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Phoenicia
The dawn of recorded history found Lebanon inhabited by
its native people who it would seem called themselves the
Kena'ani (Akkadian: Kinahna), the "Canaanites". Canaan was
therefore earliest native name applied to the land at the
eastern end of the Mediterranean. In Hebrew the word
kena'ani has the secondary, and apt, meaning of
"merchant", a term which well characterizes the
Phoenicians because the nature of the country and its
location, forced these ancient Lebanese to turn to the
sea, where they engaged in trade and navigation. The words
Phoenicia and Phoenicians are thought to come from the
Greek word meaning purple and refer to those Canaanites
which traded in purple cloth and dye with the Greeks and
lived in an area which had slightly larger borders than
modern day Lebanon. It is also thought the word Phoenicia
may have been derived from Phoenix, the son of Agenor,
King of Tyre.
Phoenicia consisted of a mainly urban population living
in a string of coastal towns and a heavily forested and
mountainous hinterland. These coastal towns were to grow
into cities and then into city-states. The Phoenician
city-states were Ugarit, Aradus, Tripoli, Batrun, Byblos,
Beirut, Sidon, and Tyre. Each of the coastal cities was an
independent kingdom and had an elected council of elders
to check the power of the king, these councils are the
first example of democracy in history. Common interests
made these cities form a Phoenician federation under the
leadership of one of its cities. In the 16th century BC
Ugarit headed the federation, Byblos in the 14th, Sidon in
the 12th, Tyre in the 11th to the 9th and Tripoli in the
5th.
These ancient Lebanese left a monumental legacy. They
invented the alphabet. The Phoenician invention of the
alphabet is without doubt the greatest invention in the
history of mankind. This achievement alone guaranties them
a unique place in history making them the world's greatest
benefactors, but the story didn't end there. The city of
Byblos gave its name to the Bible and the Tyrian princess
Europa gave her name to Europe. The Phoenicians excelled
in producing textiles, in carving ivory, in working with
metal, stone and wood, and above all in making glass which
they also invented. They even built the temple of Solomon
and mined tin in Cornwall. Masters of the art of
navigation, Phoenician ships of cedar ruled the seas, they
were the first people of sail past the 'Pillars of
Hercules' and discover Atlantic, another milestone in the
history of man. The Phoenicians discovered the North Star
which the Greeks were to name the Phoenician Star in
honour of those that discovered it. These ancient Lebanese
founded colonies wherever they went in the Mediterranean
such as Cyprus, Rhodes, Crete, Malta, Sicily, Sardinia,
Marseilles, Cadiz, and Carthage. Furthermore, their ships
circumnavigated Africa a thousand years before those of
the Portuguese. Amongst other evidence, Phoenician
inscriptions have been found in Brazil to suggest that the
Phoenicians crossed the Atlantic thousands of years before
Columbus. With the establishment of trade routes to
Europe and western Asia, Phoenicia was to acquire wealth
and position that rivalled Rome.
The Phoenicians were the great pioneers of
civilisation. Intrepid, inventive, enterprising, they at
once made vast progress in the arts themselves, and
carried their knowledge, their active habits, and their
commercial instincts into the remotest regions of the old
continent. They exercised a stimulating, refining, and
civilising influence wherever they went. North and south
and east and west they adventured themselves amid perils
of all kinds, actuated by the love of adventure more than
by the thirst for gain, conferring benefits, spreading
knowledge, suggesting, encouraging, and developing trade,
turning men from the barbarous and unprofitable pursuits
of war and bloodshed to the peaceful occupations of
productive industry. They did not aim at conquest. They
united the various races of men by the friendly links of
mutual advantage and mutual dependence, conciliated them,
softened them, humanised them. While, among the nations of
the earth generally, brute force was worshipped as the
true source of power and the only basis of national
repute, the Phoenicians succeeded in proving that as much
could be done by arts as by arms, as great glory and
reputation gained, as real a power built up, by the quiet
agencies of exploration, trade, and commerce, as by the
violent and brutal methods of war, massacre, and ravage.
