by George Rawlinson
CHAPTER III— THE PEOPLE—ORIGIN
AND CHARACTERISTICS
Semitic origin of the Phoenicians—Characteristics of the
Semites—Place of the Phoenicians within the Semitic group—
Connected linguistically with the Israelites and the Assyro-
Babylonians—Original seat of the nation, Lower Babylonia—
Special characteristics of the Phoenician people—Industry
and perseverance—Audacity in enterprise—Pliability and
adaptability—Acuteness of intellect—Business capacity—
Charge made against them of bad faith—Physical
characteristics.
The
Phoenician people are generally admitted to have belonged to the group of
nations known as Semitic. This group, somewhat irrelevantly named, since the
descent of several of them from Shem is purely problematic, comprises the
Assyrians, the later Babylonians, the Aramæans or Syrians, the Arabians, the
Moabites, the Phoenicians, and the Hebrews. A single and very marked type of
language belongs to the entire group, and a character of homogeneity may, with
certain distinctions, be observed among all the various members composing it.
The unity of language is threefold: it may be traced in the roots, in the
inflections, and in the general features of the syntax. The roots are, as a
rule, bilateral or trilateral, composed (that is) of two or three letters, all
of which are consonants. The consonants determine the general sense of the
words, and are alone expressed in the primitive writing; the vowel sounds do
but modify more or less the general sense, and are unexpressed until the
languages begin to fall into decay. The roots are, almost all of them, more or
less physical and sensuous. They are derived in general from an imitation of
nature. "If one looked only to the Semitic languages," says M. Renan,31 "one would say, that sensation
alone presided over the first acts of the human intellect, and that language
was primarily nothing but a mere reflex of the external world. If we run
through the list of Semitic roots, we scarcely meet with a single one which
does not present to us a sense primarily material, which is then transferred,
by transitions more or less direct and immediate, to things which are
intellectual." Derivative words are formed from the roots by a few simple
and regular laws. The noun is scarcely inflected at all; but the verb has a
marvellous wealth of conjugations, calculated to express excellently well the
external relations of ideas, but altogether incapable of expressing their
metaphysical relations, from the want of definitely marked tenses and moods.
Inflections in general have a half-agglutinative character, the meaning and
origin of the affixes and suffixes being palpable. Syntax scarcely exists, the
construction of sentences having such a general character of simplicity,
especially in narrative, that one might compare it with the naïve utterances of
an infant. The utmost endeavour of the Semites is to join words together so as
to form a sentence; to join sentences is an effort altogether beyond them. They
employ the {lexis eiromene} of Aristotle,32 which proceeds by accumulating atom on
atom, instead of attempting the rounded period of the Latins and Greeks.
The
common traits of character among Semitic nations have been summed up by one
writer under five heads:—1. Pliability combined with iron fixity of purpose; 2.
Depth and force; 3. A yearning for dreamy ease; 4. Capacity for the hardest
work; and 5. Love of abstract thought.33 Another has thought to find them in the
following list:—1. An intuitive monotheism; 2. Intolerance; 3. Prophetism; 4.
Want of the philisophic and scientific faculties; 5. Want of curiosity; 6. Want
of appreciation of mimetic art; 7. Want of capacity for true political life.34 According to the latter writer,
"the Semitic race is to be recognized almost entirely by negative
characteristics; it has no mythology, no epic poetry, no science, no
philosophy, no fiction, no plastic arts, no civil life; everywhere it shows
absence of complexity; absence of combination; an exclusive sentiment of
unity."35 It is not very easy to reconcile these
two views, and not very satisfactory to regard a race as "characterised by
negatives." Agreement should consist in positive features, and these may
perhaps be found, first, in strength and depth of the religious feeling,
combined with firm belief in the personality of the Deity; secondly, in dogged
determination and "iron fixity of purpose;" thirdly, in inventiveness
and skill in the mechanical arts and other industries; fourthly, in
"capacity for hard work;" and, fifthly, in a certain adaptability and
pliability, suiting the race for expansion and for commerce. All these
qualities are perhaps not conspicuous in all the branches of the Semites, but
the majority of them will be found united in all, and in some the combination
would seem to be complete.
