by George Rawlinson
CHAPTER VIII—INDUSTRIAL ART AND
MANUFACTURES
Phoenician textile fabrics, embroidered or dyed—Account of
the chief Phoenician dye—Mollusks from which the purple was
obtained—Mode of obtaining them—Mode of procuring the dye
from them—Process of dyeing—Variety of the tints—
Manufacture of glass—Story of its invention—Three kinds of
Phoenician glass—1. Transparent colourless glass—2. Semi-
transparent coloured glass—3. Opaque glass, much like
porcelain—Description of objects in glass—Methods pursued
in the manufacture—Phoenician ceramic art—Earliest
specimens—Vases with geometrical designs—Incised
patterning—Later efforts—Use of enamel—Great amphora of
Curium—Phoenician ceramic art disappointing—Ordinary
metallurgy—Implements—Weapons—Toilet articles—Lamp-
stands and tripods—Works in iron and lead.
Phoenicia was celebrated from a remote antiquity
for the manufacture of textile fabrics. The materials which she employed for
them were wool, linen yarn, perhaps cotton, and, in the later period of her
commercial prosperity, silk. The "white wool" of Syria was supplied to her in abundance by the
merchants of Damascus,81 and wool of lambs, rams, and goats
seems also to have been furnished by the more distant parts of Arabia.82 Linen yarn may have been imported from
Egypt, where it was largely manufactured, and was of excellent quality;83 while raw silk is said to have been
"brought to Tyre and Berytus by the Persian merchants, and there both dyed
and woven into cloaks."84 The price of silk was very high, and it
was customary in Phoenicia
to intermix the precious material either with linen or with cotton;85 as is still done to a certain extent in
modern times. It is perhaps doubtful whether, so far as the mere fabric of
stuffs was concerned, the products of the Phoenician looms were at all superior
to those which Egypt and Babylonia furnished, much less to those which came
from India, and passed under the name of Sindones. Two things gave to
the Phoenician stuffs that high reputation which caused them to be more sought
for than any others; and these were, first, the brilliancy and beauty of their
colours, and, secondly, the delicacy with which they were in many instances
embroidered. We have not much trace of Phoenician embroidery on the
representations of dresses that have come down to us; but the testimony of the
ancients is unimpeachable,86 and we may regard it as certain that
the art of embroidery, known at a very early date to the Hebrews,87 was cultivated with great success by
their Phoenician neighbours, and under their auspices reached a high point of
perfection. The character of the decoration is to be gathered from the extant
statues and bas-reliefs, from the representations on pateræ, on cups, dishes,
and gems. There was a tendency to divide the surface to be ornamented into
parallel stripes or bands, and to repeat along the line a single object, or two
alternately. Rosettes, monsters of various kinds, winged globes with uræi,
scarabs, sacred trees, and garlands or blossoms of the lotus were the ordinary
"motives."88 Occasionally human figures might be
introduced, and animal forms even more frequently; but a stiff conventionalism
prevailed, the same figures were constantly repeated, and the figures
themselves had in few cases much beauty.
The
brilliancy and beauty of the Phoenician coloured stuffs resulted from the excellency
of their dyes. Here we touch a second branch of their industrial skill, for the
principal dyes used were originally invented and continuously fabricated by the
Phoenicians themselves, not imported from any foreign country. Nature had
placed along the Phoenician coast, or at any rate along a great portion of it,
an inexhaustible supply of certain shell-fish, or molluscs, which contained as
a part of their internal economy a colouring fluid possessing remarkable, and
indeed unique, qualities. Some account has been already given of the species
which are thought to have been anciently most esteemed. They belong, mainly, to
the two allied families of the Murex and the Buccinum or Purpura.
