by George Rawlinson
CHAPTER XIV—POLITICAL HISTORY
1. Phoenicia, before the
establishment of the hegemony of Tyre.
Separate autonomy of the Phoenician cities—No marked
predominance of any one or more of them during the Egyptian
period, B.C. 1600-1350—A certain pre-eminence subsequently
acquired by Aradus and Sidon—Sidonian territorial
ascendancy—Great proficiency of Sidon in the arts—Sidon's
war with the Philistines—Her early colonies—Her advances
in navigation—Her general commercial honesty—Occasional
kidnapping—Stories of Io and Eumæus—Internal government—
Relations with the Israelites.
When
the Phoenician immigrants, in scattered bands, and at longer or shorter
intervals, arrived upon the Syrian coast, and finding it empty occupied it, or
wrested it from its earlier possessors, there was a decided absence from among
them of any single governing or controlling authority; a marked tendency to
assert and maintain separate rule and jurisdiction. Sidon, the Arkite, the
Arvadite, the Zemarite, are separately enumerated in the book of Genesis;0141 and the Hebrews have not even any one
name under which to comprise the commercial people settled upon their coast
line,0142 until we come to Gospel times, when
the Greeks have brought the term "Syro-Phoenician" into use.0143 Elsewhere we hear of "them of
Sidon," "them of Tyre,"0144 "the Giblites,"0145 "the men of Arvad,"0146 "the Arkites," "the
Sinites," "the Zemarites,"0147 "the inhabitants of Accho, of
Achzib, and Aphek,"0148 but never of the whole maritime
population north of Philistia under any single ethnic appellation. And the
reason seems to be, that the Phoenicians, even more than the Greeks, affected a
city autonomy. Each little band of immigrants, as soon as it had pushed its way
into the sheltered tract between the mountains and the sea, settled itself upon
some attractive spot, constructed habitations, and having surrounded its
habitations with walls, claimed to be—and found none to dispute the claim—a
distinct political entity. The conformation of the land, so broken up into
isolated regions by strong spurs from Lebanon and Bargylus, lent additional
support to the separatist spirit, and the absence in the early times of any
pressure of danger from without permitted its free indulgence without entailing
any serious penalty. It is difficult to say at what time the first settlements
took place; but during the period of Egyptian supremacy over Western Asia,
under the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties (ab. B.C. 1600-1350), we seem to
find the Phoenicians in possession of the coast tract, and their cities
severally in the enjoyment of independence and upon a quasi-equality. Tyre,
Sidon, Gebal, Aradus, Simyra, Sarepta, Berytus, and perhaps Arka, appear in the
inscriptions of Thothmes III,0149 and in the "Travels of a
Mohar,"1410 without an indication of the
pre-eminence, much less the supremacy, of any one of them. The towns pursued
their courses independently one of another, submitting to the Egyptians when
hard pressed, but always ready to reassert themselves, and never joining, so
far as appears, in any league or confederation, by which their separate
autonomy might have been endangered. During this period no city springs to any
remarkable height of greatness or prosperity; material progress is, no doubt,
being made by the nation; but it is not very marked, and it does not excite any
particular attention.
But
with the decline of the Egyptian power, which sets in after the death of the
second Rameses, a change takes place. External pressure being removed,
ambitions begin to develop themselves. In the north Aradus (Arvad), in the
south Sidon, proceed to exercise a sort of hegemony over several neighbouring
states. Sidon becomes known as "Great Zidon."1411 Not content with her maritime
ascendancy, which was already pushing her into special notice, she aspired to a
land dominion, and threw out offshoots from the main seat of her power as far
as Laish, on the head-waters of the Jordan.1412 It was her support, probably, which
enabled the inhabitants of such comparatively weak cities as Accho and Achzib
and Aphek to resist the invasion of the Hebrews, and maintain themselves,
despite all attempts made to reduce them.1413 At the same time she gradually
extended her influence over the coast towns in her neighbourhood, as Sarepta,
Heldun, perhaps Berytus, Ecdippa, and Accho. The period which succeeds that of
Egyptian preponderance in Western Asia may be distinguished as that of Sidonian
ascendancy, or of such ascendancy slightly modified by an Aradian hegemony in
the north over the settlements intervening between Mount Casius and the
northern roots of Lebanon.1414 During this period Sidon came to the
front, alike in arts, in arms, and in navigation. Her vessels were found by the
earliest Greek navigators in all parts of the Mediterranean into which they
themselves ventured, and were known to push themselves into regions where no
Greek dared to follow them. Under her fostering care Phoenician colonisation
had spread over the whole of the Western Mediterranean, over the Ægean, and
into the Propontis. She had engaged in war with the powerful nation of the
Philistines, and, though worsted in the encounter, had obtained a reputation
for audacity. By her wonderful progress in the arts, her citizens had acquired
the epithet of {poludaidaloi},1415 and had come to be recognised
generally as the foremost artificers of the world in almost every branch of
industry. Sidonian metal-work was particularly in repute. When Achilles at the
funeral of Patroclus desired to offer as a prize to the fastest runner the most
beautiful bowl that was to be found in all the world, he naturally chose one
which had been deftly made by highly-skilled Sidonians, and which Phoenician
sailors had conveyed in one of their hollow barks across the cloud-shadowed
sea.1416 When Menelaus proposed to present
Telemachus, the son of his old comrade Odysseus, with what was at once the most
beautiful and the most valuable of all his possessions, he selected a silver
bowl with a golden rim, which in former days he had himself received as a
present from Phædimus, the Sidonian king.1417 The sailors who stole Eumæus from
Ortygia, and carried him across the sea to Ithica, obtained their prize by
coming to his father's palace, and bringing with them, among other wares,
. . . a necklace of fine gold to sell,
With bright electron linked right wondrously and well.1418
Sidon's
pre-eminence in the manufacture, the dyeing, and the embroidery of textile
fabrics was at the same time equally unquestionable. Hecuba, being advised to
offer to Athêné, on behalf of her favourite son, the best and loveliest of all
the royal robes which her well-stored dress-chamber could furnish—
She to her fragrant wardrobe bent her way,
Where her rich veils in beauteous order lay;
Webs by Sidonian virgins finely wrought,
From Sidon's woofs by youthful Paris brought,
When o'er the boundless main the adulterer led
Fair Helen from her home and nuptial bed;
From these she chose the fullest, fairest far,
With broidery bright, and blazing as a star.1419
Already,
it would seem, the precious shell-fish, on which Phoenicia's commerce so
largely rested in later times, had been discovered; and it was the dazzling hue
of the robe which constituted its especial value. Sidon was ultimately eclipsed
by Tyre in the productions of the loom; and the unrivalled dye has come down to
us, and will go down to all future ages, as "Tyrian purple;"
but we may well believe that in this, as in most other matters on which
prosperity and success depended, Tyre did but follow in the steps of her elder
sister Sidon, perfecting possibly the manufacture which had been Sidon's
discovery in the early ages. According to Scylax of Cadyanda, Dor was a
Sidonian colony.1420 Geographically it belonged rather to
Philistia than to Phoenicia; but its possession of large stores of the purple
fish caused its sudden seizure and rapid fortification at a very remote date,
probably by the Phoenicians of Sidon.1421 It is quite possible that this
aggression may have provoked that terrible war to which reference has already
been made, between the Philistines under the hegemony of Ascalon and the first
of the Phoenician cities. Ascalon attacked the Sidonians by land, blockaded the
offending town, and after a time compelled a surrender; but the defenders had a
ready retreat by sea, and, when they could no longer hold out against their
assailants, took ship, and removed themselves to Tyre, which at the time was
probably a dependency.1422
In
navigation also and colonisation Sidon took the lead. According to some, she
was the actual founder of Aradus, which was said to have owed its origin to a
body of Sidonian exiles, who there settled themselves.1423 Not much reliance, however, can be
placed on this tradition, which first appears in a writer of the Augustan age.
With more confidence we may ascribe to Sidon the foundation of Citium in
Cyprus, the colonisation of the islands in the Ægean, and of those Phoenician
settlements in North Africa which were anterior to the founding of Carthage. It
has even been supposed that the Sidonians were the first to make a settlement
at Carthage itself,1424 and that the Tyrian occupation under
Dido was a recolonisation of an already occupied site. Anyhow, Sidon was the
first to explore the central Mediterranean, and establish commercial relations with
the barbarous tribes of the mid-African coast, Cabyles, Berbers, Shuloukhs,
Tauriks, and others. She is thought to claim on a coin to be the mother-city of
Melita, or Malta, as well as of Citium and Berytus;1425 and, if this claim be allowed, we can
scarcely doubt that she was also the first to plant colonies in Sicily. Further
than this, it would seem, Sidonian enterprise did not penetrate. It was left for
Tyre to discover the wealth of Southern Spain, to penetrate beyond the Straits
of Gibraltar, and to affront the perils of the open ocean.
But,
within the sphere indicated, Sidonian rovers traversed all parts of the Great
Sea, penetrated into every gulf, became familiar sights to the inhabitants of
every shore. From timid sailing along the coast by day, chiefly in the summer
season, when winds whispered gently, and atmospheric signs indicated that fair
weather had set in, they progressed by degrees to long voyages, continued both
by night and day,1426 from promontory to promontory, or
from island to island, sometimes even across a long stretch of open sea, altogether
out of sight of land, and carried on at every season of the year except some
few of special danger. To Sidon is especially ascribed the introduction of the
practice of sailing by night,1427 which shortened the duration of
voyages by almost one-half, and doubled the number of trips that a vessel could
accomplish in the course of a year. For night sailing the arts of astronomy and
computation had to be studied;1428 the aspect of the heavens at
different seasons had to be known; and among the shifting constellations some
fixed point had to be found by which it would be safe to steer. The last star
in the tail of the Little Bear—the polar star of our own navigation books—was
fixed upon by the Phoenicians, probably by the Sidonians, for this purpose,1429 and was practically employed as the
best index of the true north from a remote period. The rate of a ship's speed
was, somehow or other, estimated; and though it was long before charts were
made, or the set of currents taken into account, yet voyages were for the most
part accomplished with very tolerable accuracy and safety. An ample commerce
grew up under Sidonian auspices. After the vernal equinox was over a fleet of
white-winged ships sped forth from the many harbours of the Syrian coast, well
laden with a variety of wares—Phoenician, Assyrian, Egyptian1430—and made for the coasts and islands
of the Levant, the Ægean, the Propontis, the Adriatic, the mid-Mediterranean,
where they exchanged the cargoes which they had brought with them for the best
products of the lands whereto they had come. Generally, a few weeks, or at most
a month or two, would complete the transfer the of commodities, and the ships
which left Sidon in April or May would return about June or July, unload, and
make themselves ready for a second voyage. But sometimes, it appears, the
return cargo was not so readily procured, and vessels had to remain in the
foreign port, or roadstead, for the space of a whole year.1431
The
behaviour of the traders must, on the whole, have been such as won the respect
of the nations and tribes wherewith they traded. Otherwise, the markets would
soon have been closed against them, and, in lieu of the peaceful commerce which
the Phoenicians always affected, would have sprung up along the shores of the
Mediterranean a general feeling of distrust and suspicion, which would have led
on to hostile encounters, surprises, massacres, and then reprisals. The entire
history of Phoenician commerce shows that such a condition of things never
existed. The traders and their customers were bound together by the bonds of
self-interest, and, except in rare instances, dealt by each other fairly and
honestly. Still, there were occasions when, under the stress of temptation,
fair-dealing was lost sight of, and immediate prospect of gain was allowed to
lead to the commission of acts destructive of all feeling of security,
subversive of commercial morals, and calculated to effect a rupture of
commercial relations, which it may often have taken a long term of years to
re-establish. Herodotus tells us that, at a date considerably anterior to the
Trojan war, when the ascendancy over the other Phoenician cities must certainly
have belonged to Sidon, an affair of this kind took place on the coast of
Argolis, which was long felt by the Greeks as an injury and an outrage. A
Phoenician vessel made the coast near Argos, and the crew, having effected a
landing, proceeded to expose their merchandise for sale along the shore, and to
traffic with the natives, who were very willing to make purchases, and in the course
of five or six days bought up almost the entire cargo. At length, just as the
traders were thinking of re-embarking and sailing away, there came down to the
shore from the capital a number of Argive ladies, including among them a
princess, Io, the daughter of Inachus, the Argive king. Hereupon, the
trafficking and the bargaining recommenced; goods were produced suited to the
taste of the new customers; and each strove to obtain what she desired most at
the least cost. But suddenly, as they were all intent upon their purchases, and
were crowding round the stern of the ship, the Phoenicians, with a general
shout, rushed upon them. Many—the greater part, we are told—made their escape;
but the princess, and a certain number of her companions, were seized and
carried on board. The traders quickly put to sea, and hoisting their sails,
hurried away to Egypt.1432
Another
instance of kidnapping, accomplished by art rather than by force, is related to
us by Homer.1433 Eumæus, the swineherd of Ulysses, was
the son of a king, dwelling towards the west, in an island off the Sicilian
coast. A Phoenician woman, herself kidnapped from Sidon by piratical Taphians,
had the task of nursing and tending him assigned to her, and discharged it
faithfully until a great temptation befell her. A Sidonian merchant-ship
visited the island, laden with rich store of precious wares, and proceeded to
open a trade with the inhabitants, in the course of which one of the sailors
seduced the Phoenician nurse, and suggested that when the vessel left, she
should allow herself to be carried off in it. The woman, whose parents were
still alive at Sidon, came into the scheme, and being apprised of the date of
the ship's departure, stole away from the palace unobserved, taking with her
three golden goblets, and also her master's child, the boy of whom she had
charge. It was evening, and all having been prepared beforehand, the nurse and
child were hastily smuggled on board, the sails were hoisted, and the ship was
soon under weigh. The wretched woman died ere the voyage was over, but the boy
survived, and was carried by the traders to Ithaca, and there sold for a good
sum to Laërtes.
It is
not suggested that these narratives, in the form in which they have come down
to us, are historically true. There may never have been an "Io, daughter
of Inachus," or an "Eumæus, son of Ctesius Ormenides," or an
island, "Syria called by name, over against Ortygia," or even a
Ulysses or a Laërtes. But the tales could never have grown up, have been
invented, or have gained acceptance, unless the practice of kidnapping, on
which they are based, had been known to be one in which the Phoenicians of the
time indulged, at any rate occasionally. We must allow this blot on the
Sidonian escutcheon, and can only plead, in extenuation of their offence,
first, the imperfect morality of the age, and secondly, the fact that such
deviations from the line of fair-dealing and honesty on the part of the
Sidonian traders must have been of rare occurrence, or the flourishing and
lucrative trade, which was the basis of all the glory and prosperity of the
people, could not possibly have been established. Successful commerce must rest
upon the foundation of mutual confidence; and mutual confidence is impossible
unless the rules of fair dealing are observed on both sides, if not invariably,
yet, at any rate, so generally that the infraction of them is not contemplated
on either side as anything but the remotest contingency.
Of the
internal government of Sidon during this period no details have come down to
us. Undoubtedly, like all the Phoenician cities in the early times,1434 she had her own kings; and we may
presume, from the almost universal practice in ancient times, and especially in
the East,1435 that the monarchy was hereditary. The
main duties of the king were to lead out the people to battle in time of war,
and to administer justice in time of peace.1436 The kings were in part supported, in
part held in check, by a powerful aristocracy—an aristocracy which, we may
conjecture, had wealth, rather than birth, as its basis. It does not appear
that any political authority was possessed by the priesthood, nor that the
priesthood was a caste, as in India, and (according to some writers) in Egypt.
The priestly office was certainly not attached by any general custom to the
person of the kings, though kings might be priests, and were so occasionally.1437
We do
not distinctly hear of Sidon
has having been engaged in any war during the period of her ascendancy,
excepting that with the Philistines. Still as "the Zidonians" are
mentioned among the nations which "oppressed Israel" in the time of
the Judges,1438 we must conclude that differences
arose between them and their southern neighbours in some portion of this
period, and that, war having broken out between them, the advantage rested with
Sidon. The record of "Judges" is incomplete, and does not enable us
even to fix the date of the Sidonian "oppression." We can only say
that it was anterior to the judgeship of Jephthah, and was followed, like the
other "oppressions," by a "deliverance."
The
war with the Philistines brought the period of Sidonian ascendancy to an end,
and introduces us to the second period of Phoenician history, or that of the
hegemony of Tyre.
The supposed date of the change is B.C. 1252.1439
2. Phoenicia
under the hegemony of Tyre
(B.C. 1252-877)
Influx of the Sidonian population raises Tyre to the first
place among the cities (about B.C. 1252)—First notable
result, the colonisation of Gades (B.C. 1130)—Other
colonies of about this period—Extension of Phoenician
commerce—Tyre ruled by kings—Abi-Baal—Hiram—Hiram's
dealings with Solomon—His improvement of his own capital—
His opinion of "the land of Cabul"—His joint trade with the
Israelites—His war with Utica—Successors of Hiram—Time of
disturbance—Reign of Ithobal—of Badezor—of Matgen—of
Pygmalion—Founding of Carthage—First contact of Phoenicia
with Assyria—Submission of Phoenicia, B.C. 877.
Tyre was noted as a "strong city" as early
as the time of Joshua,1440 and was probably inferior only to Sidon, or to Sidon
and Aradus, during the period of Sidonian ascendancy. It is mentioned in the
"Travels of a Mohar" (about B.C. 1350) as "a port, richer in
fish than in sands."1441 The tradition was, that it acquired
its predominance and pre-eminence from the accession of the Sidonian
population, which fled thither by sea, when no longer able to resist the forces
of Ascalon.1442 We do not find it, however, attaining
to any great distinction or notoriety, until more than a century later, when it
distinguishes itself by the colonisation of Gades (about B.C. 1130), beyond the
Pillars of Hercules, on the shores of the Atlantic. We may perhaps deduce from
this fact, that the concentration of energy caused by the removal to Tyre of
the best elements in the population of Sidon gave a stimulus to enterprise, and
caused longer voyages to be undertaken, and greater dangers to be affronted by
the daring seamen of the Syrian coast than had ever been ventured on before.
The Tyrian seamen were, perhaps, of a tougher fibre than the Sidonian, and the
change of hegemony is certainly accompanied by a greater display of energy, a
more adventurous spirit, a wider colonisation, and a more wonderful commercial
success, than characterise the preceding period of Sidonian leadership and
influence.
The
settlements planted by Tyre in the first burst of her colonising energy seem to
have been, besides Gades, Thasos, Abdera, and Pronectus towards the north,
Malaca, Sexti, Carteia, Belon, and a second Abdera in Spain, together with
Caralis in Sardinia,1443 Tingis and Lixus on the West African
coast, and in North Africa Hadrumetum and the lesser Leptis.1444 Her aim was to throw the meshes of
her commerce wider than Sidon
had ever done, and so to sweep into her net a more abundant booty. It was Tyre which especially affected "long voyages,"1445 and induced her colonists of Gades to
explore the shores outside the Pillars of Hercules, northwards as far as Cornwall and the Scilly Isles, southwards to the Fortunate Islands, and north-eastwards into the
Baltic. It is, no doubt, uncertain at what date these explorations were
effected, and some of them may belong to the later hegemony of Tyre, ab.
B.C. 600; but the forward movement of the twelfth century seems to have been
distinctly Tyrian, and to have been one of the results of the new position in
which she was placed by the sudden collapse of her elder sister, Sidon.
According
to some,1446 Tyre,
during the early period of her supremacy, was under the government of shôphetim,
or "judges;" but the general usage of the Phoenician cities makes
against this supposition. Philo in his "Origines of Phoenicia" speaks
constantly of kings,1447 but never of judges. We hear of a
king, Abd-Baal, at Berytus1448 about B.C. 1300. Sidonian kings are
mentioned in connection with the myth of Europa.1449 The cities founded by the Phoenicians
in Cyprus
are always under monarchical rule.1450 Tyre
itself, when its history first presents itself to us in any detail, is governed
by a king.1451 All that can be urged on the other
side is, that we know of no Tyrian king by name until about B.C. 1050; and
that, if there had been earlier kings, it might have been expected that some
record of them would have come down to us. But to argue thus is to ignore the
extreme scantiness and casual character of the notices which have reached us
bearing upon the early Phoenician history. No writer has left us any continuous
history of Phoenicia,
even in the barest outline.1452 Native monumental annals are entirely
wanting. We depend for the early times upon the accident of Jewish monarchs
having come into contact occasionally with Phoenician ones, and on Jewish
writers having noted the occasions in Jewish histories. Scripture and Josephus
alone furnish our materials for the period now under consideration, and the
materials are scanty, fragmentary, and sadly wanting in completeness.
It is
towards the middle of the eleventh century B.C. that these materials become
available. About the time when David was acclaimed as king by the tribe of Judah at Hebron,
a Phoenician prince mounted the throne of Tyre,
by name Abibalus, or Abi-Baal.1453 We do not know the length of his
reign; but, while the son of Jesse was still in the full vigour of life,
Abi-Baal was succeeded on the Tyrian throne by his son, Hiram or Hirôm, a
prince of great energy, of varied tastes, and of an unusually broad and liberal
turn of mind. Hiram, casting his eye over the condition of the states and
kingdoms which were his neighbours, seems to have discerned in Judah and David
a power and a ruler whose friendship it was desirable to cultivate with a view
to the establishment of very close relations. Accordingly, it was not long
after the Jewish monarch's capture of the Jebusite stronghold on Mount Zion
that the Tyrian prince sent messengers to him to Jerusalem, with a present of "timber of
cedars," and a number of carpenters, and stone-hewers, well skilled in the
art of building.1454 David accepted their services, and a
goodly palace soon arose on some part of the Eastern hill, of which cedar from Lebanon was the
chief material,1455 and of which Hiram's workmen were the
constructors. At a later date David set himself to collect abundant and choice
materials for the magnificent Temple which Solomon his son was divinely
commissioned to build on Mount Moriah to Jehovah; and here again "the
Zidonians and they of Tyre," or the subjects of Hiram, "brought much
cedar wood to David."1456 The friendship continued firm to the
close of David's reign;1457 and when Solomon succeeded his father
as king of Israel and lord of the whole tract between the middle Euphrates and
Egypt, the bonds were drawn yet closer, and an alliance concluded which placed
the two powers on terms of the very greatest intimacy. Hiram had no sooner
heard of Solomon's accession than he sent an embassy to congratulate him;1458 and Solomon took advantage of the
opening which presented itself to announce his intention of building the Temple
which his father had designed, and to request Hiram's aid in the completion of
the work. Copies of letters which passed between the two monarchs were
preserved both in the Tyrian and the Jewish archives, and the Tyrian versions
are said to have been still extant in the public record office of the city in
the first century of the Christian era.1459 These documents ran as follows:—
"Solomon
to King Hiram [sends greeting]:—Know that my father David was desirous of
building a temple to God, but was prevented by his wars and his continual
expeditions; for he did not rest from subduing his adversaries, until he had
made every one of them tributary to him. And now I for my part return thanks to
God for the present time of peace, and having rest thereby I purpose to build
the house; for God declared to my father that it should be built by me.
