Overview
Phoenicians were an ancient Semitic people who inhabited city-states in Canaan along the Levantine coast of the eastern Mediterranean, primarily in present-day Lebanon and parts of coastal Syria. Their maritime civilization expanded and contracted over time, with its cultural core stretching from Arwad to Mount Carmel. Through trade and colonization, the Phoenicians extended their influence across the Mediterranean, from Cyprus to the Maghreb and Iberian Peninsula, leaving behind thousands of inscriptions. The Phoenicians emerged directly from the Bronze Age Canaanites, and their cultural traditions survived the Late Bronze Age collapse, continuing into the Iron Age with little interruption. They referred to themselves as Canaanites and their land as Canaan, though the territory they occupied was smaller than that of earlier.
Historical Periods
Phoenicia (-1150–-1001)
1150 BCE – 1001 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 12,354 km²
Phoenicia (-1000–-901)
1000 BCE – 901 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 12,908 km²
Phoenicia (-900–-801)
900 BCE – 801 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 14,560 km²
Phoenicia (-800–-751)
800 BCE – 751 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 25,399 km²
Phoenicia (-750–-701)
750 BCE – 701 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 28,407 km²
Phoenicia (-700–-676)
700 BCE – 676 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 11,931 km²
Phoenicia (-675–-651)
675 BCE – 651 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 15,639 km²
Phoenicia (-650–-631)
650 BCE – 631 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 14,536 km²
Phoenicia (-630–-616)
630 BCE – 616 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 9,718 km²
Phoenicia (-615–-601)
615 BCE – 601 BCE
Capital: SidonArea: 34,487 km²
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