Phoenicia (
Phoenician:

𐤊

𐤍

𐤏

𐤍
, Canaan or Kana'an, nonstandardly,
Phenicia; , : Phoiníkē, ) what is now modern day Lebanon, was an ancient civilization centered in the north of ancient
Canaan, with its heartland along the coastal regions of modern day
Lebanon, extending to parts of
Israel,
Syria and
Palestine. Phoenician civilization was an enterprising
maritime trading culture that spread across the Mediterranean during the period 1550 BC to 300 BC. Though ancient boundaries of such city-centered cultures fluctuated, the city of
Tyre seems to have been the southernmost.
Sarepta (modern day Sarafand) between
Sidon and Tyre, is the most thoroughly excavated city of the Phoenician homeland. The Phoenicians often traded by means of a
galley, a man-powered sailing vessel and are credited with the invention of the
bireme.
It is uncertain to what extent the Phoenicians viewed themselves as a single ethnicity. Their civilization was organized in
city-states, similar to
ancient Greece. Each city-state was an independent unit politically, although they could come into conflict, be dominated by another city-state, or collaborate in leagues or alliances.
The Phoenicians were also the first state-level society to make extensive use of the
alphabet, and the Canaanite-Phoenician alphabet is generally believed to be the ancestor of almost all modern alphabets. Phoenicians spoke the
Phoenician language, which belongs to the group of
Canaanite languages in the
Semitic language family. Through their maritime trade, the Phoenicians spread the use of the alphabet to North Africa and Europe where it was adopted by the
Greeks, who later passed it on to the
Romans and
Etruscans. In addition to their many inscriptions, there were a considerable number of other types of written sources left by the Phoenicians, which have not survived.
Evangelical Preparation by
Eusebius of Caesarea quotes extensively from
Philo of Byblos and
Sanchuniathon.
History
Origins: 2300-1200 BC
The question of the Phoenicians' origin persists. Archaeologists have pursued the origin of the Phoenicians for generations, basing their analyses on excavated sites, the remains of material culture, contemporary texts set into contemporary contexts, as well as
linguistics. In some cases, the debate is characterized by modern cultural agendas. Ultimately, the origins of the Phoenicians are still unclear: where they came from and just when (or if) they arrived, and under what circumstances, are all still energetically disputed.

Phoenician sarcophagus found in
Cádiz, Spain; now in Archaeological Museum of Cádiz. The sarcophagus is thought to have been designed and paid for by a Phoenician merchant, and made in Greece with Egyptian influence.
In terms of archaeology, language, and religion, there is little to set the Phoenicians apart as markedly different from other cultures of Canaan. They were Canaanites. They are unique in their remarkable seafaring achievements. In the
Amarna tablets of the
14th century BC they call themselves
Kenaani or
Kinaani (Canaanites). Note, however, that the Amarna letters predate the invasion of the
Sea Peoples by over a century. Much later in the
6th century BC,
Hecataeus of Miletus writes that Phoenicia was formerly called
χνα, a name
Philo of Byblos later adopted into his mythology as his eponym for the Phoenicians: "Khna who was afterwards called Phoinix". Egyptian seafaring expeditions had already been made to
Byblos to bring back "
cedars of Lebanon" as early as the
third millennium BC.
Stories of their emigrating from various places to the eastern Mediterranean are probably founded in 'oral fact', but researchers are pursuing DNA tests to verify these legends.
Herodotus's account (written c. 440 BC) refers to the Io and Europa myths. (
History, I:1).
TV journalist
Gerhard Herm asserts that, because the Phoenicians' legendary sailing abilities are not well attested before the invasions of the
Sea Peoples around 1200 BC, that these Sea Peoples would have merged with the local population to produce the Phoenicians, whom he says gained these abilities rather suddenly at that time. There is also archaeological evidence that the Philistines, often thought of as related to the Sea Peoples, were culturally linked to
Mycenaean Greeks, who were also known to be great sailors even in this period.
Spencer Wells of the
Genographic Project has conducted
genetic studies which demonstrate that male populations of Lebanon,
Malta, Spain and other areas which are past Phoenician settlements, share a common m89 chromosome Y type, while male populations which are related with the Minoans or with the Sea Peoples have completely different genetic markers. This implies that Minoans and Sea Peoples probably didn't have any ancestral relation with the Phoenicians.
In 2004, two
Harvard University educated geneticists and leading scientists of the National Geographic Genographic Project, Dr. Pierre Zalloua and Dr.
Spencer Wells identified the haplogroup of the Phoenicians as
haplogroup J2, with avenues open for future research. As Dr. Wells commented, "The Phoenicians were the Canaanites—and the ancestors of today's Lebanese." The male populations of Tunisia and Malta were also included in this study and shown to share overwhelming genetic similarities with the Lebanese-Phoenicians. In 2008, scientists from the Genographic Project announce that "as many as 1 in 17 men living today on the coasts of North Africa and southern Europe may have a Phoenician direct male-line ancestor." See
Genetics of the Ancient World.
High point: 1200–800 BC

