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The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook
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The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.)

Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook

Page 2: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

The Phoenicians According to ancient classical authors, the Phoenicians were

a people who occupied the coast of the eastern Mediterranean.

Their major cities were Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, and Arwad. Their cities were fiercely independent and competitive The Phoenicians were sea traders rather than a defined

country.

Page 3: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Geography

Phoenicia was located between the eastern Mediterranean coast and the Lebanon Mountains

Page 5: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Colonization Colonization is invading and taking over of a

foreign territory, which then becomes known as a colony.

Page 6: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Phoenician Trade Routes

Page 7: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Phoenician Colonies

Sailed and colonized throughout the Mediterranean beginning circa 1000 B.C.E. Gades (Cadiz, Spain) Carthage (Tunis,

Tunisia)

Page 8: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Phoenicians By far they were superior to all peoples of that

time in seamanship. Legend has it that an Egyptian pharaoh hired a

band of Phoenicians to map and circumnavigate the coast of Africa.

Page 9: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Sea Traders

They are best remembered for their contributions in the establishment to trade with the many peoples living along the Mediterranean Sea.

Page 10: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

What did the Phoenicians Trade?

The main natural resources of the Phoenician cities in the eastern Mediterranean were the prized cedars of Lebanon and murex shells used to make the purple dye.

Page 11: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Trade

They also traded Cloth Glass Pottery

They traded for: Tin (Britannia) Hides, ivory, ostrich feathers, and slaves (Africa) Gold, precious stones, and spices (India)

Page 12: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Alphabet Sumerian cuneiforms and Egyptian hieroglyphics were the only known

forms of writing before the alphabet as we know it was developed. Both scripts, though separately created, used picture writing. Eventually, pictures or signs represented sounds. Finally, the pictures became so simplified that a whole word was written as a single sign.

By about 1200 B.C., the Phoenicians had developed symbols which in time became a real alphabet. The Phoenician alphabet consisted of twenty-two symbols, all consonants.

Page 13: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Alphabet Family Tree

Page 14: The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.) Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Page 28 in your textbook Page 28 in your textbook.

Ahiram Sarophagus about 1000 BC: Has the oldest evidence of the Phoenician alphabet

discovered to date

• The inscription reads:

• Coffin which Ittobaal, son of Ahiram, king of Byblos, made for Ahiram, his father, when he placed him in the 'house of eternity'.

• Now if a king among kings or a governor among governors or a commander of an army should come up against Byblos and uncovers this coffin, may the sceptre of his rule be torn away, may the throne of his kingdom be overturned, and may peace flee from Byblos!

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Government

Organized into individual city-states, each Phoenician city was under its own form of government. Each had its own god and its own ruler, whose usually remained in power for life.

Byblos was a strong religious city-state. Sidon and Tyre were cities of business, industry, and navigation.

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Review Questions

Where was Phoenicia located? Name two Phoenician colonies. Where and what did the Phoenicians trade? What is considered to be the Phoenicians’

greatest contribution to the world?