Phoenician
Dress, Ornaments and Social Habits
Dress of common men
The dress of the Phoenician men, especially
of those belonging to the lower orders, consisted, for the most part,
of a single close-fitting tunic, which reached from the waist to a little
above the knee. The material was probably either linen or cotton, and
the simple garment was perfectly plain and unornamented, like the common
/shenti/ of the Egyptians. On the head was generally worn a cap of one
kind or another, sometimes round, more often conical, occasionally shaped
like a helmet. The conical head-dresses seem to have often ended in a
sort of top-knot or button, which recalls the head-dress of a Chinese
Mandarin.
Dress
of men of the upper classes
Where the men were of higher rank, the /shenti/
was ornamented. It was patterned, and parted towards the two sides, while
a richly adorned lappet, terminating in uræi, fell down in front.
The girdle, from which it depended, was also patterned, and the /shenti/
thus arranged was sometimes a not inelegant garment. In addition to the
/shenti/, it was common among the upper classes to wear over the bust
and shoulders a close-fitting tunic with short sleeves, like a modern
"jersey;" and sometimes two garments were worn, an inner robe
descending to the feet, and an outer blouse or shirt, with sleeves reaching
to the elbow. Occasionally, instead of this outer blouse, the man of rank
has a mantle thrown over the left shoulder, which falls about him in folds
that are sufficiently graceful. The conical cap with a top- knot is, with
persons of this class, the almost universal head-dress.
Treatment of the hair and beard
Great attention seems to have been paid
to the hair and beard. Where no cap is worn, the hair clings closely to
the head in a wavy compact mass, escaping however from below the wreath
or diadem, which supplies the place of a cap, in one or two rows of crisp,
rounded curls. The beard has mostly a strong resemblance to that affected
by the Assyrians, and familiar to us from their sculptures. It is arranged
in three, four, or five rows of small tight curls, and extends from ear
to ear around the cheeks and chin. Sometimes, however, in lieu of the
many rows, we find one row only, the beard falling in tresses, which are
curled at the extremity.There is no indication of the Phoenicians having
cultivated mustachios.
Male ornaments
For ornaments the male Phoenicians wore
collars, which were sometimes very elaborate, armlets, bracelets, and
probably finger-rings. The collars resembled those of the Egyptians, being
arranged in three rows, and falling far over the breast. The armlets seem
to have been plain, consisting of a mere twist of metal, once, twice,
or thrice around the limb. The royal armlets of Etyander, king of Paphos,
are single twists of gold, the ends of which only just overlap: they are
plain, except for the inscription, which reads /Eteadoro to Papo basileos/,
or "The property of Etyander, king of Paphos."Men's bracelets
were similar in character. The finger- rings were either of gold or silver,
and generally set with a stone, which bore a device, and which the wearer
used as a seal.
Supposed priestly costume
The most elaborate male costume which has
come down to us is that of a figure found at Golgi, and believed to represent
a high priest of Ashtoreth. The conical head-dress is divided into partitions
by narrow stripes, which, beginning at its lower edge, converge to a point
at top. This point is crowned by the representation of a calf's or bull's
head. The main garment is a long robe reaching from the neck to the feet,
"worn in much the same manner as the peplos on early Greek female
figures." Round the neck of the robe are two rows of stars painted
in red, probably meant to represent embroidery. A little below the knee
is another band of embroidery, from which the robe falls in folds or pleats,
which gather closely around the legs. Above the long robe is worn a mantle,
which covers the right arm and shoulder, and thence hangs down below the
right knee, passing also in many folds from the shoulder across the breast,
and thence, after a twist around the left arm, falling down below the
left knee. The treatment of the hair is remarkable. Below the rim of the
cap is the usual row of crisp curls; but besides these, there depend from
behind the ears on either side of the neck three long tresses. The feet
of the figure are naked. The right hand holds a cup by its foot between
the middle and fore- fingers, while the left holds a dove with wings outspread.
Ordinary dress of women
Women were, for the most part, draped very
carefully from head to foot. The nude figures which are found abundantly
in the Phoenician remains are figures of goddesses, especially of Astarte,
who were considered not to need the ornament, or the concealment of dress.
Human female figures are in almost every case covered from the neck to
the feet, generally in garments with many folds, which, however, are arranged
very variously. Sometimes a single robe of the amplest dimensions seems
to envelop the whole form, which it completely conceals with heavy folds
of drapery. The long petticoat is sleeved, and gathered into a sinus below
the breasts, about which it hangs loosely. Sometimes, on the contrary,
the petticoat is perfectly plain, and has no folds. Occasionally a second
garment is worn over the gown or robe, which covers the left shoulder
and the lap, descending to the knees, or somewhat lower.[The waist is
generally confined by a girdle, which is knotted in front. There are a
few instances in which the feet are enclosed in sandals.
