READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
CHAPTER XLII (42).DECLINE OF THE PHENICIANS.-GROWTH OF CARTHAGE.. The preceding sketch of that important system of foreign nations,—
Phenicians, Assyrians, and Egyptians,—who occupied the south-eastern portion
of the inhabited world of an early Greek, brings them down nearly to the time
at which they were all absorbed into the mighty Persian Empire. In tracing the
series of events which intervened between 700 BC, and 530 BC, we observe a material increase of
power both in the Chaldaeans and Egyptians, and an
immense extension of Grecian maritime activity and commerce,—but we at the
same time notice the decline of Tyre and Sidon, both in power and traffic. The
arms of Nebuchadnezzar reduced the Phenician cities to the same state of dependence
as that which the Ionian cities underwent half a century later from Croesus and
Cyrus, while the ships of Miletus, Phocaea, and Samos gradually spread over all
those waters of the Levant which had once been exclusively Phenician. In the
year 704 BC, the Samians did not yet possess a single trireme,down to the year 630 BC not a single Greek vessel had yet visited Libya; but when we
reach 550 bC we find the Ionic
ships predominant in the Jagan, and those of Corinth end Corcyra in force to
the west of Peloponnesus,—we see the flourishing cities of Cyrene and Barka
already rooted in Libya, and the port of Naucratis a busy emporium of Grecian
commerce with Egypt. The trade by land, which is all that Egypt had enjoyed
prior to Psammetichus, and which was exclusively conducted by Phenicians, is
exchanged for a trade by sea, of which the Phoenicians have only a share, and
seemingly a smaller share than the Greeks ; and the conquest by Amasis of the
island of Cyprus, half-filled with Phenician settlements and once the tributary
dependence of Tyre, affords one mark of the comparative decline of that great
city. In her commerce with the Red sea and the Persian gulf she still remained
without a competitor, the schemes of the Egyptian king Nekos having proved abortive; slid even in the time of Herodotus, the spices and
frankincense of Arabia were still brought and distributed only by the Phenician
merchant. But on the whole, both her political and industrial development are
now cramped by impediments, and kept down by rivals, not before in operation;
and the part which she will be found to play in the Mediterranean, throughout
the whole course of this history, is one subordinate and of reduced importance.
The course of Grecian history is not directly affected by
these countries, yet their effect upon the Greek mind was very considerable,
and the opening of the Nile by Psammetichus constitutes an epoch la Hellenic
thought. It supplied their observation with a large, and diversified field of
present reality, while it was at the same time one great source of those mysticizing tendencies which corrupted so many of their
speculative minds. But to Phenicia and Assyria, the Greeks owe two acquisitions
well deserving special mention, the alphabet, and the first standard and
scale of weight, as well as coined money. Of neither of these acquisitions can
we trace the precise date. That the Greek alphabet is derived from the
Phenician, the analogy of the two proves beyond dispute, though we know not how
or where the inimitable present was handed over, of which no traces are to be
found in the Homeric poems. The Latin alphabet, which is nearly identical with
the most ancient Doric variety of the Greek, was derived from the same source,—also the Etruscan alphabet, though—if O. Muller is correct in his
conjecture—only at second-hand, through the intervention of the Greek. If we
cannot make out at what time the Phenicians made this valuable communication
to the Greeks, much less can we determine when or how they acquired it
themselves,— whether it be of Semitic invention, or derived from improvement
upon the phonetic hieroglyphics of the Egyptians.
Besides the letters of the alphabet, the scale of weight
and that of coined money passed from Phenicia and Assyria into Greece. It has
been shown by Boeckh, in his “Metrologie,”
that the Aeginaean scale,—with its divisions, talent, mna,
and obolus,—is identical with the Babylonian and Phenician: and that the
word mna, which forms the central point of the scale,
is of Chaldean origin. On this I have already touched in a former chapter,
while relating the history of Phedon of Argos, by
whom what is called the Aeginaean scale was first promulgated.
In tracing, therefore, the effect upon the Greek mind of
early intercourse with the various Asiatic nations, we find that, as the Greeks
made up their musical scale, so important an element of their early mental
culture, in part by borrowing from Lydians and Phrygians,—so also their
monetary and statical system, their alphabetical writing, and their duodecimal
division of the day, measured by the gnomon and the shadow, were all derived
from Assyrians and Phenicians. The early industry and commerce of these
countries was thus in many ways available to Grecian advance, and would
probably have become more so, if the great and rapid rise of the more barbarous
Persians had not reduced them all to servitude. The Phenicians, though unkind
rivals, were at the same time examples and stimulants to Greek maritime
aspiration; and the Phenician worship of that goddess whom the Greeks knew
under the name of Aphrodite, became communicated to the latter in Cyprus, in
Kythera, in Sicily,—perhaps also in Corinth.
The sixth century BC, though a period of decline for Tyre and Sidon, was a period of growth for their
African colony Carthage, which appears during this century in considerable
traffic with the Tyrrhenian towns on the southern coast of Italy, and as
thrusting out the Phocaean settlers from Alalia in Corsica. The wars of the
Carthaginians with the Grecian colonies in Sicily, so far as they are known to
us, commence shortly after 500 bc, and
continue at intervals, with fluctuating success, for two centuries and a half.