An ancient Phoenician coin.
Fernand Braudel remarked in
The Perspective of the World that Phoenicia was an early example of a "world-economy" surrounded by empires. The high point of Phoenician culture and seapower is usually placed ca. 1200–800 BC.
Many of the most important Phoenician settlements had been established long before this:
Byblos,
Tyre,
Sidon,
Simyra,
Arwad, and
Berytus all appear in the Amarna tablets; and indeed, the first appearance in archaeology of cultural elements clearly identifiable with the Phoenician zenith is sometimes dated as early as the third millennium BC.
This league of independent city-state ports, with others on the islands and along other coasts of the Mediterranean Sea, was ideally suited for trade between the
Levant area, rich in natural resources, and the rest of the ancient world. Suddenly, during the early
Iron Age, in around 1200 BC an unknown event occurred, historically associated with the appearance of the
Sea Peoples from the north who were perhaps driven south by crop failures and mass starvation following the
Thera eruption. The powers that had previously dominated the area, notably the
Egyptians and the
Hittites, became weakened or destroyed; and in the resulting power vacuum a number of Phoenician cities established themselves as significant maritime powers.
Authority seems to have stabilized because it derived from three power-bases: the king; the temple and its priests; and councils of elders. Byblos soon became the predominant center from where they proceeded to dominate the Mediterranean and Erythraean (Red) Sea routes, and it is here that the first inscription in the Phoenician alphabet was found, on the sarcophagus of
Ahiram (ca. 1200 BC). The priest
Ittobaal (887-856 BC) ruled Phoenicia as far north as Beirut, and part of Cyprus.
Carthage was founded in 814 BC under
Pygmalion (820-774 BC). The collection of city-kingdoms constituting Phoenicia came to be characterized by outsiders and the Phoenicians themselves as
Sidonia or
Tyria, and Phoenicians and Canaanites alike came to be called
Zidonians or
Tyrians, as one Phoenician conquest came to prominence after another.
Decline: 539-65 BC

The Siege of Tyre by Andre Castaigne
Cyrus the Great conquered Phoenicia in 539 BC. Phoenicia was divided into four vassal kingdoms by the Persians:
Sidon,
Tyre,
Arwad, and
Byblos, and prospered, furnishing fleets for the Persian kings. However, Phoenician influence declined after this. It is also reasonable to suppose that much of the Phoenician population migrated to
Carthage and other colonies following the Persian conquest. In 350 or 345 BC a rebellion in Sidon led by
Tennes was crushed by
Artaxerxes III, and its destruction was described, perhaps too dramatically, by
Diodorus Siculus.
Alexander the Great took Tyre in 332 BC following the
Siege of Tyre. Alexander was exceptionally harsh to Tyre, executing 2000 of the leading citizens, but he maintained the king in power. He gained control of the other cities peacefully: the ruler of Aradus submitted; the king of Sidon was overthrown. The rise of
Hellenistic Greece gradually ousted the remnants of Phoenicia's former dominance over the Eastern Mediterranean trade routes, and Phoenician culture disappeared entirely in the motherland. However, its North African offspring, Carthage, continued to flourish, mining iron and
precious metals from Iberia, and using its considerable naval power and mercenary armies to protect its commercial interests, until it was finally destroyed by Rome in 146 BC at the end of the
Punic Wars.
As for the Phoenician homeland, following Alexander it was controlled by a succession of Hellenistic rulers:
Laomedon (323 BC),
Ptolemy I (320),
Antigonus II (315),
Demetrius (301), and
Seleucus (296). Between 286 and 197 BC, Phoenicia (except for Aradus) fell to the Ptolemies of Egypt, who installed the high priests of
Astarte as vassal rulers in Sidon (
Eshmunazar I,
Tabnit,
Eshmunazar II). In 197 BC, Phoenicia along with Syria reverted to the Seleucids, and the region became increasingly Hellenized, although Tyre actually became autonomous in 126 BC, followed by Sidon in 111. Syria, including Phoenicia, were seized by king
Tigranes the Great from 82 until 69 BC when he was defeated by
Lucullus, and in 65 BC
Pompey finally incorporated it as part of the Roman province of Syria. Genetic studies showed them to be closely related to the
Maltese people today.
Trade

