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The Western Phoenicians: Colonisation and Assimilation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2013
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It has long been canonical to deny the Phoenicians a place in the ranks of the true colonisers of the Western Mediterranean. ‘The expansion of the Phoenicians’, says Moscati, ‘and later of the Carthaginians was predominantly commercial with no intent of conquest, requiring no stable settlements or mass emigration of the population.’ And although Moscati goes on to qualify this statement by admitting that, of course, some stable settlements did ensue, they were, he says, ‘in no way dependent on the phenomenon of expansion’. Thus by this thesis the Phoenicians may set up ‘comptoirs’, ‘relais’, ‘escales maritimes’, ‘établissements’, ‘Erkundungsfahrten’, ‘Factorei’, ‘teste di ponti’ and ‘emporia’, but never anything which might qualify as a colony in Maunier's terms, as emigration plus government.
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References
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page 75 note 4 Eisenstadt, op. cit. (above, n. 1), pp. 229–30, makes this observation about rural immigrants to Eastern France.
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page 77 note 4 Harden, op. cit. (p. 59 n. 1), pp. 53–4, 76.
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page 79 note 3 I am extremely grateful to Professor E. Lepore for reading this article and making a number of suggestions for its improvement. It does not follow, of course, that he approves of all I have said. He has drawn my attention to the book by Tarradell, M., Economía de la colonización fenicia (1968)Google Scholar, which unfortunately I was not able to get hold of. As far as I can judge from secondhand references, Tarradell agrees with me about the primacy of Gades in the region from Mogador to the east of Almeria, but he believes in a network of Carthaginian sub-colonies from Sicily to Villaricos in Spain, for which I know of no evidence during the period discussed in this paper.
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