|
|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
Here is a blueprint for a new interdisciplinary approach that
decompartmentalizes disciplines for the study of this district of
the Achaemenid Empire including Syria, Phoenicia, Palestine and
Cyprus. Remarkable cultural evolutions and changes in this area
need closer study: the introduction of coinage and the coin
economy, the sources of tension over problems of power and
identity, the emergence of city-states similar to the Greek city
type, the development of mercenary armies, the opening up of the
Western fringe of the Persian Empire to the Greek world. Completely
new research initiatives can extensively modify the vision that
classical and oriental specialists have traditionally formed of the
history of the Persian Empire.>
Arwad (now in Syria), Byblos (now Jbeil in Lebanon), Sidon (Saida
in Lebanon), and Tyre (Sour in Lebanon)—the four major cites of
Persian-period Phoenicia—all minted their own coins.
Archaeologists and historians have found these coins to be a major
resource for the reconstruction of Phoenician history. They have
increasingly been able to use them to discern important details of
Phoenicia’s political history that were previously unknown or
were presented only from the perspective provided by the reports of
the Greek historians or were based on knowledge of the Greek
language, rather than being based on knowledge of Semitic languages
and the iconography and inscriptions of the Phoenicians themselves.
For more than two decades, Alain and Josette Elayi have researched
the history of the Phoenician cities in the Persian period before
Alexander’s conquest. In the first stage of their research, the
authors provided an overview of the Phoenician economy under
Persian rule. The second stage provided an analysis of all hoards,
which included Phoenician coins dating to the Persian period. The
third stage was an investigation of Phoenician weights, in which
the Elayis used an original method that is also suited to
numismatic studies. The fourth stage covered the monetary and
political histories of the four Phoenician cities. In A Monetary
and Political History of the Phoenician City of Byblos, the
Elayis’ tour de force is the coin catalog, which introduces 1,662
silver Byblian coins, also published in 25 plates. In addition to
the usual numismatic analysis (monetary production, number of
issues, manufacturing techniques, and processes), this impressive
volume provides information on monetary inscriptions and
iconography and on the history of Byblos. The book is an
indispensable reference for understanding coin circulation, trading
exchanges, and even the wars involving the Greeks, Cypriots, and
Egyptians in the Phoenician eastern Mediterranean.
|
You may like...
Wales
Alison Jenkins
Hardcover
R214
Discovery Miles 2 140
|