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Founded
at the start of the third millennium B.C., Tyre originally
consisted of a mainland settlement and a modest island city
that lay a short distance off shore. But it was not until
the first millennium B.C. that the city experienced its golden
age.
In the 10th century B.C. Hiram, King of Tyre, joined two islets
by landfill. Later he extended the city further by reclaiming
a considerable area from the sea. Phoenician expansion began
about 815 B.C. when traders from Tyre founded Carthage in
North Africa. Eventually its colonies spread around the Mediterranean
and Atlantic, bringing to the city a flourishing maritime
trade. But prosperity and power make their own enemies. Early
in the sixth century B.C. Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon,
laid siege to the walled city for thirteen years. Tyre stood
firm, but it is probable that at this time the residents of
the mainland city abandoned it for the safety of the island.
In 332 B.C. Alexander the Great set out to conquer this strategic
coastal base in the war between the Greeks and the Persians.
Unable to storm the city, he blockaded Tyre for seven months.
Again Tyre held on. But the conqueror used the debris of the
abandoned mainland city to build a causeway and once within
reach of the city walls, Alexander used his siege engines
to batter and finally breach the fortifications. It is said
that Alexander was so enraged at the Tyrian's defense and
the loss of his men that he destroyed half the city. The town's
30,000 residents were massacred or sold into slavery.
Tyre and the whole of ancient Syria fell under Roman rule
in 64 B.C. Nonetheless, for some time Tyre continued to mint
its own silver coins. The Romans built a great many important
monuments in the city, including an aqueduct, a triumphal
arch and the largest hippodrome in antiquity.
Christianity figures in the history of Tyre, whose name are
mentioned in the New Testament. During the Byzantine era,
the Archbishop of Tyre was the Primate of all the bishops
of Phoenicia. At this time the town witnessed a second golden
age as can be seen from the remains of its buildings and the
inscriptions in the necropolis.
Taken by the Islamic armies in 634, the city offered no resistance
and continued to prosper under its new rulers, exporting sugar
as well as objects made of pearl and glass. With the decline
of the Abbasid caliphate, Tyre acquired some independence
under the dynasty of the Banu 'Aqil, vassals of the Egyptian
Fatimides. This was a time when Tyre was adorned with fountains
and its bazaars were full of all kinds of merchandise, including
carpets and jewelry of gold and silver.
Thanks to Tyre's strong fortifications it was able to resist
the onslaught of the Crusaders until 1124. After about 180
years of Crusader rule, the Mamlukes retook the city in 1291,
then it passed on to the Ottomans at the start of the 16th
century. With the end of World War I Tyre was integrated into
the new nation of Lebanon.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL TYRE
For
a period of nearly 50 years the General Directorate of Antiquities
excavated in and around Tyre, concentrating on the three major
Roman archaeological sites in the town, which can be seen
today.
The most important recent archaeological find is a Phoenician
cemetery from the first millennium B.C. Discovered in 1991
during clandestine excavations, this is the first cemetery
of its kind found in Lebanon. Funeraly jars, inscribed steles
and jewelry were among the objects retrieved from the site.
The importance of this historical city and its monuments was
highlighted in 1979 when UNESCO declared Tyre a World Heritage
Site.
In the meantime, government efforts have stopped much of the
wartime pillaging that Tyre's archaeological treasures suffered
because of economic stress in the area and international demand
for antiquities. Grassroots campaigns have also drawn attention
to the importance of the city's antiquities.
VISITING TYRE'S ANCIENT SITES
Area
One located on what was the Phoenician island, is a vast district
of civic buildings, colonnades, public baths, mosaic streets
and a rectangular arena. At the far end of the site, near
The beach, there are columns to the left belonging to a Palaestra,
an area where athletes trained. Other excavated remains on
this site date to the Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine periods.
A short distance from the shore you will see ''islands'' which
are, in fact, the great stone breakwaters and jetties of the
ancient Phoenician port, called the ''Egyptian port'' because
it faced south towards Egypt.
Area Two is a five minute walk to the West. Its major point
of interest is a Crusader cathedral. Only the lowest foundations
and a few re-erected granite columns remain intact but these
are nevertheless impressive. The area below it has revealed
a network of Romano-Byzantine roads and other installations.
Visitors are not allowed inside the site, but the ruins can
be viewed from the road.
Area Three is a thirty minute walk from Areas One and Two
and consists of an extensive necropolis, a three-bay monumental
arch and one of the largest Roman hippodromes ever found.
