID 163353156 The Phoenicians 1500 300 B C www metmuseum org Retrieved 2020 04 19 Furniture plaque carved in high relief with two Egyptianizing figures flanking a volute tree c 9th 8th century B C www metmuseum org Retrieved 2020 04 19 Holst 2011 p 31 sfnp error no target CITEREFHolst2011 help Holst 2011 p 44 sfnp error no target CITEREFHolst2011 help Moscati 1957 e g p 40 amp 113 Smith 1956 pp 1 15 Gaster 1965 pp 113 143 114 5 Harden 1962 pp 83 4 Brandon 1970 pp 512 513 Brandon 1970 p 448 Brandon 1970 p 173 Brandon 1970 p 258 El Here Baal was used instead of the storm god s name Hadad Brandon 1970 pp 315 28 124 Moscati 1957 pp 113 4 Brandon 1970 pp 29 30 Brandon 1970 pp 173 501 Carlyon Richard 1981 A Guide to the Gods New York pp 311 333 Markoe 2000 p 120 Warmington 1964 p 148 Smith 1956 pp 33 43 a b Long lost Phoenician figurines could reveal secrets to ancient cult The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 2020 09 11 Sources Edit Aubet Maria Eugenia 2001 The Phoenicians and the West Politics Colonies and Trade Translated by Turton Mary Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79543 2 See Review by Roger Wright University of Liverpool Bondi S F 1988 The Course of History In The Phoenicians edited by Sabatino Moscati 38 45 Milan Gruppo Editoriale Fabbri Brandon S G F ed 1970 Dictionary of Comparative Religion New York City Charles Scribner s Son ISBN 9780684310091 Charles Picard Gilbert Picard Colette 1968 The Life and Death of Carthage New York City Taplinger Original French ed Vie et mort de Carthage Paris Hatchette 1968 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Coulmas Florian 1996 The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Writing Systems Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 21481 6 Cross Frank M 1973 Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674091764 Cunliffe Barry 2008 Europe Between the Oceans 9000 BC AD 1000 New Haven CT Yale University Press Elayi J 2013 Histoire de la Phenicie Paris Perrin Gaster Theodor H 1965 The Religion of the Canaanites In Ferm Vergilius ed Ancient Religions New York City Citadel Pres Original ed Philosophical Library 1950 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Harden Donald 1962 The Phoenicians New York NY Frederick A Praeger Jigoulov Vadim S 2021 The Phoenicians Lost Civilizations London Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 789 14478 9 Lancel Serge 1995 Carthage A History Oxford Blackwell Original ed in French Carthage Paris Librairie Artheme Fayard 1992 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Markoe Glenn E 2000 Peoples of the Past Phoenicians Berkeley CA University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22614 2 Moscati Sabatino 1957 Ancient Semitic Civilizations London England Elek Books Moscati Sabatino 1965 The World of the Phoenicians New York NY Frederick A Praeger Quinn Josephine Crawley 2017 In Search of the Phoenicians Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 8911 2 Rawlinson George 1889 The History of Phoenicia W Rollig 1995 Phoenician and the Phoenicians in the context of the Ancient Near East in S Moscati ed I Fenici ieri oggi domani ricerche scoperte progetti Roma p 203 214 Smith W Robertson 1956 A amp C Black Edinburgh 1889 Lectures on the Religion of the Semites New York Meridian Library Soren David Khader Aicha B Slim Hedi 1990 Carthage New York NY Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9780671669027 Warmington Brian H 1964 Carthage Penguin original ed Robert Hale 1960 Further reading EditCarayon Nicolas Les ports pheniciens et puniques PhD Thesis 2008 Strasbourg France Cerqueiro Daniel Las Naves de Tarshis o quienes fueron los Fenicios Buenos Aires Ed Peq Venecia 2002 ISBN 987 9239 13 X Cioffi Robert L A Palm Tree a Colour and a Mythical Bird review of Josephine Quinn In Search of the Phoenicians Princeton 2017 360 pp ISBN 978 0 691 17527 0 London Review of Books vol 41 no 1 3 January 2019 pp 15 16 Thiollet Jean Pierre Je m appelle Byblos foreword by Guy Gay Para H amp D Paris 2005 ISBN 2 914266 04 9 Todd Malcolm Andrew Fleming 1987 The South West to AD 1 000 Regional history of England series No 8 Harlow Essex Longman ISBN 978 0 582 49274 5 for a critical examination of the evidence of Phoenician trade with the South West of the U K Silva Diogenes La literatura sobre fenicios en el territorio brasileno origenes y razones PhD Thesis Madrid 2016 Available in https eprints ucm es 39468 External links EditBBC Radio4 In Our Time The Phoenicians audio archive The quest for the Phoenicians in South Lebanon Phoenician Alphabet Sam Haselby ed Phoenicia An imaginary friend to nations in need of ancestors Josephine Quinn associate professor in ancient history at Worcester College University of Oxford Aeon Phoenicia at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phoenicia amp oldid 1135177976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.