Wherefore I beseech thee to send some of thy servants with my servants to Mount Lebanon, to cut wood there, for none among us can
skill to hew timber like unto the Sidonians. And I will pay the wood-cutters
their hire at whatsoever rate thou shalt determine."
"King
Hiram to King Solomon [sends greeting]:—Needs must I praise God, that hath
given thee to sit upon thy father's throne, seeing that thou art a wise man,
and possessed of every virtue. And I, rejoicing at these things, will do all
that thou hast desired of me. I will by my servants cut thee in abundance
timber of cedar and timber of cypress, and will bring them down to the sea, and
command my servants to construct of them a float, or raft, and navigate it to
whatever point of thy coast thou mayest wish, and there discharge them; after
which thy servants can carry them to Jerusalem. But be it thy care to provide
me in return with a supply of food, whereof we are in want as inhabiting an
island."1460
The
result was an arrangement by which the Tyrian monarch furnished his brother
king with timber of various kinds, chiefly cedar, cut in Lebanon, and also with
a certain number of trained artificers, workers in metal, carpenters, and
masons, while the Israelite monarch on his part made a return in corn, wine,
and oil, supplying Tyre, while the contract lasted, with 20,000 cors of wheat,
the same quantity of barley, 20,000 baths of wine, and the same number of oil,
annually.1461 Phoenicia
always needed to import supplies of food for its abundant population,1462 and having an inexhaustible store of
timber in Lebanon,
was glad to find a market for it so near. Thus the arrangement suited both
parties. The hillsides of Galilee and the
broad and fertile plains of Esdraelon and Sharon produced a superabundance of
wheat and barley, whereof the inhabitants had to dispose in some quarter or
other, and the highlands of Sumeria and Judæa bore oil and wine far beyond the
wants of those who cultivated them. What Phoenicia lacked in these respects
from the scantiness of its cultivable soil, Palestine was able and eager to
supply; while to Phoenicia it was a boon to obtain, not only a market for her
timber, but also employment for her surplus population, which under ordinary
circumstances was always requiring to be carried off to distant lands, from the
difficulty of supporting itself at home.
A
still greater advantage was it to the rude Judæans to get the assistance of
their civilised and artistic neighbours in the design and execution, both of
the Temple
itself and of all those accessories, which in ancient times a sacred edifice on
a large scale was regarded as requiring. The Phoenicians, and especially the
Tyrians, had long possessed, both in their home and foreign settlements,
temples of some pretension, and Hiram had recently been engaged in beautifying
and adorning, perhaps in rebuilding, some of these venerable edifices at Tyre.1463 A Phoenician architectural style had
thus been formed, and Hiram's architects and artificers would be familiar with
constructive principles and ornamental details, as well as with industrial
processes, which are very unlikely to have been known at the time to the
Hebrews. The wood for the Jewish Temple was roughly cut, and the stones
quarried, by Israelite workmen;1464 but all the delicate work, whether in
the one material or the other, was performed by the servants of Hiram. Stone-cutters
from Gebal (Byblus) shaped and smoothed the "great stones, costly
stones" employed in the substructions of the "house;"1465 Tyrian carpenters planed and polished
the cedar planks used for the walls, and covered them with representations of
cherubs and palms and gourds and opening flowers.1466 The metallurgists of Sidon probably supplied the cherubic figures
in the inner sanctuary,1467 as well as the castings for the
doors,1468 and the bulk of the sacred vessels.
The vail which separated between the "Holy Place" and the Holy of Holies—a
marvellous fabric of blue, and purple, and crimson, and white, with cherubim
wrought thereon1469—owed its beauty probably to Tyrian
dyers and Tyrian workers in embroidery. The master-workman lent by the Tyrian
monarch to superintend the entire work—an extraordinary and almost universal
genius—"skilful to work in gold and in silver, in brass, in iron, in
stone, and in timber; in purple, in blue, in fine linen, and in crimson; also
to grave any manner of graving"1470—who bore the same name with the king,1471 was the son of an Israelite mother,
but boasted a Tyrian father,1472 and was doubtless born and bred up at
Tyre. Under his special direction were cast in the valley of the Jordan,
between Succoth and Zarthan,1473 those wonderful pillars, known as
Jachin and Boaz, which have already been described, and which seem to have had
their counterparts in the sacred edifices both of Phoenicia and Cyprus.1474 To him also is specially ascribed the
"molten sea," standing on twelve oxen,1475 which was perhaps the most artistic
of all the objects placed within the Temple circuit, as are also the lavers
upon wheels,1476 which, if less striking as works of
art, were even more curious.
The
partnership established between the two kingdoms in connection with the
building and furnishing of the Jewish Temple, which lasted for seven years,1477 was further continued for thirteen
more1478 in connection with the construction
of Solomon's palace. This palace, like an Assyrian one, consisted of several
distinct edifices. "The chief was a long hall which, like the Temple, was encased in cedar; whence probably its name,
'The House of the Forest
of Lebanon.' In front of
it ran a pillared portico. Between this portico and the palace itself was a
cedar porch, sometimes called the Tower
of David. In this tower,
apparently hung over the walls outside, were a thousand golden shields, which
gave to the whole place the name of the Armoury. With a splendour that outshone
any like fortress, the tower with these golden targets glittered far off in the
sunshine like the tall neck, as it was thought, of a beautiful bride, decked
out, after the manner of the East, with strings of golden coins. This porch was
the gem and centre of the whole empire; and was so much thought of that a
smaller likeness to it was erected in another part of the precinct for the
queen. Within the porch itself was to be seen the king in state. On a throne of
ivory, brought from Africa or India,
the throne of many an Arabian legend, the kings of Judah were solemnly seated on the
day of their accession. From its lofty seat, and under that high gateway,
Solomon and his successors after him delivered their solemn judgments. That
'porch' or 'gate of justice' still kept alive the likeness of the old
patriarchal custom of sitting in judgment at the gate; exactly as the 'Gate of Justice'
still recalls it to us at Granada, and the Sublime Porte—'the Lofty Gate'—at
Constantinople. He sate on the back of a golden bull, its head turned over its
shoulder, probably the ox or bull of Ephraim; under his feet, on each side of
the steps, were six golden lions, probably the lions of Judah. This was 'the
seat of Judgment.' This was 'the throne of the House of David.'"1479
We
have dwelt the longer upon these matters because it is from the lengthy and
elaborate descriptions which the Hebrew writers give of these Phoenician
constructions at Jerusalem that we must form our conceptions, not only of the
state of Phoenician art in Hiram's time, but also of the works wherewith he
adorned his own capital. He came to the throne at the age of nineteen,1480 on the decease of his father, and
immediately set to work to improve, enlarge, and beautify the city, which in
his time claimed the headship of, at any rate, all Southern Phoenicia. He found
Tyre a city
built on two islands, separated the one from the other by a narrow channel, and
so cramped for room that the inhabitants had no open square, or public place,
on which they could meet, and were closely packed in overcrowded dwellings.1481 The primary necessity was to increase
the area of the place; and this Hiram effected, first, by filling up the
channel between the two islands with stone and rubbish, and so gaining a space
for new buildings, and then by constructing huge moles or embankments towards
the east, and towards the south, where the sea was shallowest, and thus turning
what had been water into land. In this way he so enlarged the town that he was
able to lay out a "wide space" (Eurychôrus)1482 as a public square, which, like the
Piazza di San Marco at Venice,
became the great resort of the inhabitants for business and pleasure. Having
thus provided for utility and convenience, he next proceeded to embellishment
and ornamentation. The old temples did not seem to him worthy of the renovated
capital; he therefore pulled them down and built new ones in their place. In
the most central part of the city1483 he erected a fane for the worship of
Melkarth and Ashtoreth, probably retaining the old site, but constructing an
entirely new building—the building which Herodotus visited,1484 and in which Alexander insisted on
sacrificing.1485 Towards the south-west,1486 on what had been a separate islet, he
raised a temple to Baal, and adorned it with a lofty pillar of gold,1487 or at any rate plated with gold.
Whether he built himself a new palace is not related; but as the royal
residence of later times was situated on the southern shore,1488 which was one of Hiram's additions to
his capital, it is perhaps most probable that the construction of this new
palace was due to him. The chief material which he used in his buildings was,
as in Jerusalem,
cedar. The substructions alone were of stone. They were probably not on so
grand a scale as those of the Jewish Temple, since the wealth of Hiram,
sovereign of a petty kingdom, must have fallen very far short of Solomon's,
ruler of an extensive empire.
At the
close of the twenty years during which Hiram had assisted Solomon in his
buildings, the Israelite monarch deemed it right to make his Tyrian brother
some additional compensation beyond the corn, and wine, and oil with which,
according to his contract, he had annually supplied him. Accordingly, he
voluntarily ceded to him a district of Galilee containing twenty cities, a
portion of the old inheritance of Asher,1489 conveniently near to Accho, of which
Hiram was probably lord, and not very remote from Tyre. The tract appears to
have been that where the modern Kabûl now stands, which is a rocky and bare
highland,1490—part of the outlying roots of
Lebanon—overlooking the rich plain of Akka or Accho, and presenting a striking
contrast to its fertility. Hiram, on the completion of the cession, "came
out from Tyre
to see the cities which Solomon had given him," and was disappointed with
the gift. "What cities are these," he said, "which thou hast
given me, my brother? And he called them the land of Cabul"—"rubbish"
or "offscourings"—to mark his disappointment.1491
But
this passing grievance was not allowed in any way to overshadow, or interfere
with, the friendly alliance and "entente cordiale" (to use a modern phrase)
which existed between the two nations. Solomon, according to one authority,1492 paid a visit to Tyre, and gratified his host by worshipping
in a Sidonian temple. According to another,1493 Hiram gave him in marriage, as a
secondary wife, one of his own daughters—a marriage perhaps alluded to by the
writer of Kings when he tells us that "King Solomon loved many strange
women together with the daughter of Pharaoh, women of the Moabites, Ammonites,
Edomites, Zidonians, and Hittites."1494 The closest commercial relations were
established between the two countries, and the hope of them was probably one of
the strongest reasons which attracted both parties to the alliance. The
Tyrians, on their part, possessed abundant ships; their sailors had full
"knowledge of the sea,"1495 and the trade of the Mediterranean was almost wholly in their hands. Solomon,
on his side, being master of the port of Ezion-Geber on the Red Sea, had access
to the lucrative traffic with Eastern Africa, Arabia, and perhaps India, which
had hitherto been confined to the Egyptians and the Arabs. He had also, by his
land power, a command of the trade routes along the Coele-Syrian valley, by Aleppo, and by Tadmor,
which enabled him effectually either to help or to hinder the Phoenician land
traffic. Thus either side had something to gain from the other, and a close
commercial union might be safely counted on to work for the mutual advantage of
both. Such a union, therefore, took place. Hiram admitted Solomon to a
participation in his western traffic; and the two kings maintained a conjoint
"navy of Tarshish,"1496 which, trading with Spain and the
West coast of Africa, brought to Phoenicia and Palestine "once in three
years" many precious and rare commodities, the chief of them being
"gold, and silver, ivory, and apes, and peacocks." Spain would yield the gold and the silver, for
the Tagus brought down gold,1497 and the Spanish silver-mines were the
richest in the world.1498 Africa would furnish in abundance the
ivory and the apes; for elephants were numerous in Mauritania,1499 and on the west coast,14100 in ancient times; and the gorilla14101 and the Barbary ape are well-known
African products. Africa may also have
produced the "peacocks," if tukkiyim are really
"peacocks," though they are not found there at the present day. Or
the tukkiyim may have been Guinea-fowl—a bird of the same class with the
peacock.
In
return, Solomon opened to Hiram the route to the East by way of the Red Sea. Solomon, doubtless by the assistance of
shipwrights furnished to him from Tyre, "made a navy of ships at
Ezion-Geber, which is beside Eloth, on the shore of the Red Sea, in the land of
Edom,"14102 and the sailors of the two nations
conjointly manned the ships, and performed the voyage to Ophir, whence they
brought gold, and "great plenty of almug-trees," and precious stones.14103 The position of Ophir has been much
disputed, but the balance of argument is in favour of the theory which places
it in Arabia, on the south-eastern coast, a
little outside the Straits of Bab-el-Mandeb.14104 It is possible that the fleet did
not confine itself to trade with Ophir, but, once launched on the Indian Ocean,
proceeded along the Atlantic coast to the Persian Gulf and the peninsula of Hindustan. Or Ophir may have been an
Arab emporium for the Indian trade, and the merchants of Syria may have
found there the Indian commodities, and the Indian woods,14105 which they seem to have brought back
with them to their own country. A most lucrative traffic was certainly
established by the united efforts of the two kings; and if the lion's share of
the profit fell to Solomon and the Hebrews,14106 still the Phoenicians and Hiram must
have participated to some considerable extent in the gains made, or the
arrangement would not have continued.
It is
thought that Hiram was engaged in one war of some importance. Menander tells
us, according to the present text of Josephus,14107 that the "Tityi" revolted
from him, and refused any longer to pay him tribute, whereupon he made an
expedition against them, and succeeded in compelling them to submit to his
authority. As the "Tityi" are an unknown people, conjecture has been
busy in suggesting other names,14108 and critics are now of the opinion
that the original word used by Menander was not "Tityi," but
"Itykæi." The "Itykæi" are the people of Utica: and, if this emendation be accepted,14109 we must regard Hiram as having had
to crush a most important and dangerous rebellion. Utica, previously to the
foundation of Carthage, was by far the most important of all the mid-African
colonies, and her successful revolt would probably have meant to Tyre the loss
of the greater portion, if not the whole, of those valuable settlements. A
rival to her power would have sprung up in the West, which would have crippled
her commerce in that quarter, and checked her colonising energy. She would have
suffered thus early more than she did four hundred years later by the great
development of the power of Carthage; would have lost a large portion of her
prestige; and have entered on the period of her decline when she had but lately
obtained a commanding position. Hiram's energy diverted these evils: he did not
choose that his kingdom should be dismembered, if he could anyhow help it; and,
offering a firm and strenuous opposition to the revolt, he succeeded in
crushing it, and maintaining the unity of the empire.
The
brilliant reign of Hiram, which covered the space of forty-three years, was not
followed, like that of Solomon, by any immediate troubles, either foreign or
domestic. He had given his people, either at home or abroad, constant
employment; he had consulted their convenience in the enlargement of his
capital; he had enriched them, and gratified their love of adventure, by his
commercial enterprises; he had maintained their prestige by rivetting their
yoke upon a subject state; he had probably pleased them by the temples and
other public buildings with which he had adorned and beautified their city.
Accordingly, he went down to the grave in peace; and not only so, but left his
dynasty firmly established in power. His son, Baal-azar or Baleazar, who was
thirty-six years of age, succeeded him, and held the throne for seven years,
when he died a natural death.14110 Abd-Ashtoreth (Abdastartus), the
fourth monarch of the house, then ascended the throne, at the age of twenty,
and reigned for nine years before any troubles broke out. Then, however, a time
of disturbance supervened. Four of his foster-brothers conspired against
Abd-Ashtoreth, and murdered him. The eldest of them seized the throne, and
maintained himself upon it for twelve years, when Astartus, perhaps a son of
Baal-azar, became king, and restored the line of Hiram. He, too, like his
predecessor, reigned twelve years, when his brother, Aserymus, succeeded him.
Aserymus, after ruling for nine years, was murdered by another brother, Pheles,
who, in his turn, succumbed to a conspiracy headed by the High Priest,
Eth-baal, or Ithobal.14111 Thus, while the period immediately
following the death of Hiram was one of tranquillity, that which supervened on
the death of Abd-Astartus, Hiram's grandson, was disturbed and unsettled. Three
monarchs met with violent deaths within the space of thirty-four years, and the
reigning house was, at least, thrice changed during the same interval.
At
length with Ithobal a more tranquil time was reached. Ithobal, or Eth-baal, was
not only king, but also High Priest of Ashtoreth, and thus united the highest
sacerdotal with the highest civil authority. He was a man of decision and
energy, a worthy successor of Hiram, gifted like him with wide-reaching views,
and ambitious of distinction. One of his first acts was to ally himself with
Ahab, King of Israel, by giving him his daughter, Jezebel, in marriage,14112 thus strengthening his land
dominion, and renewing the old relations of friendship with the Hebrew people.
Another act of vigour assigned to him is the foundation of Botrys, on the
Syrian coast, north of Gebal, perhaps a defensive movement against Assyria.14113 Still more enterprising was his
renewal of the African colonisation by his foundation of Aüza in Numidia,14114 which became a city of some
importance. Ithobal's reign lasted, we are told, thirty-two years. He was
sixty-eight years of age at his death, and was succeeded by his son, who is
called Badezor, probably a corruption of Balezor, or Baal-azar14115—the name given by Hiram to his son
and successor. Of Badezor we know nothing, except that he reigned six years,
and was succeeded by his son Matgen, perhaps Mattan,14116 a youth of twenty-three.
With
Matgen, or Mattan, whichever be the true form of the name, the internal history
of Tyre becomes
interesting. It appears that two parties already existed in the state, one
aristocratic, and the other popular.14117 Mattan, fearing the ascendancy of
the popular party, married his daughter, Elisa, whom he intended for his
successor, to her uncle and his own brother, Sicharbas, who was High Priest of
Melkarth, and therefore possessed of considerable authority in his own person.
Having effected this marriage, and nominated Elisa to succeed him, Mattan died
at the early age of thirty-two, after a reign of only nine years.14118 Besides his daughter, he had left
behind him a son, Pygmalion, who, at his decease, was but eight or nine years
old. This child the democratic party contrived to get under their influence,
proclaimed him king, young as he was, and placed him upon the throne. Elisa and
her husband retired into private life, and lived in peace for seven years, but
Pygmalion, being then grown to manhood, was not content to leave them any
longer unmolested. He murdered Sicharbas, and endeavoured to seize his riches.
But the ex-Queen contrived to frustrate his design, and having possessed
herself of a fleet of ships, and taken on board the greater number of the
nobles, sailed away, with her husband's wealth untouched, to Cyprus first, and
then to Africa.14119 Here, by agreement with the
inhabitants, a site was obtained, and the famous settlement founded, which
became known to the Greeks as "Karchêdon," and to the Romans as
"Carthago," or Carthage.
Josephus places this event in the hundred and forty-fourth year after the
building of the Temple
of Solomon,14120 or about B.C. 860. This date,
however, is far from certain.
It
appears to have been in the reign of Ithobal that the first contact took place
between Phoenicia and Assyria. About B.C. 885, a powerful and warlike monarch,
by name Asshur-nazir-pal, mounted the throne of Nineveh, and shortly engaged in a series of
wars towards the south, the east, the north, and the north-west.14121 In the last-named direction he crossed
the Euphrates at Carchemish (Jerablus), and,
having overrun the country between that river and the Orontes, he proceeded to
pass this latter stream also, and to carry his arms into the rich tract which
lay between the Orontes and the Mediterranean.
"It was a tract," says M. Maspero,14122 "opulent and thickly populated,
at once full of industries and commercial; the metals, both precious and
ordinary, gold, silver, copper, tin (?), iron, were abundant; traffic with Phoenicia
supplied it with the purple dye, and with linen stuffs, with ebony and with
sandal-wood. Asshur-nazir-pal's attack seems to have surprised the chief of the
Hittites in a time of profound peace. Sangar, King of Carchemish, allowed the
passage of the Euphrates to take place without
disputing it, and opened to the Assyrians the gates of his capital. Lubarna,
king of Kunulua, alarmed at the power of the enemy, and dreading the issue of a
battle, came to terms with him, consenting to make over to him twenty talents
of gold, a talent of silver, two hundred talents of tin, a hundred of iron,
2,000 oxen, 10,000 sheep, a thousand garments of wool or linen, together with
furniture, arms, and slaves beyond all count. The country of Lukhuti resisted,
and suffered the natural consequences—all the cities were sacked, and the
prisoners crucified. After this exploit, Asshur-nazir-pal occupied both the
slopes of Mount Lebanon, and then descended to the shores of the Mediterranean. Phoenicia
did not await his arrival to do him homage: the kings of Tyre,
Sidon, Gebal,
and Arvad, 'which is in the midst of the sea,' sent him presents. The Assyrians
employed their time in cutting down cedar trees in Lebanon
and Amanus, together with pines and cypresses, which they transported to Nineveh to be used in the
construction of a temple to Ishtar."
The
period of the Assyrian subjection, which commenced with this attack on the part
of Asshur-nazir-pal, will be the subject of the next section. It only remains
here briefly to recapitulate the salient points of Phoenician history under Tyre's first supremacy.
In the first place, it was a time of increased daring and enterprise, in which
colonies were planted upon the shores of the Atlantic Ocean, and trade extended
to the remote south, the more remote north, and the still more remote
north-east, to the Fortunate
Islands, the
Cassiterides, and probably the Baltic. Secondly, it was a time when the
colonies on the North African coast were reinforced, strengthened, and
increased in number; when the Phoenician yoke was rivetted on that vast
projection into the Mediterranean which divides that sea into two halves, and
goes far to give the power possessing it entire command of the Mediterranean
waters. Thirdly, it was a time of extended commerce with the East, perhaps the
only time when Phoenician merchant vessels were free to share in the trade of
the Red Sea, to adventure themselves in the Indian Ocean, and to explore the
distant coasts of Eastern Africa, Southern Arabia, Beloochistan,
India and Ceylon.
Fourthly, it was a time of artistic vigour and development, when Tyre herself
assumed that aspect of splendour and magnificence which thenceforth
characterised her until her destruction by Alexander, and when she so abounded
in æsthetic energy and genius that she could afford to take the direction of an
art movement in a neighbouring country, and to plant her ideas on that
conspicuous hill which for more than a thousand years drew the eyes of men
almost more than any other city of the East, and was only destroyed because she
was felt by Rome to be a rival that she could not venture to spare. Finally, it
was a time when internal dissensions, long existing, came to a head, and the
state lost, through a sudden desertion, a considerable portion of its strength,
which was transferred to a distant continent, and there steadily, if not
rapidly, developed itself into a power, not antagonistic indeed, but still, by
the necessity of its position, a rival power—a new commercial star, before
which all other stars, whatever their brightness had been, paled and waned—a
new factor in the polity of nations, whereof account had of necessity to be
taken; a new trade-centre, which could not but supersede to a great extent all
former trade-centres, and which, however unwillingly, as it rose, and advanced,
and prospered, tended to dim, obscure, and eclipse the glories of its
mother-city.
3. Phoenicia
during the period of its subjection to Assyria
(B.C.