They were the first to set this example. If the history of
the world since their time has not been wholly one of the
potency in human affairs of "blood and iron," it is very
much owing to them. They, and their kinsmen of Carthage,
showed mankind what a power might be wielded by commercial
state.
History of
Phoenicia
On the whole Phoenician history can be reconstructed
from indirect sources as the Phoenicians wrote primarily
on papyrus and only a small number fragments remain.
Papyrus, like paper, biodegrades and although many papyrus
scrolls in Egypt survived largely by chance, because of
the extremely dry climate, the situation in Lebanon was
very different. Of actual Phoenician writings all that
survives are a relatively small number of commemorative
engravings in stone. Much of what we know comes from the
writings of those with whom they traded or who, like the
Greeks, were their rivals, and none too flattering in
their jealousy. The Phoenicians were characterized by
their chief competitors as intelligent, shrewd, cunning,
proud, arrogant, mysterious, and intensely religious.
Phoenicia is mentioned in both Egyptian and Mesopotamian
sources such as the tale of Wenamum and Assyrian annals
which mainly refer to conquest. One important source which
must have originally been direct are the annals of Tyre
quoted by Josephus in certain passages from Menander of
Ephesus. Another significant source is the Old Testament.
The history of the Phoenicians is entwined with the
history of other peoples starting with the ancient
Egyptians. Evidence of trade between Lebanon and Egypt
goes back to pre-dynastic times and continued for many
centuries. Lebanon provided the Nile valley with wood for
palaces, temples and boats and in exchange the Canaanites
received gold and other metals. This pattern of trade that
had established itself over many hundreds of years was
interrupted in the 18th century BC by the rise to power of
a warlike people who established themselves as master of
the Levant and swept down into Egypt. These were the
Hyksos.
The Hyksos or the 'Shepherd Kings' and from the names
of their gods, they were undoubtedly Canaanite. The Hyksos
controlled the region for about 150 years from around 1720
to 1570 BC. The Hyksos were responsible for the
introduction of the horse into the area and the use of the
animal for war purposes gave them a distinct advantage in
battle, they introduced the horse-drawn chariot and the
composite bow, and their successful conquests were
furthered by a type of rectangular fortification of beaten
earth used as a fortress; archaeologists have uncovered
examples of these mounds at Jericho, Shechem, and Lachish.
Their most important contribution was perhaps the
introduction into Egypt of Canaanite deities and Asian
artifacts. Hyksos rule was broken by a Theban prince,
Ahmose, who drove the invaders out of Egypt and started
his country on its new career of empire building. Over the
next few hundred years the Egyptian empire not only
included Lebanon but reached as far as the Euphrates. At
the turn of the 14th century BC however, the empire began
to decline and in the north a new world power emerged, the
Hittites.
The Hittites, a people of Indo-European connection,
were supposed to have entered Cappadocia c.1800 B.C. To
the southwest, in the Taurus and Cilicia, were the Luites,
relatives of the Hittites; to the southeast, in the Upper
Euphrates, the Hurrians (Khurrites). In the country the
Hittites then occupied, the aboriginal inhabitants were
apparently the Khatti, or Hatti. Hittite names appear
c.1800 B.C. on the tablets written by Assyrian colonists
at Kültepe (Kanesh) in Cappadocia. However, real evidence
of Hittite existence does not occur until the Old Hittite
Kingdom (1600–1400 B.C.). The Hittites tried to invade
Babylonia but were halted by Egypt and Mitanni. The
Hittite Empire that followed the Old Kingdom, with its
capital at Bogazköy (also called Hattusas), was the chief
power and cultural force in western Asia from 1400 to 1200
B.C. The famous Hittite rulers date from this period.
Among these are Supiluliumash (fl. 1380 B.C.) who is
mentioned in the Tel el Amarna letters, Mursilish II (fl.