Arrangement
of their hair
The hair of women is sometimes concealed
under a cap, but generally it escapes from such confinement, and shows
itself below the cap in great rolls, or in wavy masses, which flow off
right and left from a parting over the middle of the forehead. Tresses
are worn occasionally: these depend behind either ear in long loose curls,
which fall upon the shoulders. Female heads are mostly covered with a
loose hood, or cap; but sometimes the hair is merely encircled by a band
or bands, above and below which it ripples freely.
Female ornaments
Phoenician women were greatly devoted to
the use of personal ornaments. It was probably from them that the Hebrew
women of Isaiah's time derived the "tinkling ornaments of the feet,
the cauls, the round tires like the moon, the chains, the bracelets, and
the mufflers, the bonnets and the ornaments of the legs, and the head-bands,
and the tablets, and the ear-rings, the rings and nose-jewels, the changeable
suits of apparel, and the mantles, and the wimples, and the crisping pins,
the glasses, and the fine linen, and the hoods, and the vails," which
the prophet denounces so fiercely. The excavations made on Phoenician
sites have yielded in abundance necklaces, armlets, bracelets, pendants
to be worn as lockets, ear-rings, finger-rings, ornaments for the hair,
buckles or brooches, seals, buttons, and various articles of the toilet
such as women delight in.
Necklaces
Women wore, it appears, three or four necklaces
at the same time, one above the other. A string of small beads or pearls
would closely encircle the neck just under the chin. Below, where the
chest begins, would lie a second string of larger beads, perhaps of gold,
perhaps only of glass, while further down, as the chest expands, would
be rows of still larger ornaments, pendants in glass, or crystal, or gold,
or agate modelled into the shape of acorns, or pomegranates, or lotus
flowers, or cones, or vases, and lying side by side to the number of fifty
or sixty. Several of the necklaces worn by the Cypriote ladies have come
down to us. One is composed of a row of one hundred and three gold beads,
alternately round and oval, to the oval ones of which are attached pendants,
also in
gold, representing alternately the blossom and bud of the lotus plant,
except in one instance. The central bead of all has as its pendant a human
head and bust, modelled in the Egyptian style, with the hair falling in
lappets on either side of the face, and with a broad collar upon the shoulders
and the breast. Another consists of sixty-four gold beads, twenty-two
of which are of superior size to the rest, and of eighteen pendants, shaped
like the bud of a flower, and delicately chased. There are others where
gold beads are intermixed with small carnelian and onyx bugles, while
the pendants are of gold, like the beads; or where gold and rock-crystal
beads alternate, and a single crystal vase hangs as pendant in the middle;
or where alternate carnelian and gold beads have as pendant a carnelian
cone, a symbol of Astarte.Occasionally the sole material used is glass.
Necklaces have been found composed entirely of long oval beads of blue
or greenish-blue glass; others where the colour of the beads is a dark
olive; others again, where all the component parts are of glass, but the
colours and forms are greatly varied. In a glass necklace found at Tharros
in Sardinia, besides beads of various sizes and hues, there are two long
rough cylinders, four heads of animals, and a human head as central ornament.
"Taken separately, the various elements of which this necklace is
composed have little value; neither the heads of the animals, nor the
bearded human face, perhaps representing Bacchus, are in good style; the
cylinders and rounded beads which fill up the intermediate spaces between
the principal objects are of very poor execution; but the mixture of whites,
and greys, and yellows, and greens, and blues produces a whole which is
harmonious and gay."
Perhaps the most elegant and tasteful necklace
of all that have been discovered is the one made of a thick solid gold
cord, very soft and elastic, which is figured on the page opposite. At
either extremity is a cylinder of very fine granulated work, terminating
in one case in a lion's head of good execution, in the other surmounted
by a simple cap. The lion's mouth holds a ring, while the cap supports
a long hook, which seems to issue from a somewhat complicated knot, entangled
wherein is a single light rosette. "In this arrangement, in the curves
of the thin wire, which folds back upon itself again and again, there
is an air of ease, an apparent negligence, which is the very perfection
of technical skill."
Bracelets
The bracelets worn by the Phoenician ladies
were of many kinds, and frequently of great beauty. Some were bands of
plain solid gold, without ornament of any kind, very heavy, weighing from
200 to 300 grammes each. Others were open, and terminated at either extremity
in the head of an animal. One, found by General Di Cesnola at Curium in
Cyprus, exhibited at the two ends heads of lions, which seemed to threaten
each other. The execution of the heads left nothing to be desired. Some
others, found in Phoenicia Proper, in a state of extraordinary preservation,
were of similar design, but, in the place of lions' heads, exhibited the
heads of bull, with very short horns. A third type aimed at greater variety,
and showed the head of a wild goat at one end, and that of a ram at the
other. In a few instances, the animal representation appears at one extremity
of the bracelet only, as in a specimen from Camirus, whereof the workmanship
is unmistakably Phoenician, which has a lion's head at one end, and at
the other tapers off, like the tail of a serpent.