877-635)
Phoenicia conquered by the Assyrians (about B.C. 877)—
Peaceful relations established (about B.C. 839)—Time of
quiet and prosperity—Harsh measures of Tiglath-pileser II.
(about B.C. 740)—Revolt of Simyra—Revolt of Tyre under
Elulæus—Wars of Elulæus with Shalmaneser IV. and with
Sennacherib—Reign of Abdi-Milkut—His war with Esarhaddon—
Accession of Baal—His relations with Esarhaddon and Asshur-
bani-pal—Revolt and reduction of Arvad, Hosah, and Accho—
Summary.
The
first contact of Phoenicia
with Assyria took place, as above observed, in
the reign of Asshur-nazir-pal, about the year B.C. 877. The principal cities,
on the approach of the great conquering monarch, with his multitudinous array
of chariots, his clouds of horse, and his innumerable host of foot soldiers,
made haste to submit themselves, sought to propitiate the invader by rich
gifts, and accepted what they hoped might prove a nominal subjection. Arvad,
which, as the most northern, was the most directly threatened, Gebal, Sidon,
and even the comparatively remote Tyre, sent their several embassies, made
their offerings, and became, in name at any rate, Assyrian dependencies. But
the real subjection of this country was not effected at this time, nor without
a struggle. Asshur-nazir-pal's yoke lay lightly upon his vassals, and during
the remainder of his long reign—from B.C. 877 to B.C. 860—he seems to have
desisted from military expeditions,14123 and to have exerted no pressure on
the countries situated west of the Euphrates.
It was not until the reign of his son and successor, Shalmaneser II., that the
real conquest of Syria and Phoenicia was
taken in hand, and pressed to a successful issue by a long series of
hard-fought campaigns and bloody battles. From his sixth to his twenty-first
year Shamaneser carried on an almost continuous war in Syria,14124 where his adversaries were the
monarchs of Damascus and Hamath, and "the twelve kings beside the sea,
above and below,"14125 one of whom is expressly declared to
have been "Mattan-Baal of Arvad."14126 It was not until the year B.C. 839
that this struggle was terminated by the submission of the monarchs engaged in
it to their great adversary, and the firm establishment of a system of
"tribute and taxes."14127 The Phoenician towns agreed to pay
annually to the Assyrian monarch a certain fixed sum in the precious metals,
and further to make him presents from time to time of the best products of
their country. Among these are mentioned "skins of buffaloes, horns of
buffaloes, clothing of wool and linen, violet wool, purple wool, strong wood,
wood for weapons, skins of sheep, fleeces of shining purple, and birds of
heaven."14128
The
relations of Phoenicia
towards the Assyrian monarchy continued to be absolutely peaceful for above a
century. The cities retained their native monarchs, their laws and
institutions, their religion, and their entire internal administration. So long
as they paid the fixed tribute, they appear not to have been interfered with in
any way. It would seem that their trade prospered. Assyria had under her
control the greater portion of those commercial routes across the continent of
Asia,14129 which it was of the highest
importance to Phoenicia
to have open and free from peril. Her caravans could traverse them with
increased security, now that they were safeguarded by a power whereof she was a
dependency. She may even have obtained through Assyria access to regions which
had been previously closed to her, as Media, and perhaps Persia. At any
rate Tyre seems
to have been as flourishing in the later times of the Assyrian dominion as at
almost any other period. Isaiah, in denouncing woe upon her, towards the close
of the dominion, shows us what she had been under it:—
Be silent (he says), ye inhabitants of the island,
Which the merchants of Zidon, that pass over the sea, have
replenished.
The corn of the Nile, on the broad waters,
The harvest of the River, has been her revenue:
She has been the mart of nations . . .
She was a joyful city,
Her antiquity was of ancient days . . .
She was a city that dispensed crowns;
Her merchants were princes,
And her traffickers the honourable of the earth.14130
A
change in the friendly feelings of the Phoenician cities towards Assyria first began after the rise of the Second or Lower
Assyrian Empire, which was founded, about B.C. 745, by Tiglath-pileser II.14131 Tiglath-pileser, after a time of
quiescence and decay, raised up Assyria to be
once more a great conquering power, and energetically applied himself to the
consolidation and unification of the empire. It was the Assyrian system, as it
was the Roman, to absorb nations by slow degrees—to begin by offering
protection and asking in return a moderate tribute; then to draw the bonds more
close, to make fresh demands and enforce them; finally, to pick a quarrel,
effect a conquest, and absorb the country, leaving it no vestige of
independence. Tiglath-pileser began this process of absorption in Northern Syria about the year B.C. 740. He rearranged the
population in the various towns, taking from some and giving to others,14132 adding also in most cases an
Assyrian element, appointing Assyrian governors,14133 and requiring of the inhabitants
"the performance of service like the Assyrians."14134 Among the places thus treated
between the years B.C. 740 and B.C. 738, we find the Phoenician cities of
Zimirra, or Simyra, and Arqa, or Arka. Zimirra was in the plain between the sea
and Mount Bargylus,
not very far from the island
of Aradus, whereof it was
a dependency. Arqa was further to the south, beyond the Eleutherus, and
belonged properly to Tripolis, if Tripolis had as yet been founded, or else to Botrys.
Both of them were readily accessible from the Orontes
valley along the course of the Eleutherus, and, being weak, could offer no
resistance. Tiglath-pileser carried out his plans, rearranged the populations,
and placed the cities under Assyrian governors responsible to himself. There
was no immediate outbreak; but the injury rankled. Within twenty years Zimirra
joined a revolt, to which Hamath, Arpad, Damascus,
and Samaria
were likewise parties, and made a desperate attempt to shake off the Assyrian
yoke.14135 The attempt failed, the revolt was
crushed, and Zimirra is heard of no more in history.
But
this was not the worst. The harsh treatment of Simyra and Arka, without
complaint made or offence given, after a full century of patient and quiet
submission, aroused a feeling of alarm and indignation among the Phoenician
cities generally, which could not fail to see in what had befallen their
sisters a foreshadowing of the fate that they had to expect one day themselves.
Beginning with the weakest cities, Assyria would naturally go on to absorb
those which were stronger, and Tyre herself, the
"anointed cherub,"14136 could look for no greater favour
than, like Ulysses in the cave
of Polyphemus, to be
devoured last. Luliya, or Elulæus, the king of Tyre at the time,14137 endeavoured to escape this calamity
by gathering to himself a strength which would enable him to defy attack. He
contrived to establish his dominion over almost the whole of Southern
Phoenicia—over Sidon,
Accho, Ecdippa, Sarepta, Hosah, Bitsette, Mahalliba, &c.14138—and at the same time over the
distant Cyprus,14139 where the Cittæans, or people of
Citium, held command of the island. After a time the Cittæans revolted from
him, probably stirred up by the Assyrians. But Elulæus, without delay, led an
expedition into Cyprus,
and speedily put down the rebellion. Hereupon the Assyrian king of the time,
Shalmaneser IV., the successor and probably the son of Tiglath-pileser II., led
a great expedition into the west about B.C. 727, and "overran all Syria and Phoenicia."14140 But he was unable to make any
considerable impression. Tyre and Aradus were
safe upon their islands; Sidon
and the other cities upon the mainland, were protected by strong and lofty
walls. After a single campaign, the Great King found it necessary to offer
terms of peace, which proved acceptable, and the belligerents parted towards
the close of the year, without any serious loss or gain on either side.14141
It
seemed necessary to adopt some different course of action. Shalmaneser had
discovered during his abortive campaign that there were discords and jealousies
among the various Phoenician cities; that none of them submitted without
repugnance to the authority of Tyre, and that Sidon especially had an
ancient ground of quarrel with her more powerful sister, and always cherished
the hope of recovering her original supremacy. He had seen also that the
greater number of the Phoenician towns, if he chose to press upon them with the
full force of his immense military organisation, lay at his mercy. He had only
to invest each city on the land side, to occupy its territory, to burn its
villas, to destroy its irrigation works, to cut down its fruit trees, to
interfere with its water-supply, and in the last instance to press upon it, to
batter down its walls, to enter its streets, slaughter its population, or drive
it to take refuge in its ships,14142 and he could become absolute master
of the whole Phoenician mainland. Only Tyre
and Aradus could escape him. But might not they also be brought into subjection
by the naval forces which their sister cities, once occupied, might be compelled
to furnish, and to man, or, at any rate, to assist in manning? Might not the
whole of Phoenicia
be in this way absorbed into the empire? The prospect was pleasing, and
Shalmaneser set to work to convert the vision into a reality. By his emissaries
he stirred up the spirit of disaffection among the Tyrian subject towns, and
succeeded in separating from Tyre, and drawing over to his own side, not only
Sidon and Acre and their dependencies, but even the city of Palæ-Tyrus itself,14143 or the great town which had grown up
opposite the island Tyre upon the mainland. The island Tyre seems to have been left without support
or ally, to fight her own battle singly. Shalmaneser called upon his new
friends to furnish him with a fleet, and they readily responded to the call,
placing their ships at his disposal to the number of sixty, and supplying him
further with eight hundred skilled oarsmen, not a sufficient number to dispense
with Assyrian aid, but enough to furnish a nucleus of able seamen for each
vessel. The attack was then made. The Assyro-Phoenician fleet sailed in a body
from some port on the continent, and made a demonstration against the Island City,
which they may perhaps have expected to frighten into a surrender. But the
Tyrians were in no way alarmed. They knew, probably, that their own countrymen
would not fight with very much zeal for their foreign masters, and they
despised, undoubtedly, the mixed crews, half skilled seamen, half tiros and
bunglers, which had been brought against them. Accordingly they thought it
sufficient to put to sea with just a dozen ships—one to each five of the enemy,
and making a sudden attack with these upon the adverse fleet, they defeated it,
dispersed it, and took five hundred prisoners. Shalmaneser saw that he had
again miscalculated; and, despairing of any immediate success, drew off his
ships and his troops, and retired to his own country. He left behind him,
however, on the mainland opposite the island Tyre, a certain number of his
soldiers, with orders to prevent the Tyrians from obtaining, according to their
ordinary practice, supplies of water from the continent. Some were stationed at
the mouth of the river Leontes (the Litany), a little to the north of Tyre, a
perennial stream bringing down a large quantity of water from Coele-Syria and
Lebanon; others held possession of the aqueducts on the south, built to convey
the precious fluid across the plain from the copious springs of Ras el Ain14144 to the nearest point of the coast
opposite the city. The continental water supply was thus effectually cut off;
but the Tyrians were resolute, and made no overtures to the enemy. For five
years, we are told,14145 they were content to drink such
water only as could be obtained in their own island from wells sunk in the
soil, which must have been brackish, unwholesome, and disagreeable. At the end
of that time a revolution occurred at Nineveh.
Shalmaneser lost his throne (B.C. 722), and a new dynasty succeeding, amid troubles
of various kinds, attention was drawn away from Tyre to other quarters; and
Elulæus was left in undisturbed possession of his island city for nearly a
quarter of a century.
It
appears that, during this interval, Elulæus rebuilt the power which Shalmaneser
had shattered and brought low, repossessing himself of Cyprus, or, at
any rate, of some portion of it,14146 and re-establishing his authority
over all those cities of the mainland which had previously acknowledged
subjection to him. These included Sidon,
Bit-sette, Sarepta, Mahalliba, Hosah, Achzib or Ecdippa, and Accho (Acre). There is some ground for thinking that he
transferred his own residence to Sidon,14147 perhaps for the purpose of keeping
closer watch upon the town which he most suspected of disaffection. The policy
of Sargon seems to have been to leave Phoenicia alone, and content himself with
drawing the tribute which the cities were quite willing to pay in return for
Assyrian protection. His reign lasted from B.C. 722 to B.C. 705, and it was not
until Sennacherib, his son and successor, had been seated for four years upon
the throne that a reversal of this policy took place, and war à outrance
was declared against the Phoenician king, who had ventured to brave, and had
succeeded in baffling, Assyria more than twenty years previously. Sennacherib
entertained grand designs of conquest in this quarter, and could not allow the
example of an unpunished and triumphant rebellion to be flaunted in the eyes of
a dozen other subject states, tempting them to throw off their allegiance. He
therefore, as soon as affairs in Babylonia ceased to occupy him, marched the
full force of the empire towards the west, and proclaimed his intention of
crushing the Phoenician revolt, and punishing the audacious rebel who had so
long defied the might of Assyria. The army
which he set in motion must have numbered more than 200,000 men;14148 its chariots were numerous,14149 its siege-train ample and well
provided.14150 Such terror did it inspire among
those against whom it was directed that Elulæus was afraid even to await
attack, and, while Sennacherib was still on his march, took ship and removed
himself to the distant island of Cyprus,14151 where alone he could feel safe from
pursuit and capture. But, though deserted by their sovereign, his towns seem to
have declined to submit themselves. No great battle was fought; but severally
they took arms and defended their walls. Sennacherib tells us that he took one
after another—"by the might of the soldiers of Asshur his lord"14152—Great Sidon, Lesser Sidon,
Bit-sette, Zarephath or Sarepta, Mahalliba, Hosah, Achzib or Ecdippa, and
Accho—"strong cities, fortresses, walled and enclosed, Luliya's
castles."14153 He does not claim, however, to have
taken Tyre, and we may conclude that the Island City
escaped him. But he made himself master of the entire tract upon the continent
which had constituted Luliya's kingdom, and secured its obedience by placing
over it a new king, in whom he had confidence, a certain Tubaal14154 (Tob-Baal), probably a Phoenician.
At the same time he rearranged the yearly tribute which the cities had to pay
to Assyria,14155 probably augmenting it, as a
punishment for the long rebellion.
We
hear nothing more of Phoenicia
during the reign of Sennacherib, except that, shortly after his conquest of the
tract about Sidon,
he received tribute, not only from the king whom he had just set over that
town, but also from Uru-melek, king of Gebal (Byblus), and Abd-ilihit, king of
Arvad.14156 The three towns represent, probably,
the whole of Phoenicia,
Aradus at this time exercising dominion over the northern tract, or that
extending from Mount Casius to the Eleutherus, Gebal or Byblus over the central
tract from the Eleutherus to the Tamyras, and Sidon,
in the temporary eclipse of Tyre, ruling the
southern tract from the Tamyrus to Mount Carmel.
It appears further,14157 that at some date between this
tribute-giving (B.C. 701) and the death of Sennacherib (B.C. 681) Tubaal must
have been succeeded in the government of Sidon by Abdi-Milkut, or Abd-Melkarth14158 ({...}), but whether this change was
caused by a revolt, or took place in the ordinary course, Tubaal dying and
being succeeded by his son, is wholly uncertain.
All
that we know is that Esarhaddon, on his accession, found Abd-Melkarth in revolt
against his authority. He had formed an alliance with a certain Sanduarri, king
of Kundi and Sizu,14159 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.14160 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,14161 "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.
The blank was filled up with "natives of the lands and seas of the
East"—prisoners taken in Esarhaddon's war with Babylon
and Elam, who, like the
Phoenicians themselves at a remote time, exchanged a residence on the shores of
the Persian Gulf for one on the distant Mediterranean.
An Assyrian general was placed as governor over the city, and its name changed
from Sidon to
"Ir-Esarhaddon."
It
seems to have been in the course of the same year that Esarhaddon held one of
those courts, or durbars, in Syria, which all subject monarchs
were expected to attend, and whereat it was the custom that they should pay
homage to their suzerain. Hither flocked almost all the neighbouring monarchs14162—Manasseh, king of Judah,
Qavus-gabri, king of Ammon, Zilli-bel, king of Gaza, Mitinti of Askelon,
Ikasamsu of Ekron, Ahimelek of Ashdod, together with twelve kings of the
Cyprians, and three Phoenician monarchs, Baal, king of Tyre, Milki-asaph, king
of Gebal, and Mattan-baal, king of Arvad. Tribute was paid, home rendered, and
after a short sojourn at the court, the subject-monarchs were dismissed. The
foremost position in Esarhaddon's list is occupied by "Baal, king of Tyre;" and this
monarch appears to have been received into exceptional favour. He had perhaps
been selected by Esarhaddon to rule Southern Phoenicia
on the execution of Abd-Melkarth. At any rate, he enjoyed for some time the
absolute confidence and high esteem of his suzerain. If we may venture to
interpret a mutilated inscription,14163 he furnished Esarhaddon with a
fleet, and manned it with his own sailors. Certainly, he received from
Esarhaddon a considerable extension of his dominions. Not only was his
authority over Accho recognised and affirmed, but the coast tract south of Carmel, as far as Dor, the important city Gebal, and the
entire region of Lebanon,
were placed under his sovereignty.14164 The date assigned to these events is
between B.C. 680 and B.C. 673. It was in this latter year that the Assyrian
monarch resolved on an invasion of Egypt. For fifty years the two
countries had been watching each other, counteracting each other's policy,
lending support to each other's enemies, coming into occasional collision the
one with the other, not, however, as principals, but as partakers in other
persons' quarrels. Now, at length there was to be an end of subterfuge and
pretences. Esarhaddon, about B.C. 673, resolved to attempt the conquest of Egypt. He
"set his face to go to the country of Magan and Milukha."14165 He let his intention be generally
known. No doubt he called on his subject allies for contingents of men, if not
for supplies of money. To Tyre
he must naturally have looked for no niggard or grudging support. What then
must have been his disgust and rage at finding that, at the critical moment, Tyre had gone over to the
enemy? Notwithstanding the favours heaped on him by his suzerain, "Baal,
king of Tyre, to Tirhakah, king of Ethiopia, his
country entrusted, and the yoke of Asshur threw off and made defiance."14166 Esarhaddon was too strongly bent on
his Egyptian expedition to be diverted from it by this defection; but in the
year B.C. 672, as he marched through Syria and Palestine on his way to attack
Tirhakah, he sent a detachment against Tyre, with orders to his officers to
repeat the tactics of Shalmaneser, by occupying points of the coast opposite to
the island Tyre, and "cutting off the supplies of food and water."14167 Baal was by this means greatly
distressed, and it would seem that within a year or two he made his submission,
surrendering either to Esarhaddon or to his son Asshur-bani-pal, in about the
year of the latter's accession (B.C. 668). It is surprising to find that he was
not deposed from his throne; but as the circumstances seem to have been such as
made it imperative on the Assyrian king to condone minor offences in order to
accomplish a great enterprise—the restoration of the Assyrian dominion over the
Nile valley. Esarhaddon had effected the conquest of Egypt in about the year B.C. 670,
and had divided the country into twenty petty principalities;14168 but within a year his yoke had been
thrown off, his petty princes expelled, and Tirhakah reinstated as sole monarch
over the "Two Regions."14169 It was the determination of Asshur-bani-pal,
on becoming king, to strain every nerve and devote his utmost energy to the
re-conquest of the ancient kingdom, so lightly won and so lightly lost by his
father. Baal's perfidy was thus forgiven or overlooked. A great expedition was
prepared. The kings of Phoenicia,
Palestine, and Cyprus were bidden once more to
assemble, to bring their tribute, and pay homage to their suzerain as he passed
on his way at the head of his forces towards the land of the Pharaohs. Baal
came, and again holds the post of honour;14170 with him were the king of
Judah—doubtless Manasseh, but the name is lost—the kings of Edom, Moab, Gaza,
Askelon, Ekron, Gebal, Arvad, Paphos, Soli, Curium, Tamassus, Ammochosta,
Lidini, and Aphrodisias, with probably those also of Ammon, Ashdod, Idalium,
Citium, and Salamis.14171 Each in turn prostrated himself at
the foot of the Great Monarch, paid homage, and made profession of fidelity.
Asshur-bani-pal then proceeded on his way, and the kings returned to their
several governments.
It is
about four years after this, B.C. 664, that we find Baal attacked and punished
by the Assyrian monarch. The subjugation of Egypt had been in the meantime,
though not without difficulty, completed. Asshur-bani-pal's power extended from
the range of Niphates to the First Cataract. Whether during the course of the four
years' struggle, by which the reconquest of Egypt was effected, the Tyrian
prince had given fresh offence to his suzerain, or whether it was the old
offence, condoned for a time but never forgiven, that was now avenged, is not
made clear by the Assyrian Inscriptions. Asshur-bani-pal simply tells us that,
in his third expedition, he proceeded against Baal, king of Tyre, dwelling in the midst of the sea, who
his royal will disregarded, and did not listen to the words of his lips.
"Towers round him," he says, "I raised, and over his people I
strengthened the watch; on sea and land his forts I took; his going out I
stopped. Water and sea-water, to preserve their lives, their mouths drank. By a
strong blockade, which removed not, I besieged them; their works I checked and
opposed; to my yoke I made them submissive. The daughter proceeding from his
body, and the daughters of his brothers, for concubines he brought to my
presence. Yahi-milki, his son, the glory of the country, of unsurpassed renown,
at once he sent forward, to make obeisance to me. His daughter, and the
daughters of his brothers, with their great dowries, I received. Favour I
granted him, and the son proceeding from his body, I restored, and gave him
back."14172 Thus Baal once more escaped the fate
he must have expected. Asshur-bani-pal, who was far from being of a clement
disposition, suffered himself to be appeased by the submission made, restored
Baal to his favour, and allowed him to retain possession of his sovereignty.
Another
Phoenician monarch also was, about the same time, threatened and pardoned. This
was Yakinlu, the king of Arvad, probably the son and successor of Mattan-Baal,
the contemporary of Esarhaddon.14173 He is accused of having been wanting
in submission to Asshur-bani-pal's fathers;14174 but we may regard it as probable
that his real offence was some failure in his duties towards Asshur-bani-pal
himself. Either he had openly rebelled, and declared himself independent, or he
had neglected to pay his tribute, or he had given recent offence in some other
way. The Phoenician island kings were always more neglectful of their duties
than others, since it was more difficult to punish them. Assyria did not even
now possess any regular fleet, and could only punish a recalcitrant king of
Arvad or Tyre by impressing into her service the
ships of some of the Phoenician coast-towns, as Sidon, or Gebal, or Accho. These towns were
not very zealous in such a service, and probably did not maintain strong
navies, having little use for them. Thus Yakinlu may have expected that his
neglect, whatever it was, would be overlooked. But Asshur-bani-pal was jealous
of his rights, and careful not to allow any of them to lapse by disuse. He let
his displeasure be known at the court of Yakinlu, and very shortly received an
embassy of submission. Like Baal, Yakinlu sent a daughter to take her place
among the great king's secondary wives, and with her he sent a large sum of
money, in the disguise of a dowry.14175 The tokens of subjection were
accepted, and Yakinlu was allowed to continue king of Arvad. When, not long
afterwards, he died,14176 and his ten sons sought the court of
Nineveh to prefer their claims to the succession, they were received with
favour. Azi-Baal, the eldest, was appointed to the vacant kingdom, while his
nine brothers were presented by Asshur-bani-pal with "costly clothing, and
rings."14177
Two
other revolts of two other Phoenician towns belong to a somewhat later period.
