The Phoenicians: The Civilization That Built the Ancient World Without Conquering It
pplpod10 Jun

The Phoenicians: The Civilization That Built the Ancient World Without Conquering It

In this episode of pplpod, we explore the rise of the Phoenicians, the seafaring Canaanite city-states that transformed the ancient Mediterranean through trade, shipbuilding, and communication rather than territorial conquest. The discussion follows how independent coastal cities like Tyre, Sidon, and Byblos emerged after the Late Bronze Age collapse and built a commercial empire powered by cedar lumber, maritime engineering, and the production of Tyrian purple dye. The episode examines how geography forced the Phoenicians toward the sea, leading them to dominate long-distance trade routes stretching from the Levant to Britain and North Africa. It also explores how their merchant-driven society reshaped political power, elevated commerce above militarism, and established one of the first large-scale interconnected trade networks in world history.

The episode also examines the Phoenicians’ technological and cultural influence on the modern world. Topics include the engineering breakthroughs behind Phoenician ship construction, the spread of the phonetic alphabet that later shaped Greek and Latin writing systems, and the rise of Carthage from a Phoenician colony into a Mediterranean superpower. The discussion traces the eventual decline of the eastern Phoenician cities under Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, and Macedonian domination, culminating in Alexander the Great’s brutal siege of Tyre. At the same time, the episode highlights modern genetic research showing strong continuity between ancient Canaanite populations and modern Lebanese populations, challenging the idea that the Phoenicians vanished from history entirely.

Key topics covered:

• The rise of the Phoenician city-states after the Bronze Age collapse

• Tyrian purple dye and its connection to wealth and royalty

• Phoenician shipbuilding innovations and Mediterranean trade networks

• The creation and spread of the Phoenician alphabet

• Carthage, Alexander the Great, and the long-term legacy of Phoenician civilization

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(8251)

Code Talkers: The Unbreakable Language Weapon of WWI and WWII

Code Talkers: The Unbreakable Language Weapon of WWI and WWII

One of the most remarkable chapters of military history belongs to the Code Talkers, the Native American servicemen whose ancestral languages became an encryption system the enemy could never crack. T...

30 Jun 23min

Christine Granville: Britain's First Female Special Agent

Christine Granville: Britain's First Female Special Agent

This episode dives into the audacious life of Christina Skarbek, who operated as Christine Granville and became Britain's first female special agent of the Second World War, as well as its longest ser...

30 Jun 22min

The Highway of Tears: Decades of Loss on Canada's Highway 16

The Highway of Tears: Decades of Loss on Canada's Highway 16

Along a 719-kilometer stretch of British Columbia's Highway 16 between Prince George and Prince Rupert, an unknown number of women have vanished or been murdered since 1969. This episode examines how ...

30 Jun 21min

Nick Leeson and the Collapse of Barings Bank

Nick Leeson and the Collapse of Barings Bank

In 1995, a single 28-year-old trader brought down Barings Bank, the oldest merchant bank in the United Kingdom and the personal bank of the Queen. This episode unpacks how Nick Leeson, working from Si...

30 Jun 23min

Kamikaze: The Divine Wind That Stopped the Mongol Invasions

Kamikaze: The Divine Wind That Stopped the Mongol Invasions

Long before World War II gave the word its modern meaning, kamikaze meant divine wind, the typhoons that twice destroyed the largest naval invasions in history. This episode journeys back to the 13th ...

30 Jun 18min

Oleg Gordievsky: The KGB Colonel Who Spied for Britain

Oleg Gordievsky: The KGB Colonel Who Spied for Britain

This episode explores the extraordinary life of Oleg Gordievsky, the KGB colonel who served for over a decade as a double agent for British intelligence and helped avert a potential nuclear war. Born ...

30 Jun 23min

Lizzie Borden: The Truth Behind the Fall River Axe Murders

Lizzie Borden: The Truth Behind the Fall River Axe Murders

The nursery rhyme says Lizzie Borden took an axe and gave her mother forty whacks, but almost every detail of that famous chant is wrong. This episode strips away the folklore to examine the real 1892...

30 Jun 25min

Pets.com: How a Sock Puppet Burned Through Millions

Pets.com: How a Sock Puppet Burned Through Millions

Pets.com built one of the most recognizable brands of the dot-com era, complete with a Super Bowl ad, a Macy's parade balloon, and a beloved sock puppet mascot, then collapsed in roughly 24 months. Th...

30 Jun 22min

Populært innen Underholdning

enkel-servering
papaya
storefri-med-mikkel-og-herman
harm-og-hegseth
tusvik-tnne
big-5-med-nils-og-harald-2
topp-3-med-wold-og-fladseth
kjendiscrush-med-sofie-karlstad
hovla
konspirasjonspodden
tore-og-haralds-podkast
folk-flest-med-linn-og-nils
ma-pa-behandling-med-morten-ramm
vitnemal
gi-meg-alle-detaljene
nare-venner
rss-gammal-maiden
singel
feedback-med-egon-holstad
rss-backstage-historier-om-legender