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It is still in use today
- The ancient skill of building Phoenician ships is not a lost art... in fact it is still in use today.
phoenician.org/ancient_ships/Phoenician Ships, Boats and Sea Trade - Phoenicians in Phoenicia
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Are Phoenician ships still used today?
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Why were the Phoenicians remembered as 'princes of the sea'?
Its planks had been dovetailed together using mortise-and-tenon joints made from olivewood pegs, a technique of joinery that was known by the Romans as a coagmenta punicana (Phoenician joint). It’s still used in shipbuilding and carpentry today.
Sep 3, 2024 · The ancient skill of building Phoenician ships is not a lost art . . . in fact it is still in use today. Historian Sanford Holst documented this remarkable experience in Lebanon:
- The Canaanites' Origin of The Phoenicians
- The Phoenician Civilization with Many Contradictions
- Some Interesting Questions About The Phoenicians
- Phoenicians' Key Achievement - Alphabet and Writing
- Phoenician Cities Under Foreign Rule
The Phoenicians originated from the Canaanites' ancient culture in the region during the earlier Bronze Age (3000-1200 BC. It was concentrated along the coast of Lebanon and included some coastal areas of modern Syria and Galilee, reaching as far north as Arwad and as far south as Acre. Phoenicia was not a single centrally administered state; it wa...
"The Phoenicians were a clever race, who prospered in war and peace," wrote around AD 43, the earliest Roman geographer, Pomponius Mela. Mela described the Phoenicians as the ones who "excelled in writing and literature, and other arts, in seamanship, and in ruling an empire." He also wrote they were great writers, yet they left almost no documents...
Some interesting and unanswered though valid questions are: How could a civilization exist with so many contradictions? How can modern historians utilize evidence that no longer seems to exist to uncover the truth about these people? And why did their civilization finally crumble? As Canaanites, they had remarkable seafaring achievements. The Phoen...
No doubt, the Phoenicians' outstanding achievement was the development of writing, with letters that were later taken over and expanded by the Greeks forming the Latin alphabet. This alphabet originates from the Proto-Canaanite alphabet, during the 15th century BC, and earlier, the Phoenicians wrote with a cuneiform script. The earliest known inscr...
For most of their history, the Phoenicians remained under foreign rule or influence of political powers like Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Persia, Macedonia, and Rome. Gradually, the Phoenicia began to decline, and finally, Alexander the Great conquered Tyre and other Phoenician cities in 332 BC. After him, the Phoenicians came under Ptolemy's Egypt's r...
3 days ago · Sailing the Phoenician Coast of Spain. The Phoenician ship dates to around 600 BCE, when much of southern Iberia was settled by Phoenician merchants and traders. Likely struck by a sudden storm, the ship sank only a few yards from the coastline and was quickly covered over by sand. Today, the ship is one of the most complete ancient sea vessels ...
Feb 12, 2020 · The Phoenicia trawled through the ocean, collecting microplastics, as it travelled from Carthage, Tunisia through to Cadiz (Spain), Essaouira (Morocco), Tenerife (Canary Islands) and Santo Domingo (Dominican Republic) before finally arriving in Fort Lauderdale, Florida on 4 February 2020.
Nov 10, 2014 · Concealed for thousands of years by the Mediterranean Sea, wrecks of Phoenician ships are providing new vistas not only of the ships themselves but also of the lives and livelihood of Phoenician sailors.
Jan 21, 2021 · Despite their reputation as successful sailors, few Phoenician shipwrecks have been discovered in the Mediterranean. Ancient accounts and surviving iconography reveal that they used three types of ship: one for combat, with a square sail and two banks of oars, and two types of trading vessel.