On his return from an expedition against Arabia, about B.C. 645,
Asshur-bani-pal found that Hosah, a small place in the vicinity of Tyre,14178 and Accho, famous as Acre in later times, had risen in revolt against their
Assyrian governors, refused their tribute, and asserted independence.14179 He at once besieged, and soon
captured, Hosah. The leaders of the rebellion he put to death; the plunder of
the town, including the images of its gods, and the bulk of its population, he
carried off into Assyria. The people of Accho,
he says, he "quieted." It is a common practice of conquerors "to
make a solitude and call it peace." Asshur-bani-pal appears to have
punished Accho, first by a wholesale massacre, and then by the deportation of
all its remaining inhabitants.
It is
evident from this continual series of revolts and rebellions that, however mild
had been the sway of Assyria over her
Phoenician subjects in the earlier times, it had by degrees become a hateful
and a grinding tyranny. Commercial states, bent upon the accumulation of
wealth, do not without grave cause take up arms and affront the perils of war,
much less do so when their common sense must tell them that success is almost
absolutely hopeless, and that failure will bring about their destruction. The
Assyrians were a hard race. Such tenderness as they ever showed to any subject
people was, we may be sure, in every case dictated by policy. While their power
was unsettled, while they feared revolts, and were uncertain as to their
consequences, their attitude towards their dependents was conciliating. When
they became fully conscious of the immense preponderance of power which they
wielded, and of the inability of the petty states of Asia
to combine against them in any firm league, they grew careless and confident,
reckless of giving offence, ruder in their behaviour, more grasping in their
exactions, more domineering, more oppressive. Prudence should perhaps have
counselled the Phoenician cities to submit, to be yielding and pliant, to
cultivate the arts of the parasite and the flatterer; but the people had still
a rough honesty about them. It was against the grain to flatter or submit
themselves; constant voyages over wild seas in fragile vessels kept up their
manhood; constant encounters with pirates, cannibals, and the rudest possible savages
made them brave and daring; exposure to storm, and cold, and heat braced their
frames; the nautical life developed and intensified in them a love of freedom.
The Phoenician of Assyrian times was not to be coaxed into accepting patiently
the lot of a slave. Suffer as he might by his revolts, they won him a certain
respect; it is likely that they warded off many an indignity, many an outrage.
The Assyrians knew that his endurance could not be reckoned on beyond a certain
point, and they knew that in his death-throes he was dangerous. The Phoenicians
probably suffered considerably less than the other subject nations under
Assyrian rule; and the maritime population, which was the salt of the people,
suffered least of all, since it was scarcely ever brought into contact with its
nominal rulers.
4. Phoenicia
during its struggles with Babylon and Egypt (about
B.C.
635-527)
Decline of Assyria—Scythic troubles—Fall of Nineveh—Union
of the Phoenician cities under Tyre—Invasion of Syria by
Neco—Battle of Megiddo—Submission of Phoenicia to Neco—
Tyrian colony at Memphis—Conquest of Phoenicia by
Nebuchadnezzar—Reign of Ithobal II. at Tyre—He revolts
from Nebuchadnezzar but is reduced to subjection—Decline of
Tyre—General weakness of Phoenicia under Babylon.
It is
impossible to fix the year in which Phoenicia
became independent of Assyria. The last trace
of Assyrian interference, in the way of compulsion, with any of the towns
belongs to B.C. 645, when she severely punished Hosah and Accho. The latest
sign of her continued domination is found in B.C. 636, when the Assyrian
governor of a Phoenician town, Zimirra, appears in the list of Eponyms.14180 It must have been very soon after
this that the empire became involved in those troubles and difficulties which
led on to its dissolution. According to Herodotus,14181 Cyaxares, king of Media, laid siege
to Nineveh in
B.C. 633, or very soon afterwards. His attack did not at once succeed; but it
was almost immediately followed by the irruption into South-western Asia of
Scythic hordes from beyond the Caucasus, which
overran country after country, destroying and ravaging at their pleasure.14182 The reality of this invasion is now
generally admitted. "It was the earliest recorded," says a modern
historian, "of those movements of the northern populations, hid behind the
long mountain barrier, which, under the name of Himalaya, Caucasus, Taurus,
Hæmus, and the Alps, has been reared by nature between the civilised and
uncivilised races of the old world. Suddenly, above this boundary, appeared
those strange, uncouth, fur-clad forms, hardly to be distinguished from their
horses and their waggons, fierce as their own wolves or bears, sweeping towards
the southern regions, which seemed to them their natural prey. The successive
invasions of Parthians, Turks, Mongols in Asia, of Gauls, Goths, Vandals, Huns
in Europe, have, it is well said, 'illustrated the law, and made us familiar
with its operations. But there was a time in history before it had come into
force, and when its very existence must have been unsuspected. Even since it
began to operate, it has so often undergone prolonged suspension that the
wisest may be excused if they cease to bear it in mind, and are as much
startled when a fresh illustration of it occurs, as if the like had never
happened before.'14183 No wonder that now, when the veil
was for the first time rent asunder, all the ancient monarchies of the
South—Assyria, Babylon, Media, Egypt, even Greece and Asia Minor—stood aghast
at the spectacle of these savage hordes rushing down on the seats of luxury and
power."14184 Assyria
seems to have suffered from the attack almost as much as any other country. The
hordes probably swarmed down from Media through the Zagros passes into the most
fruitful portion of the empire—the flat country between the mountains and the Tigris. Many of the old cities, rich with the accumulated
stores of ages, were besieged, and perhaps taken, and their palaces wantonly
burnt by the barbarous invaders. The tide then swept on. Wandering from
district to district, plundering everywhere, settling nowhere, the clouds of
horse passed over Mesopotamia, the force of the invasion becoming weaker as it
spread itself, until in Syria
it reached its term through the policy of the Egyptian king, Psamatik I. That
monarch bribed the nomads to advance no further,14185 and from this time their power began
to wane. Their numbers must have been greatly thinned in the long course of
battles, sieges, and skirmishes wherein they were engaged year after year; they
suffered also through their excesses;14186 and perhaps through intestine
dissensions. At last they recognised that their power was broken. Many bands
probably returned across the Caucasus into the
Steppe country. Others submitted and took service under the native rulers of Asia.14187 Great numbers were slain, and,
except in a province
of Armenia, which
thenceforward became known as Sacasêné,14188 and perhaps in one Syrian town,
which acquired the name of Scythopolis,14189 the invaders left no permanent trace
of their brief but terrible inroad.
The
shock of the Scythian irruption cannot but have greatly injured and weakened Assyria. The whole country had been ravaged and
depopulated; the provinces had been plundered, many of the towns had been taken
and sacked, the palaces of the old kings had been burnt,14190 and all the riches that had not been
hid away had been lost. Assyria, when the
Scythian wave had passed, was but the shadow of her former self. Her prestige
was gone, her armed force must have been greatly diminished, her hold upon the
provinces, especially the more distant ones, greatly weakened. Phoenicia is likely to have detached herself from
Assyria at latest during the time that the
Scyths were dominant, which was probably from about B.C. 630 to B.C. 610. When
Assyrian protection was withdrawn from Syria, as it must have been during
this period, and when every state and town had to look solely to itself for
deliverance from a barbarous and cruel enemy, the fiction of a nominal
dependence on a distant power could scarcely be maintained. Without any actual
revolt, the Phoenician cities became their own masters, and the speedy fall of Assyria before the combined attack of the Medes and
Babylonians,14191 after the Scythians had withdrawn,
prevented for some time any interference with their recovered independence.
A
double danger, however, impended. On the one side Egypt, on the other Babylon,
might be confidently expected to lay claim to the debatable land which nature
had placed between the seats of the great Asiatic and the great African power,
and which in the past had almost always been possessed by the one or the other
of them. Egypt
was the nearer of the two, and probably seemed the most to be feared. She had
recently fallen under the power of an enterprising native monarch, who had
already, before the fall of Assyria, shown that he entertained ambitious
designs against the Palestinian towns, having begun attacks upon Ashdod soon after he
ascended the throne.14192 Babylon was, comparatively speaking, remote
and had troublesome neighbours, who might be expected to prevent her from
undertaking distant expeditions. It was clearly the true policy for Phoenicia to temporise, to enter into no
engagements with either Babylon or Egypt, to
strengthen her defences, to bide her time, and, so far as possible, to
consolidate herself. Something like a desire for consolidation would seem to
have come over the people; and Tyre,
the leading city in all but the earliest times, appears to have been recognised
as the centre towards which other states must gravitate, and to have risen to
the occasion. If there ever was such a thing as a confederation of all the
Phoenician cities, it would seem to have been at this period. Sidon forgot her ancient rivalry, and
consented to furnish the Tyrian fleet with mariners.14193 Arvad gave not only rowers to man
the ships, but also men-at-arms to help in guarding the walls.14194 The "ancients of Gebal"
lent their aid in the Tyrian dockyards.14195 The minor cities cannot have
ventured to hold aloof. Tyre, as the time
approached for the contest which was to decide whether Egypt or Babylon
should be the great power of the East, appears to have reached the height of
her strength, wealth, and prosperity. It is now that Ezekial says of
her—"O Tyrus, thy heart is lifted up, and thou hast said, I am a God, I
sit in the seat of God in the midst of the seas—Behold, thou art wiser than
Daniel, there is no secret that they can hide from thee: from thy wisdom and
with thine understanding hast thou gotten thee riches, and hast gotten gold and
silver into thy treasures: by thy great wisdom and by thy traffick thou hast
increased thy riches, and thy heart is lifted up because of thy riches"14196; and again, "O thou that are
situated at the entry of the sea, which art the merchant of the peoples unto
many isles, thus saith the Lord God, Thou, O Tyre, hast said, I am perfect in
beauty. Thy borders are in the heart of the sea; thy builders have perfected
thy beauty. They have made all thy planks of fir-trees from Senir; they have
taken from Lebanon cedars to make masts for thee; of the oaks of Bashan have
they made thine oars; they have made thy benches of ivory, inlaid in boxwood,
from the isles of Kittim . . . The ships of Tarshish were thy caravans for thy
merchandise; and thou wast replenished, and made very glorious in the heart of
the sea."14197
The
first to strike of the two great antagonists was Egypt. Psamatik
I., who was advanced in years at the time of Assyria's downfall,14198 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,14199 with the object of bringing under
his dominion the entire tract between the River of Egypt (Wady el Arish) and
the Middle Euphrates. Already possessed of Ashdod14200 and perhaps also of Gaza14201 and Askelon,14202 he held the keys of Syria, and could
have no difficulty in penetrating along the coast route, through the rich plain
of Sharon, to the first of the mountain barriers which are interposed between
the Nile and the Mesopotamian region. His famous fleet14203 would support him along the shore,
at any rate as far Carmel;
and Dor and Accho would probably be seized, and made into depôts for his stores
and provisions. The powerful Egyptian monarch marching northward with his
numerous and well-disciplined army, partly composed of native troops, partly of
mercenaries from Asia Minor, Greeks and Carians, probably did not look to meet
with any opposition, till, somewhere in Northern Syria, he should encounter the
forces of Babylonia, which would of course be moved westward to meet him. What
then must have been his surprise when he found the ridge connecting Carmel with the highland
of Samaria occupied by a strong body of troops, and his further progress barred
by a foe who had appeared to him too insignificant to be taken into account?
Josiah, the Jewish monarch of the time, grandson of Manasseh and great-grandson
of Hezekiah, who, in the unsettled state of Western Asia, had united under his
dominion the entire country of the twelve tribes,14204 had quitted Jerusalem, and thrown
himself across the would-be conqueror's path in the strong and well-known
position of Megiddo. Here, in remote times, had the great Thothmes met and
defeated the whole force of Syria
and Mesopotamia under the king of Kadesh;14205 here had Deborah and Barak, the son
of Abinoam, utterly destroyed the mighty army of Jabin, king of Canaan, under Sisera.14206 Here now the gallant, if rash,
Judæan king elected to take his stand, moved either by a sense of duty, because
he regarded himself as a Babylonian feudatory, or simply determined to defend
the Holy Land against any heathen army that, without permission, trespassed on
it. In vain did Neco seek to induce Josiah to retire and leave the way open, by
assuring him that he had no hostile intentions against Judæa, but was marching
on Carchemish by the Euphrates,
there to contend with the Babylonians.14207 The Jewish king persisted in his
rash enterprise, and Neco was forced to brush him from his path. His seasoned
and disciplined troops easily overcame the hasty levies of Josiah; and Josiah
himself fell in the battle.
We
have no details with respect to the remainder of the expedition. Neco, no
doubt, pressed forward through Galilee and Coele-Syria towards the Euphrates. Whether he had to fight any further battles we
are not informed. It is certain that he occupied Carchemish,14208 and made it his headquarters, but
whether it submitted to him, or was besieged and taken, is unknown. All Syria, Phoenicia,
and Palestine
were overrun, and became temporarily Egyptian possessions.14209 But Phoenicia 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;14210 and we may suspect that it was Neco
who granted to Tyre the extraordinary favour of
settling a colony in the Egyptian capital, Memphis.14211 Probably Phoenicia accepted at the
hands of Neco the same sort of position which she had at first occupied under
Assyria, a position, as already explained, satisfactory to both parties.
But
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,14212 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 no unworthy 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, and is probably drawn from the life—"Lo, I
raise up the Chaldæans, 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."14213 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.14214 One of the "decisive battles of
the world" was impending. If Egypt conquered, Oriental civilisation would
take the heavy immovable Egyptian type; change, advance, progress would be
hindered; sacerdotalism in religion, conventionalism in art, pure unmitigated
despotism in government would generally prevail; all the throbbing life of Asia
would receive a sudden and violent check; Semitism would be thrust back;
Aryanism, just pushing itself to the front, would shrink away; the monotonous
Egyptian tone of thought and life would spread, like a lava stream, over the
manifold and varied forms of Asiatic culture; crushing them out, concealing
them, making them as though they had never been. The victory of Babylon, on the
other hand, would mean room for Semitism to develop itself, and for Aryanism to
follow in its wake; fresh stirs of population and of thought in Asia; further
advances in the arts; variety, freshness, growth; the continuance of the varied
lines of Oriental study and investigation until such time as would enable
Grecian intellect to take hold of them, sift them, and assimilate whatever in
them was true, valuable, and capable of expansion.
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."14215 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."14216 "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."14217 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."14218 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."14219 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.14220 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,"14221 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.14222 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.14223 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."14224 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,14225 who had developed its resources to
the uttermost, and was warmly supported by the other cities.14226 His revolt appears to have taken
place in the year B.C. 598, the seventh year of Nebuchadnezzar.14227 Nebuchadnezzar at once marched
against him in person. The sieges of Tyre, Sidon, and Jerusalem
were formed. Jerusalem
submitted almost immediately.14228 Sidon
was taken after losing half her defenders by pestilence;14229 but Tyre continued to resist for the long space
of thirteen years.14230 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:14231 "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,14232 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 view14233 admit that it must have submitted
and owned the suzerainty of its assailant. The date of the submission was B.C.
585.
Thus Tyre, in B.C. 585,
"fell from her high estate." Ezekiel's prophecies were fulfilled.
Ithobal II., the "prince of Tyrus" of those prophecies,14234 whose "head had been lifted
up," and who had said in his heart, "I am a God, I sit in the seat of
God, in the midst of the waters," who deemed himself "wiser than
Daniel," and thought that no secret was hid from him, was "brought
down to the pit," "cast to the ground," "brought to ashes
upon the earth in the sight of all them that beheld him."14235 Tyre herself was "broken in the midst of
the seas."14236 A blight fell upon her. For many
years, Sidon, rather than Tyre,
became once more the leading city of Phoenicia,
was regarded as pre-eminent in naval skill,14237 and is placed before Tyre when the two are
mentioned together.14238 Internal convulsion, moreover,
followed upon external decline. Within ten years of the death of Ithobal, the monarchy
came to an end by a revolution,14239 which substituted for Kings Suffetes
or Shophetim, "judges," officers of an inferior status, whose tenure
of office was not very assured. Ecnibal, the son of Baslach, the first judge,
held the position for no more than two months; Chelbes, the son of Abdæus, who
followed him, ruled for ten months; Abbarus, a high priest, probably of
Melkarth, for three months. Then, apparently to weaken the office, it was
shared between two, as at Carthage, and Mytgon
(perhaps Mattan), together with Ger-ashtoreth, the son of Abd-elim, judged Tyre for six years. But
the partisans of monarchy were now recovering strength; and the reign of a
king, Balator, was intruded at some point in the course of the six years'
judgeship. Judges were then abolished by a popular movement, and kings of the
old stock restored. The Tyrians sent to Babylon
for a certain Merbal, who must have been either a refugee or a hostage at the
court of Neriglissar. He was allowed to return to Tyre, and, being confirmed in the
sovereignty, reigned four years. His brother, Eirom, or Hiram, succeeded him,
and was still upon the throne when the Empire of Babylon came to an end by the
victory of Cyrus over Nabonidus (B.C. 538).
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,14240 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,14241 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,
and a new and hitherto unknown power was about to assume the first position
among the nations of the earth.
5. Phoenicia under the Persians (B.C.
528-333)
Phoenicia not claimed by Cyrus—Submits willingly to
Cambyses—Takes part in his invasion of Egypt—Refuses to
proceed against Carthage—Exceptional privileges enjoyed by
the Phoenicians under the Persians—Government system of
Darius advantageous to them—Their conduct in the Ionian
revolt—In the expeditions of Mardonius and Datis—In the
great expedition of Xerxes—Interruption of the friendly
relations between Phoenicia and Persia—Renewal of amity—
Services rendered to Persia between B.C. 465 and 392—
Amicable relations with Athens—Phoenicia joins in revolt of
Evagoras—Supports Tachos, king of Egypt—Declares herself
independent under Tennes—Conquered and treated with great
severity of Ochus—Sidonian dynasty of the Esmunazars.
The
conquest of Babylon
by Cyrus gave him, according to Oriental notions generally, a claim to succeed
to the inheritance of the entire Babylonian empire; but the claim would remain
dormant until it was enforced. The straggling character of the territory, which
was shaped like a Greek {L}, ascending from Babylon along the course of the
Euphrates to the Armenian mountains, and then descending along the line of the
Mediterranean coast as far as Gaza or Raphia, rendered the enforcement of the
claim a work of difficulty, more especially in the remote West, which was
distant fifteen hundred miles from Persia Proper, and more than a thousand
miles from Babylon. Cyrus, moreover, was prevented, first by wars in his
immediate neighbourhood,14242 and later on by a danger upon his
north-eastern frontier,14243 from taking the steps usually taken
by a conqueror to establish his dominion in a newly-annexed region, and thus he
neither occupied Syria with troops, nor placed it under the administration of
Persian governors. The only step which, so far as we know, he took, implying
that his authority reached so far, was the commission which he gave to
Zerubbabel and the other chiefs of the Jewish nation to proceed from Babylonia
to Judæa, and re-establish themselves, if they could, on the site of the
destroyed Jerusalem.14244 The return from the Captivity which
followed was in some sense the occupation of a portion of the extreme West by a
Persian garrison, and may be viewed as a step intended to be "preparatory
towards obtaining possession of the entire sea-coast;"14245 but it appears to have been an
isolated movement, effected without active Persian support, and one whereby the
neighbouring countries were only slightly affected.
That Phoenicia
retained her independence until the reign of Cambyses is distinctly implied, if
not actually asserted, by Herodotus.14246 She saw without any displeasure the
re-establishment in her neighbourhood of a nation with which her intercourse
had always been friendly, and sometimes close and cordial. Tyre and Sidon vied
with each other in their readiness to supply the returned exiles with the
timber which they needed for the rebuilding of their temple and city; and once
more, as in the days of Solomon, the Jewish axes were heard amid the groves of
Lebanon, and the magnificent cedars of that favoured region were cut down,
conveyed to the coast, and made into floats or rafts, which Phoenician mariners
transported by sea to Joppa, the nearest seaport to Jerusalem.14247 In return, the Jews willingly
rendered to the Phoenicians such an amount of corn, wine, and oil as was
equivalent in value to the timber received from them,14248 and thus the relations between the
two peoples were replaced on a footing which recalled the time of their closest
friendship, nearly five hundred years previously.
On the
death of Cyrus, and the accession of his son Cambyses, B.C. 529, the
tranquillity which South-western Asia had
enjoyed since the time of the wars of Nebuchadnezzar came to an end. Cyrus had,
it is said, designed an expedition against Egypt,14249 as necessary to round off his
conquests, and Cambyses naturally inherited his father's projects. He had no
sooner mounted the throne than he commenced preparations for an attack upon the
ancient kingdom of the Pharaohs, which, under the dynasty of the Psamatiks, had
risen to something of its early greatness, and had been especially wealthy and
prosperous under the usurper Amasis.14250 It was impossible to allow an
independent and rival monarchy so close upon his borders, and equally
impossible to shrink from an enterprise which had been carried to a successful
issue both by Assyria and by Babylon.
Persian prestige required the subjugation and absorption of a country which,
though belonging geographically to Africa, was politically and commercially an
integral part of that Western Asia over which Persia claimed a complete and
absolute supremacy.
The
march upon Egypt
implied and required the occupation of the Mediterranean seaboard. No armies of
any considerable size have ever attempted to traverse the almost waterless
desert which separates the Lower Euphrates valley from the delta of the Nile. Light corps d'armée have no doubt
occasionally passed from Circesium by way of Tadmor to Damascus, and vice
versâ;14251 but the ordinary line of route
pursued by conquerors follows the course of the Euphrates to Carchemish, then
strikes across the chalky upland in the middle of which stands the city of
Aleppo, and finally descends upon Egypt by way of the Orontes, the Coele-Syrian
valley, and the plains of Sharon and Philistia.14252 This was undoubtedly the line
followed by Cambyses,14253 and it necessarily brought him into
contact with the Phoenicians. The contact was not an hostile one. It would have
been madness on the part of the Phoenicians to have attempted any resistance to
the vast host with which Cambyses, we may be sure, made his invasion, and it
would have been folly on the part of Cambyses to employ force when he could
better obtain his object by persuasion. It must have been a very special object
with him to obtain the hearty co-operation of the Phoenician naval forces in
the attack which he was meditating, since he would otherwise have had no fleet
at all capable of coping with the fleet of Egypt. Neco had made Egypt a strong
naval power;14254 Apries had contented for naval
supremacy in the Eastern Mediterranean with Tyre;14255 Amasis had made an expedition by sea
against Cyprus, had crushed whatever resistance the Cyprians were able to
offer, had permanently occupied the island,14256 and added the Cyprian fleet to his
own. Cambyses had as yet no ships, except such as he could procure from the
Greek cities of Asia Minor, which were not
likely to be very zealous in his service, since they had friends engaged upon
the other side.14257 Accordingly, the Persian monarch
seems to have made friendly overtures to the Phoenician states, which were
received with favour, and led to an arrangement satisfactory to both parties. Phoenicia surrendered the independence which it
was impossible for her to maintain, and placed her fleet at the disposal of Persia.14258 Persia spared her cities any
occupation, imposed on her a light tribute, and allowed her that qualified
independence which is implied in the retention of her native princes. From
first to last under the Persian régime, Phoenician monarchs bear rule in
the Phoenician cities,14259 and command the contingents which
the cities furnish to any combined Persian fleet.
