Soon after 1000 BC, Phoenicians began to take ever-longer voyages away from their homeland. Within just a few decades, they were already present at the far end of the Mediterranean and even further, past the Straits of Gibraltar on the Atlantic coast of Iberia. The process of creating an interconnected Mediterranean had begun.
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Iron Age Italy
Competition, Tyranny, and the Birth of Ancient Greece
Sicily and the Making of the Greek Mediterranean
How Data Happened: Professors Chris Wiggins and Matthew L. Jones on the History of Data
Who Were the Phoenicians? Interview with Professor Carolina Lopez-Ruiz
The Roots of Archaic Greece
The Emergence of Phoenicia
How to Write Historical Fiction | Interview with historian and author Dan Jones on his new novel Essex Dogs
Greece's Dark Age
Wondery Presents: Stolen Hearts
The Global Mediterranean of the Iron Age: Interview with Professor Tamar Hodos
Greece after the Bronze Age Collapse: Interview with Professor Alex Knodell
The Interconnected Mediterranean of the Iron Age
The Fall of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
Introducing: History Daily
The Archaeology of the Assyrian Empire: Interview with Professor Bleda During
The Rise of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
Weavers, Scribes, and Kings in the Ancient Near East: Interview with Professor Amanda Podany
From a World of Iron to Classical Empires
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