The foundation of Carthage by the Tyrians is placed at
different dates, the lowest of which, however, is 819 BC: other authorities
place it in 878 BC, and we have
no means of deciding between them. I have already remarked that it is by no means
the oldest of the Tyrian colonies; but though Utica and Gades may have been
more ancient than Carthage, the latter greatly outstripped them in wealth and
power, and acquired a sort of federal preeminence over all the Phenician
colonies on the coast of Africa. In those later times when the dominion of the
Carthaginians had reached its maximum, it comprised the towns of Utica, Hippo,
Adrumetum, and Leptis,—all original Phenician foundations, and enjoying
probably, even as dependents of Carthage, a certain qualified autonomy,—besides a great number of smaller towns planted by themselves, and inhabited by
a mixed population called Liby-Phenicians. Three hundred such towns,—a
dependent territory covering half the space between the lesser and the greater
Syrtis, and. in many parts remarkably fertile,—a city said to contain seven
hundred thousand inhabitants, active, wealthy, and seemingly homogeneous,—and
foreign dependencies in Sicily, Sardinia, the Balearic isles, and Spain,—all
this aggregate of power, under one political management, was sufficient to
render the contest of Carthage even with Rome for some time doubtful.
But by what steps the Carthaginians raised themselves to
such a pitch of greatness we have no information, and we are even left to guess
how much of it had already been acquired in the sixth century BC. As in the
case of so many other cities, we have a foundation-legend, decorating the
moment of birth, and then nothing farther. The Tyrian princess Dido or Elisa,
daughter of Belus, sister of Pygmalion Ling of Tyre, and wife of the wealthy
Sichaeus priest of Herakles in that city,—is said to have been left a widow in
consequence of the murder of Sichaeus by Pygmalion, who seized the treasures
belonging to his victim. But Dido found means to disappoint him of his booty,
possessed herself of the gold which had tempted Pygmalion, and secretly
emigrated, carrying with her the sacred insignia of Herakles: a considerable
body of Tyrians followed her. She settled at Carthage on a small hilly
peninsula joined by a narrow tongue of land to the continent, purchasing from
the natives as much land as could be surrounded by an ox’s hide, which she
caused to be cut into the thinnest strip, and thus made it sufficient for the site
of her first citadel, Byrsa, which afterwards grew up into the great, city of
Carthage. As soon as her new settlement had acquired footing, she was
solicited in marriage by several princes of the native tribes, especially by
the Gaetulian Jarbas, who threatened war if he were
refused. Thus pressed by the clamors of her own people, who desired to come
into alliance with the natives, yet irrevocably determined to maintain
exclusive fidelity to her first husband, she escaped the conflict by putting an
end to her life. She pretended to acquiesce m the proposition of a second
marriage, requiring only delay sufficient to offer an expiatory sacrifice to
the manes of Sichaeus: a vast funeral pile was erected, and many victims slain
upon it, in the midst of which Dido pierced her own bosom with a sword, and
perished in the flames. Such is the legend to which Virgil has given a new
color by interweaving the adventures of Aeneas, and thus connecting the foundation
legends of Carthage and Rome, careless of his deviation from the received
mythical chronology. Dido was worshipped as a goddess at Carthage until the
destruction of the city: and it has been imagined with some probability that
she is identical with Astarte, the divine patroness under whose auspices the colony
was originally established, as Gades and Tarsus were founded under those of
Herakles, — the tale of the funeral pile and self-burning appearing in the
religious ceremonies of other Cilician and Syrian towns. Phenician religion and
worship was diffused along with the Phenician colonies throughout the larger portion
of the Mediterranean.
The Phocaeans of Ionia, who
amidst their adventurous voyages westward established the colony of Massalia, (as
early as 600 bc) were only enabled to accomplish this
by a naval victory over the Carthaginians,—the earliest example of Greek and
Carthaginian collision which has been preserved to us. The Carthaginians were
jealous of commercial rivalry, and their traffic with the Tuscans and Latins
in Italy, as well as their lucrative mine-working in Spain, dates from a period
when Greek commerce in those regions was hardly known. In Greek authors, the
denomination Phenicians is often used to designate the Carthaginians, aa well
as the inhabitants of Tyre and Sidon, so that we cannot always distinguish
which of the two is meant; but it is remarkable that the distant establishment
of Gades, and the numerous settlements planted for commercial purposes along
the western coast of Africa, and without the strait of Gibraltar, arc expressly
ascribed to the Tyrians. Many of the other Phenician establishments on the
southern coast of Spain seemed to have owed their origin to Carthage rather
than to Tyre. But the relations between the two, so far as we know them, were
constantly amicable, and Carthage, even at the period of her highest glory,
sent Theori with a tribute of religious recognition
to the Tyrian Herakles: the visit of these envoys coincided with the siege of
the town by Alexander the Great. On that critical occasion, the wives and children
of the Tyrians were sent to find shelter at Carthage: two centuries before,
when the Persian empire was in its age of growth and expansion, the Tyrians had
refused to aid Cambyses with their fleet in his plans for conquering Carthage,
and thus probably pro« served their colony from subjugation.
|