The
friendly arrangement concluded between Phoenicia
and Persia
was followed, very naturally, by a further accession to the Persian power. Cyprus, whose population was in great part
Phoenician, had for centuries been connected politically in the closest manner
with the Phoenician towns on the Asiatic mainland, especially with Tyre and Sidon.
Her enslavement by Amasis must have been hateful to her, and she must have been
only too glad to see an opportunity of shaking off the Egyptian yoke.
Accordingly, no sooner did the Phoenicians of the mainland conclude the
arrangement by which they became part and parcel of the Persian Empire than the
Cyprians followed their example, and, revolting from Egypt,
offered themselves of their own free will to Persia.14260 Cambyses, it is needless to say,
readily accepted them as his subjects.
The
invasion of Egypt
could now be taken in hand with every prospect of a successful issue. The march
of the land army along the shore would be supported by a parallel movement on
the part of a powerful fleet, which would carry its provisions and its water,
explore the country in front, and give notice of the movements of the enemy,
and of the place where they proposed to make a stand in force. When Egypt was reached the fleet would command all
the navigable mouths of the Nile, would easily establish a blockade of all
ports, and might even mount the Nile and take a part in the siege of Memphis. It would seem
that all these services were rendered to the Persian monarch by the great fleet
which he had collected, of which the Phoenician ships were recognised as the
main strength. The rapid conquest of Egypt
was in this way much facilitated, and Cambyses within a twelvemonth found
himself in possession of the entire country within its recognised limits of the
Mediterranean and "the tower
of Syêné."14261
But
the Great King was not satisfied with a single, albeit a magnificent,
achievement. He had accomplished in one short campaign what it took the
Assyrians ten years, and Nebuchadnezzar eighteen years, to effect. But he now
set his heart on further conquests. "He designed," says Herodotus,14262 "three great expeditions. One
was to be against the Carthaginians, another against the Ammonians, and a third
against the long-lived Ethopians, who dwelt in that part of Lybia which borders
upon the southern sea." The expedition against the Carthaginians is the
only one of the three which here concerns us: it was to be entrusted to the
fleet. Instead of conducting, or sending, a land force along the seaboard of
North Africa, which was probably known to be for the most part barren and
waterless, Cambyses judged that it would be sufficient to dispatch his powerful
navy against the Liby-Phoenician colony, which he supposed would submit or else
be subjugated. But on broaching this plan to the leaders of the fleet he was
met with a determined opposition. The Phoenicians positively refused to proceed
against their own colonists. They urged that they were bound to the
Carthaginians by most solemn oaths, and that it would be as wicked and
unnatural for them to execute the king's orders as for parents to destroy their
own children.14263 It was a bold act to run counter to
the will of a despotic monarch, especially of one so headstrong and impetuous
as Cambyses. But the Phoenicians were firm, and the monarch yielded. "He
did not like," Herodotus says, "to force the war upon the
Phoenicians, because they had surrendered themselves to the Persians, and
because on the Phoenicians his entire sea-service depended." He therefore
allowed their opposition to prevail, and desisted from his proposed
undertaking.14264
This
acquiescence in their wishes on the part of the Great King, and his abstinence
from any attempt at compulsion, would seem to have paved the way for that
thoroughly good understanding between the suzerain power and her dependency
which characterises the relations of the two for the next century and a half,
with the single exception of one short interval. "The navy of Phoenicia
became a regular and very important part of the public power"14265 of the Persian state. Complete
confidence was felt by their Persian masters in the fidelity, attachment, and
hearty good-will of the Phoenician people. Exceptional favour was shown them.
Not only were they allowed to maintain their native kings, their municipal
administration, their national laws and religion, but they were granted
exceptional honours and exceptional privileges and immunities. The Great King
maintained a park and royal residence in some portion of Phoenicia,14266 probably in the vicinity of Sidon,14267 and no doubt allowed his faithful
subjects to bask occasionally in the sunshine of his presence. When the
internal organisation of the empire was taken in hand, and something
approaching to a uniform system of government established for revenue purposes,
though Phoenicia
could not be excused from contributing to the taxation of the empire, yet the
burden laid upon her seems to have been exceptionally light. United in a
satrapy—the fifth—with Syria, Cyprus, and Palestine, and taxed according to her
population rather than according to her wealth, she paid a share—probably not
more than a third or a fourth—of 350 talents,14268 or an annual contribution to the
needs of the empire amounting to no less than 30,000l. Persia, moreover, encouraged Phoenicia to establish an internal organisation
of her own, and, under her suzerainty, Tyre, Sidon, and Aradus were
united by federal bonds, and had a common council, which met at Tripolis,
probably of three hundred members.14269 This council debated matters in
which Phoenicia
generally was interested, and, in times of disturbance, decided questions of
peace and war.
The
reign of Darius Hystaspis (B.C. 521-486), the successor of Cambyses upon the
Persian throne, introduced several changes into the Persian governmental system
which were of advantage to the Phoenicians. Darius united the most distant
parts of his empire by postal routes, along which at moderate intervals were
maintained post-houses, with relays of horses,14270 primarily for the use of the
government, but at the service of the traveller or private trader when not
needed for business of state. Phoenician commerce must have been much helped by
these arrangements, which facilitated rapid communication, gave security to
lines of route which had been previously infested with robbers, and provided
resting-places for the companies of merchants and traders, not unlike the
caravanserai of modern Turkey
and Persia.
Darius
also established throughout his vast empire a uniform coinage, based apparently
on that which had previously prevailed in Lydia. His "darics," as
they were called by the Greeks, were, in the first instance, gold coins of a
rude type, a little heavier than our sovereigns, weighing between 123 and 124
grains troy.14271 They bore the figure of an archer on
the obverse, and on the reverse a very rough and primitive quadratum incusum.
Darius must have coined them in vast abundance, since early in the reign of his
successor a single individual of no great eminence had accumulated as many as
3,993,000 of them.14272 Subsequently to the introduction of
the gold darics, a silver coinage was issued, originally (we are told) in Egypt by a
Persian satrap called Aryandes,14273 but afterwards by the central
government. The name of "daric" was extended to these coins also,
which, however, were much larger and heavier than the gold coins, weighing as
much as 235 grains, and corresponding to the Greek tetradrachm, and (nearly) to
the Hebrew shekel. The establishment of this excellent circulating medium, and
the wide extension which it almost immediately attained, must have given an
enormous stimulus to trade, and have been found of the greatest convenience by
the Phoenician merchants, who had no longer to carry with them the precious
metal in bars or ingots, and to weigh their gold and silver in the balance in
connection with every purchase that they made, but could effect both sales and
purchases in the simple and commodious manner still in use among all civilised
nations at the present day.
Under
these circumstances we can well understand that the Phoenicians were thoroughly
satisfied with the position which they occupied under the earlier Persian
kings, and strove zealously to maintain and extend the empire to which they
owed so much. Their fidelity was put to a crucial test after they had been
subjects of Darius Hystaspis for a little more than twenty years, and had had
about fourteen or fifteen years' experience of the advantages of his
governmental system. Aristagoras of Miletus, finding himself in a position of
difficulty, had lighted up the flames of war in Asia Minor, and brought about a
general revolt of the Greeks in those parts against the Persian power—a revolt
which spread on from the Greeks to the native Asiatics, and in a short time
embraced, not only Ionia and Æolis, but Caria, Caunus, and almost the whole of
Cyprus.14274 The bulk of the Cyprian cities were
Phoenician colonies, and the political connection between these cities and Phoenicia was
so close and of such ancient date that the Phoenicians can scarcely have failed
to be moved by their example and by their danger. A wave of sympathy might have
been expected to sweep across the excitable people, and it would not have been
surprising had they rushed headlong into rebellion with the same impetuosity as
their Cyprian brethren. Had they done so the danger to Persia would
have been very great, and the course of the world's history might perhaps have
been differently shaped. The junction of the Phoenician fleet with the navies
of Cyprus, Ionia, Caria, and
Æolis would have transferred the complete sovereignty of the Eastern
Mediterranean to the side of the rebels.14275 The contagion of revolt would probably
have spread. Lycia and Cilicia, always eager for independence,14276 would probably have joined the
malcontents; Pamphylia, which lay between them, would have followed their
example; the entire seaboard of Asia Minor and Syria would have been lost;
Egypt would, most likely, have seen in the crisis her opportunity, and have
avenged the cruelties and insults of Cambyses14277 by the massacre of her Persian
garrison. Persia's
prosperity would have received a sudden check, from which it might never have
recovered; Greece would have
escaped the ordeal of the invasion of Xerxes; and the character of the struggle
between Europe and Asia would have been
completely altered.
But
the view which the Phoenicians took of their duties, or of their interests, led
them to act differently. When the Persians, anxious to recover Cyprus, applied
to the Phoenician cities for a naval force, to transport their army from Cilica
to the island, and otherwise help them in the war, their request was at once
complied with. Ships were sent to the Cilician coast without any delay;14278 the Persian land force was conveyed
in safety across the strait and landed on the opposite shore; the ships then
rounded Cape St. Andreas and anchored in the bay opposite Salamis, where the
Ionian fleet was drawn up in defence of the town.14279 An engagement followed—the first, so
far as we know, between Phoenicians and Greeks—wholly to the advantage of the
latter.14280 No complaint, however, is made of
any lukewarmness, or want of zeal, on the part of the Phoenicians, who seem to
have been beaten in fair fight by an enemy whom they had perhaps despised.
Their ill fortune did not lead to any very serious result, since the Persian
land force defeated the Cyprians, and thus Persia once more obtained
possession of the island.
A year
or two later the Phoenicians recovered their lost laurels. In B.C. 495 the
Persians, having trampled out the flames of revolt in Cyprus, Caria, and Caunus, resolved on a great
effort to bring the war to a close by attacking the Ionian Greeks in their own
country, and crushing the head and front of the rebellion, which was the great
and flourishing city of Miletus.
Miletus lay on the southern shore of a deep
bay—the Sinus Latmicus—which penetrated the western coast of Asia
Minor in about Lat. 37º 30´, but which the deposits of the Mæander
have now filled up.14281 North-west of the town, at the
distance of about a mile, was the small island of Ladé, now a mere hillock on
the flat alluvial plain. While the Persian land force advanced along the shore,
and invested Milestus on the side towards the continent, a combined fleet of
six hundred vessels14282 proceeded to block the entrance to
the bay, and to threaten the doomed city from the sea. This fleet was drawn
from four only of the countries subject to Persia—viz. Phoenicia, Cilicia,
Cyprus, and Egypt—whereof Phoenicia, we are told, "showed the greatest
zeal,"14283 and we may presume furnished by far
the larger number of ships. On their arrival in Milesian waters the captains
found a strong naval force collected to meet them, which rested upon the island of Ladé, and guarded the approaches to the
town. Miletus had summoned to her aid the
contingents of her various allies—Chios, Lesbos, Samos,
Teos, Priene, Erythræ, Phocæa, Myus—and had succeeded in gathering together a
fleet amounting to above three hundred and fifty vessels.14284 This time Phoenicia did not despise her foe.
Before engaging, every effort was made to sow discord and dissension among the
confederates, and induce the Greek captains to withdraw their squadrons, or at
any rate to remain neutral in the battle.14285 Considerable effect was produced by
these machinations; and when at last the attack was made, two of the principal
of the Greek allies14286 drew off, and sailed homewards,
leaving the rest of the confederates to their fate. Yet, notwithstanding this
defection, the battle was stoutly contested by the ships which remained,
especially those of the Chians,14287 and though a very decisive and
complete victory was ultimately gained by the Phoenicians and their allies, the
cost of the victory was great. Persia regained her naval supremacy in the
Eastern Mediterranean; Phoenicia re-established her claim to be considered the
great sea power of the time; but she lost a large number of her best vessels
and seamen, and she was taught the lesson that, to cope with Greeks, she must
have a vast superiority of force upon her side—a superiority of not much less
than three to one.
Miletus
soon fell after the victory of Ladé, and the Phoenician fleet was then employed
for some time in chastising the islanders who had taken part in the revolt, and
in reducing various towns upon the European shores of the Hellespont, the
Propontis, and the Bosphorus, including Perinthus, Selymbria, and Byzantium.14288 Miltiades, the destined hero of
Marathon, narrowly escaped capture at the hands of the Phoenicians at this
time, as he fled from his government in the Thracian Chersonese to Athens. The vessel which
bore him just escaped into the harbour
of Imbrus; but his son,
Metiochus, who was on board a worse sailer, was less fortunate. The Phoenicians
captured him, and, learning who he was, conveyed him to Darius at Susa, where he was well
treated and became a naturalised Persian.14289
After
the Ionian revolt had been completely put down and avenged, the states subject
to Persia,
and the Phoenicians among them, enjoyed a brief period of repose. But soon the
restless spirit which possessed all the earlier Persian monarchs incited Darius
to carry his warlike enterprises into "fresh fields and pastures
new." From the eastern coast of the Ægean Sea
he looked out towards a land possessing every attraction that soil or clime
could offer, fertile, rich in minerals, and with many excellent harbours, well
watered, abounding in corn and wine and oil, in wooded hillsides, and in
productive plains. According to Herodotus,14290 he had already explored the strength
and weakness of the region by means of a commission of Persian nobles, who had
surveyed all the shores of Greece
from the decks of Phoenician ships. The result was that he coveted the
possession of the land thus made known to him, and came to a fixed resolution
that he would add it to his territories.
There
were two modes by which Greece
might be approached from Asia. Bridges of
boats could be thrown across the Bosphorus or the Hellespont, mere salt rivers,
scarcely more formidable than the streams of the Euphrates and the Tigris. In this way Europe could be invaded in force, and
the army sent across the straits, could pursue its way along the shore till it
reached the rich plains of Thessaly, and from Thessaly passed into Boetia,
Attica, and the Peloponnese. Or a fleet, with
a land force on board, might proceed from Asia Minor across the Ægean, where
the numerous islands, scattered at short intervals, seemed to have been
arranged by nature as stepping-stones, whereby the adventurous denizens of
either continent might cross easily into the other; and a landing might be
suddenly effected near the very heart of Greece without a tenth part of the
trouble that must be taken if the other line of route were pursued. In either
case the attendance of a fleet would be necessary. If the more circuitous route
were pursued, a powerful squadron must attend the march of the army along the
shore, to convey its supplies; if the direct route were preferred, a still
larger fleet would be necessary for the conveyance, not only of the supplies,
but of the army itself. Darius gave a trial to each of the two plans. In the
year B.C. 492 he sent a fleet and army under Mardonius by way of the Hellespont
and the European coast; but this expedition met with severe disasters, the
fleet being shattered by a storm off Mount Athos, and the land force greatly
damaged by a night attack on the part of the Thracians.14291 Two years later he dispatched the
famous expedition under Datis and Artaphernes, which took its course through
the islands, and landed perhaps 200,000 men on the plain of Marathon,14292 but being there defeated by
Miltiades, returned hastily to Asia by the sea route. The fleets employed on
both these occasions were numerous,14293 and appear to have been collected
from several of the Persian maritime states;14294 the proportion which the several
contingents bore one to another is not stated, but there can be little doubt
that the Phoenicians contributed the greater number. We have no details of the
conduct of the Phoenicians on either occasion, beyond a casual notice that in
the expedition of Datis and Artaphernes one of their vessels plundered the
temple of Delium on the Boeotian coast opposite Chalcis, carrying off from it
an image of Apollo plated with gold.14295 The superstition of Datis deprived
them of this valuable booty; but we may safely conclude from the anecdote that,
while rendering service to Persia,
the keen-witted mariners took care not to neglect their own material interests.
In the
third and greatest of the expeditions conducted by Persia
against Greece,
the Phoenicians are found to have played a very important and prominent part.
Even before the expedition commenced, a call was made upon them in connection
with it for services of an unusual character. The loss of the fleet of
Mardonius off Mount Athos induced Xerxes to determine on cutting a ship-canal
through the isthmus which joins Athos to the mainland; and his passion for
great and striking achievements caused him to project the construction of a
double bridge of boats across the Hellespont.
Phoenician technical skill was invoked for the furtherance of both objects. At
Athos they worked in conjunction with the maritime states generally, but showed
an amount of engineering knowledge far in advance of their fellow-labourers.
The others attempted to give perpendicular sides to their portions of the
excavation, but found the sides continually fall in, and so (as Herodotus
observes) "had double labour."14296 The Phoenicians alone knew that the
sides must be sloped at an angle, and, calculating the proper slope aright,
performed their share of the task without mishap. At the Hellespont
the Phoenicians had for co-partners the Egyptians only, and the two nations
appear to have displayed an equal ability.14297 Cables were passed from shore to
shore, made taut by capstans and supported by an almost continuous line of
boats; planks were then laid upon the cables, and covered with brushwood, while
a thick layer of earth was placed upon the top. A solid causeway was thus
formed, which was guarded on either side by bulwarks of such a height that the
horses which crossed the bridge could not see over them; and thus the cavalry and
the sumpter beasts passed from one continent to the other without a suspicion
that they had ever had anything but terra firma under them. The
structure served its purpose, but was not found strong enough to defy even for
a year the forces of the winds and waves. Before the return of Xerxes, towards
the close of B.C. 480, the autumnal gales had broken it up; and the army which
accompanied him had to re-cross the strait in a number of separate ships.14298
The
fleet which Xerxes collected to accompany his land army and take part in his
great expedition amounted, it is said, to a total of 1207 vessels.14299 Of these the Phoenician triremes
were at once the most numerous and the best. While Egypt
furnished 200 ships, Cyprus
150, Cilicia, Ionia, and the Hellespontine Greeks 100 each, and the other
maritime nations, all together, 257, Phoenicia singly contributed no
fewer than 300.14300 The superiority of the Phoenician
vessels was sufficiently shown, first by the regatta at Abydos, which was won
by a Sidonian trireme;14301 next, by the preference of Xerxes
for Phoenician over other vessels;14302 and, thirdly, by the position
assigned them at Salamis, where care was taken to pit them against the
Athenians,14303 who were recognised as superior at
sea to all the other Greeks. If the Phoenician prowess and naval skill did not
succeed in averting defeat from the Persians, we must ascribe it first to the
narrowness of the seas in which they had to engage the enemy; and, secondly, to
the still greater prowess and skill of their principal antagonists, the
Athenians, the Eginetans, and the Corinthians.
In the
naval combats at Artemisium, the Egyptians, according to Herodotus,14304 were considered to have borne off
the palm on the Persian side; but Diodorus assigns that honour to the
Sidonians.14305 At Salamis the brunt of the conflict fell on the
Phoenician contingent, which began the battle,14306 and for some time forced the
Athenian squadron to beat a retreat, but was ultimately overpowered and forced
to take to flight, after suffering great losses. A large number of the ships
were sunk; several were taken by the Greeks; comparatively few escaped from the
battle without serious injury.14307 Xerxes, however, who from his
silver-footed throne on Mount Ægaleos surveyed the scene,14308 but, amid the general turmoil and
confusion, could ill distinguish the conduct of the several contingents,
enraged at the loss of the battle, and regarding the Phoenicians as answerable
for the unhappy result, since they formed the nucleus and chief strength of the
fleet, laid the whole blame of the failure upon them, and, on some of the
captains appearing before him to excuse themselves, had them beheaded upon the
spot.14309 At the same time he also threatened
the other Phoenician commanders with his vengeance, and so alarmed them that,
according to Diodorus,14310 they quitted the fleet and sailed
away to Asia.
This
harsh and unjust treatment seems to have led to an estrangement between the
Persians and the foremost of the naval nations subject to them, which lasted
for fifteen years. The Persians naturally distrusted those whom they had
injured, and were unwilling to call them in to their aid. The Phoenicians
probably brooded over their wrongs, and abstained from volunteering an
assistance which they were not asked to furnish. The war between Persia and Greece
continued, and was transferred from Europe to Asia,
but no Phoenicians are mentioned as taking part in it. The Phoenician ships
retired from Samos on the approach of the
Greek fleet under Leotychides.14311 No Phoenicians fought at Mycale. None are heard of as engaged at Sestos, or Byzantium, or Eïon, or
Doriscus, or even Phaselis. It was not until—in B.C. 465—the war passed from
the Ægean to the southern coast of Asia Minor, and their dependency, Cyprus,
was threatened, that the Phoenicians again appeared upon the scene, and
mustered in strength to the support of their Persian suzerain.
The
Persian fleet which fought at the Eurymedon is said to have consisted of three
hundred and forty vessels, drawn from the three subject nations of the
Phoenicians, the Cyprians, and the Cilicians.14312 It was under the command of
Tithraustes, a son of Xerxes. Cimon, who led the fleet of the Athenians and
their allies, attacked it with a force of 250 triremes, of which Athens had furnished the
greater number. The battle was contested with extreme obstinacy on both sides;
but at length the Athenians prevailed, and besides destroying a large number of
the enemy's vessels, took as many as a hundred with their crews on board. At
the same time a land victory was gained over the Persian troops. The double
exploit was regarded as one of the most glorious in the annals of Greece, and was commemorated at Delos by a tablet with the following inscription:—14313
Since first the sea Europe from Asia severed,
\ And Mars to rage 'mid humankind began,
Never was such a blow as this delivered
\ On land and sea at once by mortal man.
These heroes did to death a host of Medes
\ Near Cyprus, and then captured with their crews
\ Five score Phoenician vessels; at the news
All Asia groaned, hard hit by such brave deeds.
It is
scarcely necessary to follow further in detail the services which Phoenicia rendered to Persia as her submissive and
attached ally. For the space of about seventy-five years from the date of the
engagement at the Eurymedon (B.C. 465-390), the Phoenicians continued to hold
the first place among the Persian naval states, and to render their mistress
effective help in all her naval enterprises. They protected Cyprus and Egypt from the Athenian attacks,
bore their part in the war with Amyrtæus and Inaros, and more than once
inflicted severe blows upon the Athenian navy.14314 It was his command of a Phoenician
fleet amounting to nearly a hundred and fifty triremes which enabled
Tissaphernes to play so influential a part in Asia Minor
during the later years of the Peloponnesian war. It was the presence of their
ships at Cnidus which, in B.C. 394, turned the
scale between Athens and Sparta, enabling the Athenians to recover the
naval supremacy which they had lost at Ægos-Potami. It was the appearance of a
Phoenician fleet in Greek waters14315 which, in the following year, gave
an opportunity to the Athenians to rebuild their "Long Walls,"
alarmed Sparta for her own safety, and extorted from her fears—in B.C. 387—the
agreement known as "the Peace of Antalcidas." Persia owed to her Phoenician subjects the glory
of recovering complete possession of Asia Minor,
and of being accepted as a sort of final arbiter in the quarrels of the Grecian
states. From B.C. 465 to B.C. 392 Phoenicia
served Persia
with rare fidelity, never hesitating to lend her aid, and never showing the
least inclination to revolt.