1335 B.C.), and Hattusilish III (fl. 1300 B.C.). The
Hittite Empire was a loose confederation that started to
break up under the invasions of the Thracians, Phrygians,
and Assyrians from c.1300 B.C. Several small states arose,
with Carchemish becoming an outstanding city.
It was at the turn of the 13th century BC when both the
Egyptian and Hittite powers were on the decline and the
Assyrians had not yet risen that Phoenicia was able to
assert its full independence. It was the next few hundred
years of relative peace that saw Phoenicia enter its
golden age of prosperity based on increased international
trade and colonization.
Assyrian greatness was to wait until the 9th century,
when Ashurnasirpal II came into power. He was not only a
vigorous and barbarously cruel conqueror who pushed his
conquests N to Urartu and W to Lebanon and the
Mediterranean, but he was also a shrewd administrator.
Instead of merely making conquered kings pay tribute, he
installed Assyrian governors so that he could have more
control over the empire.
Shalmaneser III attempted to continue this policy, but,
although he exacted heavy tribute from Jehu of Israel and
claimed many victories, he failed to establish hegemony
over the Hebrews and their Aramaic-speaking allies. A
basalt obelisk, called the Black Obelisk, now in the
British Museum, describes the expeditions and conquests of
Shalmaneser III. Raids from Urartu were resumed and grew
more destructive after the death of Shalmaneser. Calah,
the capital of Assyria during the reigns of Ashurnasirpal
II and Shalmaneser III, has been excavated.
In the 8th century B.C. conquest was pursued by
Tiglathpileser III. He subdued Babylonia, defeated the
king of Urartu, attacked the Medes, and established
control over Syria. As an ally of Ahaz of Judah, who
became his vassal, he defeated his Aramaic-speaking
enemies centering at Damascus. His successor, Shalmaneser
V, besieged Samaria, the capital of Israel, in 722–721
B.C., but it was Sargon, his son, who completed the task
of capturing Israel. Sargon's victory at Raphia (720 B.C.)
and his invasions of Armenia, Arabia, and other lands made
Assyria indisputably one of the greatest of ancient
empires.
Sargon's son Sennacherib devoted himself to retaining
the gains his father had made. He is particularly
remembered for his warfare against his rebellious vassal,
Hezekiah of Judah. Sennacherib's successor, Esar-Haddon (Esarhaddon),
on his accession, found Abd-Melkarth of Sidon in revolt
against his authority. He had formed an alliance with a
certain Sanduarri, king of Kundi and Sizu, a prince of the
Lebanon, and had set up as independent monarch, probably
during the time of the civil way which was waged between
Esarhaddon and two of his brothers who disputed his
succession after they had murdered his father. As soon as
this struggle was over, and the Assyrian monarch found
himself free to take his own course, he proceeded at once
(B.C. 680) against these two rebels. Both of them tried to
escape him. Abd-Melkarth, quitting his capital, fled away
by sea, steering probably either for Aradus or for Cyprus.
Sanduarri took refuge in his mountain fastnesses. But
Esarhaddon was not to be baffled. He caused both chiefs to
be pursued and taken. "Abd-Melkarth," he says, "who from
the face of my solders into the middle of the sea had
fled, like a fish from out of the sea, I caught, and cut
off his head . . . Sanduarri, who took Abd-Melkarth for
his ally, and to his difficult mountains trusted, like a
bird from the midst of the mountains, I caught and cut off
his head." Sidon was very severely punished. Esarhaddon
boasts that he swept away all its subject cities, uprooted
its citadel and palace, and cast the materials into the
sea, at the same time destroying all its habitations. The
town was plundered, the treasures of the palace carried
off, and the greater portion of the population deported to
Assyria. An Assyrian general was placed as governor over
the city, and its name changed from Sidon to "Ir-Esarhaddon."