Eight species of the former, and six of the latter, having their habitat in the
Mediterranean, have been distinguished by some naturalists;89 but two of the former only, and one of
the latter, appear to have attracted the attention of the Phoenicians. The Murex
brandaris is now thought to have borne away the palm from all the others;
it is extremely common upon the coast; and enormous heaps of the shells are
found, especially in the vicinity of Tyre, crushed and broken—the débris, as it
would seem, cast away by the manufacturers of old.810 The Murex trunculus, according
to some, is just as abundant, in a crushed state, in the vicinity of Sidon, great banks of it
existing, which are a hundred yards long and several yards thick.811 It is a more spinous shell than the M.
brandaris, having numerous projecting points, and a generally rough and
rugged appearance. The Purpura employed seems to have been the P.
lapillus, a mollusc not confined to the Mediterranean, but one which
frequents also our own shores, and was once turned to some account in Ireland.812 The varieties of the P. lapillus
differ considerably. Some are nearly white, some greyish, others buff striped
with brown. Some, again, are smooth, others nearly as rough as the Murex
trunculus. The Helix ianthina, which is included by certain writers
among the molluscs employed for dyeing purposes by the Phoenicians,813 is a shell of a completely different
character, smooth and delicate, much resembling that of an ordinary land snail,
and small compared to the others. It is not certain, however, that the helix,
though abounding in the Eastern Mediterranean,814 ever attracted the notice of the
Phoenicians.
The
molluscs needed by the Phoenician dyers were not obtained without some
difficulty. As the Mediterranean has no tides,
it does not uncover its shores at low water like the ocean, or invite man to
rifle them. The coveted shell-fish, in most instances, preferred tolerably deep
water; and to procure them in any quantity it was necessary that they should be
fished up from a depth of some fathoms. The mode in which they were captured
was the following. A long rope was let down into the sea, with baskets of reeds
or rushes attached to it at intervals, constructed like our lobster-traps or
eel-baskets, with an opening that yielded easily to pressure from the outside,
but resisted pressure from the inside, and made escape, when once the trap was
entered, impossible. The baskets were baited with mussels or frogs, both of
which had great attractions for the Purpuræ, and were seized and
devoured with avidity. At the upper end of the rope was attached to a large
piece of cork, which, even when the baskets were full, could not be drawn under
water. It was usual to set the traps in the evening, and after waiting a night,
or sometimes a night and a day, to draw them up to the surface, when they were
generally found to be full of the coveted shell-fish.815
There
were two ways in which the dye was obtained from the molluscs. Sometimes a hole
was broken in the side of the shell, and the fish taken out entire.816 The sac containing the
colouring matter, which is a sort of vein, beginning at the head of the animal,
and following the tortuous line of the body as it twists through the spiral
shell,817 was then carefully extracted, either
while the mollusc was still alive, or as soon as possible after death, as
otherwise the quality of the dye was impaired. This plan was pursued more
especially with the larger species of Purpuræ, where the sac
attained a certain size; while with a smaller kinds a different method was
followed. In their case no attempt was made to extract the sac, but the
entire fish was crushed, together with its shell, and after salt had been added
in the proportion of twenty ounces to a hundred pounds of the pulp, three days
were allowed for maceration; heat was then applied, and when, by repeated
skimming, the coarse particles had been removed, the dye was left in a liquid
state at the bottom. It was necessary that the vessel in which this final
process took place should be of lead, and not of bronze or iron, since those
metals gave the dye a disagreeable tinge.818
The
colouring matter contained in the sac of the Purpuræ is a liquid
of a creamy consistency, and of a yellowish-white hue. On extraction, it is at
first decidedly yellow; then after a little time it becomes green; and, finally,
it settles into some shade of violet or purple. Chemical analysis has shown
that in the case of the Murex trunculus the liquid is composed of two
elementary substances, one being cyanic acid, which is of a blue or azure
colour, and the other being purpuric oxide, which is a bright red.819 In the case of the Murex brandaris
one element only has been found: it is an oxide, which has received the name of
oxyde tyrien.820 No naturalist has as yet discovered
what purpose the liquid serves in the economy, or in the preservation, of the
animal; it is certainly not exuded, as sepia is by the cuttle-fish, to cloud
the water in the neighbourhood, and enable the creature to conceal itself.