It was
probably under these circumstances, when Athens
owed the recovery of her greatness in no small measure to the Phoenicians, that
those relations of friendship and intimacy were established between the two
peoples of which we have evidence in several inscriptions. Phoenicians settled
in Attica, particularly at Phalerum and the
Piræus, and had their own places of worship and interment. Six sepulchral
inscriptions have been found, either in Athens
itself or at the Piræus,14316 five of them bilingual,14317 which mark the interment in Attic
soil of persons whose nationality was Phoenician. They had monuments erected
over them, generally of some pretension, which must have obtained as much
respect as the native tombstones, since otherwise they could not have endured
to our day. There is also at the Piræus an altar,14318 which a Phoenician must have erected
and dedicated to a Phoenician god, whom he worshipped on Attic soil apparently
without let or hindrance. The god's name is given as "Askum-Adar," a
form which does not elsewhere recur, but which is thought to designate the god
elsewhere called Sakon, who corresponded to the Grecian Hermes.14319 Moreover, there is evidence of the
Phoenicians having worshipped two other deities in their Attic abodes, one a
god who corresponded to the Greek Poseidon and the Roman Neptune, the other the
Babylonian and Assyrian Nergal. Among the lost orations of Deniarchus was one
delivered by that orator on the occasion of the suit between the people of
Phalerum and the Phoenician inhabitants of the place with respect to the
priesthood of Poseidon;14320 and a sepulchral monument at the
Piræus was erected to Asepta, daughter of Esmun-sillem, of Sidon, by Itten-bel,
son of Esmun-sibbeh, high priest of the god Nergal.14321 It appears further from the Greek
inscription, edited by Böckh,14322 that about this time (B.C. 390-370)
a decree was promulgated by the Council {bonle} of Athens whereby the relation
of Proxenia was established between Strato (Abd-astartus), king of Sidon, and
the Athenian people, and all Sidonians sojourning in Attica were exempted from
the tax usually charged upon foreign settlers, from the obligation of the
Choregia, and from all other contributions to the state.
The
power of Persia
began about this time to decline, and the Phoenicians seem to have wavered in
their allegiance. In B.C. 406 or 405 Egypt shook off the Persian yoke,
and established her independence under a native sovereign.14323 Soon afterwards, probably in B.C.
392 or 391, Evagoras, a Cypriot Greek, who claimed descent from Teucer,
inaugurated a revolution at Salamis in Cyprus, where he slew the Phoenician monarch,
Abdemon, who held his throne under Persia, and, himself mounting the
throne, proceeded to reduce to subjection the whole island.14324 Vast efforts were made to crush him,
but for ten years he defied the power of Persia, and maintained himself as
an independent monarch.14325 Even when finally he made his
submission, it was under an express stipulation that he should retain his royal
dignity, and be simply bound to pay his tribute regularly, and to render such
obedience as subject kings commonly paid to their suzerain.14326
In the
course of his resistance to Persia,
it is beyond question that Evagoras received a certain amount of support from Phoenicia; but
the circumstances under which the support was given was doubtful. According to
Isocrates,14327 he equipped a large fleet, and
attacked the Phoenicians on the mainland with so much vigour as even to take
the great city of Tyre by assault; but Diodorus says nothing of the attack, and
it is conjectured that the contagion of revolt, which certainly affected, more
or less, Cyprus, Cilicia, Caria, and some of the Syrian Arabs,14328 spread also thus early to Phoenicia,
and that "the surrender of Tyre was a voluntary defection."14329 In that case, we must view Phoenicia, or at any rate a portion of it, as
having detached itself from Persia,
about B.C. 390, sixty years before the final break-up of the Empire.
But
the disaffection of Phoenicia
does not become open and patent until about thirty years later. The decline of Persia had
continued. In B.C. 375 an attempt to recover Egypt, for which a vast armament
had been collected under Pharnabazus and Iphicrates, completely failed.14330 Nine years afterwards, in B.C. 366,
the revolt of the satraps began. First Ariobarzanes, satrap of Phrygia,
renounced his allegiance, and defended himself with success against
Autophradutes, satrap of Lydia,
and Mausolus, native king of Caria under Persia. Then Aspis, who held a part
of Cappadocia, revolted and maintained himself
by the help of the Pisidians, until he was overpowered by Datames. Next Datames
himself, satrap of the rest of Cappadocia,
understanding that the mind of the Persian king was poisoned against him, made
a treaty with Ariobarzanes, and assumed an independent attitude in his own
province. Finally, in B.C. 362, there seems to have been something like a
general revolt of the western provinces, in which the satraps of Mysia,
Phrygia, and Lydia, Mausolus
prince of Caria, and the peoples of Lycia,
Pisidia, Pamphylia, Cilicia, and Syria participated.14331 Then, if not earlier, Phoenicia
openly threw in her lot with the disaffected;14332 refused her tribute like the others,
and joined her forces with theirs. Nor, when the rebellion collapsed, did she
at once return to her allegiance. When Tachos, native king of Egypt, in B.C. 361, having secured the services
of Agesilaus and Chabrias, advanced boldly into Syria,
with the object of enlarging his own dominions at the expense of Persia, he was
received with favour by the Phoenicians, who were quite willing to form a
portion of his empire. But the rebellion of Nectanebo forced Tachos to
relinquish his projects,14333 and the dominion over the Phoenician
cities seems to have reverted to Persia without any effort on her
part.
In
this condition matters remained till about the year B.C. 351, when Sidon,
feeling herself aggrieved by the conduct of the Persian authorities at
Tripolis,14334 where the general assembly of the
Phoenicians held its meetings, boldly raised the standard of revolt against
Persia under Tennes, or Tabnit II., and induced the Phoenicians generally to
declare themselves independent. Alliance was at
once formed with the Egyptian king, Nekht-nebf, or Nectanebo II., who sent a
body of 4,000 Greek mercenaries, under Mentor
the Rhodian, to the aid of Tennes.14335 Hostilities commenced by the
Phoenicians expelling or massacring the Persian garrisons, devastating the
royal park or paradise, and burning the stores of forage collected for the use
of the Persian cavalry.14336 An attempt made by two
satraps—Belesys of Syria and Mazæus of Cilicia—to crush the revolt was
completely defeated by Tennes, with the aid of Mentor and his Greeks, who
gained a decisive victory over the satraps, and drove the Persians out of
Phoenicia.14337 Cyprus then joined the rebels. The
nine principal cities made common cause, expelled the Persians, and declared
themselves free states,
under their respective native kings.14338 Ochus, the Persian king, was at last
roused to exert himself. Collecting an army of 300,000 foot and 30,000 horse,
supported by 300 triremes and 500 transports or provision-ships,14339 he proceeded to the west in person,
determined to inflict condign punishment on the rebels, and to recover to the
empire, not only Cyprus and Phoenicia, but also the long-lost Egypt.
Tennes,
on his part, had done his best in the way of preparations for defence. He had
collected a fleet of above a hundred ships—triremes and quinqueremes,14340 the latter now heard of for the
first time in Asiatic warfare. He had strengthened the fortifications of Sidon, surrounding the
town with a triple ditch of great width and depth, and considerably raising the
height of the walls.14341 He had hired Greek mercenaries to
the number of six thousand, raising thus the number in his service to ten
thousand in all, had armed and drilled the most active and athletic of the
citizens, and had collected vast stores of provisions, armour, and weapons. But
the advance of the Persian monarch at the head of so large a force filled
Tennes with dismay and despair. Successful resistance was, he thought,
impossible; and with a selfishness and a cowardice that must ever make him rank
among the most infamous of men, he resolved, if possible, to purchase his own
pardon of the King by delivering to his vengeance the entire body of his
fellow-countrymen. Accordingly, after handing over to him a hundred of the
principal citizens, who were immediately transfixed with javelins, he concerted
measures with Mentor
for receiving the Persians within the walls. While the arrangements were
proceeding, five hundred of the remaining citizens issued forth from one of the
gates of the town, with boughs of supplication, as a deputation to implore the
mercy of Ochus, but only to suffer the same fate as their fellow-townsmen. The
Persians were then received within the walls; but the citizens, understanding
what their fate was to be, resolved to anticipate it. They had already burnt
their ships, to prevent any desertion. Now they shut themselves up, with their
wives and children, in their houses, and applying the torch to their dwellings
lighted up a general conflagration. More than forty thousand persons perished
in the flames. Ochus sold the ruins at a high price to speculators, who
calculated on reimbursing themselves by the treasures which they might dig out
from among the ashes. As for Tennes, it is satisfactory to find that a just
vengeance overtook him. The treachery which he had employed towards others was
shown also to himself. Ochus, who had given him a solemn promise that he would
spare his life, no sooner found that there was nothing more to be gained by
letting him live, than he relentlessly put him to death.14342
No
further resistance was made by the Phoenician cities. Ochus marched on against Egypt and
effected its reconquest.14343 The Cyprian revolt was put down by
the Prince of Caria, Istricus.14344 A calm, prelude to the coming storm,
settled down upon Persia;
and Phoenicia
participated in the general tranquillity. The various communities, exhausted by
their recent efforts, and disappointed with the result, laid aside their
political aspirations, and fell back upon their commercial instincts. Trade
once more flourished. Sidon
rose again from her ashes, and recovered a certain amount of prosperity. She
held the coast from Leontopolis to Ornithonpolis, and possessed also the
dependency of Dor;14345 but she had lost Sarepta to Tyre,14346 which stepped into the foremost
place among the cities on her fall, and retained it until destroyed by
Alexander. The other towns which still continued to be of some importance were
Aradus, and Gebal or Byblus. These cities, like Tyre
and Sidon,
retained their native kings,14347 who ruled their several states with
little interference from the Persians. The line of monarchs may be traced at Sidon for five
generations, from the first Esmunazar, who probably reigned about B.C. 460-440,
through three generations and four kings, to the second Strato, the
contemporary of Alexander.14348 The first Esmunazar was succeeded by
his son, Tabnit, about B.C. 440. Tabnit married his sister, Am-Ashtoreth,
priestess of Ashtoreth, and had issue, two sons, Esmunazar II., whose tomb was
found near Sidon
by M. de Vogüé in the year 1855, and Strato I. Esmunazar II. is thought to have
died about B.C. 400, and to have been succeeded by his brother Strato, the
Proxenus of Athens, who reigned till B.C. 361. On Strato's death, his son, the
second Tabnit—known to the Greeks as Tennes—mounted the throne, and reigned
till B.C. 345, when he was put to death by Ochus. A second Strato, the son of
Tennes, then became king, and retained his sovereignty till after the battle of
Issus14349 (B.C. 333).
6. Phoenicia in the time of Alexander
the Great (B.C. 333-323)
Alexander's invasion of Asia—Preparations made to resist
it, insufficient—What should have been done—Movements of
Memnon in B.C. 333—His death—Paralysis of the Persian
fleet—Attack on Phoenicia after Issus—Submission of all
the cities but Tyre—Siege of Tyre—Fall of the city—Cruel
treatment of the inhabitants.
The
invasion of Asia by Alexander the Great,
though it found the Persians unready, was by no means of the nature of a
surprise. The design had been openly proclaimed by Philip in the year B.C. 338,
when he forced the Grecian States to appoint him generalissimo of their armies,
which he promised to lead to the conquest of the East.14350 Darius Codomannus had thus ample
warning of what he had to expect, and abundant opportunity to make the fullest
preparations for defence. During the years B.C. 338 and 337, while Philip was
still alive, he did do something towards organising defensive measures,
collected troops and ships, and tried to foment discontent and encourage
anti-Macedonian movements in Greece.14351 But the death of Philip by the
dagger of Pausanias caused him most imprudently to relax his efforts, to
consider the danger past, and to suspend the operations, which he had
commenced, until he should see whether Alexander had either the will or the
power to carry into effect his father's projects. The events of the years B.C.
336 and 335, the successes of Alexander in Thrace,
Illyria, and Boeotia,14352 woke him from his fool's paradise to
some sense of the realities of the situation. In B.C. 335 the preparations for
defence were resumed. Orders were issued to the satraps of Phrygia and Lydia to draw together their troops towards the
north-western corner of Asia Minor, and to
take the offensive against the Macedonian force which had crossed the straits
before Philip's death. The Persian garrisons in this quarter were strongly
reinforced with troops of a good quality, drawn from the remoter provinces of
the empire, as from Persia Proper, Media, Hyrcania, and Bactria. Notice
was given to the Phoenicians to prepare a considerable fleet, and hold it in
readiness for active service. Above all, Memnon the Rhodian was given a command
on the Asiatic seaboard, and entrusted with a body of five thousand Greek
mercenaries, which he was empowered to use at his discretion.14353
But
these steps, though in the right direction, were quite inadequate under the
circumstances. Everything that was possible should have been done to prevent
Alexander from crossing to Asia in force. The
fleet should not only have been commanded to hold itself in readiness, but
should have been brought up. Four hundred or five hundred vessels,14354 from Phoenicia,
Cyprus, Egypt, Lycia,
and Cilicia, should have been moved into the
northern Egean and the Propontis, and have kept watch on every Grecian port.
Alexander was unable to muster for the transport of his army across the Straits
a larger number than 160 triremes.14355 Persia should have met them with a
fleet three times as large. Had Memnon been given from the first a free hand at
sea, instead of satrapial power on land, it is quite conceivable that the
invasion of Asia by Alexander might have proved as abortive an enterprise as
the contemplated invasion of England
by Napoleon.
As it
was, the fleet of Persia,
composed mainly of Phoenician vessels, did not appear in the northern Egean
waters until some weeks after Alexander had transported his grand army into Asia, and fought at the Granicus, so that when it arrived
it was of comparatively little service. Too late even to save Miletus, it had to be a tame spectator of the
siege and capture of that important town.14356 It was then withdrawn to Halicarnassus, where its
presence greatly helped the defence, but not to the extent of wholly baffling
the besiegers. Halicarnassus fell, like Miletus, after a while,
being entered from the land side; but the fleet saved the troops, the stores,
and the inhabitants.14357
During
the early part of the ensuing year, B.C. 333, while Alexander was engaged in
conquering the interior of Asia Minor, the Persian fleet under Memnon at last
took the aggressive, and, advancing northwards, employed itself in establishing
Persian influence over the whole of the Egean, and especially in reducing the
important islands of Chios and Lesbos.14358 Memnon was now in full command.
Fortune smiled on him; and it seemed more than probable that the war would be,
at least partially, transferred into Greece, where the Spartans only
waited for Memnon's appearance to commence an anti-Macedonian movement. The presence
of a powerful fleet in Greek waters, and Memnon's almost unlimited command of
Persian gold, might in a short time have raised such a flame in Greece as to
necessitate Alexander's return in order to extinguish it.14359 The invasion of Asia might have been
arrested in mid course; Alexander might have proved as powerless as Agesilaus
to effect any great change in the relations of the two continents; but, at the
critical moment, the sudden and unexpected death of the Rhodian chief cast all
these hopes to the ground,14360 and deprived Persia of her last
chance of baffling the invader.
Thus,
first by mismanagement and then by an unhappy accident, the Phoenicians were
precluded from rendering Persia
any effective service in the time of her great necessity. Wiser than Napoleon,
Alexander would not contest the sovereignty of the seas with the great naval
power of the day, and he even, when he once felt himself strongly lodged in
Asia, disbanded his naval force,14361 that so it might be impossible for
disaster at sea to tarnish his prestige. He was convinced that Asia could be
won by the land force which he had been permitted to disembark on its shores,
and probably anticipated the transfer of naval supremacy which almost
immediately followed on the victory of Issus.
The complete defeat of the great army of Codomannus, and its retirement on the
Euphrates,14362 left the entire seaboard of Syria and Phoenicia open to him. He resolved
at once to take advantage of the opportunity, and to detach from Persia the three countries of Phoenicia, Egypt,
and Cyprus.
If he could transfer to himself the navies of these powers, his maritime
supremacy would be incontestable. He would render his communications with Macedonia
absolutely secure. He would have nothing to fear from revolt or disturbance at
home, however deeply he might plunge into the Asiatic continent. If the worst
happened to him in Asia, he would have assured
himself a safe return.
Accordingly,
no sooner was the retreat of Darius upon the line of the Euphrates, and his
abandonment of Syria,
ascertained, than Alexander, after despatching a detachment of his army to Damascus, marched in person into Phoenicia.14363 The Phoenicians were placed between
two dangers. On the one hand, Alexander might ravage their territory, capture
and pillage their cities, massacre or sell for slaves the greater portion of
their citizens, and destroy their very existence as a people; on the other
hand, Darius held as hostages for their fidelity the crews and captains of
their triremes, which formed a portion of his fleet, and had on board a large
number of their chief men, and even some of their kings.14364 It was impossible, however, to
temporise; a choice had necessarily to be made; and when Alexander entered Phoenicia, the
cities, in almost every case, decided on submitting to him. First Strato, the
son of Ger-astartus, king of Aradus, who was serving on board the Phoenician
contingent to the Persian fleet, went out to meet Alexander, and surrendered
into his hands the four cities of Aradus, Marathus, Sigon, and Mariamme.14365 Then Byblus, whose king was also
absent with the fleet, opened its gates to the Macedonians.14366 Next Sidon, mindful of her recent wrongs, sent
envoys to invite Alexander's approach, and joyfully embraced his cause.14367 Even Tyre nominally made submission,
and declared itself ready to obey Alexander's commands;14368 and the transfer of Phoenicia to the
side of Alexander might have been made without bloodshed, had the Macedonian
monarch been content to leave their island city, which was their true capital,
and their pride and glory, unmolested. But Alexander could not brook anything
that in any degree savoured of opposition to his will. When therefore, on his
expressing a wish to sacrifice to Melkarth in their island town, the Tyrians
declined to receive him within the walls, and suggested that his pious design
might be sufficiently accomplished by his making his intended offering in
Palæ-Tyrus, where there was a temple of the same god, which was older (they
said) and more venerable than their own, Alexander's pride was touched, and he
became violently enraged.14369 Dismissing the envoys with angry
threats, he at once began preparations for an attack upon the town.
The
Tyrians have been accused of extreme rashness and folly in not making an
unqualified submission to the demands preferred by Alexander,14370 but the reproach scarcely appears to
be deserved. They had on previous occasions resisted for years the entire power
of Assyria, and of Babylon; they naturally deemed themselves only assailable by
sea; their fortifications were of immense strength; and they possessed a navy
much superior to any of which Alexander could boast at the time when he
threatened them. Their own vessels were eighty in number; those of their
kinsmen upon the continent were likewise eighty; Cyprus, which for centuries
had been closely allied with them, and which was more than half Phoenician in
blood, could furnish a hundred and twenty; Carthage, if she chose, could send
to their aid, without any difficulty, as many as two hundred.14371 Alexander had never been able to
collect from the Greek states which owned his sway a fleet of more than one
hundred and sixty sail; and, having disbanded this fleet, he could not readily
have mustered from the cities and countries accessible to him, exclusive of
Cyprus and Phoenicia, so many as a hundred.14372 The Tyrians, when they took their
resolution to oppose Alexander, had a right to expect that their kindred would
either assist them, or at any rate not serve against them, and that thus they
would be sure to maintain their supremacy at sea. As for Alexander's design to
join the island Tyre to the continent by means of a mole, they cannot have had
the slightest suspicion of it, since no work of the kind had ever previously
been accomplished, or even attempted; for the demonstration of Xerxes against
Salamis was not seriously intended.14373 They naturally counted on the
struggle being entirely by sea, and may well have thought that on their own
element they would not be worsted. Even if the continental towns forsook them
and went over to the enemy, why might they not do as they had done in
Shalmaneser's time, defeat their unnatural countrymen, and retain their naval
supremacy? Moreover, if they made a gallant fight, might not Persia be
expected to second their efforts? Would she not attack Alexander from the
flanks of Lebanon, intercept
his supplies, cut off his foragers, and make his position untenable; the
Tyrians could scarcely anticipate that Persia would sit with folded hands,
a calm spectator of a seven months' siege, and do absolutely nothing.
Having
determined on resistance to the demands of Alexander, the Tyrians lost no time
in placing their city in a position to resist attack. They summoned their king,
Azemilcus, from the Persian fleet, and required him to hasten home with the
entire squadron which he commanded.14374 They collected triremes and lighter
vessels from various quarters. They distributed along the walls of the city
upon every side a number of engines of war, constructed to hurl darts and
stones, and amply provided them with missiles.14375 The skilled workmen and engineers
resident in the town were called upon not merely to furnish additional engines
of the old type, but to exercise their ingenuity in devising new and unheard of
structures.14376 They armed all the young and
vigorous among the people, and appointed them their several stations at the
walls. Finally, to diminish the number of mouths to be fed, and to save
themselves from distracting cares, they sent away to Carthage a number of their aged men, their
women, and their children, who were readily received and supported by the rich
and friendly colonists.14377
Meantime
Alexander had taken his resolution. Either recollecting what Xerxes had
threatened to do at Salamis, or prompted merely by his own inventive genius, he
determined on the construction of a great mole, or embankment, which should be
carried out from the Asiatic mainland across the half-mile of channel to the
very walls of the recalcitrant city, and should thus join the island to the
Syrian shore. The width of the embankment he fixed at two plethra, or nearly
seventy yards.14378 Material for the construction was
abundant. The great city of Palæ-Tyrus
was close at hand, partly in ruins, and with many of the houses deserted by
their inhabitants. Its walls would furnish abundance of stone, mortar, and
rubble. Behind Palæ-Tyrus lay the flanks of Lebanon, cultivated in orchards,
while beyond were its dense and inexhaustible forests of fir, pine, and cedar.
Human labour could be obtained to almost any extent, for the neighbourhood was
populous, and Alexander's authority acknowledged by all. Accordingly the work,
once commenced, for a while made fair progress. Piles were cut in the mountain,
which were driven with much ease into the soft mud of the channel, which was
shallow near the shore,14379 and completely under the control of
the Macedonians, since the Tyrian vessels could not approach it for fear of
sticking in the ooze. Between the piles, towards the edge of the mole, were
sunk stones, trunks of trees, and material of the more solid character, while
the central part was filled up with rubble and rubbish of every sort and kind.
