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Our City: |
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37 km north of
Beirut,
Byblos
is the oldest continuously inhabited city of the
world. About 7,000 years ago a small Neolithic fishing
community settled along the shore and several of their
monocular huts with crushed limestone floors can be seen on
the site.
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By the beginning of the Early Bronze Age (about 3000 B.C.),
Canaanite Byblos had developed into the most important
timber-shipping center on the eastern Mediterranean and ties
with Egypt were very close. |
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Around 1200 B.C. a wave of the so-called "Sea Peoples"
from
the north spread to the eastern Mediterranean, and some
settled on the southern coast of Canaan. These seafarers
probably contributed their skills to the maritime society we
know today as Phoenicia.About this same time the scribes of
Byblos developed an alphabetic phonetic script,the precursor
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of our modern alphabet. By 800 B.C., it had traveled to
Greece, changing forever the way man communicated. The
earliest form of the Phoenician alphabet to date is the
inscription on the sarcophagus of King Ahiram of Byblos.
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Throughout the first millennium B.C., Byblos continued to
benefit from trade in spite of Assyrian and Babylonian
encroachments. The Persian, who ruled the city from 550-330
B.C, marked the archeological site with large and impressing
remains of constructions. |
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After conquest by Alexander the Great, Byblos was rapidly
Hellenized and Greek became the language of the local
intelligentsia. In the first century B.C. the Romans under
Pompey took over Byblos and other Phoenician cities, ruling
them from 64 B.C. to 395 A.D. |
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There are few remains of the Byzantine Period (395-637 A.D.)in Byblos, partly because construction was of soft
sandstone and generally of poor quality. |
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Under Arab rule beginning 637 A.D. Byblos was generally
peaceful but it had declined in importance over the
centuries and archaeological evidence from this period is
fragmentary. |
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In
1104 Byblos fell to the Crusaders who came upon the large
stones and granite columns of the Roman buildings and used
them for their castle and church.
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