It is
primarily on account of their language that the Phoenicians are regarded as
Semites. When there are no historical grounds for believing that a nation has
laid aside its own original form of speech, and adopted an alien dialect,
language, if not a certain, is at least a very strong, evidence of ethnic
character. Counter-evidence may no doubt rebut the prima facie
presumption; but in the case of the Phoenicians no counter-evidence is
producible. They belong to exactly that geographic zone in which Semitism has
always had its chief seat; they cannot be shown to have been ever so
circumstanced as to have had any inducement to change their speech; and their
physical character and mental characteristics would, by themselves, be almost
sufficient ground for assigning them to the type whereto their language points.
The
place which the Phoenicians occupy within the Semitic group is a question
considerably more difficult to determine. By local position they should belong
to the western, or Aramaic branch, rather than to the eastern, or
Assyro-Babylonian, or to the southern, or Arab. But the linguistic evidence
scarcely lends itself to such a view, while the historic leads decidedly to an
opposite conclusion. There is a far closer analogy between the Palestinian
group of languages—Phoenician, Hebrew, Moabite, and the Assyro-Babylonian, than
between either of these and the Aramaic. The Aramaic is scanty both in variety
of grammatical forms and in vocabulary; the Phoenician and Assyro-Babylonian
are comparatively copious.36 The Aramaic has the character of a
degraded language; the Assyro-Babylonian and the Phoenician are modelled on a
primitive type.37 In some respects Phoenician is even
closer to Assyro-Babylonian than Hebrew is—e.g. in preferring at to ah
for the feminine singular termination.38
The
testimony of history to the origin of the Phoenicians is the following.
Herodotus tells us that both the Phoenicians themselves, and the Persians best
acquainted with history and antiquities, agreed in stating that the original
settlements of the Phoenician people were upon the Erythræan Sea (Persian
Gulf), and that they had migrated from that quarter at a remote period, and
transferred their abode to the shores of the Mediterranean.39 Strabo adds that the inhabitants of
certain islands in the Persian Gulf had a similar tradition, and showed temples
in their cities which were Phoenician in character.310 Justin, or rather Trogus Pompeius,
whom he abbreviated, writes as follows:—"The Syrian nation was founded by
the Phoenicians, who, being disturbed by an earthquake, left their native land,
and settled first of all in the neighbourhood of the Assyrian Lake, and
subsequently on the shore of the Mediterranean, where they built a city which
they called Sidon on account of the abundance of the fish; for the Phoenicians
call a fish sidon."311 The "Assyrian lake" of this
passage is probably the Bahr Nedjif, or "Sea of Nedjif," in the
neighbourhood of the ancient Babylon, a permanent sheet of water, varying in
its dimensions at different seasons, but generally about forty miles long, and
from ten to twenty broad.312 Attempts have been made to discredit
this entire story, but the highest living authority on the subject of Phoenicia
and the Phoenicians adopts it as almost certainly true, and observes:—"The
tradition relative to the sojourn of the Phoenicians on the borders of the
Erythræan Sea, before their establishment on the coast of the Mediterranean,
has thus a new light thrown upon it. It appears from the labours of M. Movers,
and from the recent discoveries made at Nineveh and Babylon, that the
civilisation and religion of Phoenicia and Assyria were very similar.