Still, the operation was toilsome and tedious, even from the first, while the
further that the mole was advanced into the sea, the more difficult and
dangerous became its construction. The channel deepened gradually from a few
feet towards the shore to eighteen or twenty,14380 as it approached the island. The
Tyrians in their vessels were soon able to act. In small boats at first, and
afterwards in their triremes, they attacked and annoyed the workmen,
perpetually hindered their work, and occasionally destroyed portions of it.14381 Damage was also inflicted by the
wind and waves; and the rate of progress became, in consequence, exceedingly
slow. A strong current set through the channel, and this was continually
working its way among the interstices of the mole, washing holes in its sides
and face, and loosening the interior of the structure. When a storm arose, the
surf broke over the top of the work, and did even greater damage, carrying
portions of the outer casing into the sea.
To
meet the assaults of the Tyrian ships upon the work, the Macedonians
constructed two movable towers, well protected against torches and weapons by
curtains made of raw hides,14382 and advancing these upon the surface
of the mole to the points most threatened, discharged from the engines which
the towers contained darts and stones of a large size against the Tyrian
sailors. Thus protected, the workmen were able to make sensible progress, and
the Tyrians began to fear that, unless they could destroy the towers, the mole
would ere long be completed. For the accomplishment of their purpose, they
resolved to employ a fire-ship.14383 Selecting one of the largest of
their horse-transports, they stowed the hold with dry brushwood and other
combustible materials; and erecting on the prow two masters, each with a
projecting arm, attached to either a cauldron, filled with bitumen and sulphur,
and with every sort of material apt to kindle and nourish flame. By loading the
stern of the transport with stones of a large size, they succeeded in
depressing it and correspondingly elevating the prow, which was thus prepared
to glide over the smooth surface of the mole and bring itself into contact with
the towers. In the fore part of the ship were deposited a quantity of torches,
resin, and other combustibles. Watching an opportunity when the wind blew
strongly from the seaward straight upon the mole, they towed the vessel at
their best speed in the direction of the towers, set it on fire, and then,
loosing their hawsers, allowed it to dash itself upon the work. The prow slid
over the top a certain distance and then stopped. The arms projecting from the
masts broke off at the sudden check,14384 and scattered the contents of the
cauldrons around. The towers caught fire and were at once in a blaze. The
Macedonians found it impossible to extinguish the flames, since the Tyrian
triremes, drawing close to the mole, prevented approach by flights of arrows
and other missiles. "At the same time, the full naval force of the city,
both ships and little boats, was sent forth to land men at once on all parts of
the mole. So successful was this attack, that all the Macedonian engines were
burnt—the outer woodwork which kept the mole together was torn up in many places—and
a large part of the structure came to pieces."14385 A heavy sea, moreover, accompanied
the gale of wind which had favoured the conflagration, and penetrating the
loosened work, carried the whole into deep waters.14386
Alexander
had now seriously to consider what course he should take. Hitherto his attempt
had proved an entire failure. Should he relinquish it? To do so would be to
acknowledge himself baffled and defeated, to tarnish the prestige which he held
so dear, and to cripple the plans that he had formed against Persia. It was
simply impossible that Alexander, being the man he was, should so act. No—he
must persevere—he must confront and overcome his difficulties—he must repair
the damages that he had suffered, restore his lost works, and carry them out on
a larger scale, and with more skill than before. He gave orders therefore for
an enlargement and alteration of the mole, which he no longer carried across
the strait in a direct line, but inclined to the south-west,14387 so that it might meet the force of
the prevalent wind, instead of exposing its flank to the violent gusts. He also
commanded the construction of fresh towers and fresh engines, stronger and more
in number than the former ones.14388 But this alone would not, he felt,
be enough. His designs had been frustrated hitherto solely from the fact that
the Tyrians were masters of the sea; and it was plain to him that, so long as
this state of things remained unaltered, it was next to impossible that he
should succeed. The great desideratum—the one condition of success—was the
possession of a powerful fleet. Such a fleet must be either built or collected.
Leaving therefore the restoration of the mole and the engines to his generals,
Alexander went in person to Sidon, and there set himself to gather together as
large a fleet as he could. Most opportunely it happened that, either shortly
before Alexander's arrival or immediately afterwards, the ships of Sidon,
Aradus, and Byblus, which had been serving with the Persian naval force in the
Ægean, had been required by their respective commanders to proceed homewards,
and, to the number of eighty, had sailed into the harbour of Sidon.14389 The kings had, in fact, deserted the
Persian cause on hearing that their cities had submitted to Alexander, and
readily placed their respective squadrons at his disposal. Further contingents
were received from other quarters—from Rhodes ten triremes, from the seaports
of Lycia the same number, from Soli and Mallus
three, from Macedonia
a single penteconter.14390 The number of the vessels was thus
brought up to one hundred and four; but even with such a fleet it would have
been rash to engage the Tyrian navy; and Alexander would probably have had to
build an additional squadron had he not received, suddenly and unexpectedly,
the adhesion of the princes of Cyprus.
Cyprus, being an island, was as yet in no danger, and might have been expected
at least to remain neutral until the fate of Tyre was decided; but, for reasons
that history has not recorded, the petty kings of the island about this
time—some months after the battle of Issus—resolved to desert Persia, to detach
themselves wholly from Tyre, and to place their navy at the disposal of the
Macedonians.14391 The number of their triremes
amounted to 120; and Alexander, having now under his command a fleet of 224
sail, could no longer feel any doubt of being able to wrest the supremacy at
sea from the unfortunate Tyrians.
Accordingly,
after allowing his ships a period of eleven days for nautical practice, and
placing on board a number of his bravest soldiers,14392 Alexander sailed out from Sidon at the head of his entire fleet, and made straight
for Tyre in
order of battle. He himself in person commanded the right wing, the post of
danger, since it held the open sea, and had under him the bulk of the Cyprian
ships, with their commanders. Pnytagoras of Salamis and Craterus led the left
wing, which was composed mainly of the vessels furnished by the Phoenician
towns upon the mainland, and held its course at no great distance from the
shore. The Tyrians, who had received no intelligence from without, saw with
astonishment the great fleet, nearly three times as large as their own,14393 bearing down upon them in orderly
array, and challenging them to the combat. They had not now the spirit of
ancient times, when no disparity of force dismayed them. Surprised and alarmed,
they resolved to decline a battle, to remain within their ports, and to use
their ships for blocking the entrances. Alexander, advancing from the north,
when he saw the mouth of the Sidonian harbour, which faced northwards, strongly
guarded, did not attempt to force it, but anchored his vessels outside, and
established a blockade, the maintenance of which he entrusted to the Cyprian
squadron. The next day he ordered the Phoenician ships to proceed southwards,
and similarly block and watch the southern or Egyptian harbour.14394 For himself, he landed upon the
mole, and pitching his tent near the south-western corner, there established
himself.14395
The
mole had not advanced very much during his absence. Vast efforts had been made
to re-establish it, but they had not been attended with any great success.14396 Whole trees, torn up by the roots,
and with their branches still adhering to them, had been dragged to the water's
edge, and then precipitated into the strait;14397 a layer of stones and mud had been
placed upon them, to solidify them into a mass; on the top of this other trees
had been placed, and the former process repeated. But the Tyrians had met the
new tactics with new methods. They had employed divers to attach hooks to the
boughs where they projected into the sea, and by sheer force had dragged the
trees out from the superincumbent mass, bringing down in this way large
portions of the structure.14398 But with Alexander's coming, and the
retirement of the Tyrian fleet, all this was altered. Alexander's workmen were
no longer impeded, except from the town, and in a short time the mole was
completed across the channel and carried up to the very foot of the defences.
The new towers, which had replaced the burnt ones, were brought up close to the
walls, and plied the new machines which Cyprian and Phoenician engineers had
constructed for their new master.14399 The battering of the wall began.
Engines moreover of a large size were placed on horse-transports furnished by
Sidon, and on the heavier and clumsier of the triremes, and with these attacks
were made upon the town in various places, all round the circuit of the walls,
which, if they did nothing else, served to distract the attention of the
defenders. To meet such assailants the Tyrians had let down huge blocks of
stone into the sea, which prevented the approach of the ships, and hindered
those on board from using the battering ram. These blocks the Macedonians endeavoured
to weigh up and remove by means of cranes; but their vessels were too unsteady
for the purpose, whereupon they proceeded to anchor them. The Tyrians went out
in boats well protected, and passing under the stems and sterns of the vessels,
cut the cables, whereupon the Macedonians kept an armed watch upon the cables
in boats of their own, which the Tyrians did not venture to attack. They were
not, however, without resource even yet, since they contrived still to cut the
cables by means of divers. At last the Macedonians bethought themselves of
using chains for cables instead of ropes; these could not be cut, and the
result was that at length they succeeded in dragging the stones away and
obtaining access to the foot of the walls wherever they pleased.14400
Under
these circumstances, threatened on every side, and feeling almost at the last
gasp, the Tyrians resolved on a final desperate effort. They would make a bold
attempt to recover the command of the sea. As the Macedonian fleet was divided,
part watching the Sidonian and part the Egyptian harbour, they could freely
select to contend with which portion they preferred. Their choice fell upon the
Cyprian contingent, which was stationed to the north of the mole, keeping guard
on the "Portus Sidonius." This they determined to attack, and to
take, if possible, by surprise. Long previously they had spread sails along the
mouth of the harbour, to prevent their proceedings inside it from being
overlooked.14401 They now prepared a select squadron
of thirteen ships—three of them quinqueremes, three quadriremes, and seven
triremes—and silently placing on board their best sailors and the best and
bravest of their men-at-arms, waited till the hour of noon, when the Cyprian
crews would be taking their mid-day meal, and Alexander might be expected,
according to his general habit, to have retired to his tent on the opposite
side of the mole. When noon came, still in deep silence, they issued from the
harbour in single file, each crew rowing gently without noise or splash, or a
word spoken, either by the boatswains or by anyone else. In this way they came
almost close to the Cyprians without being perceived: then suddenly the
boatswains gave out their cry, and the men cheered, and all pulled as hard as
they could, and with splash and dash they drove their ships against the enemy's,
which were inert, lying at anchor, some empty, others hurriedly taking their
crews on board. The ships of three Cyprian kings—Pnytagoras, king of Salamis,
Androcles, king of Amathus, and Pasicrates, king of Curium14402—were at once run down and sunk.14403 Many others were disabled; the rest
fled, pursued by the Tyrians, and sought to reach the shore. All would probably
have been lost, had not Alexander returned from his tent earlier than usual,
and witnessed the Tyrian attack. With his usual promptitude, he at once formed
his plan. As only a portion of the Cyprian fleet had maintained the blockade,
while the remainder of their ships were lying off the north shore of the mole
with their crews disembarked, he set to work to man these, and sent them off,
as each was got ready, to station themselves at the mouth of the harbour, and
prevent any more of the Tyrian vessels from sallying forth. He then hurried to
the southern side of the mole, where the Greco-Phoenician squadron kept guard,
and manning a certain number of the vessels,14404 sailed with them round the western
shore of the island into the northern bay, where the Tyrians and the remnant of
the Cyprian fleet were still contending. Those in the city perceived the
movement, and made every effort to signal it to their sailors, but in vain. The
noise and uproar of the battle prevented them from hearing until it was too
late. It was not till Alexander had entered the northern bay that they
understood, and turned and fled, pursued by his ships, which captured or
disabled the greater number. The crews, however, and the men-at-arms, escaped,
since they threw themselves overboard, and easily swam into the harbour.14405
This
was the last attempt of the Tyrians by sea. They were now invested on every
side, and hopelessly shut up within their defences. Still, however, they made a
desperate resistance. On the side of the mole the Macedonians, having brought
up their towers and battering-ram close to the wall, attacked it with much
vigour, hurling against it great masses of stone, and by constant flights of
darts and arrows driving the defenders from the battlements.14406 At the same time the battering-rams
were actively plied, and every effort made to effect a breach. But the Tyrians
deadened the blows of the rams and the force of the stones by letting down from
the walls leathern bags filled with sea-weed at the points assailed;14407 while, by wheels which were set in
rapid motion, they intercepted the darts and javelins wherewith they were
attacked, and broke them or diverted them from their intended courses.14408 When boarding-bridges were thrown
from the towers to the top of the walls, and an attempt was made to pass troops
into the town across them, they flung grappling hooks among the soldiers on the
bridges, which caught in their bodies and lacerated them, or dragged their shields
from their hands, or sometimes hauled them bodily into the air, and then dashed
them against the wall or against the ground.14409 Further, they made ready masses of
red-hot metal, and hurled them against the towers and the scaling-parties.14410 They also heated sand over fires and
poured it from the battlements on all who approached the foot of the wall;
this, penetrating between the armour and the skin, inflicted such intolerable
pain that the sufferers were forced to tear off their coats of mail, whereupon
they were easily transfixed by arrows or long lances.14411 With scythes they cut the ropes and
thongs by means of which the rams were worked;14412 and at last, armed with hatchets,
they sprang from the battlements upon the Macedonian boarding-bridges, and in a
hand-to-hand combat defeated and drove back their assailants.14413 Finally, when, despite of all their
efforts, the outer wall began to give way, they constructed an inner wall to
take its place, broader and stronger than the other.14414
Alexander,
after a time, became convinced that his endeavours to take the city from the
mole were hopeless, and turned his attention to the sea defences, north and
south of the mole, which were far less strong than those which he had hitherto
been attacking.14415 He placed his best engines and his
boarding-bridges upon ships, and proceeded to batter the sea walls in various
places. On the south side, near the Egyptian harbour, he found a weak place,
and concentrating his efforts upon it, he succeeded in effecting a large
breach.14416 He then gave orders for a general
assault.14417 The two fleets were commanded to force
simultaneously the entrances to the two harbours; other vessels to make
demonstrations against the walls at all approachable points; the army collected
on the mole to renew its assaults; while he himself, with his trustiest
soldiers, delivered the main attack at the southern breach.14418 Two vessels were selected for the
purpose. On one, which was that of Coenus, he embarked a portion of the
phalanx; on the other, which was commanded by Admetus, he placed his bodyguard,
himself accompanying it. The struggle was short when once the boarding-bridges
were thrown across and rested on the battered wall. Fighting under the eye of
their king, the Macedonians carried all before them, though not without
important losses. Admetus himself, who was the first to step on to the wall,
received a spear thrust, and was slain.14419 But the soldiers who were following
close behind him maintained their footing, and in a little time got possession
of several towers, with the spaces between them. Alexander was among the
foremost of those who mounted the breach,14420 and was for a while hotly engaged in
a hand-to-hand fight with the enemy. When those who resisted him were slain or
driven off, he directed his troops to seize the royal palace, which abutted on
the southern wall, and through it make their entrance into the town.14421
Meanwhile,
the Greco-Phoenician fleet on the south side of the mole had burst the boom and
other obstacles by which the Egyptian harbour was closed, and, attacking the
ships within, had disabled some, and driven the rest ashore, thus gaining
possession of the southern port and a ready access to the adjacent portion of
the city.14422 The Cyprians, moreover, on the
north, had forced their way into the Sidonian harbour, which had no boom, and
obtained an entrance into the town on that quarter.14423 The defences were broken through in
three places, and it might have been expected that resistance would have
ceased. But the gallant defenders still would not yield. A large body assembled
at the Agenorium, or temple
of Agenor, and there made
a determined stand, which continued till Alexander himself attacked them with
his bodyguard, and slew almost the entire number. Others, mounting upon the
roofs of the houses, flung down stones and missiles of all kinds upon the
Macedonians in the street. A portion shut themselves up in their homes and
perished by their own hands. In the streets and squares there was a terrible
carnage. The Macedonians were infuriated by the length of the siege, the
stubbornness of the resistance, and the fact that the Tyrians had in the course
of the siege publicly executed, probably by way of sacrifice, a number of their
prisoners upon the walls. Those who died with arms in their hands are reckoned
at eight thousand;14424 two thousand more, who had been made
prisoners, were barbarously crucified by command of Alexander round the walls
of the city.14425 None of the adult free males were
spared, except the few who had taken refuge with Azemilcus the king in the temple of Melkarth, which Alexander professed
greatly to revere, and a certain number whom the Sidonians, touched at last
with pity, concealed on board their triremes. The women, the children, and the
slaves, to the number of thirty thousand,14426 were sold to the highest bidder.
Having
worked his will, and struck terror, as he hoped, into the hearts of all who
might be thinking of resisting him, Alexander concluded the Tyrian episode of
his career by a religious ceremony.14427 Entering the city from the mole in a
grand procession, accompanied by his entire force of soldiers, fully armed and
arrayed, while his fleet also played its part in the scene, he proceeded to the
temple of Melkarth in the middle of the town, and offered his much desired
sacrifice to Hercules. A gymnastic contest and a torch race formed a portion of
the display. To commemorate his victory, he dedicated and left in the temple
the battering-ram which had made the first impression on the southern wall,
together with a Tyrian vessel, used in the service of the god, which he had
captured when he bore down upon the city from Sidon with his fleet. Over the charred and
half-ruined remnants of the city, into which he had introduced a certain number
of colonists, chiefly Carians,14428 he placed as ruler a member of a
decayed branch of the royal family, a certain Abd-elonim, whom the Greeks
called Ballonymos.14429
7. Phoenicia under the Greeks (B.C.
323-65)
The Phoenicians faithful subjects of Alexander—At his death
Phoenicia falls, first to Laomedon, then to Ptolemy Lagi—Is
held by the Ptolemies for seventy years—Passes willingly,
B.C. 198, under the Seleucidæ—Relations with the Seleucid
princes and with the Jews—Hellenisation of Phoenicia—
Continued devotion of the Phoenicians generally to trade and
commerce—Material prosperity of Phoenicia.
Phoenicia continued faithful to Alexander during
the remainder of his career. Phoenician vessels were sent across the Ægean to
the coast of the Peloponnese to maintain the
Macedonian interest in that quarter.14430 Large numbers of the mercantile
class accompanied the march of his army for the purposes of traffic. A portion
of these, when Alexander reached the Hydaspes and determined to sail down the
course of the Indus to the sea, were drafted into the vessels which he caused
to be built,14431 descended the river, and accompanied
Nearchus in his voyage from Patala to the Persian Gulf. Others still remained
with the land force, and marched with Alexander himself across the frightful
deserts of Beloochistan, where they collected the nard and myrrh, which were
almost its only products, and which were produced in such abundance as to scent
the entire region.14432 On Alexander's return to Babylon, Phoenicia
was required to supply him with additional vessels, and readily complied with
the demand. A fleet of forty-eight ships—two of them quinqueremes, four
quadriremes, twelve triremes, and thirty pentaconters, or fifty-oared
galleys—was constructed on the Phoenician coast, carried in fragments to
Thapsacus on the Euphrates, and there put together and launched on the stream
of the Euphrates, down which it sailed to Babylon.14433 Seafaring men from Phoenicia and Syria
were at the same time enlisted in considerable numbers, and brought to
Alexander at his new capital to man the ships which he was building there, and
also to supply colonists for the coasts of the Persian
Gulf and the islands scattered over its surface.14434 Alexander, among his many projects,
nourished an intention of adding to his dominions, at any rate, the seaboard of
Arabia, and understood that for this purpose he must establish in the Persian
Gulf a great naval power, such as Phoenicia alone out of all the
countries under his dominion was able to furnish. His untimely death brought
all these schemes to an end, and plunged the East into a sea of troubles.
In the
division of Alexander's empire, which followed upon his death, Phoenicia was at first assigned, together with Syria, to
Laemedon, and the two formed together a separate satrapy.14435 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.14436 Six years later (B.C. 314), attacked
in his turn by Antigonus, Ptolemy was forced to relinquish his conquests,14437 none of which offered much
resistance excepting Tyre.
Tyre, though no more than eighteen years had elapsed since its desolation by
Alexander, had, like the fabled phoenix, risen again from its ruins, and
through the recuperative energy of commerce had attained almost to its previous
wealth and prosperity.14438 Its walls had been repaired, and it
was defended by its Egyptian garrison with pertinacity. Antigonus, who was
master of the Phoenician 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.14439 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.14440 The garrison marched out with the
honours of war, and Phoenicia
became an appendage of the empire (for such it was) of Antigonus.
From
Antigonus Phoenicia
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.14441 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 Philopater14442 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,14443 and being joined by Theodotus, the
Egyptian governor of the Coelesyrian province, invaded that country and Phoenicia,
took possession of Tyre and Accho, which was now called Ptolemaïs, and
threatened Egypt with subjugation.14444 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,14445 and the surrender of Sidon, Phoenicia
passed, with Coelesyria, into the permanent possession of the Seleucidæ, and,
though frequently reclaimed by Egypt,
was never recovered.
The
change of rulers was, on the whole, in consonance with the wishes and feelings
of the Phoenicians. Though Alexandria may not
have been founded with the definite intention of depressing Tyre,
and raising up a commercial rival to her on the southern shore of the Mediterranean;14446 yet the advantages of the situation,
and the interests of the Lagid princes, constituted her in a short time an
actual rival, and an object of Phoenician jealousy. Phoenicia
had been from a remote antiquity14447 down to the time of Alexander, the
main, if not the sole, dispenser of Egyptian products to Syria, Asia Minor, and Europe.
With the foundation of Alexandria
this traffic passed out of her hands. It may be true that what she lost in this
way was "more than compensated by the new channels of eastern traffic
which Alexander's conquests opened to her, by the security given to commercial
intercourse by the establishment of a Greek monarchy in the ancient dominions
of the Persian kings, and by the closer union which now prevailed between all
parts of the civilised world."14448 But the balance of advantage and
disadvantage does not even now always reconcile traders to a definite and
tangible loss; and in the ruder times of which we are writing it was not to be
expected that arguments of so refined and recondite a character should be very
sensibly felt. Tyre and Sidon
recognised in Alexandria
a rival from the first, and grew more and more jealous of her as time went on.
She monopolised the trade in Egyptian commodities from her foundation. In a short
time she drew to herself, not only the direct Egyptian traffic, but that which
her rulers diverted from other quarters, and drew to Egypt by the construction
of harbours, and roads with stations and watering places.14449 Much of the wealth that had
previously flowed into Phoenicia
was, in point of fact, diverted to Egypt,
and especially to Alexandria,
by the judicious arrangements of the earlier Lagid princes. Phoenicia,
therefore, in attaching herself to the Seleucidæ, felt that she was avenging a
wrong, and though materially she might not be the gainer, was gratified by the
change in her position.
The
Seleucid princes on their part regarded the Phoenicians with favour, and made a
point of conciliating their affections by personal intercourse with them, and
by the grant of privileges. At the quinquennial festival instituted by
Alexander ere he quitted Tyre,
which was celebrated in the Greek fashion with gymnastic and musical contests,
the Syrian kings were often present in person, and took part in the
festivities.14450 They seem also to have visited the
principal cities at other times, and to have held their court in them for many
days together.14451 With their consent and permission,
the towns severally issued their own coins, which bore commonly legends both in
Greek and in Phoenician, and had sometimes Greek, sometimes Phoenician emblems.14452 Both Aradus and Tyre were allowed the privilege of being
asylums,14453 from which political refugees could
not be demanded by the sovereign.