Concerning
the Phoenician process of dyeing, the accounts which have come down to us are
at once confused and incomplete. Nothing is said with respect to their
employment of mordants, either acid or alkali, and yet it is almost certain
that they must have used one or the other, or both, to fix the colours, and
render them permanent. The gamins of Tyre employ to this day mordants of
each sort;821 and an alkali derived from seaweed is
mentioned by Pliny as made use of for fixing some dyes,822 though he does not distinctly tell us
that it was known to the Phoenicians or employed in fixing the purple. What we
chiefly learn from this writer as to the dyeing process is823—first, that sometimes the liquid
derived from the murex only, sometimes that of the purpura or buccinum
only, was applied to the material which it was wished to colour, while the most
approved hue was produced by an application of both dyes separately. Secondly,
we are told that the material, whatever it might be, was steeped in the dye for
a certain number of hours, then withdrawn for a while, and afterwards returned
to the vat and steeped a second time. The best Tyrian cloths were called Dibapha,
i.e. "twice dipped;" and for the production of the true "Tyrian
purple" it was necessary that the dye obtained from the Buccinum
should be used after that from the Murex had been applied. The Murex
alone gave a dye that was firm, and reckoned moderately good; but the Buccinum
alone was weak, and easily washed out.
The
actual tints produced from the shell-fish appear to have ranged from blue,
through violet and purple, to crimson and rose.824 Scarlet could not be obtained, but was
yielded by the cochineal insect. Even for the brighter sorts of crimson some
admixture of the cochineal dye was necessary.825 The violet tint was not generally
greatly prized, though there was a period in the reign of Augustus when it was
the fashion;826 redder hues were commonly preferred;
and the choicest of all is described as "a rich, dark purple, the colour
of coagulated blood."827 A deep crimson was also in request,
and seems frequently to be intended when the term purple ({porphureos}, purpureus)
is used.
A
third industry greatly affected by the Phoenicians was the manufacture of glass.
According to Pliny,828 the first discovery of the substance
was made upon the Phoenician coast by a body of sailors whom he no doubt
regarded as Phoenicians. These persons had brought a cargo of natrum, which is
the subcarbonate of soda, to the Syrian coast in the vicinity of Acre, and had gone ashore at the mouth of the river Belus
to cook their dinner. Having lighted a fire upon the sand, they looked about
for some stones to prop up their cooking utensils, but finding none, or none
convenient for the purpose, they bethought themselves of utilising for the
occasion some of the blocks of natrum with which their ship was laden. These
were placed close to the fire, and the heat was sufficient to melt a portion of
one of them, which, mixing with the siliceous sand at its base, produced a
stream of glass. There is nothing impossible or even very improbable in this
story; but we may question whether the scene of it is rightly placed. Glass was
manufactured in Egypt
many centuries before the probable date of the Phoenician occupation of the
Mediterranean coast; and, if the honour of the invention is to be assigned to a
particular people, the Egyptians would seem to have the best claim to it. The
process of glass-blowing is represented in tombs at Beni Hassan of very great
antiquity,829 and a specimen of Egyptian glass is in
existence bearing the name of a Usurtasen, a king of the twelfth dynasty.830 Natrum, moreover, was an Egyptian
product, well known from a remote date, being the chief ingredient used in the
various processes of embalming.831 Phoenicia has no natrum, and not
even any vegetable alkali readily procurable in considerable quantity. There may
have been an accidental discovery of glass in Phoenicia,
but priority of discovery belonged almost certainly to Egypt; and it is, upon the whole, most probable
that Phoenicia derived from Egypt her
knowledge both of the substance itself and of the method of making it.
