Phoenician Government Definition by Mark Cartwright published on 29 April 2016 Eshmunazar II Eric Chan (CC BY) The governments of such Phoenician cities as Tyre, Sidon, and Byblos were led by hereditary monarchs throughout their history. Those individual cities typically acted autonomously from each other and only rarely did they form mutual alliances. The absolute power of the Phoenician kings, even if they had at their disposal a council of elders for consultation, is attested by various ancient sources, including the Hebrew prophets of the Old Testament. Below the king, matters of government were also carried out by a priestly class and those elite households who controlled the international trade upon which Phoenicia so prospered. A Collection of City-states Phoenicia was never a single political entity but rather a collection of culturally similar cities on the narrow strip of the Levant. Each city had its own independent system of government, which controlled the city and its surrounding territory. At certain times one city might be more dominant than another in the region but individual autonomy was not perhaps compromised. Sidon dominated in the 12th and 11th centuries BCE while thereafter Tyre was the most powerful Phoenician city. Only very occasionally did one Phoenician city form a formal alliance with another. Even when the cities acted with the same policies, they did so individually. An example is in the 5th century BCE when Phoenician cities contributed ships to the Persian fleet of Xerxes, each group acted under their own commander's orders. The kings of the Phoenician cities were absolute in their power until the 7th century BCE. Hereditary Monarchies Phoenician kings did not commemorate their reigns or achievements in art and inscriptions as in other cultures, and so information is often scarce, not only on the machinery of government but even such basics as who ruled when. We do know from certain tomb inscriptions and scattered sources from other contemporary cultures that the monarchies of the Phoenician cities were absolute in their power until the 7th century BCE. Unlike in other ancient societies where a ruler's wealth was usually acquired through some form of taxation on agricultural production, the Phoenician kings, not having quite so much territory to call upon, acquired their wealth either from directly engaging in trade expeditions themselves or taxing the trade of the city's elite merchants. The monarchy was usually hereditary, even if there were sometimes revolts, wars, and dramatic changes of dynasty. Marriages of convenience with the royal houses of other cities were also arranged to maintain and increase the king's power. Inscriptions suggest that a long ancestral line was a mark of prestige. From an inscription on the coffin of King Ahiram of Byblos we have the following king list: c. 1000 BCE Ahiram 980 BCE Ittobaal 940 BCE Abibaal 920 BCE Yehimilk 900 BCE Elibaal 880 BCE Shipitbaal The annals of Tyre and other complimentary sources produce the following list of reigning kings for Tyre: 969-936 BCE Hiram I 935-919 BCE Baal-eser I 918-910 BCE Abdastrato 909-898 BCE Methustratos 897-889 BCE Astharymos 888 BCE Phelles 887-856 BCE Ithobaal I 855-830 BCE Baal-asor II 829-821 BCE Mattan II 820-774 BCE Pygmalion 750-740 BCE Ithobaal II 739-730 BCE Hiram II 730-729 BCE Mattan II 729-694 BCE Elulaios 680-640 BCE Baal I Late 7th century BCE but specific dates unknown – Ithobaal III Baal II Mattan III Hiram III There is no evidence of any queens ruling alone but an inscription at Sidon describes one Queen Unmiashtart who ruled as regent for her son Yatonmilk during the 5th century BCE. There is one other strong female leader mentioned in sources, the semi-mythical figure of Dido, sister of Pygmalion, the king of Tyre. Disgruntled with her brother's policies she is said to have collected a group of like-minded nobles and left Tyre to found her own city, Carthage, on the north coast of Africa. The Priesthood Another class was the priests who tended the temples and performed rituals, once again, members would have come from the royal family and leading merchant families. There was sometimes a direct connection between the royal and priestly class, for example, Ozbaal, king of Byblos was the son of Paltibaal, the priest of Baalat, according to an inscription on his coffin. The monarch also had a priestly function, perhaps even holding the position of high priest and one of the king's secondary titles was 'Priest of Astarte'. Perhaps not unconnected with this fact, kings were keen for their deeds to match their frequently used additional titles of 'just' and 'righteous' by building temples and monuments in honour of deities such as Astarte, Baal, and Melqart. It is also true that some kings conveyed the idea of being the god's representative in their very name, for example, Baalbazer which signifies 'servant of Baal' or Abdastratus, 'servant of Astarte'. Some kings must have gone one step further and claimed to have actually been the god on earth, a claim much criticized by the Hebrew prophets, as seen in the book of Ezekial in the Bible. Phoenician Religious Sacrifice O.Mustafin (Public Domain) Senior Officials The king of Tyre could consult a council of elders for advice but it is not known if this body met regularly to discuss policy or what