Map of Phoenicia and trade routes
The Phoenicians were amongst the greatest traders of their time and owed a great deal of their prosperity to trade. The Phoenicians' initial trading partners were the Greeks, with whom they used to trade wood, slaves, glass and powdered
Tyrian Purple, used by the Greek elite to color clothes and other garments and was not available anywhere else. Without trade with the Greeks they would not be known as Phoenicians, as the word for Phoenician is derived from the
Ancient Greek word
phoinikèia meaning "purple".
In the centuries following 1200 BC, the Phoenicians formed the major naval and trading power of the region. Phoenician trade was founded on
Tyrian Purple, a violet-purple dye derived from the
Murex sea-snail's shell, once profusely available in coastal waters of the eastern Mediterranean Sea but exploited to local extinction.
James B. Pritchard's excavations at
Sarepta in present day Lebanon revealed crushed Murex shells and pottery containers stained with the dye that was being produced at the site. The Phoenicians established a second production center for the purple dye in
Mogador, in present day
Morocco. Brilliant textiles were a part of Phoenician wealth, and Phoenician
glass was another export ware. They traded unrefined, prick-eared hunting dogs of Asian or African origin which locally they had developed into many breeds such as the
Basenji,
Ibizan Hound,
Pharaoh Hound,
Cirneco dell'Etna,
Cretan Hound,
Canary Islands Hound and
Portuguese Podengo. To Egypt, where the grapevine would not grow, the 8th-century Phoenicians sent
wine: the wine trade with Egypt is vividly documented by the shipwrecks located in 1997 in the open sea thirty miles west of
Ascalon; pottery kilns at Tyre and
Sarepta produced the big terracotta jars used for transporting wine. Egypt in turn was the outlet for
Nubian gold.
From elsewhere they obtained other materials, perhaps the most important being
silver from
Iberian Peninsula and
tin from Great Britain, the latter of which when smelted with
copper (from
Cyprus) created the durable metal
alloy bronze.
Strabo states that there was a highly lucrative Phoenician trade with Britain for tin.
The Phoenicians established commercial outposts throughout the Mediterranean, the most strategically important being
Carthage in North Africa, directly across the narrow straits. However, ancient Gaelic mythologies of origin attribute a Phoenician/Scythian influx to Ireland by a leader called
Fenius Farsa. Others also sailed south along the coast of Africa. A Carthaginian expedition led by
Hanno the Navigator explored and colonized the Atlantic coast of Africa as far as the
Gulf of Guinea; and according to Herodotus, a Phoenician expedition sent down the
Red Sea by pharaoh
Necho II of Egypt (c. 600 BC) even
circumnavigated Africa and returned through the
Pillars of Hercules in three years.
Important cities and colonies

