SCIENCE
Who were the Phoenicians? Read our outstanding article to find out.
Teachers, scroll down for a quick list of key resources in our Teachers Toolkit.
Discussion Ideas
- Researchers recently sequenced the genome of the “Young Man of Byrsa,” thought to be a Phoenician. Who were the Phoenicians? Read through our great article for some help.
- Good question! Relatively little is known about these “ancient rulers of the Mediterranean.”
- The Phoenicians were a seafaring Mediterranean people who dominated trade between about 1550 BCE and 300 BCE, when their civilization was overtaken by the Persians and the Greeks.
- The Phoenicians are primarily remembered as adept sailors and cunning merchants. They used their strategic position at the crossroads of eastern and western cultures to build a trading empire that extended from the Fertile Crescent in the east, through the islands of the Mediterranean Sea, and as far west as the Iberian Peninsula and the Atlantic Ocean.
- Fun fact: The Phoenician alphabet is the oldest alphabet yet identified. Arabic, Aramaic, Hebrew, Latin, and Greek scripts are all descended from Phoenician.
- The article and research paper identify the genome as Phoenician, but describe the Young Man of Byrsa as being discovered in a Punic, not Phoenician, burial crypt. Who were the Punics?
- The Punics were a people and culture from the ancient city-state of Carthage, in what is now Tunisia. The Punics traced their heritage to the Phoenicians and the Berbers, a people and culture indigenous to North Africa.
- The center of Phoenician culture was the city-state of Tyre, in what is now Lebanon. If the Phoenicians were based in the eastern Mediterranean, why does most information about the Phoenicians come from shipwrecks and deserted sites in North Africa?
- Good reason: People are still living there. “The main Phoenician coastal cities, Tyre, Sidon, Byblos and Arwad, are located in what is now Lebanon and southern Syria. These cities have been continuously occupied for thousands of years, and as a result are rarely subjected to major archaeological excavations.”
- OK, we know about the Phoenicians. Now what does it mean to sequence a genome?
- Genome sequencing is a process that reveals the order of the chemical bases—adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and thymine (T)—in an organism’s DNA. This genome sequence determines the information available for building and maintaining an organism, similar to the way in which letters of the alphabet appear in a certain order to form words and sentences.
- It is important to note that sequencing a genome does not immediately unravel the mysteries of humanity. “Imagine the genome as a book written without capitalization or punctuation, without breaks between words, sentences, or paragraphs, and with strings of nonsense letters scattered between and even within sentences … And the genome is ‘written’ in a far less familiar language, multiplying the difficulties involved in reading it.”
- Genome sequencing is a process that reveals the order of the chemical bases—adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and thymine (T)—in an organism’s DNA. This genome sequence determines the information available for building and maintaining an organism, similar to the way in which letters of the alphabet appear in a certain order to form words and sentences.
- What is so unexpected about the Phoenician genome?
- It isn’t African. Although the Young Man of Byrsa was from the area around Carthage, his genome is much more closely related to Europeans from Spain, Portugal, England, Ireland, Scotland, the United States and Germany. (Yes, we know the United States isn’t in Europe, but we have a lot of people with European ancestry here.)
- His genome sequence, U5b2c1, is almost unknown among modern populations. Only one person (from Portugal) shares the whole genome.
- What does the U5b2c1 genome sequence tell us about ancient Phoenician trade networks?
- They were really impressive! The core of Phoenician territory was the far eastern Mediterranean, in what is today Lebanon. However, the genome indicates trade with far western Europe. This supports ancient accounts of Phoenicians from sources such as the Greek historian Herodotus.
TEACHERS TOOLKIT
Independent: DNA of ancient Phonecian could make us reconsider history of human migration
Nat Geo: First Rulers of the Mediterranean
(extra credit!) PLoS One: A European Mitochondrial Haplotype Identified in Ancient Phoenician Remains from Carthage, North Africa