「Phoenician」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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hostats, along with inscriptions in Aramaic, | Phoenician, and Akkadian. |
Some | Phoenician and Greek colonies were established along th |
F L Benz, Personal names in the | Phoenician and Punic inscriptions. |
Among the works are Egyptian, Assyrian, and | Phoenician art, as well as Greek sculptures of the clas |
given in hieroglyphic Luwian as Moxos and in | Phoenician as Mopsos, in the form mps. The area also re |
His female counterpart is the | Phoenician Astarte. |
helles comes from Josephus's citation of the | Phoenician author Menander of Ephesus, in Against Apion |
reconstruction of Josephus's citation of the | Phoenician author Menander of Ephesus, in Against Apion |
ttan I comes from Josephus's citation of the | Phoenician author Menander of Ephesus, in Against Apion |
The | Phoenician became a successful hotel in the luxury segm |
Among the remnants were several examples of | Phoenician ceramics, pottery and artifacts including wi |
The | Phoenician cities of Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, and Aradus we |
creased its attractiveness (the tribute from | Phoenician cities was assessed in silver). |
atellite of Sidon into the most important of | Phoenician cities, and the holder of a large trading em |
Phoenician cities, allied to Israel since the days of K | |
It was named after the ancient | Phoenician city of Dor, which inhabited by the tribe of |
reek it refers both to the various Greek and | Phoenician city-states and trade outposts in Egypt, Nor |
The | Phoenician Club was the name of a well-known entertainm |
sted of present day Palestine as well as the | Phoenician coast while avoiding conflict with the incre |
by the communities along the Palestinian and | Phoenician coasts, Tyre alone retaining its independenc |
While it is clear that the | Phoenician colonies along the coast had planted vineyar |
It was founded as a | Phoenician colony in the 8th century BCE, around the ti |
Carthaginians in support of the | Phoenician colony Gades in Spain, also brought about th |
Founded in antiquity as a | Phoenician colony, it became a haven for pirates as an |
Originally a | Phoenician colony, it was located on the Atlantic, at t |
nown from the suffetes of Carthage, a former | Phoenician colony. |
re equally old, but similarly transmitted by | Phoenician culture, and that the seeresses - Herodotus |
iver valley believed to have been founded by | Phoenician explorers more than 4,000 years ago. |
It is a | Phoenician figurine from the 7th century BCE (similar t |
he Punic religion was based on that of their | Phoenician forefathers, who worshiped Baal Hammon and M |
y Fineka (in Antiquity the port Phoenicus, a | Phoenician foundation), in the Ottoman sanjak (district |
moun, less accurately Esmun or Esmoun) was a | Phoenician god of healing and the tutelary god of Sidon |
o have identified the Venus Erycina with the | Phoenician goddess Astarte, and hence showed her much r |
includes a small figurine of the Astarte, a | Phoenician goddess. |
A Discourse concerning Sanchoniathon's | Phoenician History (1681) |
Philo of Byblos, The | Phoenician History (with Robert A. Oden, 1981) |
Baumgarten, Albert Irwin, The | Phoenician History of Philo of Byblos: a Commentary EPR |
on the mainland just outside of Tyre in the | Phoenician homeland. |
nd just possibly following a design that was | Phoenician in origin. |
He currently plays most nights the | Phoenician in Phoenix Arizona. |
There is substantial evidence of Semitic | Phoenician influence on Celtic culture extending back a |
He became famous only by his | Phoenician inscribed sarcophagus which was discovered i |
ntury BCE and is still considered the oldest | Phoenician inscription yet found in Sardinia. |
rian stele of Esharhaddon and perhaps in the | Phoenician inscription of the Nora Stone, but also with |
Phoenician inscription of King Bodashtart found on the | |
latter relates that Abraham interpreted many | Phoenician inscriptions collected by the Sardinian king |
Phoenician Ireland (translated by Henry O'Brien, 1837) | |
All accounts agree on a | Phoenician king who has several children, including the |
d Berosus the Chaldaean, but also Jerome the | Phoenician king of Tyre; and their followers, too: Ptol |
Bodashtart was a | Phoenician king of Sidon (c. |
Ahiram or, more correctly, Ahirom was a | Phoenician king of Byblos (ca. |
Punic is an extinct variety of the | Phoenician language spoken in the oversea Phoenician em |
ring that led to modern understanding of the | Phoenician language, since the inscriptions on each bas |
The | Phoenician letter appears to be named after a sword or |
The | Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Pi (Π), Latin |
The | Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Lambda (Λ), La |
The | Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Xi (Ξ, ξ).. |
The | Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Zeta (Ζ), Etru |
A war with | Phoenician Massalia followed. |
Sanchuniathon offered a Hellenistic view of | Phoenician materials. |
, son of Hamilcar Barca, also spelled Magon, | Phoenician MGN, "God sent" (243 BC - 203 BC), was a mem |
According to the | Phoenician mythology related by Mochos of Sidon, as cit |
the recovered ostracon bears the theophoric | Phoenician name "grtnt" which suggests that veneration |
Phoenician name for Tarragona | |
The Europa name is after a mythical | Phoenician noblewoman, Europa, who was courted by Zeus |
specially as a leading collector for ancient | Phoenician objects. |
Of | Phoenician origin, the candelabra-shaped cippi dated to |
ent seat of Pelasgic worship, rather than of | Phoenician origin, as supposed by many writers. |
te clear that he depicts Severus as being of | Phoenician origins. |
built in ancient times, possibly during the | Phoenician period (early first millennium BC). |
It was a prominent city during the | Phoenician period, but became a less important city dur |
ent white bull to abduct Europa, a legendary | Phoenician princess. |
ch achievements, while his numerous works on | Phoenician religion (based in particular on the texts f |
The rejection of | Phoenician research was partly because of anti-Semitic |
Pygmalion,the Greek version of the | Phoenician royal name Pumayyaton, also figures in the f |
lso within the boundaries are the remains of | Phoenician settlement called Sa Caleta which along with |
It passed, in common with the other | Phoenician settlements in Sicily, at a later period und |
He has | Phoenician soldiers smuggled into Rhodes as slaves, and |
m is inspired by real-world Mesopotamian and | Phoenician sources. |
rthage lost battles but managed to safeguard | Phoenician Spain and close the Strait of Gibraltar to G |
d and the Netherlands in connection with his | Phoenician studies. |
ed throughout the Mediterranean region since | Phoenician times. |
(in | Phoenician) To our lord Melqart, Lord of Tyre, dedicate |
Comparable objects found in a | Phoenician tomb at Achziv suggest that they may have de |
rld that the phrase Bybline (relating to the | Phoenician town of Byblos) became a byword to denote wi |
dogs were taken to the island of Sardinia by | phoenician traders. |
there are the remains of ancient Elymian and | Phoenician walls indicating different stages of settlem |
The very name Baali is originated from the | Phoenician word Ba'al, meaning "great lord". |
at the name of the town is derivative of the | Phoenician words, beit truna, which translates to house |
by Dunand providing rare examples of cursive | Phoenician writing in the Phoenician mainland. |
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