Still,
there can be no doubt that the manufacture was one on which the Phoenicians
eagerly seized, and which they carried out on a large scale and very
successfully. Sidon, according to the ancients,832 was the chief seat of the industry;
but the best sand is found near Tyre, and both Tyre and Sarepta also
seem to have been among the places where glassworks were early established. At
Sarepta extensive banks of débris have been found, consisting of broken
glass of many colours, the waste beyond all doubt of a great glass manufactory;833 at Tyre, the traces of the industry
are less extensive,834 but on the other hand we have
historical evidence that it continued to be practised there into the middle
ages.835
The
glass produced by the Phoenicians was of three kinds: first, transparent
colourless glass, which the eye could see through; secondly, translucent
coloured glass, through which light could pass, though the eye could not
penetrate it so as to distinguish objects; and, thirdly, opaque glass, scarcely
distinguishable from porcelain. Transparent glass was employed for mirrors,
round plates being cast, which made very tolerable looking-glasses,836 when covered at the back by thin
sheets of metal, and also for common objects, such as vases, urns, bottles, and
jugs, which have been yielded in abundance by tombs of a somewhat late date in
Cyprus.837 No great store, however, seems to have
been set upon transparency, in which the Oriental eye saw no beauty; and the
objects which modern research has recovered under this head at Tyre,
in Cyprus,
and elsewhere, seem the work of comparatively rude artists, and have little
æsthetic merit. The shapes, however, are not inelegant.
The
most beautiful of the objects in glass produced by the Phoenicians are the
translucent or semi-transparent vessels of different kinds, most of them
variously coloured, which have been found in Cyprus,
at Camirus in Rhodes, and on the Syrian coast,
near Beyrout and elsewhere.838 These comprise small flasks or
bottles, from three to six inches long, probably intended to contain perfumes;
small jugs (oenochoæ) from three inches in height to five inches; vases of
about the same size; amphoræ pointed at the lower extremity; and other
varieties. They are coloured, generally, either in longitudinal or in horizontal
stripes and bands; but the bands often deviate from the straight line into
zig-zags, which are always more or less irregular, like the zig-zags of the
Norman builders, while sometimes they are deflected into crescents, or other
curves, as particularly one resembling a willow-leaf. The colours are not very
vivid, but are pleasing and well-contrasted; they are chiefly five—white, blue,
yellow, green, and a purplish brown. Red scarcely appears, except in a very
pale, pinkish form; and even in this form it is uncommon. Blue, on the other
hand, is greatly affected, being sometimes used in the patterns, often taken
for the ground, and occasionally, in two tints, forming both groundwork and
ornamentation.839 It is not often that more than three
hues are found on the same vessel, and sometimes the hues employed are only
two. There are instances, however, and very admirable instances, of the
employment, on a single vessel, of four hues.840
The
colours were obtained, commonly, at any rate, from metallic oxides. The
ordinary blue employed is cobalt, though it is suspected that there was an
occasional use of copper. Copper certainly furnished the greens, while
manganese gave the brown, which shades off into purple and into black. The
beautiful milky white which forms the ground tint of some vases is believed to
have been derived from the oxide of tin, or else from phosphate of chalk. It is
said that the colouring matter of the patterns does not extend through the
entire thickness of the glass, but lies only on the outer surface, being a
later addition to the vessels as first made.
Translucent
coloured glass was also largely produced by the Phoenicians for beads and other
ornaments, and also for the imitation of gems. The huge emerald of which
Herodotus speaks,841 as "shining with great brilliancy
at night" in the temple of Melkarth at Tyre,
was probably a glass cylinder, into which a lamb was introduced by the priests.
In Phoenician times the pretended stone is quite as often a glass paste as a
real gem, and the case is the same with the scarabs so largely used as seals.