All date from the 2nd century A.D. to the 6th century A.D.
The necropolis, excavated in 1962, yielded hundreds of ornate
stone and marble sarcophagi of the Roman and Byzantine periods.
Foundations of a Byzantine church can also be seen. The archway
stands astride a Roman road that led into the ancient city.
Alongside the road are the remains of the aqueduct that assured
the city its water supply (See reference to Ras El-Ain below).
South of the necropolis is the partially reconstructed Roman
hippodrome excavated in 1967. The 480-meter structure seated
twenty thousand spectators who gathered to watch the death-defying
sport of chariot racing. Each end of the course was marked
by still existing stone turning posts (metae). Charioteers
had to make this circuit seven times. Rounding the metae at
top speed was the most dangerous part of the race and often
produced spectacular spills.
The walk to Area Three takes you through a residential part
of Tyre called Hay Er-Raml or the Quarter of Sand. You are
in fact walking on what once was Alexander the Great's causeway.
Accumulating sands and extensive landfill have expanded this
old land link to the extent that modern visitors have the
impression that Tyre is built on a peninsula.
TYRE TODAY
Tyre
has a colorful souk (covered market) well worth exploring.
Look for the Ottoman khan, or inn, just inside the market
entrance. On a side street is the ''Mamluke House'', an Ottoman
period residence that is being restored as a cultural heritage
and information center by the General Directorate of Antiquities.
Also in the souk area is a white, double-domed Shiite mosque
of great interest.
Near the market you will see a busy fisherman's port, in Phoenician
times referred to as the ''Sidonian'' port because it faced
north towards Sidon. Walk along the port with the sea on your
right and you enter the city's Christian Quarter, a picturesque
area of narrow streets, traditional architecture, and the
Seat of the Maronite Bishop of Tyre and the Holy Land. One
medieval tower still stands in a small garden. A second one
is visible under the little lighthouse. During Crusader times,
towers similar to these ringed the city.
AMENITIES
The
archaeological sites are open daily.
Several seafood restaurants and pubs are located in the port
area and fast food places have opened in the Hay Er-Raml area.
Local restaurant fare is good.
The seaside Elissa Hotel is a tourist-standard hotel in Tyre
and is located near the hippodrome/necropolis.
IF YOU HAVE TIME...
Skin
Diving: Basic equipment is sufficient for exploring the ancient
Phoenician breakwaters and jetties. Look for the Murex, still
living along Tyre's shores among the rocks and sunken archaeological
remains.
Ras el-Ain: (6 kilometers south of Tyre) has been Tyre's main
source of water since Phoenician days. Its artesian wells
gush up into stone reservoirs that have been maintained through
the ages. One of the reservoirs fed the arched aqueducts of
the Roman period that once stretched all the way to Tyre.
Remains of these aqueducts can be seen along the Roman road
running under the monumental arch on the necropolis at Area
Three. A short stretch of the original aqueduct near the reservoirs
continues to serve as part of Tyre's present day waterworks.
Sarafand: (28 kilometers north of Tyre) is the site of ancient
Serepta, mentioned in the Bible. Excavations here revealed
the remains of Canaanite-Phoenician structures and Roman port
installations. Modern Sarafand still has a workshop where
the ancient Phoenician art of glass blowing is practiced.
Tomb of Hiram: On the road to Qana El-Jaleel, (6 kilometers
southeast of Tyre) is a burial monument from the Persian period
(550-330 B.C.). This has traditionally been called the tomb
of Hiram, the celebrated Phoenician architect of the Temple
of Jerusalem.
Remarks:
The ancient world had much to thank Tyre for. The Greeks attributed
the introduction of the alphabet to their country to Cadmus,
the son of a Tyrian king. The name of the continent is said
to come from Europa, the sister of Cadmus.
But it was Tyre's purple-dyed textiles, worn throughout the
ancient world as a mark of royal rank, that brought fame and
fortune to the city. One gram of pure purple dye was worth
ten or twenty grams of gold, so it is not surprising that
some of the beautiful sarcophagi of the necropolis belonged
to wealthy purple dye manufactures of Tyre.
The ancient Tyrians extracted the dye from the Murex, a marine
snail that still lives along Tyre's shores deep among the
rocks and sunken archaeological remains. Dye extraction is
no longer a viable commercial venture, but scientists have
documented the process for historical purposes.
Source: Ministry of Tourism
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