Under Esarhaddon's son, Assurbanipal, Assyria reached
its zenith and approached its fall. Assurbanipal's reign
saw the Assyrian capital of Nineveh reach the height of
its splendor. The library of cuneiform tablets he
collected ultimately proved to be one of the most
important historical sources of antiquity. The magnificent
Assyrian bas-reliefs reached their peak. The royal court
was luxurious. Assyrian culture owed much to earlier
Babylonian civilization, and in religion Assyria seems to
have taken much from its southern neighbor and subject.
Despite the magnificence of Assurbanipal's court, Assyria
began a rapid decline during his reign. The military
aspect of the empire was its most prominent feature, for
Assyria was prepared for conflict from beginning to end.
Because of the ever-present need for men to fight the
constant battles, agriculture suffered, and ultimately the
Assyrians had to import food. The lavish expenditures of
Assurbanipal on warfare and building drained the resources
of the empire and contributed to its weakness. When
Assurbanipal was fighting against the Chaldaeans and
Elamites, an Egyptian revolt under Psamatik I (Psamtik I)
was successful. Psamatik I., who was advanced in years at
the time of Assyria's downfall, died about B.C. 610, and
was succeeded by a son still in the full vigour of life,
the brave and enterprising Neco. Neco, in B.C. 608, having
made all due preparations, led a great expedition into
Palestine, with the object of bringing under his dominion
the entire tract between the River of Egypt (Wady el Arish)
and the Middle Euphrates. Soon all of Palestine,
Phoenicia, and Syria were overrun, and became temporarily
Egyptian possessions. Phœnicia does not appear to have
been subdued by force. Tyrian prosperity continued, and
the terms on which Phoenicia stood towards Egypt during
the remainder of Neco's reign were friendly. Phoenicians
at Neco's request accomplished the circumnavigation of
Africa; and Neco granted to Tyre the extraordinary favour
of settling a colony in the Egyptian capital, Memphis.
The glory and prosperity which Egypt had thus acquired
were very short-lived. Within three years Babylonia
asserted herself. In B.C. 605, the crown prince,
Nebuchadnezzar, acting on behalf of his father,
Nabopolassar, who was aged and infirm, led the forces of
Babylon against the audacious Pharaoh, who had dared to
affront the "King of kings," "the Lord of Sumir and Accad,"
had taken him off his guard, and deprived him of some of
his fairest provinces. Babylonia, under Nabopolassar and
Nebuchadnezzar, was a worthy successor of the mighty power
which for seven hundred years had held the supremacy of
Western Asia. Her citizens were as brave; her armies as
well disciplined; her rulers as bold, as sagacious, and as
unsparing. Habakkuk's description of a Babylonian army
belongs to about this date -- "Lo, I raise up the
Chaldaeans, that bitter and hasty nation, which shall
march through the breadth of the land, to possess the
dwelling-places that are not theirs. They are terrible and
dreadful; from them shall proceed judgment and captivity;
their horses are swifter than leopards, and are more
fierce than the evening wolves; and their horsemen shall
spread themselves, and their horsemen shall come from far;
they shall fly as the eagle that hasteth to eat. They
shall come all for violence; their faces shall sup as the
east wind, and they shall gather the captivity as the
sand. And they shall scoff at kings, and princes shall be
a scorn unto them; they shall derive every stronghold; for
they shall heap dust, and take it." Early in the year B.C.
605 the host of Nebuchadnezzar appeared on the right bank
of the Euphrates, moving steadily along its reaches, and
day by day approaching nearer and nearer to the great
fortress in and behind which lay the army of Neco, well
ordered with shield and buckler, its horses harnessed, and
its horsemen armed with spears that had been just
furbished, and protected by helmets and brigandines. One
of the "decisive battles of the world" was impending.