In Phoenician necklaces, glass beads alternate frequently with real agates,
onyxes, and crystals; while sometimes glass in various shapes is the only
material employed. A necklace found at Tharros in Sardinia, and now in the
collection of the Louvre, which is believed to be of Phoenician manufacture, is
composed of above forty beads, two cylinders, four pendants representing heads
of bulls, and one representing the face of a man, all of glass.842 Another, found by M. Renan in Phoenicia
itself, is made up of glass beads imitating pearls, intermixed with beads of
cornaline and agate.843
Another
class of glass ornaments consists of small flat plaques or plates,
pierced with a number of fine holes, which appear to have been sewn upon
garments. These are usually patterned, sometimes with spirals, sometimes with
rosettes, occasionally, though rarely, with figures. Messrs. Perrot and Chipiez
represent one in their great work upon ancient art,844 where almost the entire field is
occupied by a winged griffin, standing upright on its two hind legs, and
crowned with a striped cap, or turban.
Phoenician
opaque glass is comparatively rare, and possesses but little beauty. It was
rendered opaque in various ways. Messrs. Perrot and Chipiez found that in a
statue of Serapis, which they analysed, the glass was mixed with bronze in the
proportions of ten to three. An opaque material of a handsome red colour was
thus produced, which was heavy and exceedingly hard.845
The
methods pursued by the Phoenician glass-manufacturers were probably much the same
as those which are still employed for the production of similar objects, and
involved the use of similar implements, as the blowpipe, the lathe, and the
graver. The materials having been procured, they were fused together in a
crucible or melting-pot by the heat of a powerful furnace. A blowpipe was then
introduced into the viscous mass, a portion of which readily attached itself to
the implement, and so much glass was withdrawn as was deemed sufficient for the
object which it was designed to manufacture. The blower then set to work, and
blew hard into the pipe until the glass at its lower extremity began to expand
and gradually took a pear-shaped form, the material partially coolling and
hardening, but still retaining a good deal of softness and pliability. While in
this condition, it was detached from the pipe, and modelled with pincers or
with the hand into the shape required, after which it was polished, and perhaps
sometimes cut by means of the turning-lathe. Sand and emery were the chief
polishers, and by their help a surface was produced, with which little fault
could be found, being smooth, uniform, and brilliant. Thus the vessel was
formed, and if no further ornament was required, the manufacture was complete—a
jug, vase, alabastron, amphora, was produced, either transparent or of a single
uniform tint, which might be white, blue, brown, green, &c., according to
the particular oxide which had been thrown, with the silica and alkali, into
the crucible. Generally, however, the manufacturer was not content with so
simple a product: he aimed not merely at utility, but at beauty, and proceeded
to adorn the work of his hands—whatever it was—with patterns which were for the
most part in good taste and highly pleasing. These patterns he first scratched
on the outer surface of the vessel with a graving tool; then, when he had made
his depressions deep enough, he took threads of coloured glass, and having
filled up with the threads the depressions which he had made, he subjected the
vessel once more to such a heat that the threads were fused, and attached
themselves to the ground on which they had been laid. In melting they would
generally more than fill the cavities, overflowing them, and protruding from
them, whence it was for the most part necessary to repeat the polishing
process, and to bring by means of abrasion the entire surface once more into
uniformity. There are cases where this has been incompletely done and where the
patterns project; there are others where the threads have never thoroughly
melted into the ground, and where in the course of time they have partially
detached themselves from it; but in general the fusion and subsequent polishing
have been all that could be wished, and the patterns are perfectly level with
the ground and seem one with it.846
The
running of liquid glass into moulds, so common nowadays, does not seem to have
been practised by the Phoenicians, perhaps because their furnaces were not
sufficiently hot to produce complete liquefaction. But—if this was so—the
pressure of the viscous material into moulds cannot have been unknown, since we
have evidence of the existence of moulds,847 and there are cases where several
specimens of an object have evidently issued from a single matrix.848 Beads, cylinders, pendants, scarabs,
amulets, were probably, all of them, made in this way, sometimes in
translucent, sometimes in semi-opaque glass, as perhaps were also the plaques
which have been already described.
