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T he Levant in Ancient Times

T he Levant in Ancient Times. FOH 13. Can you locate…?. The Fertile Crescent Mediterranean Sea, Persian Gulf 3 major rivers Mesopotamia Sumer, Babylonia, Akkad, Assyria Egypt: Upper, Lower, delta, desert. B etween the major powers of Egypt and Mesopotamia?.

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T he Levant in Ancient Times

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  1. The Levant in Ancient Times FOH 13

  2. Can you locate…? • The Fertile Crescent • Mediterranean Sea, Persian Gulf • 3 major rivers • Mesopotamia • Sumer, Babylonia, Akkad, Assyria • Egypt: Upper, Lower, delta, desert

  3. Between the major powers of Egypt and Mesopotamia?

  4. Peoples of the Levant • Who lived here? • Were they settled or nomadic? • How did they make a living? • What resources did they have? • What language(s) did they speak? • What god(s) did they worship? • How did they deal with the presence and projects of larger powers?

  5. Phoenicians • Canaanites • Arameans • Philistines • Hebrews • Israelites • Judeans/Jews c. 830 BCE

  6. The International Age The “Five Powers” c. 1350 BCE • Egypt • Including Syria/Palestine/Canaan • Hatti (Hittites) • Mittani (Hurrians) • Alashiya • Mesopotamia • Northern part: Assyrians • Babylonia: Hittites, Kassites, Assyrians

  7. From alliance of “five great powers” to many smaller kingdoms? c. 1350 BCE c. 830 BCE

  8. The arrival of “the Sea Peoples” • c. 1200 BCE • Origin unknown, but armed with iron and warships, they attack and diminish the power of: - Mittani (the Hurrians) - Hatti (the Hittites) - Alashiya - Egypt (loses Syria/Palestine) • 1st Assyrian Empire is conquered by Arameans • the Levant is up for grabs…

  9. New powers take shape in the Levant (c. 1200 – 800 BCE) • Some of the “Sea Peoples” (peleset) settle on the southern coast  Philistines, Palestine • They form city-states: Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod • Further north, Phoenician city-states form: Byblos, Tyre, Sidon • Nomadic Hebrews, led by Moses, settle in the land of Canaan, and eventually form kingdoms • Settled people of Canaan form kingdoms: Edom, Moab, Ammon – as newcomers displace them

  10. Semitic family of languages

  11. The Phoenicians (c. 1200 – 500 BCE) • Location? Major settlements? Natural environment? Geopolitics?

  12. The Phoenicians (c. 1200 – 500 BCE) Geopolitics: • Rough terrain, hilly, rocky  hard to unite, created independent city-states • Narrow strip of plains along coast, hemmed in by mountains and forests  did some farming, but mostly relied on trade • Caught between two major civilizations  expanded to the west, around the Mediterranean, by creating colonies and extensive maritime (sea-based) trade routes

  13. Phoenicians’ colonies: • - Islands in middle of Mediterranean • - coast of southern Iberian peninsula (Spain) • - Coast of North Africa • Carthage and other settlements allowed them to control passage of ships between Eastern and Western Mediterranean • Access to natural resources and trading opportunities in these areas

  14. Phoenicians as traders • Trade featured: • two unique natural resources: timber and dye from snails • cheaper imitations of other people’s pottery, glass, jewelry, etc. • resources obtained through their colonies

  15. Phoenicians’ innovations as traders • Keeping track of stuff • Traveling by sea

  16. Phoenicians’ innovations as traders • Keeping track of stuff • Developed an alphabet with 22 symbols (letters) – all consonants • This made it easier for traders to keep their own records, not have to hire scribes • Traveling by sea

  17. Phoenicians’ innovations as traders • Phonetic alphabet • Traveling by sea: • New models of ships that were sturdy, stable, durable • Discovered tacking (sailing into wind) • Developed biremes and triremes as warships • Explored Mediterranean and beyond (Britain, Africa)

  18. End of the Phoenicians? • Assyrians (2nd empire) • Neo-babylonians • Persians • Greeks • Carthage, 146 BCE, by Romans Heartland of ancient Phoenicia today?

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