A pair of bracelets in the British Museum,
said to have come from Tharros, consist of plain thin circlets of gold,
with a ball of gold in the middle. The ball is ornamented with spirals
and projecting knobs, which must have been uncomfortable to the wearer,
but are said not to be wanting in elegance.
There are
other Phoenician bracelets of an entirely different character. These consist
of broad flat bands, which fitted closely to the wrist, and were fastened
round it by means of a clasp. Two, now in the Museum of New York, are
bands of gold about an inch in width, ornamented externally with rosettes,
flowers, and other designs in high relief, on which are visible in places
the remains of a blue enamel. Another is composed of fifty-four large-ribbed
gold beads, soldered together by threes, and having for centre a gold
medallion, with a large onyx set in it, and with four gold pendants. A
third bracelet of the kind, said to have been found at Tharros, consists
of six plates, united by hinges, and very delicately engraved with patterns
of a thoroughly Phoenician character, representing palms, volutes, and
flowers.
But it is in their earrings that the Phoenician
ladies were most curious and most fanciful. They present to us, as MM.
Perrot and Chipiez note, "an astonishing variety." Some, which
must have been very expensive, are composed of many distinct parts, connected
with each other by chains of an elegant pattern. One of the most beautiful
specimens was found by General Di Cesnola in Cyprus. There is a hook at
top, by which it was suspended. Then follows a medallion, where the workmanship
is of singular delicacy. A rosette occupies the centre; around it are
a set of spirals, negligently arranged, and enclosed within a chain-like
band, outside of which is a double beading. From the medallion depend
by finely wrought chains five objects. The central chain supports a human
head, to which is attached a conical vase, covered at top: on either side
are two short chains, terminating in rings, from which hang small nondescript
pendants: beyond are two longer chains, with small vases or bottles attached.
Another, found in Sardinia, is scarcely less complicated. The ring which
pierced the ear forms the handle of a kind of basket, which is covered
with lines of bead-work: below, attached by means of two rings, is the
model of a hawk with wings folded; below the hawk, again attached by a
couple of rings, is a vase of elegant shape, decorated with small bosses,
lozenges, and chevrons. Other ear-rings have been found similar in type
to this, but simplified by the omission of the bird, or of the basket.
Ear-rings
An entirely different type is that furnished
by an ear-ring in the Museum of New York brought from Cyprus, where the
loop of the ornament rises from a sort of horse-shoe, patterned with bosses
and spirals, and surrounded by a rough edging of knobs, standing at a
little distance one from another. Other forms found also in Cyprus are the ear-ring with the
long pendant, which has been called "an elongated pear," ornamented
towards the lower end with small blossoms of flowers, and terminating
in a minute ball, which recalls the "drops" that are still used
by the jewellers of our day; the loop which supports a /crux ansata/;
that which has attached to it a small square box, or measure containing
a heap of grain, thought to represent wheat; and those which support fruit
of various kinds. An ear-ring of much delicacy consists of a twisted ring,curved
into a hook at one extremity, and at the other ending in the head of a
goat, with a ring attached to it, through which the hook passes.Another,
rather curious than elegant, consists of a double twist, ornamented with
lozenges, and terminating in triangular points finely granulated
Ornaments more or less resembling this last
type of ear-ring, but larger and coarser, have given rise to some controversy,
having been regarded by some as ear-rings, by others as fastenings for
the dress, and by a third set of critics as ornaments for the hair. They
consist of a double twist, sometimes ornamented at one end only, sometimes
at both. A lion's or a griffin's head crowns usually the principal end;
round the neck is a double or triple collar, and below this a rosette,
very carefully elaborated. In one instance two griffins show themselves
side by side, exhibiting their heads, their chests, their wings, and their
fore-paws or hands; between them is an ornament like that which commonly
surmounts Phoenician /stelæ/; and below this a most beautiful rosette.The
fashioning shows that the back of the ornament was not intended to be
seen, and favours the view that it was to be placed where a mass of hair
would afford the necessary concealment.
Ornaments for the hair
The Phoenician ladies seem also to have
understood the use of hair- pins, which were from two to three inches
long, and had large heads, ribbed longitudinally, and crowned with two
smaller balls, one above the other. The material used was either gold
or silver.