The
ceramic art of the Phoenicians is not very remarkable. Phoenicia Proper is
deficient in clay of a superior character, and it was probably a very ordinary
and coarse kind of pottery that the Phoenician merchants of early times
exported regularly in their trading voyages, both inside and outside the Mediterranean. We hear of their carrying this cheap
earthenware northwards to the Cassiterides or Scilly Islands,849 and southwards to the isle of Cerné,
which is probably Arguin, on the West African coast;850 nor can we doubt that they supplied it
also to the uncivilised races of the Mediterranean—the Illyrians, Ligurians,
Sicels, Sards, Corsicans, Spaniards, Libyans. But the fragile nature of the
material, and its slight value, have caused its entire disappearance in the
course of centuries, unless in the shape of small fragments; nor are these
fragments readily distinguishable from those whose origin is different.
Phoenicia Proper has furnished no earthen vessels, either whole or in pieces,
that can be assigned to a time earlier than the Greco-Roman period,851 nor have any such vessels been found
hitherto on Phoenician sites either in Sardinia, or in Corsica, or in Spain, or
Africa, or Sicily, or Malta, or Gozzo. The only places that have hitherto
furnished earthen vases or other vessels presumably Phoenician are Jerusalem, Camirus in Rhodes, and Cyprus; and it
is from the specimens found at these sites that we must form our estimate of
the Phoenician pottery.
The
earliest specimens are of a moderately good clay, unglazed. They are regular in
shape, being made by the help of a wheel, and for the most part not inelegant,
though they cannot be said to possess any remarkable beauty. Many are without
ornament of any kind, being apparently mere jars, used for the storing away of
oil or wine; they have sometimes painted or scratched upon them, in Phoenician
characters, the name of the maker or owner. A few rise somewhat above the
ordinary level, having handles of some elegance, and being painted with designs
and patterns, generally of a geometrical character. A vase about six inches
high, found at Jerusalem, has, between horizontal bands, a series of geometric
patterns, squares, octagons, lozenges, triangles, pleasingly arranged, and
painted in brown upon a ground which is of a dull grey. At the top are two rude
handles, between which runs a line of zig-zag, while at the bottom is a sort of
stand or base. The shape is heavy and inelegant.852
Another
vase of a similar character to this, but superior in many respects, was found
by General Di Cesnola at Dali (Idalium), and is figured in his "Cyprus."853 This vase has the shape of an urn, and
is ornamented with horizontal bands, except towards the middle, where it has
its greatest diameter, and exhibits a series of geometric designs. In the
centre is a lozenge, divided into four smaller lozenges by a St. Andrew's
cross; other compartments are triangular, and are filled with a chequer of
black and white, resembling the squares of a chessboard. Beyond, on either
side, are vertical bands, diversified with a lozenge ornament. Two hands succeed,
of a shape that is thought to have "a certain elegance."854 There is a rim, which might receive a
cover, at top, and at bottom a short pedestal. The height of the vase is about
thirteen inches.
In
many of the Cyprian vases having a geometric decoration, the figures are not
painted on the surface but impressed or incised. Messrs. Perrot and Chipiez
regard this form of ornamentation as the earliest; but the beauty and finish of
several vases on which it occurs is against the supposition. There is scarcely
to be found, even in the range of Greek art, a more elegant form than that of
the jug in black clay brought by General Di Cesnola from Alambra and figured
both in his "Cyprus"855 and in the "Histoire de
l'Art."856 Yet its ornamentation is incised. If,
then, incised patterning preceded painted in Phoenicia, at any rate it held its
ground after painting was introduced, and continued in vogue even to the time
when Greek taste had largely influenced Phoenician art of every description.
The
finest Phoenician efforts in ceramic art resemble either the best Egyptian or
the best Greek. As the art advanced, the advantage of a rich glaze was
appreciated, and specimens which seem to be Phoenician have all the delicacy
and beauty of the best Egyptian faïence. A cup found at Idalium, plain on the
outside, is covered internally with a green enamel, on which are patterns and
designs in black.857 In a medallion at the bottom of the
cup is the representation of a marshy tract overgrown with the papyrus plant,
whereof we see both the leaves and blossoms, while among them, rushing at full
speed, is the form of a wild boar. The rest of the ornamentation consists
chiefly of concentric circles; but between two of the circles is left a
tolerably broad ring, which has a pattern consisting of a series of broadish
leaves pointing towards the cup's centre. Nothing can be more delicate, or in
better taste, than the entire design.