We have no historical account of the great battle of
Carchemish. Jeremiah, however, beholds it in vision. He
sees the Egyptians "dismayed and turned away back--their
mighty ones are beaten down, and are fled apace, and look
not back, since fear is round about them." He sees the
"swift flee away," and the "mighty men" attempting to
"escape;" but they "stumble and fall toward the north by
the river Euphrates. For this is the day of the Lord God
of hosts, a day of vengeance, that He may avenge Him of
His adversaries; and the sword devours, and it is satiate
and made drunk with their blood, for the Lord God of hosts
hath a sacrifice in the north country by the river
Euphrates." The "valiant men" are "swept away...many fall,
yea, one falls upon another, and they say, Arise and let
us go again to our own people, and to the land of our
nativity from the oppressing sword. Nor do the mercenaries
escape. Her hired men are in the midst of her, like fatted
bullocks; for they also are turned back, and are fled away
together; they did not stand because the day of their
calamity was come upon them, and the time of their
visitation." The defeat was, beyond a doubt, complete,
overwhelming. The shock of it was felt all over the Delta,
at Memphis, and even at distant Thebes. The hasty flight
of the entire Egyptian host left the whole country open to
the invading army. "Like a whirlwind, like a torrent, it
swept on. The terrified inhabitants retired into the
fortified cities," where for the time they were safe.
Nebuchadnezzar did not stop to commence any siege. He
pursued Neco up to the very frontier of Egypt, and would
have continued his victorious career into the Nile valley,
had not important intelligence arrested his steps. His
aged father had died at Babylon while he was engaged in
his conquests, and his immediate return to the capital was
necessary, if he would avoid a disputed succession. Thus
matters in Syria had to be left in a confused and
unsettled state, until such time as the Great King could
revisit the scene of his conquests, and place them upon
some definite and satisfactory footing.
On the whole, the campaign had, apparently, the effect
of drawing closer the links which united Phoenicia with
Egypt. Babylon had shown herself a fierce and formidable
enemy, but had disgusted men more than she had terrified
them. It was clear enough that she would be a hard
mistress, a second and crueller Assyria. There was thus,
on Nebuchadnezzar's departure, a general gravitation of
the Syrian and Palestinian states towards Egypt, since
they saw in her the only possible protector against
Babylon, and dreaded her less than they did the "bitter
and hasty nation." Neco, no doubt, encouraged the movement
which tended at once to strengthen himself and weaken his
antagonist; and the result was that, in the course of a
few years, both Judæa and Phoenicia revolted from
Nebuchadnezzar, and declared themselves independent.
Phoenicia was still under the hegemony of Tyre, and Tyre
had at its head an enterprising prince, a second Ithobal,
who had developed its resources to the uttermost, and was
warmly supported by the other cities. His revolt appears
to have taken place in the year B.C. 598, the seventh year
of Nebuchadnezzar. Nebuchadnezzar at once marched against
him in person.
The sieges of Tyre, Sidon, and Jerusalem were formed.
Jerusalem submitted almost immediately. Sidon was taken
after losing half her defenders by pestilence; but Tyre
continued to resist for the long space of thirteen years.
The continental city was probably taken first. Against
this Nebuchadnezzar could freely employ his whole
force--his "horses, his chariots, his companies, and his
much people"--he could bring moveable forts close up to
the walls, and cast up banks against them, and batter them
with his engines, or undermine them with spade and
mattock. When a breach was effected, he could pour his
horse into the streets, and ride down all opposition. It
is the capture of the continental city which Ezekiel
describes when he says: "Thus saith the Lord God: Behold,
I will bring upon Tyrus Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, a
king of kings, from the north, with horses and with
chariots, and with horsemen, and companies, and much
people. He shall slay with the sword thy daughters in the
field; and he shall make a fort against thee, and cast a
mount against thee, and lift up the buckler against thee.
And he shall set engines of war against thy walls, and
with his axes he shall break down thy towers. By reason of
the abundance of his horses, their dust shall cover thee;
thy walls shall shake at the noise of the horseman, and of
the wheels and of the chariots, when he shall enter into
thy gates, as men enter into a city wherein is made a
breach. With the hoofs of his horses shall he tread down
all thy streets: he shall slay thy people by the sword,
and thy strong garrisons shall go down to the ground. And
they shall make a spoil of thy riches, and make a prey of
thy merchandise; and they shall break down thy walls, and
destroy thy pleasant houses: and they shall lay thy stones
and thy timber and thy dust in the midst of the water."