Independently of this, the majority of modern critics admit it as demonstrated
that the primitive abode of the Phoenicians ought to be placed upon the Lower
Euphrates, in the midst of the great commercial and maritime establishments of
the Persian Gulf, agreeable to the unanimous witness of all antiquity."313
If we
pass from the probable origin of the Phoenician people, and their place in the
Semitic group, to their own special characteristics, we shall find ourselves
upon surer ground, though even here there are certain points which are
debateable. The following is the account of their general character given by a
very high authority, and by one who, on the whole, may be regarded as an
admirer:—
"The
Phoenicians form, in some respects, the most important fraction of the whole
group of antique nations, notwithstanding that they sprang from the most
obscure and insignificant families. This fraction, when settled, was constantly
exposed to inroad by new tribes, was utterly conquered and subjected by utter
strangers when it had taken a great place among the nations, and yet by
industry, by perseverance, by acuteness of intellect, by unscrupulousness and
wait of faith, by adaptability and pliability when necessary, and dogged
defiance at other times, by total disregard of the rights of the weaker, they
obtained the foremost place in the history of their times, and the highest
reputation, not only for the things that they did, but for many that they did
not. They were the first systematic traders, the first miners and
metallurgists, the greatest inventors (if we apply such a term to those who
kept an ever-watchful lookout for the inventions of others, and immediately
applied them to themselves with some grand improvements on the original idea);
they were the boldest mariners, the greatest colonisers, who at one time held
not only the gorgeous East, but the whole of the then half-civilised West in
fee—who could boast of a form of government approaching to constitutionalism,
who of all nations of the time stood highest in practical arts and sciences,
and into whose laps there flowed an unceasing stream of the world's entire
riches, until the day came when they began to care for nothing else, and the
enjoyment of material comforts and luxuries took the place of the thirst for
and search after knowledge. Their piratical prowess and daring was undermined;
their colonies, grown old enough to stand alone, fell away from them, some
after a hard fight, others in mutual agreement or silently; and the nations in
whose estimation and fear they had held the first place, and who had been
tributary to them, disdained them, ignored them, and finally struck them
utterly out of the list of nations, till they dwindled away miserably, a
warning to all who should come after them."314
The
prominent qualities in this description would seem to be industry and perseverance,
audacity in enterprise, adaptability and pliability, acuteness of intellect,
unscrupulousness, and want of good faith. The Phoenicians were certainly among
the most industrious and persevering of mankind. The accounts which we have of
them from various quarters, and the remains which cover the country that they
once inhabited, sufficiently attest their unceasing and untiring activity
through almost the whole period of their existence as a nation. Always
labouring in their workshops at home in mechanical and æsthetic arts, they were
at the same time constantly seeking employment abroad, ransacking the earth for
useful or beautiful commodities, building cities, constructing harbours,
founding colonies, introducing the arts of life among wild nations, mining and
establishing fisheries, organising lines of land traffic, perpetually moving
from place to place, and leaving wherever they went abundant proofs of their
diligence and capacity for hard work. From Thasos in the East, where Herodotus
saw "a large mountain turned topsy-turvy by the Phoenicians in their
search for gold,"315 to the Scilly Islands in the West,
where workings attributable to them are still to be seen, all the metalliferous
islands and coast tracts bear traces of Phoenician industry in tunnels, adits,
and air-shafts, while manufactured vessels of various kinds in silver, bronze,
and terra-cotta, together with figures and gems of a Phoenician type, attest
still more widely their manufacturing and commercial activity.