its powers were. According to the ancient historian Arrian, the council could make decisions if the king was otherwise unavailable. The book of Ezekial mentions 'ancients' in the court of Byblos, which could well refer to a similar council. Finally, Diodorus, the 1st-century BCE historian, describes a council of 100 members at Sidon, mentioning that they sometimes took decisions contrary to those of the king. The membership of these councils was likely reserved for members of the royal family and those senior merchants who controlled the trade activities of the city. Below the king were two specific positions of importance - the governor and the commander of the army. The former was responsible for supervising the court and city administrations. The title is mentioned in texts from Ugarit, El Amarna, and Cyprus, but once again, details are lacking. Alternative Forms of Government There is mention in the annals of Tyre of a peculiar if brief period of government during the 6th century BCE when the city was ruled at any one time by a pair of judges known as suffetes. Later, this system would be adopted by Carthage. When the Phoenician cities came under Assyrian domination in the 7th century BCE, the king had to rule alongside an Assyrian governor who guided policy. The king could not even open official correspondence without being in the presence of this governor. An exception to this dual governance was at Simira where there was not even a king and the Assyrian governor ruled alone. A similar arrangement existed in the 6th century BCE when the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II imposed a minister to co-rule with the king at Tyre and again under the Persian domination of the following century. Editorial Review This article has been reviewed for accuracy, reliability and adherence to academic standards prior to publication. Timeline c. 4000 BCE Founding of the city of Sidon. c. 2900 BCE - c. 2300 BCE First settlement of Baalbek. c. 2750 BCE The city of Tyre is founded. 1115 BCE - 1076 BCE Reign of Tiglath-Pileser I of Assyria who conquers Phoenicia and revitalizes the empire. c. 1000 BCE Ahiram becomes king of Sidon. 980 BCE Ittobaal becomes king of Sidon. 969 BCE - 936 BCE Hiram I reigns as king of Tyre. 940 BCE Abibaal becomes king of Sidon. 935 BCE - 919 BCE Baal-eser I reigns as king of Tyre. 920 BCE Yehimilk becomes king of Sidon. 918 BCE - 910 BCE Abdastrato reigns as king of Tyre. 909 BCE - 898 BCE Methustratos reigns as king of Tyre. 900 BCE Elibaal becomes king of Sidon. 897 BCE - 889 BCE Astharymos reigns as king of Tyre. 888 BCE Phelles reigns as king of Tyre. 887 BCE - 856 BCE Ithobaal I reigns as king of Tyre. 880 BCE Shiptibaal becomes king of Sidon. 855 BCE - 830 BCE Baal-asor II reigns as king of Tyre. 829 BCE - 821 BCE Mattan II rules as king of Tyre. 820 BCE - 774 BCE Pygmalion rules as king of Tyre. 750 BCE - 740 BCE Ithobaal II reigns as king of Tyre. 739 BCE - 730 BCE Hiram II reigns as king of Tyre. 730 BCE - 729 BCE Mattan II rules as king of Tyre. 729 BCE - 694 BCE Elulaios rules as king of Tyre. 680 BCE - 640 BCE Baal I reigns as king of Tyre. c. 301 BCE - c. 195 BCE Tyre, as all other Phoenician cities, belongs to the Ptolemies, rulers of hellenistic Egypt. c. 195 BCE After the battle at Panion, the Seleucids finally take the rule of Phoenicia from the Ptolemies. Tyre and the other Phoenician cities will remain in the Seleucid power until the Roman conquest of Syria. 64 BCE Tyre becomes a Roman colony. Bibliography Acquaro, E. The Phoenicians. White Star Publishers, 2010. Aubet, M.E. The Phoenicians and the West. Cambridge University Press, 1996. Kenrick, J. Phoenicia. Forgotten Books, 2015. Moscati, S. The World of the Phoenicians Paperback. Weidenfeld & Nicolson History, 2016. Rawlinson, G. History of Phoenicia. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2014. About the Author Mark Cartwright Mark is a full-time author, researcher, historian, and editor. Special interests include art, architecture, and discovering the ideas that all civilizations share. He holds an MA in Political Philosophy and is the WHE Publishing Director. Recommended Books The World of the Phoenicians Paperback Written by Anonymous, published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson History (1970) $51.92 The First New Chronicle and Good Government: On the History of the World... Written by Guaman Poma de Ayala, Felipe & Hamilton, Roland, published by University of Texas Press (2021) $39.95 Carthage Written by Hoyos, Dexter, published by Routledge (2020) $49.95 Bread and Freedom: Egypt's Revolutionary Situation Written by El-Ghobashy, Mona, published by Stanford University Press (2021) $25.00 Bronze Age Bureaucracy: Writing and the Practice of Government in Assyria... Written by Postgate, Nicholas, published by Cambridge University Press (2018) $36.99   Cite This Work APA Style Cartwright, M. (2016, April 29). Phoenician Government. World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/Phoenician_Government/ Chicago Style Cartwright, Mark. "Phoenician Government." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified April 29, 2016. https://www.worldhistory.org/Phoenician_Government/. MLA Style Cartwright, Mark. "Phoenician Government." World History Encyclopedia. World History Encyclopedia, 29 Apr 2016. Web. 28 Sep 2022.