Map of Phoenician and Greek colonies at about 550 BC (with German legend).
From the
10th century BC, their expansive culture established cities and colonies throughout the Mediterranean. Canaanite deities like
Baal and
Astarte were being worshipped from Cyprus to Sardinia, Malta, Sicily, Spain, Portugal, and most notably at Carthage in modern Tunisia.
In the Phoenician homeland:
- Berut (Greek Βηρυτός; Latin Berytus;
Arabic بيروت; English Beirut)
Phoenician colonies, including some of lesser importance (this list might be incomplete):
- *Tas-Silġ
[http://members.ziggo.nl/bezver/romans.html A History of Malta]
- Located in modern Portugal
- * Hippo Diarrhytos (modern Bizerte)
Culture
Language and literature
The Phoenicians are credited with spreading the
Phoenician alphabet throughout the Mediterranean world. It was a variant of the Semitic alphabet of the Canaanite area developed centuries earlier in the Sinai region, or in central Egypt. Phoenician traders disseminated this writing system along Aegean trade routes, to coastal Anatolia, the Minoan civilization of Crete,
Mycenean Greece, and throughout the Mediterranean.
This alphabet has been termed an
abjad or a script that contains no vowels. A
cuneiform abjad originated to the north in
Ugarit, a Canaanite city of northern Syria, in the
14th century BC. Their language,
Phoenician, is classified as in the
Canaanite subgroup of Northwest
Semitic. Its later descendant in
North Africa is termed
Punic.

Sarcophagus of a Phoenician woman (c. 400 BC.) found in the necropolis of
Magharat Tabloun in
Sidon (
The Louvre)
The earliest known inscriptions in Phoenician come from Byblos and date back to ca. 1000 BC. Phoenician inscriptions are found in Lebanon, Syria, Israel, Cyprus and other locations, as late as the early centuries of the Christian Era. In Phoenician colonies around the western Mediterranean, beginning in the
9th century BC, Phoenician evolved into Punic. Punic Phoenician was still spoken in the 5th century CE:
St. Augustine, for example, grew up in
North Africa and was familiar with the language.
Art
Phoenician art had no unique characteristic that could be identified with. This is due to the fact that Phoenicians were influenced by foreign designs and artistic cultures mainly from
Egypt, Greece and
Assyria. Phoenicians who were taught on the banks of the
Nile and the
Euphrates gained a wide artistic experience and finally came to create their own art, which was an amalgam of foreign models and perspectives.
In an article from
The New York Timespublished on January 5, 1879, Phoenician art was described by the following:
He entered into other men's labors and made most of his heritage. The Sphinx of Egypt became Asiatic, and its new form was transplanted to Nineveh on the one side and to Greece on the other. The rosettes and other patterns of the Babylonian cylinders were introduced into the handiwork of Phoenicia, and so passed on to the West, while the hero of the ancient Chaldean epic became first the Tyrian Melkarth, and then the Herakles of Hellas.
Gods
Attested 2nd Millennium
- Venerable Reshef (Reshef of the Arrow)
Gebory-Kon
Attested 1st Millennium
Influence in the Mediterranean region