Audacity
in enterprise can certainly not be denied to the adventurous race which, from
the islands and coasts of the Eastern Mediterranean, launched forth upon the
unknown sea in fragile ships, affronted the perils of waves and storms, and
still more dreaded "monsters of the deep,"316 explored the recesses of the stormy
Adriatic and inhospitable Pontus, steered their perilous course amid all the
islets and rocks of the Ægean, along the iron-bound shores of Thrace, Euboea,
and Laconia, first into the Western Mediterranean basin, and then through the
Straits of Gibraltar into the wild and boundless Atlantic, with its mighty
tides, its huge rollers, its blinding rains, and its frequent fogs. Without a
chart, without a compass, guided only in their daring voyages by their
knowledge of the stars, these bold mariners penetrated to the shores of Scythia
in one direction; to Britain, if not even to the Baltic, in another; in a third
to the Fortunate Islands; while, in a fourth, they traversed the entire length
of the Red Sea, and entering upon the Southern Ocean, succeeded in doubling the
Cape of Storms two thousand years before Vasco di Gama, and in effecting the
circumnavigation of Africa.317 And, wild as the seas were with which
they had to deal, they had to deal with yet wilder men. Except in Egypt, Asia
Minor, Greece, and perhaps Italy, they came in contact everywhere with savage
races; they had to enter into close relations with men treacherous,
bloodthirsty, covetous—men who were almost always thieves, who were frequently
cannibals, sometimes wreckers—who regarded foreigners as a cheap and very
delicious kind of food. The pioneers of civilisation, always and everywhere,
incur dangers from which ordinary mortals would shrink with dismay; but the earliest
pioneers, the first introducers of the elements of culture among barbarians who
had never heard of it, must have encountered far greater peril than others from
their ignorance of the ways of savage man, and a want of those tremendous
weapons of attack and defence with which modern explorers take care to provide
themselves. Until the invention of gunpowder, the arms of civilised men—swords,
and spears, and javelins, and the like—were scarcely a match for the cunningly
devised weapons—boomerangs, and blow-pipes, and poisoned arrows, and lassoes318—of the savage.
The
adaptability and pliability of the Phoenicians was especially shown in their
power of obtaining the favourable regard of almost all the peoples and nations
with which they came into contact, whether civilised or uncivilised. It is most
remarkable that the Egyptians, intolerant as they usually were of strangers,
should have allowed the Phoenicians to settle in their southern capital,
Memphis, and to build a temple and inhabit a quarter there.319 It is also curious and interesting
that the Phoenicians should have been able to ingratiate themselves with
another most exclusive and self-sufficing people, viz. the Jews. Hiram's
friendly dealings with David and Solomon are well known; but the continued
alliance between the Phoenicians and the Israelites has attracted less
attention. Solomon took wives from Phoenicia;320 Ahab married the daughter of
Ithobalus, king of Sidon;321 Phoenicia furnished timber for the
second Temple;322 Isaiah wound up his prophecy against
Tyre with a consolation;323 our Lord found faith in the
Syro-Phoenician woman;324 in the days of Herod Agrippa, Tyre and
Sidon still desired peace with Judæa, "because their country was nourished
by the king's country."325 And similarly Tyre had friendly
relations with Syria and Greece, with Mesopotamia and Assyria, with Babylonia
and Chaldæa. At the same time she could bend herself to meet the wants and gain
the confidence of all the varieties of barbarians, the rude Armenians, the wild
Arabs, the barbarous tribes of northern and western Africa, the rough Iberi,
the passionate Gauls, the painted Britons, the coarse Sards, the fierce
Thracians, the filthy Scyths, the savage races of the Caucasus. Tribes so timid
and distrustful as those of Tropical Africa were lured into peaceful and
friendly relations by the artifice of a "dumb commerce,"326 and on every side untamed man was softened
and drawn towards civilisation by a spirit of accommodation, conciliation, and
concession to prejudices.
