Explore the enigmatic Phoenicians and their city-state identities, their expansion and colonization in the Mediterranean, their wealth and influence in trade routes, maritime skills, and controversial practices like child sacrifice. Discover their culture, negotiations with empires, and significant contribution to the development of the alphabet, leading to Carthage's rise and conflict with Rome.
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Quick takeaways
Phoenicians pioneered maritime trade with innovative ships and a prosperous marketing system.
The origins of the Phoenicians remain enigmatic, with modern scholarship placing them in modern-day Lebanon. Noteworthy city-states like Tyre and Sidon defined their identity, emphasizing city loyalty over a broader national concept. The Phoenicians' reach extended across the Mediterranean, establishing colonies in North Africa, Spain, southern France, and the Aegean region.
Phoenician Influence and Economic Prosperity
Phoenicians were skilled in navigation, renowned for their fast vessels crafted with innovative features like the cutwater for speed. They excelled in trade, leveraging unique resources like cedar wood for shipbuilding, glassmaking, and purple dye production from sea snails. Through cash cropping, they developed a sophisticated marketing system, establishing a vast trading network that included spices, linens, and other commodities across the Mediterranean.
Phoenician Governance and Alphabet Contribution
Ruled by kings with advisory councils, Phoenician governance reflected absolute monarchy tendencies. They significantly impacted communication by simplifying the alphabet from earlier scripts, enabling efficient trade documentation and contract establishment. The Phoenician alphabet, eventually adopted by Greek cities, revolutionized written communication with its commercial and practical applications.
Phoenician Decline and Empirical Challenges
Phoenician city-states faced challenges from emerging empires, leading to varying fates. While the eastern Phoenicians navigated subservience to inland powers, exemplified by tributes to Assyria, Carthage in the west thrived as a mercantile empire. Eventually, Phoenician city-states transformed, with Carthage rising to prominence before succumbing to Roman conquest, marking the end of Phoenician dominance in the Mediterranean region.
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Phoenicians. The Greek historian Herodotus wrote about a people from the Levant who were accomplished sailors and traders, and who taught the Greeks their alphabet. He called them the Phoenicians, the Greek word for purple, although it is not known what they called themselves. By about 700 BC they were trading all over the Mediterranean, taking Egyptian and Syrian goods as far as Spain and North Africa. Although they were hugely influential in the ancient world, they left few records of their own; some contemporary scholars believe that the Phoenicians were never a unified civilisation but a loose association of neighbouring city-states.
With:
Mark Woolmer
Assistant Principal at Collingwood College, Durham University
Josephine Quinn
Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Oxford
Cyprian Broodbank
Professor of Mediterranean Archaeology at University College London
Producer: Thomas Morris.
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