The
Phoenicians in return served zealously on board the Syro-Macedonian fleet, and
showed their masters all due respect and honour.14454 They were not afraid, however, of asserting
an independence of thought and judgment, even in matters where the kings were
personally concerned. On one occasion, when Antiochus Epiphanes was holding his
court at Tyre, a cause of the greatest
importance was brought before him for decision by the authorities at Jerusalem. The
high-priest of the time, Menelaus, who had bought the office from the Syrian
king, was accused of having plundered the Temple
of a number of its holy vessels, and of having sold them for his own private
advantage. The Sanhedrim, who prosecuted Menelaus, sent three representatives
to Tyre, to
conduct the case, and press the charges against him. The evidence was so clear
that the High Priest saw no chance of an acquittal, except by private interest.
He therefore bribed an influential courtier, named Ptolemy, the son of a
certain Dorymenes, to intercede with Antiochus on his behalf, and, if possible,
obtain his acquittal. The affair was not one of much difficulty. Justice was
commonly bought and sold at the Syro-Macedonian
Court, and Antiochus readily came into the views
of Ptolemy, and pronounced the High Priest innocent. He thought, however, that
in so grave a matter some one must be punished, and, as he had acquitted
Menelaus, he could only condemn his accusers. These unfortunates suffered death
at his hands, whereon the Tyrians, compassionating their fate, and to mark
their sense of the iniquity of the sentence, decreed to give them an honourable
burial. The historian who relates the circumstance evidently feels that it was a
bold and courageous act, very creditable to the Tyrian people.14455
It is
not always, however, that we can justly praise the conduct of the Phoenicians at
this period. Within six years of the time when the Tyrians showed themselves at
once so courageous and so compassionate, the nation generally was guilty of
complicity in a most unjust and iniquitous design. Epiphanes, having driven the
Jews into rebellion by a most cruel religious persecution, and having more than
once suffered defeat at their hands, resolved to revenge himself by utterly
destroying the people which had provoked his resentment.14456 Called away to the eastern provinces
by a pressing need, he left instructions with his general, Lysias, to invade
Judæa with an overwhelming force, and, after crushing all resistance, to sell
the surviving population—men, women, and children—for slaves. Lysias, in B.C.
165, marched into Judæa, accompanied by a large army, with the full intention
of carrying out to the letter his master's commands. In order to attract
purchasers for the multitude whom he would have to sell, he made proclamation
that the rate of sale should be a talent for ninety, or less than 3l. a head,14457 while at the same he invited the
attendance of the merchants from all "the cities of the sea-coast,"
who must have been mainly, if not wholly, Phoenicians. The temptation was
greater than Phoenician virtue could resist. The historian tells us that
"the merchants of the country, hearing the fame of the Syrians, took
silver and gold very much, with servants, and came into the Syrian camp to buy
the children of Israel
for money."14458 The result was a well-deserved
disappointment. The Syrian army suffered complete defeat at the hands of the
Jews, and had to beat a hasty retreat; the merchants barely escaped with their
lives. As for the money which they had brought with them for the purchase of
the captives, it fell into the hands of the victorious Jews, and formed no
inconsiderable part of the booty which rewarded their valour.14459
After
this, we hear but little of any separate action on the part of the Phoenicians,
or of any Phoenician city, during the Seleucid period. Phoenicia
became rapidly Hellenised; and except that they still remained devoted to
commercial pursuits, the cities had scarcely any distinctive character, or
anything that marked them out as belonging to a separate nationality. Greek
legends became more frequent upon the coins; Greek names were more and more
affected, especially by the upper classes; the men of letters discarded
Phoenician as a literary language, and composed the works, whereby they sought
to immortalize their names, in Greek. Greek philosophy was studied in the
schools of Sidon;14460 and at Byblus Phoenician mythology
was recast upon a Greek type. At the same time Phoenician art conformed itself
more and more closely to Greek models, until all that was rude in it, or
archaic, or peculiar, died out, and the productions of Phoenician artists
became mere feeble imitations of second-rate Greek patterns.
The
nation gave itself mainly to the pursuit of wealth. The old trades were
diligently plied. Tyre retained its pre-eminence
in the manufacture of the purple dye; and Sidon
was still unrivalled in the production of glass. Commerce continued to enrich
the merchant princes, while at the same time it provided a fairly lucrative
employment for the mass of the people. A new source of profit arose from the
custom, introduced by the Syro-Macedonians, of farming the revenue. In Phoenicia, as in Syria generally, the taxes of each
city were let out year by year to some of the wealthiest men of the place,14461 who collected them with extreme
strictness, and made over but a small proportion of the amount to the Crown.
Large fortunes were made in this way, though occasionally foreigners would step
in, and outbid the Phoenician speculators,14462 who were not content unless they
gained above a hundred per cent. on each transaction. Altogether, Phoenicia may
be pronounced to have enjoyed much material prosperity under the Seleucid
princes, though, in the course of the civil wars between the different
pretenders to the Crown, most of the cities had, from time to time, to endure
sieges. Accho especially, which had received from the Lagid princes the name of
Ptolemaïs, and was now the most important and flourishing of the Phoenician
towns, had frequently to resist attack, and was more than once taken by storm.14463
8. Phoenicia under the Romans (B.C.
65-A.D. 650)
Syria made a Roman province, B.C. 65—Privileges granted by
Rome to the Phoenician cities—Phoenicia profits by the
Roman suppression of piracy, but suffers from Parthian
ravages—The Phoenicians offend Augustus and lose their
favoured position, but recover it under later emperors—
Mention of the Phoenician cities in the New Testament—
Phoenicia accepts Christianity—Phoenician bishops at the
early Councils—Phoenician literature at this date—Works of
Antipater, Apollonius, Philo, Hermippus, Marinus, Maximus,
and Porphyry—School of law at Berytus—Survival of the
Phoenician commercial spirit—Survival of the religion—
Summary.
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.14464 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 at length
came forward, and took the inheritance to which she had become entitled a
century and a quarter earlier by the battle of Magnesia, and which she could
have occupied at any moment during the interval, had it suited her purpose. The
combat with Mithridates had forced her to become an Asiatic power; and having
once overcome her repugnance to being entangled in Asiatic politics, she
allowed her instinct of self-aggrandizement to have full play, and reduced the
kingdom of the Seleucidæ into the form of a Roman province.14465
The
province, which retained the name of Syria,
and was placed under a proconsul,14466 whose title was "Præses
Syriæ," extended from the flanks of Amanus and Taurus to Carmel
and the sources of the Jordan,
and thus included Phoenicia.
The towns, however, of Tripolis, Sidon, and Tyre were allowed 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
Cæsar, when he became master of the Roman world; and hence we find him
addressing a communication respecting Hyrcanus to the "Magistates,
Council, and People of Sidon."14467 A similar regard was shown for
Phoenician vested rights by Anthony, who in B.C. 36, when his infatuation for
Cleopatra was at its height, and he agreed to make over to her the government
of Palestine and of Coelesyria, as far as the river Eleutherus, especially
exempted from her control, despite her earnest entreaties, the cities of Tyre
and Sidon.14468 Anthony also wrote more than one
letter to the "Magistates, Council, and People of Tyre," in which he
recognised them as "allies" of the Roman people rather than subjects.14469
So far
the Phoenicians would seem to have gained rather than lost by exchanging the
dominion of Syria for that
of Rome. They
gained also 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, issuing from the creeks and
harbours of Western Cilicia and Pamphylia, spread terror on every side,14470 and made the navigation of the
Levant and Ægean as dangerous as it had been in the days anterior to Minos.14471 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.
But
their connection with Rome
exposed the Phoenicians to some fresh, and terrible, perils. The great attack
of Crassus on Parthia in the
year B.C. 53 had bitterly exasperated that savage and powerful kingdom, which
was quite strong enough to retaliate, under favourable circumstances, upon the
mighty mistress of the West, and to inflict severe sufferings upon Rome's allies, subjects,
and dependencies. After a preliminary trial of strength14472 in the years B.C. 522 and 51,
Pacorus, the son of Orodes, in B.C. 40, crossed the Euphrates
in force, defeated the Romans under Decidius Saxa, and carried fire and sword
over the whole of the Syrian presidency.14473 Having taken Apamea and Antioch, he marched into Phoenicia,
ravaged the open country, and compelled all the towns, except Tyre, to surrender. Tyre, notwithstanding the mole constructed by
Alexander, which joined it to the continent, was still regarded as impregnable,
unless invested both by sea and land; on which account Pacorus, as he had no
naval force, relinquished the idea of capturing it.14474 But all the other cities either gave
themselves up or were taken, and the conquest of Phoenicia
being completed, the Parthian prince proceeded to occupy Palestine. Jerusalem
fell into his hands, and for three years the entire tract between the Taurus range
and Egypt was lost to Rome, and formed a
portion of the Parthian Empire. What hardships, what insults, what outrages the
Phoenicians had to endure during this interval we do not know, and can only
conjecture; but the conduct of the Parthians at Jerusalem14475 makes it probable that the
inhabitants of the conquered districts generally had much cause for complaint.
However, the time of endurance did not last very long; in the third year from
the commencement of the invasion the fortune of war turned against the
assailants. Rome,
under Ventidius, recovered her lost laurels. Syria
was reoccupied, and the Parthians driven across the Euphrates,
never again to pass it.14476
In the
struggle (which soon followed these events) between Antony
and Augustus, Phoenicia had the misfortune to
give offence to the latter. The terms on which they stood with Antony, and the protection which he had
afforded to their cities against the greed of Cleopatra, naturally led them to
embrace his cause; and it should scarcely have been regarded as a crime in them
that they did so with ardour. But Augustus, who was certainly not clement by
nature, chose to profess himself deeply aggrieved by the preference which they
had shown for his rival, and, when he personally visited the East in B.C. 20,
inflicted a severe punishment on two at least of the cities. Dio Cassius can
scarcely be mistaken when he says that Tyre and Sidon were
"enslaved"—i.e. deprived of freedom—by Augustus,14477 who must certainly have revoked the
privilege originally granted by Pompey. Whether the privilege was afterwards
restored is somewhat uncertain; but there is distinct evidence that more than
one of the later emperors was favourably disposed to Rome's Phoenician subjects. Claudius granted
to Accho the title and status of a Roman colony;14478 while Hadrian allowed Tyre to call herself a
"metropolis."14479
Two
important events have caused Tyre and Sidon to be mentioned in
the New Testament. Jesus Christ, in the second year of his ministry,
"arose and went" from Galilee "into the borders of Tyre and Sidon,"
and there wrought a miracle at the earnest request of a "Syro-Phoenician
woman."14480 And Herod Agrippa, the grandson of
Herod the Great, when at Cæsarea in A.D. 44, received an embassy from
"them of Tyre and Sidon," with whom he was highly offended, and
"made an oration" to the ambassadors.14481 In this latter place the continued
semi-independence of Tyre and Sidon seems to be implied. Agrippa is
threatening them with war, while they "desire peace." "Their
country" is spoken of as if it were distinct from all other countries. We
cannot suppose that the Judæan prince would have ventured to take up this
attitude if the Phoenician cities had been fully incorporated into the Roman State,
since in that case quarrelling with them would have been quarrelling with Rome, a step on which even
Agrippa, with all his pride and all his rashness, would scarcely have ventured.
It is probable, therefore, that either Tiberius or Claudius had revoked the
decree of Augustus, and re-invested the Phoenician cities with the privilege
whereof the first of the emperors had deprived them.
Not
long after this, about A.D. 57, we have evidence that the great religious and
social movement of the age had swept the Phoenician cities within its vortex,
and that, in some of them at any rate, Christian communities had been formed,
which were not ashamed openly to profess the new religion. The Gospel was
preached in Phoenicia14482 as early as A.D. 41. Sixteen years
later, when St. Paul, on his return from his third missionary journey, landed
at Tyre, and proceeded thence to Ptolemaïs, he found at both places
"churches," or congregations of Christians, who received him kindly,
ministered to his wants, prayed with him, and showed a warm interest in his
welfare.14483 These communities afterwards
expanded. By the end of the second century after Christ Tyre was the seat of a
bishopric, which held an important place among the Syrian Sees. Several Tyrian
bishops of the second, third, and fourth centuries are known to us, as Cassius
(ab. A.D. 198), Marinus (A.D. 253), Methodius (A.D. 267-305), Tyrannion (A.D.
310), and Paulinus (A.D. 328). Early in the fourth century (B.C. 335) Tyre was the seat of a
synod or council, called to consider charges made against the great Athanasius,14484 who was taxed with cruelty, impiety,
and the use of magical arts. As the bishops who assembled belonged chiefly to
the party of Arius, the judgment of the council condemned Athanasius, and
deprived him of his see. On appeal the decision was reversed; Athanasius was
reinstated,14485 and advanced; the cause with which
he had identified himself triumphed; and the Synod of Tyre being pronounced
unorthodox, the Tyrian church, like that of Antioch, sank in the estimation of the Church
at large.
Tyre also made herself obnoxious to the
Christian world in another way. In the middle of the third century she produced
the celebrated philosopher, Porphyry,14486 who, of all the literary opponents
of Christianity, was the most vigorous and the most successful. Porphyry
appears to have been a Phoenician by descent. His original name was
Malchus—i.e. Melek or Malik, "king." To disguise his Asiatic origin,
and ingratiate himself with the literary class of the day, who were chiefly
Greeks or Grecised Romans, he took the Hellenic and far more sonorous
appellation of Porphyrius, which he regarded as a sort of synonym, since purple
was the royal colour. He early gave himself to the study of philosophy,
and was indefatigable in his efforts to acquire knowledge and learning of every
kind. In Asia, probably at Tyre itself, he
attended the lectures of Origen; at Athens he
studied under Apollonius and Longinus; in Rome,
whereto he ultimately gravitated, he attached himself to the Neo-Platonic school of Plotinus. His literary labours, which
were enormous, had for their general object the establishment of that eclectic
system which Ammonius Saccas, Plotinus, Jamblichus, and others had elaborated,
and were endeavouring to impose upon the world as constituting at once true
religion and true philosophy. He was of a constructive rather than a destructive
turn of mind. Still, he thought it of great importance, and a necessity of the
times, that he should write a book against the Christians, whose opinions were,
he knew, making such progress as raised the suspicion that they would prevail
over all others, and in a short time become universal. This polemical treatise
ran to fifteen books, and "exhibited considerable acquaintance with both
the Jewish and the Christian scriptures."14487 It is now lost, but its general
character is well known from the works of Eusebius, Jerome, and others. The
style was caustic and trenchant. An endeavour was made to show that both the
historical scriptures of the Old Testament and the Gospels and Acts in the New
were full of discrepancies and contradictions. The history and antiquities of
the Jews, as put forth in the Bible, were examined, and declared to be unworthy
of credit. A special attack was made on the genuineness and authenticity of the
book of Daniel, which was pronounced to be the work of a contemporary of
Antiochus Epiphanes, who succeeded in palming off upon his countrymen his own
crude production as the work of the venerated sage and prophet. Prevalent modes
of interpreting scripture were passed under review, and the allegorical
exegesis of Origen was handled with especial severity. The work is said to have
produced a vast effect, especially among the upper classes, whose conversion to
Christianity it tended greatly to check and hinder. Answers to the book, or to
particular portions of it, were published by Eusebius of Cæsarea, by
Apollinaris, and by Methodius, Bishop of Tyre; but these writers had neither
the learning nor the genius of their opponent, and did little to counteract the
influence of his work on the upper grades of society.14488
The
literary importance of the Phoenician cities under the Romans is altogether
remarkable. Under Augustus and Tiberius—especially from about B.C. 40 to A.D.
20—Sidon was the seat of a philosophical school, in which the works of
Aristotle were studied and explained,14489 perhaps to some extent criticised.14490 Strabo attended this school for a
time in conjunction with two other students, named Boëthus and Diodotus. Tyre had even previously
produced the philosophers, Antipater, who was intimate with the younger Cato,
and Apollonius, who wrote a work about Zeno, and formed a descriptive catalogue
of the authors who had composed books on the subject of the philosophy of the
Stoics.14491 Strabo goes so far as to say that
philosophy in all its various aspects might in his day be better studied at Tyre and Sidon
than anywhere else.14492 A little later we find Byblus
producing the semi-religious historian, Philo, who professed to reveal to the
Greeks the secrets of the ancient Phoenician mythology, and who, whatever we
may think of his judgment, was certainly a man of considerable learning. He was
followed by his pupil, Hermippus, who was contemporary with Trajan and Hadrian,
and obtained some reputation as a critic and grammarian.14493 About the same time flourished
Marinus, the writer on geography, who was a Tyrian by birth, and "the first
author who substituted maps, mathematically constructed according to latitude
and longitude, for the itinerary charts" of his predecessors.14494 Ptolemy of Pelusium based his great
work entirely upon that of Marinus, who is believed to have utilised the
geographical and hydrographical accumulations of the old Phoenician navigators,
besides availing himself of the observations of Hipparchus, and of the accounts
given of their travels by various Greek and Roman authors. Contemporary with
Marinus was Paulus, a native of Tyre, who was
noted as a rhetorician, and deputed by his city to go as their representative
to Rome and
plead the cause of the Tyrians before Hadrian.14495 A little later we hear of Maximus,
who flourished under Marcus Aurelius and Commodus (ab. A.D. 160-190), a Tyrian,
like Paulus, and a rhetorician and Platonic philosopher.14496 The literary glories of Tyre culminated and
terminated with Porphyry, of whose works we have already given an account.
Towards
the middle of the third century after Christ a school of law and jurisprudence
arose at Berytus, which attained high distinction, and is said by Gibbon14497 to have furnished the eastern
provinces of the empire with pleaders and magistrates for the space of three
centuries (A.D. 250-550). The course of education at Berytus lasted five years,
and included Roman Law in all its various forms, the works of Papinian being
especially studied in the earlier times, and the same together with the edicts
of Justinian in the later.14498 Pleaders were forced to study either
at Berytus, or at Rome, or at Constantinople,14499 and, the honours and emoluments of
the profession being large, the supply of students was abundant and perpetual.
External misfortune, and not internal decay, at last destroyed the school, the
town of Berytus
being completely demolished by an earthquake in the year A.D. 551. The school
was then transferred to Sidon,
but appears to have languished on its transplantation to a new soil and never
to have recovered its pristine vigour or vitality.
It is
difficult to decide how far these literary glories of the Phoenician cities
reflect any credit on the Phoenician race. Such a number of Greeks settled in Syria and Phoenicia under the Seleucidæ that
to be a Tyrian or a Sidonian in the Græco-Roman period furnished no evidence at
all of a man having any Phoenician blood in his veins. It will have been
observed that the names of the Tyrian, Sidonian, and Berytian learned men and
authors of the time—Antipater, Apollonius, Boëthus, Diodotus, Philo, Hermippus,
Marinus, Paulus, Maximus, Porphyrius—are without exception either Latin or
Greek. The language in which the books were written was universally Greek, and
in only one or two cases is there reason to suppose that the authors had any
knowledge of the Phoenician tongue. The students at Berytus between A.D. 250
and 550 were probably, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, Greeks or Romans.
Phoenician nationality had, in fact, almost wholly disappeared in the Seleucid
period. The old language ceased to be spoken, and though for some time retained
upon the coins together with a Greek legend,14500 became less frequent as time went
on, and soon after the Christian era disappeared altogether. It is probable
that, as a spoken language, Phoenician had gone out of use even earlier.14501
In two
respects only did the old national spirit survive, and give indication that,
even in the nation's "ashes," there still lived some remnant of its
"wonted fires." Tyre and Sidon were great commercial centres down to
the time of the Crusades, and quite as rich, quite as important, quite as
flourishing, commercially, as in the old days of Hiram and Ithobal. Mela14502 speaks of Sidon in the second century after Christ as
"still opulent." Ulpian,14503 himself a Tyrian by descent, calls Tyre in the reign of
Septimus Severus "a most splendid colony." A writer of the age of Constantine says of it: "The prosperity of Tyre is extraordinary.
There is no state in the whole of the East which excels it in the amount of its
business. Its merchants are persons of great wealth, and there is no port where
they do not exercise considerable influence."14504 St. Jerome,
towards the end of the fourth century, speaks of Tyre
as "the noblest and most beautiful of all the cities of Phoenicia,"14505 and as "an emporium for the
commerce of almost the whole world."14506 During the period of the Crusades,
"Tyre retained its ancient pre-eminence
among the cities of the Syrian coast, and excited the admiration of the
warriors of Europe by its capacious harbours,
its wall, triple towards the land and double towards the sea, its still active
commerce, and the beauty and fertility of the opposite shore." The
manufactures of purple and of glass were still carried on. Tyre was not reduced to insignificance until
the Saracenic conquest towards the close of the thirteenth century of our era,
when its trade collapsed, and it became "a rock for fishermen to spread
their nets upon."14507
The
other respect in which the vitality of the old national spirit displayed itself
was in the continuance of the ancient religion. While Christianity was adopted
very generally by the more civilised of the inhabitants, and especially by
those who occupied the towns, there were shrines and fanes in the remote
districts, and particularly in the less accessible parts of Lebanon, where the
old rites were still in force, and the old orgies continued to be carried on,
just as in ancient times, down to the reign of Constantine. The account of the
licentious worship of Ashtoreth at Aphaca, which has been already quoted from
Eusebius, belongs to the fourth century after our era, and shows the tenacity
with which a section of the Phoenicians, not withstanding their Hellenisation
in language, in literature, and in art, clung to the old barbarous and awful
cult, which had come down to them by tradition from their fathers. A similar
worship at the same time maintained itself on the other side of the Lebanon
chain in Heliopolis, or Baalbek, where the votaries of impurity allowed their
female relatives, even their wives and their daughters, to play the harlot as
much as they pleased.14508 Constantine exerted himself to put
down and crush out these iniquities, but it is more than probable that, in the
secret recesses of the mountain region, whither government officials would find
it hard to penetrate, the shameful and degrading rites still found a refuge,
rooted as they were in the depraved affections of the common people, to a much
later period.
The
mission of the Phoenicians, as a people, was accomplished before the subjection
to Rome began.
Under the Romans they were still ingenious, industrious, intelligent. But in
the earlier times they were far more than this. They 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 states. The lesson
has not been altogether neglected in the past. May the writer be pardoned if,
in the last words of what is probably his last historical work, he expresses a
hope that, in the future, the nations of the earth will more and more take the
lesson to heart, and vie with each other in the arts which made Phoenicia
great, rather than in those which exalted Rome, her oppressor and destroyer?