But the island city did not escape. When continental
Phoenicia was reduced, it was easy to impress a fleet from
maritime towns; to man it, in part with Phoenicians, in
part with Babylonians, no mean sailors, and then to
establish a blockade of the isle. Tyre may more than once
have crippled and dispersed the blockading squadron; but
by a moderate expenditure fresh fleets could be supplied,
while Tyre, cut off from Lebanon, would find it difficult
to increase or renew her navy. There has been much
question whether the island city was ultimately captured
by Nebuchadnezzar or no; but even writers who take the
negative view admit that it must have submitted and owned
the suzerainty of its assailant. The date of the
submission was B.C. 585.
Phoenicia under the Babylonian rule was exceptionally
weak. She had to submit to attacks from Egypt under Apries,
which fell probably in the reign of Baal over Tyre, about
B.C. 565. She had also to submit to the loss of Cyprus
under Amasis, probably about B.C. 540, or a little
earlier, when the power of Babylon was rapidly declining.
She had been, from first to last, an unwilling tributary
of the Great Empire on the Lower Euphrates, and was
perhaps not sorry to see that empire go down before the
rising power of Persia. Under the circumstances she would
view any chance as likely to advance her interests, and
times of disturbance and unsettlement gave her the best
chance of obtaining a temporary independence. From B.C.
538 to B.C. 528 or 527 she seems to have enjoyed one of
these rare intervals of autonomy. Egypt, content with
having annexed Cyprus, did not trouble her; Persia,
engaged in wars in the far East, made as yet no claim to
her allegiance. In peace and tranquillity she pursued her
commercial career, covered the seas with her merchant
vessels, and the land-routes of trade with her caravans,
repaired the damages inflicted by Nebuchadnezzar on her
cities; maintained, if she did not even increase, her
naval strength, and waited patiently to see what course
events would take now that Babylon was destroyed by Cyrus
the Great the great-grandson of Cyaxares, the king of the
Medes, and a new and hitherto unknown power, Persia, was
about to assume the first position among the nations of
the earth.
The empire founded by Cyrus (550-530) was stretched by
his successors from the Hindu Kush and beyond the Indus to
the Aegean, and from the Caucasus to the Indian Ocean, the
greatest thus far. The Persians were Indo-Europeans,
closer to the Greeks and Romans than to the Semites. They
followed a more centralized system of political control
than their imperial predecessors. To that end they linked
the far-flung parts of the empire with a system of roads,
introduced metallic currency and made Aramaic, a Semitic
language, the lingua franca of the realm.
Lebanon, Syria, Palestine and Cyprus were grouped in
one satrapy (province). Sidon was chosen as the capital.
The city was provided with a royal residence for the
Persian satrap and for the emperor when on a state visit.
Sidon, Tyre, Byblus and Aradus, however, were allowed a
measure of autonomy, including issuance of their own
coinage.
Phoenician cities materially profited by the Pax
Persica and the new facilities of communication. Their
seemingly inexhaustible supply of cedar wood, though now a
state domain, continued to be a source of revenue. Their
fleet, the largest and best equipped in the eastern
Mediterranean, was in demand by Persian warring emperors.
Without it Cambyses could not have conquered Egypt (525).
But when that emperor sought their aid against the Cartha-
ginians, they flatly refused, as they "would not attack
their own sons". Their response to fight the Greeks,
however, was enthusiastic, as they saw in it an
opportunity to damage the potential of their commercial
maritime rivals.
The Greco-Persian wars have been characterized as a
contest between Phoenician and Greek sea powers. In the
prolonged struggle over two hundred Phoenician ships
participated, transporting Persian troops back and forth
shuttling among Aegean islands and taking part in such
world-renowned battles as those of Miletus (494) and
Salamis (480). A Greek historian awarded the prize of
valour to the Athenians for the Greeks and "to the
Sidonians for the barbarians". Phoenician engineers helped
build the pon- toon bridge across the Hellespont, over
which Xerxes' army crossed to Europe, and dig the canal
through the isthmus joining Mount Athos to the mainland.
