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The Punic Mediterranean: identities and identification from Phoenician settlement to Roman rule

Part of the British School at Rome Studies series
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The role of the Phoenicians in the economy, culture and politics of the ancient Mediterranean was as large as that of the Greeks and Romans, and deeply interconnected with that 'classical' world, but their lack of literature and their oriental associations mean that they are much less well-known.

This book brings state-of-the-art international scholarship on Phoenician and Punic studies to an English-speaking audience, collecting new papers from fifteen leading voices in the field from Europe and North Africa, with a bias towards the younger generation.

Focusing on a series of case-studies from the colonial world of the western Mediterranean, it asks what 'Phoenician' and 'Punic' actually mean, how Punic or western Phoenician identity has been constructed by ancients and moderns, and whether there was in fact a 'Punic world'.

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£95.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1316211584 / 9781316211588
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
936
04/12/2014
England
English
364 pages
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