name | Byblos |
---|---|
native name lang | ara |
settlement type | City |
pushpin map | Lebanon |
pushpin map alt | Map showing the location of Byblos within Lebanon |
pushpin map caption | Location within Lebanon |
coordinates type | type:city |
coordinates display | inline,title |
coordinates footnotes | |
subdivision type | Country |
subdivision name | |
subdivision type1 | Governorate |
subdivision name1 | Mount Lebanon Governorate |
subdivision type2 | District |
subdivision name2 | Jbeil District |
established title | |
founder | |
area total km2 | 5 |
area metro km2 | 17 |
population total | 40000 |
population metro | 100000 |
timezone1 | EET |
utc offset1 | +2 |
timezone1 dst | EEST |
utc offset1 dst | +3 |
postal code type | Postal code |
area code type | Dialing code |
area code | +961 |
footnotes | |
website | }} |
Byblos The name originated from the Greek word biblion which means Book and the City was known as Papyrus , because this commercial center was important in the papyrus trade. () is the Greek name of the Phoenician city Gebal (; earlier Gubla, ). It is a Mediterranean city in the Mount Lebanon Governorate of present-day Lebanon under the current Arabic name of ( ) and was also referred to as Gibelet during the Crusades. It is believed to have been founded around 5000 BC, and according to fragments attributed to the semi-legendary pre-Trojan war Phoenician historian Sanchuniathon, it was built by Cronus as the first city in Phoenicia. Today it is believed by many to be the oldest continuously-inhabited city in the world.
Byblos (Greek) or Gebal (Phoenician) is located on the Mediterranean coast of present-day Lebanon, about 26 miles (42 kilometers) north of Beirut. It is attractive to archaeologists because of the successive layers of debris resulting from centuries of human habitation. It was first excavated by Pierre Montet from 1921 until 1924, followed by Maurice Dunand from 1925 over a period of forty years.
The site first appears to have been settled during the PPNB period, approximately 6230 BC. Neolithic remains of some buildings can be observed at the site. According to the writer Philo of Byblos (quoting Sanchuniathon, and quoted in Eusebius), Byblos had the reputation of being the oldest city in the world, founded by Cronus. During the 3rd millennium BC, the first signs of a town can be observed, with the remains of well-built houses of uniform size. This was the period when the Phoenician civilization began to develop.
Jacques Cauvin published studies of flint tools from the stratified Neolithic and Chalcolithic sites in 1962. Remains of humans found in Chalcolithic burials have been published by H.V. Vallois in 1937. Tombs from this era were discussed by Emir M. Chehab in 1950. Early pottery found at the tell was published by E.S. Boynton in 1960 with further studies by R. Erich in 1954 and Van Liere and Henri de Contenson in 1964.
Prehistoric settlements at Byblos were divided up by Dunand into the following five periods; Néolithique Ancien (Ancient Neolithic), Néolithique Moyen (Middle Neolithic), Néolithique Récent (Late Neolithic), Énéolithique Ancien (Ancient Chalcolithic), Énéolithique Récent (Late Chacolicthic) and Early Bronze Age. Néolithique Ancien was a later settlement than others in the Beqaa Valley such as Labweh and Ard Tlaili. It was located on the seaward slope of the larger of the two hills that used to compose ancient Bylbos, with a watered valley in between. The original site spread down into the valley and covered and area of providing fertile soils and a protected landing place for boats. Dunand discovered around twenty houses although some of the settlement was suggested to have been lost to the sea, robbed or destroyed.Dwellings were rectangular with plastered floors, pottery was usually Dark faced burnished ware with some shell impressions. Néolithique Moyen was a smaller settlement of no more than adjacent to the older site. The pottery was more developed with red washes and more varied forms and elaborate decorations, buildings were poorer with unplastered floors. The Néolithique Récent period showed development from the Moyen in building design, a wider range of more developed flint tools, and a far larger variety of pottery with fabrication including silica. Énéolithique Ancien featured developments of "Canaanean blades" and fan scrapers. Adult burials in jars started to appear along with metal in the form of one copper hook, found in a jar. Some jars were lined with white plaster that was applied and self-hardened after firing. Copper appeared more frequently in the Énéolithique Récent period along with mutiple burials in tombs and jar handles with impressed signs. Early Bronze Age remains were characterized by the development of Byblos combed ware and a lithic assemblage studied by Jacques Cauvin.
It appears Egyptian contact peaked during the 19th dynasty, only to decline during the 20th and 21st dynasties.
Although the archaeological evidence seems to indicate a brief resurgence during the 22nd and 23rd dynasties, it is clear after the Third Intermediate Period the Egyptians started favoring Tyre and Sidon instead of Byblos.
Archaeological evidence at Byblos, dating back to around 1200 BC, shows existence of a Phoenician alphabetic script of twenty-two characters; an important example of this script is the sarcophagus of king Ahiram. The use of the alphabet was spread by Phoenician merchants through their maritime trade into parts of North Africa and Europe. One of the most important monuments of this period is the temple of Resheph, a Canaanite war god, but this had fallen into ruins by the time of Alexander.
In the Persian period (538–332 BC), Byblos was the fourth of four Phoenician vassal kingdoms established by the Persians; the first three being Sidon, Tyre, and Arwad.
During the Greco-Roman period, the temple of Resheph was elaborately rebuilt, and the city, though smaller than its neighbours such as Tyre and Sidon, was a center for the cult of Adonis. In the 3rd century, a small but impressive theater was constructed. With the rise of Christianity, a bishopric was established in Byblos, and the town grew rapidly. Although a Persian colony is known to have been established in the region following the Moslem conquest of 636, there is little archaeological evidence for it. Trade with Europe effectively dried up, and it was not until the coming of the First Crusade in 1098 that prosperity returned to Byblos, known then as Giblet.
Byblos, under the name of Gibelet or Giblet, was an important military base in the crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem in the 11th and 12th century, and the remains of its crusader castle are among the most impressive architectural structures now visible at its center. The town was taken by Saladin in 1187, re-taken by the Crusaders, and eventually conquered by Baibars in 1266. Its fortifications were subsequently restored. From 1516 until 1918, the town and the whole region were part of the Ottoman Empire. Byblos and all of Lebanon was placed under French Mandate from 1920 until 1943 when Lebanon achieved independence.
Byblos Byblos Category:Archaeological sites in Lebanon Category:Phoenician cities Category:World Heritage Sites in Lebanon Category:Populated coastal places in Lebanon Category:Crusades Category:Phoenician sites in Lebanon Category:Roman sites in Lebanon Category:Hellenistic colonies Category:Mediterranean port cities and towns in Lebanon Category:Ancient cities Category:Amarna letters locations Category:Roman colonies Category:Populated places established in the 5th millennium BC Category:Fertile Crescent
am:ጌባል ar:جبيل bs:Biblos bg:Библос ca:Biblos cs:Byblos cy:Byblos da:Byblos de:Byblos el:Βύβλος es:Biblos eu:Biblos fr:Byblos gl:Biblos ko:비블로스 hr:Byblos id:Byblos it:Biblo he:גבל ka:ბიბლოსი la:Byblus lt:Biblas hu:Büblosz nl:Byblos ja:ビブロス no:Jbeil pl:Byblos pt:Biblos ru:Библ sco:Byblos sk:Byblos sl:Biblos sr:Библос sh:Biblos fi:Byblos sv:Byblos tr:Biblos uk:Бібл ur:جبیل zh:朱拜勒This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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