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Phoenicia
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"the reluctant Empire"

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Welcome to Phoenicia!

It all began in the Levant, the countries bordering on the eastern Mediterranean between Egypt and Turkey. It was only natural that it begin there too. At the western end of the Fertile Crescent, it was there that westward-bound refugees and explorers would first find the mythical waters of the Mediterranean. It was there that they would build their first communities. It was from there that they would launch the beginnings of their reluctant empire.

Byblos is believed to have been the first city of the Phoenician homeland. Sidon and Tyre followed soon after and gained in relative importance after the 13th century BC saw waves of raiders raze Byblos. As demands for commerce increased and trade relations developed, the Phoenician influence began to spread. Although by the 9th century BC, settlements had reached much farther afield - as far as the North Africa and Spanish coast, in the early years, Phoenician mingling remained centered along the Levantine coast. Ugarit, to the north of Byblos first fell under its spell. Later, points south grew into substantial settlements, some of which are still known to us today as cities in modern Israel, for example, Accho (today's Acre), Joppa (Tel Aviv-Yafo) and Dor (Nasholim).

After 1000 BC, when Tyre rose to prominence as the principal city of Levantine Phoenicia, the imperial overlord of the moment, the Assyrians, required regular tribute payments to their king. To satisfy this demand - and Phoenician curiosity - traders pushed west in search of new resources and commodities, founding great cities like Utica and Carthage. This expansion was further encouraged by alliances between Tyre and Israel and later by disruptive enemy raids. Unconfirmed tradition has it that they had already sailed as far as Spain and the North African coast as early as the 10th-12th centuries BC, but no evidence has been proven to confirm these dates.

Unfortunately, as with much of what was once Phoenicia, little remains of the great cities that stood at the center of this ancient maritime power. None of the original buildings they lived in and temples they built are still standing, and there is no great wealth of art depicting exactly how they lived. In fact, it has taken chance and persistent digging just to uncover some of the foundation traces of these intrepid people, despite the once heralded majesty of their municipalities. And, albeit informative, what has been physically brought to light does not pack the same kind of punch that tripping through Pompeii or the Roman Forum does. Nevertheless, the capital cities of Phoenicia's past - Byblos, Sidon, Tyre, Ugarit and Carthage - are worth the trip, both for the discovery of the people who inhabit the modern cities and for the academic thrill of writing a postcard home from the place that made writing a letter home possible in the first place.

The Phoenicians formed a reluctant empire. Having first made their mark on the ancient Mediterranean world as consummate merchant traders and then established protected colonial outposts along their shipping byways, they accepted the mantle of imperial power by accident. However, unlike the successive waves of conquest and subjugation led by their marauding contemporaries - Egyptians, Assyrians/Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans - the Phoenicians never really had dreams of domination. Nor, for that matter, were they ever really a nation, or a classic empire.

The earliest record of the Phoenicians is from the 16th century BC, although it is believed that around 3000 BC they settled in what became known as Phoenicia (from the Greek name, Phoinikes), an area equivalent to the coast of modern-day Lebanon. A Semitic people perhaps originally from the Persian Gulf area, they turned their backs on the sere land they had crossed and developed one of the earliest ancient and great seafaring Western cultures, using commerce as their principal motivation and source of influence. In fact, their name for themselves seems to have been Kena'ani (or Canaanites), a word which in Hebrew means "merchants."

The early Phoenicians were constantly subject to the suzerainty of greater powers that vied for control of the Old World. Between the 16th century BC and the 1st century AD, these enterprising levanters watched the Egyptians, the Assyrians, the Persians, the Greeks under Alexander, and then the Romans sweep in, exact tribute, and then disappear. Throughout it all they maintained a fierce sense of independence, and often an envied autonomy. The first order of business was... business. As long as the political maneuvering - internal or imposed - did not interfere with trade and prosperity, it did not really matter which throne laid claim to the land.

Nevertheless, not content to suffer the vicissitudes of foreign manipulation and ever wary of the importance of freedom of movement throughout the Mediterranean, the Phoenicians were eager and able colonizers. As early as the 2nd millennium BC, there were Phoenician settlements throughout the Mediterranean. The most important of these was at Carthage, a center that grew to become the biggest city in the western Mediterranean and the principal maritime and commercial center. Eventually, however, conflict with Rome in the 3rd century BC led to its total destruction, dispersion of its forces and people, and, for all practical purposes, the end of the era of Phoenicia's part in the development of the Mediterranean. It's people continued to thrive, trade in their able hands continued to flourish, and despite Phoenicia's incorporation into the Roman province of Syria, its original eastern city centers at Sidon and Tyre remained self-governing. Still, Rome had become the paramount player in the region.

In short, the Phoenicians were instrumental in establishing and following a pattern that still prevails in Mediterranean (and world) history. They arrived from a foreign land, bringing with them imported knowledge and skills. These they applied to their new environment, adding new cultural advances learned locally. Having excelled at seafaring in a sea-turned land, they traveled and traded widely, thereby also gathering and spreading knowledge throughout the region. Thus it was the cultures mingled, ushering in a period of growth and development; thus too it was that cultures collided, leading ultimately to the demise of this peripatetic culture.

Source: Gorp

Places to Go!
{click on the map to visit the cities of
Phoenicia}

Map of Phoenicia

People to Meet!

Phoenician Family Names ~ Barca, Hasdrubal

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Things to Do!

Adventure Tours - out on the web

The Phoenicians

...more to come

MHS

Groups related to Phoenicia!

Kart Hadasht - Queen of the Seas

Mesopotamia City Builder


Carthage Tyre Sidon Byblos


The Articles of Phoenicia:
Sort by: Featured Date | Date | Title
King Hiram of Tyre Feb 9, 2010
title Feb 9, 2010
title Feb 9, 2010
title Feb 9, 2010
title Feb 9, 2010
The Siege of Tyre by Alexander the Great Feb 9, 2010
Why did Hannibal lose the Second Punic War? Feb 9, 2010
title Feb 9, 2010
Tyrian King List (with contemporaries) Feb 9, 2010
The Sieges of Tyre Feb 9, 2010
New Article on Phoenicia Feb 9, 2010
The Legacy of Carthage Feb 9, 2010
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