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Principal shell-fish

On the other hand, to certain of the shell-fish of Phoenicia a great celebrity attaches. The purple dye which gave to the textile fabrics of the Phoenicians a world-wide reputation was prepared from certain shell-fish which abounded upon their coast. Four existing species have been regarded as more or less employed in the manufacture, and it seems to be certain, at any rate, that the Phoenicians derived the dye from more shell-fish than one. The four are the /Buccinum lapillus/ of Pliny,which is the /Purpura lapillus/ of modern naturalists; the /Murex trunculus/; the /Murex brandaris/; and the /Helix ianthina/. The Buccinum derives its name from the form of the shell, which has a wide mouth, like that of a trumpet, and which after one or two twists terminates in a pointed head. The /Murex trunculus/ has the same general form as the Buccinum; but the shell is more rough and spinous, being armed with a number of long thin projections which terminate in a sharp point. The /Murex brandaris/ is a closely allied species, and "one of the most plentiful on the Phoenician coast." It is unlikely that the ancients regarded it as a different shell from /Murex trunculus/. The /Helix ianthina/ has a wholly different character. It is a sort of sea-snail, as the name /helix/ implies, is perfectly smooth, "very delicate and fragile, and not more than about three-quarters of an inch in diameter." All these shell-fish contain a /sac/ or bag full of colouring matter, which is capable of being used as a dye. It is quite possible that they were all, more or less, made use of by the Phoenician dyers; but the evidence furnished by existing remains on the Tyrian coast is strongly in favour of the /Murex brandaris/ as the species principally employed.
 
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