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 PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Trading PeoplesChapter 3:i
The Aramaeans settled in central Syria circa 1200 B.C.
Damascus
The Aramaeans established their capital at Damascus,
one of the oldest,
continually inhabited
cities in the world.
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]
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]
The Aramaic alphabet is very similar to several
other alphabets.[Image source: http://www.sakkal.com/Arab_Calligraphy_Art3.html]
Hebrew and Arabic are
closely related to
the Aramaic language.
[Image source: http://pw1.netcom.com/~aldawood/aramaic.htm]
Much of the Old
Testament of the Bible was written in Aramaic.
Jesus preached in Aramaic.
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
The Phoenicians, a Semitic people from the Arabian Peninsula, settled in northern Canaan circa 3000 B.C.
Phoenicians
Southern Canaan was settled by the
Philistines, who migrated from
the eastern Mediterranean.
The Romans called
southern Canaan
Palestine, meaning
“land of the Philistines.”
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]
The shortage of arable soil for farming forced the Phoenicians to
turn to the sea to earn a living.
[Image source: http://www.execulink.com/~wblank/19981013.htm]
The Phoenicians harvested
timber from the cedar forests of
Lebanon to build strong,
fast ships.
By 1200 B.C., the
Phoenicians established powerful trading
cities along the coast of the Levant.
The city-state of Tyre often
provided the leadership for a confederation, or
loose union, of independent
Phoenician city-states.
-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.”
The Phoenicians became expert navigators, plotting their voyages by means of the sun and the stars.
The Phoenicians ventured as far as the coast of western Africa and
the British Isles, establishing colonies along the way.
Phoenician traders exchanged cedar logs, purple-dyed textiles, and jewelry for precious metals.
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]
The Phoenician alphabet consisted of 22 characters, each one representing a consonant.
[Image source: http://www.omniglot.dabsol.co.uk/language/writing/phoenician.htm]
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.
The Phoenician alphabet became the foundation for several other alphabets, among them Greek.
[Image source: http://www.sakkal.com/Arab_Calligraphy_Art3.html]
The Phoenicians established a network of trading posts
and colonies throughout the Mediterranean Basin.
[Source: World History: Patterns of Civilization (Prentice-Hall]
colony
• a settlement of people outside their homeland, linked with the parent country by trade and (sometimes) direct government control
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]
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?
Because they spread their
culture where ever they
ventured, the Phoenicians
are sometimes referred to as
the “Carriers of Civilization.”
This whole process of influencing others by
trade or contact is called Cultural Diffusion.
The kingdom of Lydia was well
situated to prosper from the trade that
passed between the Black and
Mediterranean seas.
AE
GE
AN
SEA
By the late-600s B.C., Lydia had developed into a wealthy and independent kingdom.
[Image source: http://www.turkeyholidaysguide.com/izmir-sardis.html]
King Croesusof the kingdom
of Lydia.
[Image source: http://www.livius.org/men-mh/mermnads/croesus.
htm]
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]
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.