For about a century and three-quarters Perse-Phoenician
relations seemed to have been cordial. But by 360 a change
began. Greco-Phoenician relations entered on a new phase.
Sidonians in Attica were exempted by Athenians from the
usual tax on foreigners, and the number of Phoenicians in
Piraeus and other cities greatly increased. A king of
Sidon, Straton by name, became known as Philhelene
(pro-Greek). The Lebanese must have sensed that the
Persian sun was on its way to setting and resented more
than before the arrogant attitude of such satraps as those
ofArtaxerxes III (359-338).
The spark this time was kindled in a Tripoli. The city
consisted of three separate settlements of Sidonians,
Tyrians and Aradians. The insurrection started in the
Sidonian quarter but soon spread to involve the entire
coast. The mother-city Sidon, under its king Tennes,
assumed leadership. Egypt contributed the usual
encouragement. Nine leading cities expelled their satraps
and declared their full independence. Artaxerxes reacted
vigorously. At the head of a mighty host of 300,000 foot,
30,000 horse and 300 triremes he moved in 350 BC against
Sidon. Tennes lost heart. He betrayed the city but did not
escape death. Five hundred Sidonian notables carrying the
olive branches were shot down by the Persian emperor. The
bulk of the people, however, resolved to die as free men.
In desperation they set all the ships in the harbour on
fire, leaving no way of escape and shut themselves in
their homes to be consumed along with their possessions by
the raging fire. More than 40,000 are said to have
perished. The few thousand survivors were carried away
into captivity. Once the mistress of the sea the city was
now a heap of ashes. For the second time in its history
Sidon was wiped off the face of the map, the first time
being by the hand of Esarhaddon in 680 BC. The Persian
hold on the coast, bought at such high costs was short
lived. In eighteen years the entire empire was to crumble
under the blows of an unexpected invader from the west.
When in the spring of 334 B.C. a twenty year old
Macedonian led an army of 35,000 across the Hellespont,
neither he nor anyone else could have foreseen that the
map of the Near East was soon to be redrawn and the course
of its history changed. The general's name was Alexander
the Great.
The march through Asia Minor, then in Persian hands,
amounted to a promenade. At Issus, a narrow defile in
north Syria, skill and discipline counterbalanced
numerical superiority; the motley host of Darius III was
shattered (333). The emperor had a narrow escape, leaving
even his harem behind. The Macedonian phalanx had been
developed by the general's father, Philip, under whom the
kingdom attained hegemony over Greece. Alexander's
spectacular victory was commemorated by building
Alexandretta (Iskandarun), a harbinger of unnumbered
cities to be built by him and by his successors. The way
was now open through Lebanon to Egypt. Aradus, Byblus,
Sidon and other ports willingly exchanged masters. Only
Tyre, former defier Nebuchadnezzar, dared hold out.
Alexander the Great, took Tyre only after a long and hard
siege (333–332 BC) making the siege of Tyre one of the
most dramatic of antiquity.
In the division of Alexander's empire, which followed
upon his death, Phœnicia was at first assigned, together
with Syria, to Laemedon, and the two formed together a
separate satrapy. But, after the arrangement of
Triparadisus (B.C. 320), Ptolemy Lagi almost immediately
attacked Laemedon, dispossessed him of his government, and
attached it to his own satrapy of Egypt. Six years later
(B.C. 314), attacked in his turn by Antigonus, Ptolemy was
forced to relinquish his conquests, none of which offered
much resistance except Tyre. Tyre, though no more than
eighteen years had elapsed since its desolation by
Alexander, had, like the fabled phœnix, risen again from
its ruins, and through the recuperative energy of commerce
had attained almost to its previous wealth and prosperity.
