While ancient empires collapsed, the Phoenicians thrived through trade. Discover how these merchants shaped the Mediterranean and our alphabet.

They were really the first civilization that wasn't built on land or conquest, but on connection. They looked at a world that was collapsing around them and saw opportunity, building a lean, flexible network of city-states instead of a clunky empire.
Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско

Lena: You know, I was looking at a map of the ancient Mediterranean, and it’s wild to think that while the great Bronze Age empires like the Egyptians and Hittites were collapsing around 1200 BC, one group didn't just survive—they actually hit their "renaissance."
Miles: Exactly! The Phoenicians. While everyone else was reeling from the chaos, these "purple people"—as the Greeks called them because the dye they made literally stained their skin—were busy building the world’s first true maritime empire.
Lena: It’s fascinating because they weren't even a single country, right? Just these fiercely independent city-states like Tyre and Sidon, yet they managed to invent the alphabet we’re basically still using today.
Miles: Right, and they did it all without a massive army, focusing on profit over plunder. Here’s where it gets interesting, as we look at how they turned a narrow strip of cedar forests into a global trade network.