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Title: | Journal of Mediterranean Studies : 3(2) : Part I : Malta and the Phoenician World |
Authors: | Frendo, Anthony J. |
Keywords: | Malta -- History -- Phoenician and Punic period, 8th century B.C.-218 B.C. Malta -- Antiquities Inscriptions, Phoenician -- Malta Phoenician language -- Malta |
Issue Date: | 1993 |
Publisher: | University of Malta. Mediterranean Institute |
Citation: | Frendo, A. J. (ed.). (1993). Journal of Mediterranean Studies : 3(2) : Part I : Malta and the Phoenician World. University of Malta. Mediterranean Institute. |
Abstract: | The first part of this double special issue of the Journal of Mediterranean Studies is focussing its attention on Malta and the Phoenician World. The latter phrase is to be taken in a wide sense; it is not meant to indicate simply the explicit connections between Malta and the Phoenician and the Punic world at large. It mainly refers to the presence of the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians in the Mediterranean basin, because the available evidence shows that their presence did influence (though in varying degrees) the culture of Malta between the eighth and the second centuries B.C. Indeed, Holbl’s recent study has shown beyond any reasonable doubt that as long as the Phoenicians from the Levant were a mercantile power in the Mediterranean, Malta and Gozo lay at the heart of their trade routes which linked the levantine coast with the western Mediterranean regions (1989: 176). During the Phoenician-Punic period, the main cultural links of Malta lay with the Phoenicians from the Levant (Holbl 1989:172-173). However, this does not exclude the fact that the Maltese archipelago did show signs of contact with the Punic world (Holbl 1989: 174; Frendo 1991; 389). In this sense, any contribution to our knowledge of the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians in the Mediterranean basin will ultimately turn out to be at one and the same time a contribution to our knowledge about Malta’s position in this sea, in a period when Phoenician commercial power, and later Carthaginian commercial and political power, were something to be reckoned with. |
URI: | https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/98063 |
Appears in Collections: | Scholarly Works - FacArtCA |
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Journal of Mediterranean Studies.pdf Restricted Access | 41.77 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open Request a copy |
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