The
most splendid of all the Cyprian vases was found at Curium, and has been
already represented in this volume. It is an amphora of large dimensions,
ornamented in part with geometrical designs, in part with compartments, in
which are represented horses and birds. The form, the designs, and the general
physiognomy of the amphora are considered to be in close accordance with
Athenian vases of the most antique school. The resemblance is so great that
some have supposed the vase to have been an importation from Attica into
Cyprus;858 but such conjectures are always
hazardous; and the principal motives of the design are so frequent on the
Cyprian vases, that the native origin of the vessel is at least possible, and
the judgment of some of the best critics seems to incline in this direction.
Still,
on the whole, the Cyprian ceramic art is somewhat disappointing. What is
original in it is either grotesque, as the vases in the shape of animals,859 or those crowned by human heads,860 or those again which have for spout a
female figure pouring liquid out of a jug.861 What is superior has the appearance of
having been borrowed. Egyptian, Assyrian, and Greek art, each in turn,
furnished shapes, designs, and patterns to the Phoenician potters, who readily
adopted from any and every quarter the forms and decorations which hit their
fancy. Their fancy was, predominantly, for the bizarre and the
extravagant. Vases in the shape of helmets, in the shape of barrels, in the
shape of human heads,862 have little fitness, and in the
Cyprian specimens have little beauty; the mixture of Assyrian with Egyptian
forms is incongruous; the birds and beasts represented are drawn with studied
quaintness, a quaintness recalling the art of China
and Japan.
If there is elegance in some of the forms, it is seldom a very pronounced
elegance; and, where the taste is best, the suspicion continually arises that a
foreign model has been imitated. Moreover, from first to last the art makes
little progress. There seems to have been an arrest of development.863 The early steps are taken, but at a
certain point stagnation sets in; there is no further attempt to improve or
advance; the artists are content to repeat themselves, and reproduce the
patterns of the past. Perhaps there was no demand for ceramic art of a higher
order. At any rate, progress ceases, and while Greece
was rising to her grandest efforts, Cyprus,
and Phoenicia
generally, were content to remain stationary.
Besides
their ornamental metallurgy, which has been treated of in a former chapter, the
Phoenicians largely employed several metals, especially bronze and copper, in
the fabrication of vessels for ordinary use, of implements, arms, toilet
articles, furniture, &c. The vessels include pateræ, bowls, jugs, amphoræ,
and cups;864 the implements, hatchets, adzes,
knives, and sickles;865 the arms, spearheads, arrowheads,
daggers, battle-axes, helmets, and shields;866 the toilet articles, mirrors,
hand-bells, buckles, candlesticks, &c.;867 the furniture, tall candelabra,
tripods, and thrones.868 The bronze is of an excellent quality,
having generally about nine parts of copper to one of tin; and there is reason
to believe that by the skilful tempering of the Phoenician metallurgists, it
attained a hardness which was not often given it by others. The Cyprian shields
were remarkable. They were of a round shape, slightly convex, and instead of
the ordinary boss, had a long projecting cone in the centre. An actual shield,
with the cone perfect, was found by General Di Cesnola at Amathus,869 and a projection of the same kind is
seen in several of the Sardinian bronze and terra-cotta statuettes.870 Shields were sometimes elaborately
embossed, in part with patterning, in part with animal and vegetable forms.871 Helmets were also embossed with care,
and sometimes inscribed with the name of the maker or the owner.872
Some
remains of swords, probably Phoenician, have been found in Sardinia.
