trading peoples chapter 3:i

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Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

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Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i. The Aramaeans settled in central Syria circa 1200 B.C. The Aramaeans established their capital at Damascus, one of the oldest, continually inhabited cities in the world. Damascus. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

Trading PeoplesChapter 3:i

Page 2: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The Aramaeans settled in central Syria circa 1200 B.C.

Page 3: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

Damascus

The Aramaeans established their capital at Damascus,

one of the oldest,

continually inhabited

cities in the world.

Page 4: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The Aramaeans quickly gained control of the rich overland trade between Egypt and Mesopotamia.

[Image source: http://www.faculty.fairfield.edu/faculty/jmac/meso/meso.htm]

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As a result, the Aramaean language quickly became

the dominant language for trade and communication.

[Image source: http://members.aol.com/assyrianme/aramaic/aramaic.html]

Page 6: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The Aramaic alphabet is very similar to several

other alphabets.[Image source: http://www.sakkal.com/Arab_Calligraphy_Art3.html]

Page 7: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

Hebrew and Arabic are

closely related to

the Aramaic language.

[Image source: http://pw1.netcom.com/~aldawood/aramaic.htm]

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Much of the Old

Testament of the Bible was written in Aramaic.

Page 9: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

Jesus preached in Aramaic.

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Between ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia lay the land of Canaan.

Today we know this area as modern-day

Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan. C

AN

AA

N

Page 11: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The Phoenicians, a Semitic people from the Arabian Peninsula, settled in northern Canaan circa 3000 B.C.

Phoenicians

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Southern Canaan was settled by the

Philistines, who migrated from

the eastern Mediterranean.

Page 13: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The Romans called

southern Canaan

Palestine, meaning

“land of the Philistines.”

Page 14: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

Considered one of the Sea Peoples, the Philistines were engaged in maritime

trade in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.

[Image source: Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 1996, p.33]

Page 15: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The shortage of arable soil for farming forced the Phoenicians to

turn to the sea to earn a living.

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[Image source: http://www.execulink.com/~wblank/19981013.htm]

The Phoenicians harvested

timber from the cedar forests of

Lebanon to build strong,

fast ships.

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By 1200 B.C., the

Phoenicians established powerful trading

cities along the coast of the Levant.

Page 18: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The city-state of Tyre often

provided the leadership for a confederation, or

loose union, of independent

Phoenician city-states.

Page 19: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

-Ezekiel 27:32b-33

“Who was ever . . . like Tyre in the midst of the sea? When your wares came from the seas, you satisfied many peoples; with your great abundance and merchandise you enriched the kings of the earth.”

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The Phoenicians became expert navigators, plotting their voyages by means of the sun and the stars.

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The Phoenicians ventured as far as the coast of western Africa and

the British Isles, establishing colonies along the way.

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Phoenician traders exchanged cedar logs, purple-dyed textiles, and jewelry for precious metals.

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Phoenician traders kept records of complex business transactions

with an improved alphabet - a series of written symbols that

represent sounds.

[Image source: http://www.imultimedia.pt/museuvirtpress/ing/alfa/v6.html]

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The Phoenician alphabet consisted of 22 characters, each one representing a consonant.

[Image source: http://www.omniglot.dabsol.co.uk/language/writing/phoenician.htm]

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Th Phncn lphbt ws s sy t mstr, mrchnts n lngr ndd th srvcs f

spclly trnd scrbs t kp rcrds.

The Phoenician alphabet was so easy to master, merchants no

longer needed the services of

specially trained scribes to keep

records.

Page 26: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

The Phoenician alphabet became the foundation for several other alphabets, among them Greek.

[Image source: http://www.sakkal.com/Arab_Calligraphy_Art3.html]

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The Phoenicians established a network of trading posts

and colonies throughout the Mediterranean Basin.

[Source: World History: Patterns of Civilization (Prentice-Hall]

Page 28: Trading Peoples Chapter 3:i

colony

• a settlement of people outside their homeland, linked with the parent country by trade and (sometimes) direct government control

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Geologist Mark McMenamin believes that Phoenicians from Carthage may have sailed as far as the New World.

[Image source: http://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/comm/csj/960216/mcmen.html]

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As evidence, he cites what he believes to be a map at the bottom of the obverse of a fourth century

coin minted in Carthage.

[Image source: http://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/comm/csj/960216/mcmen.html]

America?

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Because they spread their

culture where ever they

ventured, the Phoenicians

are sometimes referred to as

the “Carriers of Civilization.”

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This whole process of influencing others by

trade or contact is called Cultural Diffusion.

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The kingdom of Lydia was well

situated to prosper from the trade that

passed between the Black and

Mediterranean seas.

AE

GE

AN

SEA

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By the late-600s B.C., Lydia had developed into a wealthy and independent kingdom.

[Image source: http://www.turkeyholidaysguide.com/izmir-sardis.html]

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King Croesusof the kingdom

of Lydia.

[Image source: http://www.livius.org/men-mh/mermnads/croesus.

htm]

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The Lydians are believed to have been the first people to set prices and develop a system using coins

as a medium of exchange.

[Image source: http://www.pngdealers.com/coin/coin-1298.htm]

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Soon, the concept of money spread beyond Lydia as other realms began

to stamp their own coins and use them as a medium of exchange.