Social change in ‘Phoenicia’ in the late Bronze/early Iron Age transition
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Authors
Boyes, Philip
Advisors
Osborne, Robin
Date
2013-02-05Awarding Institution
University of Cambridge
Author Affiliation
Faculty of Classics
Queens' College
Qualification
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Language
English
Type
Thesis
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Boyes, P. (2013). Social change in ‘Phoenicia’ in the late Bronze/early Iron Age transition (Doctoral thesis). https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.4927
Abstract
This dissertation explores social, cultural and political changes in the region later known as
‘Phoenicia’ during the period of approximately 1300-900 BC.
By applying modern approaches to theoretical questions such as the nature of social
change, identity, migration and how such phenomena are represented in the archaeological
record, this dissertation aims to provide a discussion of Late Bronze/Early Iron Age Phoenicia
based on a more solid methodological foundation than has often been the case previously. As well
as better illuminating social change occurring within Phoenicia itself, it is hoped that the
methodological observations and comparative value of the case-study presented here will prove
useful for discussions of the wider social changes occurring in the East Mediterranean at this time.
A key observation of this research is that past narratives have placed too much emphasis
on the role of external powers such as the Egyptian ‘empire’ or ‘Sea People’ invaders in driving
Levantine social change in this period. This dissertation stresses the critical importance of local
responses to foreign influence and charts the balance between active choice and constraint by
circumstances in shaping the development of the Phoenician polities. It is argued that the most
important forms of change which can be identified in the archaeological and written records
relate to the construction of identities, especially those of the Phoenician élites. These take the
form of a move away from legitimation and identity-negotiation based on foreign contacts,
towards greater emphasis on more local, Levantine features. The consequences of this change, it is
argued, are felt within social, political, economic, religious and other spheres of life.
Keywords
Phoenicia, Lebanon, social change, late bronze age, early iron age
Identifiers
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.4927
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