Cadmus fighting the dragon. Side A of a black-figured
amphora from
Euboea, ca. 560–550 BC,
LouvrePhoenician culture had a huge effect upon the cultures of the Mediterranean basin in the early Iron Age, and had also been affected in reverse. For example, in Phoenicia, the tripartite division between
Baal,
Mot and
Yam seems to have been influenced by the Greek division between
Zeus,
Hades and
Poseidon. Phoenician temples in various Mediterranean ports sacred to Phoenician
Melkart, during the classical period, were recognized as sacred to
Hercules. Stories like the
Rape of Europa, and the coming of
Cadmus also draw upon Phoenician influence.
The recovery of the Mediterranean economy after the late
Bronze Age collapse, seems to have been largely due to the work of Phoenician traders and merchant princes, who re-established long distance trade between Egypt and Mesopotamia in the 10th century BC. The Ionian revolution was, at least in legend, led by
philosophers such as
Thales of Miletus or
Pythagoras, both of whom had Phoenician fathers. Phoenician motifs are also present in the
Orientalising period of
Greek art, and Phoenicians also played a formative role in
Etruscan civilisation in Tuscany.
There are many countries and cities around the world that derive their names from the Phoenician Language. Below is a list with the respective meanings:
- Altiburus: City in Algeria, SW of Carthage. From Phoenician: "Iltabrush"
- Bosa: City in Sardinia: From Phoenician "Bis'en"
- Cádiz: City in Spain: From Phoenician "Gadir"
- Dhali (Idalion): City in Central Cyprus: From Phoenician "Idyal"
- Erice: City in Sicily: From Phoenician "Eryx"
- Malta: Island in the Mediterranean: From Phoenician "Malat" ('refuge')
- Marion: City in West Cyprus: From Phoenician "Aymar"
- Oed Dekri: City in Algeria: From Phoenician: "Idiqra"
- Spain: From Phoenician: "I-Shaphan", meaning "Land of Hyraxes". Later Latinized as "Hispania"
In the Bible
Hiram (also spelled Huran) associated with the building of the temple.
This is the architect of the Temple,
Hiram Abiff of
Masonic lore. They are vastly famous for their purple dye.
Later, reforming prophets railed against the practice of drawing royal wives from among foreigners:
Elijah execrated
Jezebel, the princess from Tyre who became a consort of King
Ahab and introduced the
worship of her gods.
Long after Phoenician culture had flourished, or Phoenicia had existed as any political entity, Hellenized natives of the region where Canaanites still lived were referred to as "Syro-Phoenician", as in the
Gospel of Mark 7:26: "The woman was a Greek, a Syrophoenician by birth..."
The word
Bible itself ultimately derives through Greek from the word
Byblos which means "book", and not from the Hellenised Phoenician city of Byblos (which was called Gebal), before it was named by the Greeks as
Byblos. The Greeks called it Byblos because it was through Gebal that bublos (Bύβλος ["Egyptian papyrus"]) was imported into Greece. Present day Byblos is under the current Arabic name of Jbeil (جبيل Ǧubayl) derived from Gebal.
Etymology
The name
Phoenician, through
Latin poenicus (later
punicus), comes from
Greek phoinikes, attested since Homer and influenced by
phoînix "
Tyrian purple, crimson;
murex" (itself from
phoinos "blood red"). The word stems from
Linear B po-ni-ki-jo, ultimately borrowed from
Ancient Egyptian Fenkhu (
Fnkhw) "Syrian people". The association of
phoinikes with
phoînix mirrors an older
folk etymology present in Phoenician which tied
Kina'ahu "Canaan; Phoenicia" with
kinahu "crimson". The land was natively known as
Kina'ahu, reported in the 6th century BC by Hecataeus under the Greek-influenced form
Khna (χνα), and its people as the
Kena'ani.
Hippoi
The Greeks had two names for Phoenician ships:
hippoi and
galloi. Galloi means tubs and hippoi means horses. These names are readily explained by depictions of Phoenician ships in the palaces of Assyrian kings from the 7th and 8th centuries, as the ships in these images are tub shaped (galloi) and have horse heads on the ends of them (hippoi.) It is possible that these hippoi come from Phoenician connections with the Greek god Poseidon.
Depictions
The
Tel Balawat gates (850 BC) are found in the palace of
Shalmaneser, an Assyrian king, near Nimrud. They are made of bronze, and they portray ships coming to honor Shalmaneser.
The
Khorsabad bas-relief (7th Century BC) shows the transportation of timber (most likely cedar) from Lebanon. It is found in the palace built specifically for
Sargon II, another Assyrian king, at Khorsabad, now northern Iraq.
Relationship between the Greeks and Phoenicians
Trade
In the Late Bronze Age (around 1200 BC) there was trade between the Canaanites (early Phoenicians), Egypt, Cyprus, and Greece. In a shipwreck found off of the coast of Turkey, the Ulu Bulurun wreck, Canaanite storage pottery along with pottery from Cyprus and Greece was found. The Phoenicians were famous metalworkers, and by the end of the 8th Century BC, Greek city-states were sending out envoys to the Levant (the eastern Mediterranean) for metal goods
[1999. Canaan and Ancient Israel. http://www.museum.upenn.edu/Canaan/index.html]The height of Phoenician trade was around the 7th and 8th centuries. There is a dispersal of imports (ceramic, stone, and faience) from the Levant that traces a Phoenician commercial channel to the Greek mainland via the central Aegean.