Its walls had been repaired, and it was defended by its
Egyptian garrison with pertinacity. Antigonus, who was
master of the Phœnician mainland, established dockyards at
Sidon, Byblus, and Tripolis, set eight thousand sawyers
and labourers to cut down timber in Lebanon, and called
upon the kings of the coast towns to build him a fleet
with the least possible delay. His orders were carried
out, and Tyre was blockaded by sea and land for the space
of fifteen months, when the provisions failed and the town
was forced to surrender itself. The garrison marched out
with the honours of war, and Phoenicia became an appendage
of the small empire of Antigonus.
From Antigonus Phœnicia passed to his son Demetrius,
who maintained his hold on it, with some vicissitudes of
fortune, till B.C. 287, when it once more passed under the
dominion of Ptolemy Lagi. From this time it was an
Egyptian dependency for nearly seventy years, and
flourished commercially, if it not distinguish itself by
warlike exploits. The early Ptolemies were mild and wise
rulers. They encouraged commerce, literature, and art. So
far as was possible they protected their dominions from
external attack, put down brigandage, and ruled with
equity and moderation. It was not until the fourth prince
of the house of Lagus, Philopator, mounted the throne
(B.C. 222) that the character of their rule changed for
the worse, and their subjects began to have reason to
complain of them. The weakness and profligacy of
Philopater tempted Antiochus III. to assume the
aggressive, and to disturb the peace which had now for
some time subsisted between Syria and Egypt, the Lagidæ
and the Seleucidæ. In B.C. 219 he drove the Egyptians out
of Seleucia, the port of Antioch, and being joined by
Theodotus, the Egyptian governor of the Cœlesyrian
province, invaded that country and Phoenicia, took
possession of Tyre and Accho, which was now called
Ptolemaïs, and threatened Egypt with subjugation.
Phoenicia once more became the battle-field between two
great powers, and for the next twenty years the cities
were frequently taken and re-taken. At last, in B.C. 198,
by the victory of Antiochus over Scopas, and the surrender
of Sidon, Phœnicia passed into the permanent possession of
the Seleucidæ, and, though frequently reclaimed by Egypt,
was never recovered.
The kingdom of the Seleucidæ came to an end through its
own internal weakness and corruption. In B.C. 83 their
subjects, whether native Asiatics or Syro-Macedonians,
were so weary of the perpetual series of revolts, civil
wars, and assassinations that they invited Tigranes, the
king of the neighbouring Armenia, to step in and undertake
the government of the country. Tigranes ruled from B.C. 83
till B.C. 69, when he was attacked by the Romans, to whom
he had given just cause of offence by his conduct in the
Mithridatic struggle. Compelled by Lucullus to relinquish
Syria, he retired to his own dominions, and was succeeded
by the last Seleucid prince, Antiochus Asiaticus, who
reigned from B.C. 69 to B.C. 65. Rome then stepped
forward, and took the inheritance to which she had become
entitled a century and a quarter earlier by the battle of
Magnesia. Phoenicia thus passed quietly into the Roman
Empire.
Phoenicia gained greatly by the strictness with which
Rome kept the police of the Eastern Mediterranean. For
many years previously to B.C. 67 their commerce had been
preyed upon to an enormous extent by the piratical fleets,
which from the creeks and harbours of Western Cilicia and
Pamphylia, spread terror and made the navigation of the
Levant and Ægean a dangerous business. Pompey, in that
year, completely destroyed the piratical fleets, attacked
the pirates in their lairs, and cleared them out from
every spot where they had established themselves. Voyages
by sea became once more as safe as travels by land; and a
vigilant watch being kept on all the coasts and islands,
piracy was never again permitted to gather strength, or
become a serious evil. The Phoenician merchants could once
more launch their trading vessels on the Mediterranean
waters without fear of their suffering capture, and were
able to insure their cargoes at a moderate premium. The
cities of Tripoli, Sidon, and Tyre were given the position
of "free cities" which secured them an independent
municipal government, under their own freely elected
council and chief magistates. These privileges, conferred
by Pompey, were not withdrawn by Julius Caesar, when he
became master of the Roman world.
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