They vary from two feet seven inches to four feet two inches in length.873 The blade is commonly straight, and
very thick in the centre, but tapers off on both sides to a sharp edge. The
point is blunt, so that the intention cannot have been to use the weapon both
for cutting and thrusting, but only for the former. It would scarcely make such
a clean cut as a modern broadsword, but would no doubt be equally effectual for
killing or disabling. Another weapon, found in Sardinia,
and sometimes called a sword, is more properly a knife or dagger. In length it
does not exceed seven or eight inches, and of this length more than a third is
occupied by the handle.874 Below the handle the blade broadens
for about an inch or an inch and a half; after this it contracts, and tapers
gently to a sharp point. Such a weapon appears sometimes in the hand of a
statuette.875
The
bronze articles of the toilet recovered by recent researches in Cyprus and
elsewhere are remarkable. The handle of a mirror found in Cyprus, and now in the Museum of New York,
possesses considerable merit. It consists mainly of a female figure, naked, and
standing upon a frog.876 In her hands she holds a pair of
cymbals, which she is in the act of striking together. A ribbon, passed over
her left shoulder, is carried through a ring, from which hangs a seal. On her
arms and shoulders appear to have stood two lions, which formed side supports
to the mirror that was attached to the figure's head. If the face of the
cymbal-player cannot boast of much beauty, and her figure is thought to
"lack distinction," still it is granted that the tout ensemble
of the work was not without originality, and may have possessed a certain
amount of elegance.877 The frog is particularly well
modelled.
Some
candlesticks found in the Treasury of Curium,878 and a tripod from the same place, seem
to deserve a short notice. The candlesticks stand upon a sort of short pillar
as a base, above which is the blossom of a flower inverted, a favourite
Phoenician ornament.879 From this rises the lamp-stand,
composed of three leaves, which curl outwards, and support between them a ring
into which the bottom of the lamp fitted. The tripod880 is more elaborate. The legs, which are
fluted, bulge considerably at the top, after which they bend inwards, and form
a curve like one half of a Cupid's bow. To retain them in place, they are
joined together by a sort of cross-bar, about half-way in their length; while,
to keep them steady, they are made to rest on large flat feet. The circular
hoop which they support is of some width, and is ornamented along its entire
course with a zig-zag. From the hoop depend, half-way in the spaces between the
legs, three rings, from each of which there hangs a curious pendant.
Besides
copper and bronze, the Phoenicians seem to have worked in lead and iron, but
only to a small extent. Iron ore might have been obtained in some parts of
their own country, but appears to have been principally derived from abroad,
especially from Spain.881 It was worked up chiefly, so far as we
know, into arms offensive and defensive. The sword of Alexander, which he
received as a gift from the king of Citium,882 was doubtless in this metal, which is
the material of a sword found at Amathus, and of numerous arrowheads.883 We are also told that Cyprus
furnished the iron breast-plates worn by Demetrius Poliorcetes;884 and in pre-Homeric times it was a
Phoenician—Cinyras—who gave to Agamemnon his breast-plate of steel, gold, and
tin.885 That more remains of iron arms and
implements have not been found on Phoenician sites is probably owing to the
rapid oxydisation of the metal, which consequently decays and disappears. The
Hiram who was sent to assist Solomon in building and furnishing the Temple of Jerusalem was, we must remember,
"skilful to work," not only "in gold, and silver, and bronze,"
but also "in iron."886
Lead
was largely furnished to the Phoenicians by the Scilly Islands,887 and by Spain.888 It has not been found in any great
quantity on Phoenician sites, but still appears occasionally. Sometimes it is a
solder uniting stone with bronze;889 sometimes it exists in thin sheets,
which may have been worn as ornaments.890 In Phoenicia Proper it has been
chiefly met with in the shape of coffins,891 which are apparently of a somewhat
late date. They are formed of several sheets placed one over the other and then
soldered together. There is generally on the lid and sides of the coffin an
external ornamentation in a low relief, wherein the myth of Psyché is said
commonly to play a part; but the execution is mediocre, and the designs
themselves have little merit.