Athens shows little evidence of this trade with few eastern imports, but other Greek costal cities are rich with eastern imports that evidence this trade.
Al Mina is a specific example of the trade that took place between the Greeks and the Phoneicians. It has been theorized that by the 8th century BC, Euboean traders established a commercial enterprise with the Levantine coast and were using Al Mina (in Syria) as a base for this enterprise. There is still some question about the veracity of these claims concerning Al Mina.
[Markoe, G. E. 2000. Peoples of the Past: Phoenicians. Los Angeles: University of California Press p.174] The Phoenicians even got their name from the Greeks due to their trade. Their most famous trading product was purple dye, the Greek word for which is
phoenos [Moscati, S. 1965. The World of the Phoenicians. New York: Frederick A. Praeger, Inc., Publishers]Alphabet
The Phoenician alphabet was given to the Greeks no later than the 8th century BC (around the time of the
hippoi depictions). This most likely did not come from a single instance but from a culmination of commercial and cultural exchange.
This means that before the 8th century, there was a relationship between the Greeks and the Phoenicians. It would be very possible in this time for there to have been not only an exchange of alphabet, but also an exchange of religious ideas as well. Herodotus cited the city of Thebes (a city on Euboea) as the place of the importation of the alphabet. The famous Phoenician Kadmos is credited with bringing the alphabet to Greece. Euboea was active in eastern trade early on and is linked with Al Mina.
Connections between Greek and Phoenician religions/mythology
Kadmos
In both Phoenician and Greek mythologies, Kadmos is a Phoenician prince, the son of Agenor, the king of Tyre. Herodotus credits Kadmos for bringing the Phoenician alphabet to Greece.
"So these Phoenicians, including the Gephyraians, came with Kadmos and settled this land, and they transmitted much lore to the Hellenes, and in particular, taught them the alphabet which, I believe the Hellenes did not have previously, but which was originally used by all Phoenicians"-
The Landmark Herodotus: The Histories, Book 5.58, translated by Andrea L. Purvis
Phoenician gods of the sea
Due to the number of deities similar to the “Lord of the Sea” in classical mythology, there have been many difficulties attributing one specific name to the sea deity or the “Poseidon –Neptune” figure of Phoenician religion. This figure of “Poseidon-Neptune” is mentioned by authors and in various inscriptions as being very important to merchants and sailors , but a singular name has yet to be found. There are, however, names for sea gods from individual city-states.
Ugarit is an ancient city state of Phoencia. Yamm is the Ugaritic god of the sea. Yamm and Baal, the storm god of Ugaritic myth and often associated with Zeus, have an epic battle for power over the universe. While Yamm is the god of the sea, he truly represents vast chaos . Baal, on the other hand, is a representative for order. In Ugaritic myth, Baal overcomes Yamm's power. In some versions of this myth, Baal kills Yamm with a mace fashioned for him, and in others, the goddess Athtart saves Yamm and says that since defeated, he should stay in his own province. Yamm is the brother of the god of death, Mot.
Poseidon
The trident bearing sire of swelling Ocean – Ovid, Metamorphoses
, pg 256, translated by Rolfe HumphriesPoseidon is the god of the sea, earthquakes, and horses in ancient Greece. Horses, tridents and fish often represent him. He is the brother of Zeus and Hades, and his consort was Amphitrite.
Overlap between the two
In antiquity, the two forces represented by Poseidon, horses and the sea, were chaotic forces that the Greeks had to tame to control and order their world. Yamm was also a chaotic force that had to be tamed. Once Yamm was under Baal’s control, the universe could assume its proper order, just as the universe assumed its proper order after Zeus was declared supreme ruler, and Poseidon was placed under him. Zeus and Poseidon were in constant a power struggle, as Poseidon worked to achieve his own ends under the rule of his brother. Though they were not brothers, Baal and Yamm were also in conflict against one another.
While the reason for this possible Phoenician adaptation of Poseidon, as shown in the
hippoi, is unknown it could be postulated that it may have had something to do with the Phoenicians' expanding worldview. Yamm seems to be less civilized, and more malicious than Poseidon. For example, Poseidon’s attempts to gain power are never to the point of killing Zeus, while Yamm tried to do just that to Baal. Perhaps as the Phoenicians grew more cultured and technologically advanced and as their experiences with the outside world (specifically the Greeks) grew, their need for a chaos figure progressed from ultimate chaos (Yamm) in the universe to a more earthly and controllable one, like the one Poseidon represents.
In light of both the religious connections and the interaction between Greece and Phoenicia at the time of the
hippoi depictions, it is not hard to imagine that perhaps the
hippoi on the ends of the ships were indeed a product of Greek religious influence on the Phoenicians. It would be logical that these horse heads would be on Phoenician ships, as they were great seafarers and Poseidon was the God of the sea. With his protection, the Phoenicians would be able to carry out their duties on the sea.
See also