History of Phoenicia. George Rawlinson
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HISTORY
OF
PHOENICIA
By:
George Rawlinson
Camden Professor of Ancient History in the University of Oxford
Canon of Canterbury
Corresponding Member of the Royal Academy of Turin
First Published 1889 by Longmans, Green, and Co.
Contents
PREFACE
HISTORY OF PHOENICIA
CHAPTER I—THE LAND
CHAPTER II—CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS
CHAPTER III—THE PEOPLE—ORIGIN AND CHARACTERISTICS
CHAPTER IV—THE CITIES
CHAPTER V—THE COLONIES
CHAPTER VI—ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER VII—ÆSTHETIC ART
CHAPTER VIII—INDUSTRIAL ART AND MANUFACTURES
CHAPTER IX—SHIPS, NAVIGATION, AND COMMERCE
CHAPTER X—MINING
CHAPTER XI—RELIGION
CHAPTER XII—DRESS, ORNAMENTS, AND SOCIAL HABITS
CHAPTER XIII—PHOENICIAN WRITING, LANGUAGE, AND LITERATURE
Contents
CHAPTER XIV—POLITICAL HISTORY
1. Phoenicia, before the establishment of the hegemony of Tyre.
2. Phoenicia under the hegemony of Tyre (B.C. 1252-877)
3. Phoenicia during the period of its subjection to Assyria (B.C.
4. Phoenicia during its struggles with Babylon and Egypt (about B.C.
5. Phoenicia under the Persians (B.C. 528-333)
6. Phoenicia in the time of Alexander the Great (B.C. 333-323)
7. Phoenicia under the Greeks (B.C. 323-65)
8. Phoenicia under the Romans (B.C. 65-A.D. 650)
FOOTNOTES
TO THE
CHANCELLOR, VICE-CHANCELLOR, and SCHOLARS
of the
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
This Work
His Last as Occupant of a Professorial Chair
Is Dedicated
As a Token of Respect and Gratitude
By The
CAMDEN PROFESSOR
Oct. 1 MDCCCLXXXIX
PREFACE
Histories of Phoenicia or of the Phoenicians were written towards the middle of the present century by Movers and Kenrick. The elaborate work of the former writer collected into five moderate-sized volumes all the notices that classical antiquity had preserved of the Religion, History, Commerce, Art, &c., of this celebrated and interesting nation. Kenrick, making a free use of the stores of knowledge thus accumulated, added to them much information derived from modern research, and was content to give to the world in a single volume of small size, very scantily illustrated, the ascertained results of criticism and inquiry on the subject of the Phoenicians up to his own day. Forty-four years have since elapsed; and in the course of them large additions have been made to certain branches of the inquiry, while others have remained very much as they were before. Travellers, like Robinson, Walpole, Tristram, Renan, and Lortet, have thrown great additional light on the geography, geology, fauna, and flora of the country. Excavators, like Renan and the two Di Cesnolas, have caused the soil to yield up most valuable remains bearing upon the architecture, the art, the industrial pursuits, and the manners and customs of the people. Antiquaries, like M. Clermont-Ganneau and MM. Perrot and Chipiez, have subjected the remains to careful examination and criticism, and have definitively fixed the character of Phoenician Art, and its position in the history of artistic effort. Researches are still being carried on, both in Phoenicia Proper and in the Phoenician dependency of Cyprus, which are likely still further to enlarge our knowledge with respect to Phoenician Art and Archæology; but it is not probable that they will affect seriously the verdict already delivered by competent judges on those subjects. The time therefore appeared to the author to have come when, after nearly half a century of silence, the history of the people might appropriately be rewritten. The subject had long engaged his thoughts, closely connected as it is with the histories of Egypt, and of the “Great Oriental Monarchies,” which for thirty years have been to him special objects of study; and a work embodying the chief results of the recent investigations seemed to him a not unsuitable termination to the historical efforts which his resignation of the Professorship of Ancient History at Oxford, and his entrance upon a new sphere of labour, bring naturally to an end.
The author wishes to express his vast obligations to MM. Perrot and Chipiez for the invaluable assistance which he has derived from their great work, and to their publishers, the MM. Hachette, for their liberality in allowing him the use of so large a number of MM. Perrot and Chipiez’ Illustrations. He is also much beholden to the same gentlemen for the use of charts and drawings originally published in the “Géographie Universelle.” Other works from which he has drawn either materials or illustrations, or both, are (besides Movers’ and Kenrick’s) M. Ernest Renan’s “Mission de Phénicie,” General Di Cesnola’s “Cyprus,” A. Di Cesnola’s “Salaminia,” M. Ceccaldi’s “Monuments Antiques de Cypre,” M. Daux’s “Recherches sur les Emporia Phéniciens,” the “Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum,” M. Clermont-Ganneau’s “Imagerie Phénicienne,” Mr. Davis’s “Carthage and her Remains,” Gesenius’s “Scripturæ Linguæque Phoeniciæ Monumenta,” Lortet’s “La Syrie d’aujourd’hui,” Serra di Falco’s “Antichità della Sicilia,” Walpole’s “Ansayrii,” and Canon Tristram’s “Land of Israel.” The difficulty has been to select from these copious stores the most salient and noteworthy facts, and to marshal them in such a form as would make them readily intelligible to the ordinary English reader. How far he has succeeded in doing this he must leave the public to judge. In making his bow to them as a “Reader” and Writer “of Histories," he has to thank them for a degree of favour which has given a ready sale to all his previous works, and has carried some of them through several editions.
CANTERBURY: August 1889.
HISTORY OF PHOENICIA
CHAPTER I—THE LAND
Phoenicia—Origin of the name—Spread of the name
southwards—Real length of Phoenicia along the coast—
Breadth and area—General character of the region—The
Plains—Plain of Sharon—Plain of Acre—Plain of Tyre—Plain
of Sidon—Plain of Berytus—Plain of Marathus—Hilly
regions—Mountain ranges—Carmel—Casius—Bargylus—Lebanon—
Beauty of Lebanon—Rivers—The Litany—The Nahr-el-Berid—
The Kadisha—The Adonis—The Lycus—The Tamyras—The
Bostrenus—The Zaherany—The Headlands—Main
characteristics, inaccessibility, picturesqueness,
productiveness.
Phoenicé, or Phoenicia, was the name originally given by the Greeks—and afterwards adopted from them by the Romans—to the coast region of the Mediterranean, where it faces the west between the thirty-second and the thirty-sixth parallels. Here, it would seem, in their early voyagings, the Pre-Homeric Greeks first came upon a