If the
Phoenicians are to be credited with acuteness of intellect, it must be limited
to the field of practical enquiry and discovery. Whatever may be said with
regard to the extent and variety of their literature—a subject which will be
treated in another chapter—it cannot be pretended that humanity owes to them
any important conquests of a scientific or philosophic character. Herodotus,
who admires the learning of the Persians,327 the science of the Babylonians,328 and the combined learning and science
of the Egyptians,329 limits his commendation of the
Phoenicians to their skill in navigation, in mechanics, and in works of art.330 Had they made advances in the
abstract, or even in the mixed, sciences, in mathematics, or astronomy, or
geometry, in logic or metaphysics, either their writings would have been
preserved, or at least the Greeks would have made acknowledgments of being
indebted to them.331 But it is only in the field of
practical matters that any such acknowledgments are made. The Greeks allow
themselves to have been indebted to the Phoenicians for alphabetic writing, for
advances in metallurgy, for improvements in shipbuilding, and navigation, for
much geographic knowledge, for exquisite dyes, and for the manufacture of
glass. There can be no doubt that the Phoenicians were a people of great
practical ability, with an intellect quick to devise means to ends, to scheme,
contrive, and execute, and with a happy knack of perceiving what was
practically valuable in the inventions of other nations, and of appropriating
them to their own use, often with improvements upon the original idea. But they
were not possessed of any great genius or originality. They were, on the whole,
adapters rather than inventors. They owed their idea of alphabetic writing to
the Accadians,332 their weights and measures to Babylon,333 their shipbuilding probably to Egypt,334 their early architecture to the same
country,335 their mimetic art to Assyria, to
Egypt, and to Greece. They were not poets, or painters, or sculptors, or great
architects, much less philosophers or scientists; but in the practical arts,
and even in the practical sciences, they held a high place, in almost all of
them equalling, and in some exceeding, all their neighbours.
We
should be inclined also to assign to the Phoenicians, as a special
characteristic, a peculiar capacity for business. This may be said, indeed, to
be nothing more than acuteness of intellect applied in a particular way. To
ourselves, however, it appears to be, in some sort, a special gift. As, beyond
all question, there are many persons of extremely acute intellect who have not
the slightest turn for business, or ability for dealing with it, so we think
there are nations, to whom no one would deny high intellectual power, without
the capacity in question. In its most perfect form it has belonged but to a
small number of nations—to the Phoenicians, the Venetians, the Genoese, the
English, and the Dutch. It implies, not so much high intellectual power, as a
combination of valuable, yet not very admirable, qualities of a lower order.
Industry, perseverance, shrewdness, quickness of perception, power of
forecasting the future, power of organisation, boldness, promptness, are among
the qualities needed, and there may be others discoverable by the skilful
analyst. All these met in the Phoenicians, and met in the proportions that were
needed for the combination to take full effect.
Whether
unscrupulousness and want of good faith are rightly assigned to the Phoenicians
as characteristic traits, is, at the least, open to doubt. The Latin writers,
with whom the reproach contained in the expression "Punica fides"
originated, are scarcely to be accepted as unprejudiced witnesses, since it is
in most instances a necessity that they should either impute "bad
faith" to the opposite side, or admit that there was "bad faith"
on their own. The aspersions of an enemy are entitled to little weight. The cry
of "perfide Albion" is often heard in the land of one of our near neighbours;
but few Englishmen will admit the justice of it. It may be urged in favour of
the Phoenicians that long-continued commercial success is impossible without
fair-dealing and honesty; that where there is commercial fair-dealing and
honesty, those qualities become part and parcel of the national character, and
determine national policy; and, further, that in almost every one of the
instances of bad faith alleged, there is at the least a doubt, of which the
accused party ought to have the benefit. At any rate, let it be remembered that
the charges made affect the Liby-Phoenicians alone, and not the Phoenicians of
Asia, with whom we are here primarily concerned, and that we cannot safely, or
equitably, transfer to a mother-country faults which are only even alleged
against one of her colonies.
Physically,
the Phoenicians appear to have resembled the Assyrians and the Jews. They had
large frames strongly made, well-developed muscles, curled beards, and abundant
hair. In their features they may have borne a resemblance, but probably not a
very strong resemblance, to the Cypriots,336 who were a mixed people recruited from
various quarters.337 In complexion they belonged to the
white race, but were rather sallow than fair. Their hair was generally dark,
though it may have been sometimes red. Some have regarded the name
"Phoenician" as indicating that they were of a red or red-brown
colour;338 but it is better to regard the
appellation as having passed from the country to its people, and as applied to
the country by the Greeks on account of the palm-trees which grew along its
shores.