Toilet pins and buckles
To fasten their dresses, the Phoenician
ladies used /fibulæ/ or buckles of a simple character. Brooches
set with stones have not at present been found on Phoenician sites; but
in certain cases the fibulæ show a moderate amount of ornament.
Some have glass beads strung on the pin that is inserted into the catch;
others have the rounded portion surmounted by the figure of a horse or
of a bird. Most fibulæ are in bronze; but one, found in the treasury
of Curium, and now in the Museum of New York, was of gold. This, however,
was most probably a votive offering.
A Phoenician lady's toilet table
It is impossible at present to reproduce
the toilet table of a Phoenician lady. We may be tolerably sure, however,
that certain indispensable articles would not be lacking. Circular mirrors,
either of polished metal, or of glass backed by a plate of tin or silver,
would undoubtedly have found their place on them, together with various
vessels for holding perfumes and ointments. A vase in rock crystal, discovered
at Curium, with a funnel and cover in gold, the latter attached by a fine
gold chain to one of its handles, was doubtless a fine lady's favourite
smelling bottle. Various other vessels in silver, of a small size, as
basins and bowls beautifully chased, tiny jugs, alabasti, ladles, &c.,
had also the appearance of belonging rather to the toilet table than to
the plate- basket. Some of the alabasti would contain /kohl/ or /stibium/,
some salves and ointments, others perhaps perfumed washes for the complexion.
Among the bronze objects found,some may have been merely ornaments, others
stands for rings, bracelets, and the like. One terra-cotta vase from Dali
seems made for holding pigments, and raises the suspicion that Phoenician,
or at any rate Cyprian, beauties were not above heightening their charms
by the application of paint.
Freedom enjoyed by Phoenician women
Women in Phoenicia seem to have enjoyed
considerable freedom. They are represented as banqueting in the company
of men, sometimes sitting with them on the same couch, sometimes reclining
with them at the same table. Occasionally they delight their male companion
by playing upon the lyre or the double pipe, while in certain instances
they are associated in bands of three, who perform on the lyre, the double
pipe, and the tambourine. They take part in religious processions, and
present offerings to the deities. The positions occupied in history by
Jezebel and Elissar (Dido) fall in with these indications, and imply a
greater approach to equality between the sexes in Phoenicia than in Oriental
communities generally.
Active habits of the men
The men were, for Orientals, unusually hardy
and active. In only one instance is there any appearance of the use of
the parasol by a Phoenician.[ Sandals are infrequently worn; neck, chest,
arms, and legs are commonly naked. The rough life of seamen hardened the
greater number; others hunted the wild ox and the wild boarn the marshy
plains of the coast tract, and in the umbrageous dells of Lebanon. Even
the lion may have been affronted in the great mountain, and if we are
unable to describe the method of its chase in Phoenicia, the reason is
that the Phoenician artists have, in their representations of lion hunts,
adopted almost exclusively Assyrian models. The Phoenician gift of facile
imitation was a questionable advantage, since it led the native artists
continually to substitute for sketches at first hand of scenes with which
they were familiar, conventional renderings of similar scenes as depicted
by foreigners.
Curious agate ornament
An ornament found in Cyprus, the intention
of which is uncertain, finds its proper place in the present chapter,
though we cannot attach it to any particular class of objects. It consists
of a massive knob of solid agate, with a cylinder of the same both above
and below, through which a rod, or bar, must have been intended to pass.
Some archæologists see in it the top of a sceptre; others, the head
of a mace; but there is nothing really to prove its use. We might imagine
it the adornment of a throne or chair of state, or the end of a chariot
pole, or a portion of the stem of a candelabrum. Antiquity has furnished
nothing similar with which to compare it; and we only say of it, that,
whatever was its purpose, so large and so beautiful a mass of agate has
scarcely been met with elsewhere. The cutting is such as to show very
exquisitely the veining of the material.
Use in furniture of bronze and ivory
Bronze objects in almost infinite variety
have been found on Phoenician sites, but only a few of them can have been
personal ornaments. They comprise lamps, bowls, vases, jugs, cups, armlets,
anklets, daggers, dishes, a horse's bit, heads and feet of animals, statuettes,
mirrors, fibulæ, buttons, &c. Furniture would seem to have been
largely composed of bronze, which sometimes formed its entire fabric,
though generally confined to the ornamentation. Ivory was likewise employed
in considerable quantities in the manufacture of furniture, to which it
was applied as an outer covering, or veneer, either plain, or more generally
carved with a pattern or with figures. The "ivory house" of
Ahab] was perhaps so called, not so much from the application of the precious
material to the doors and walls, as from its employment in the furniture.
There is every probability that it was the construction of Phoenician
artists.
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