Tyre in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
tir (tsowr. tsor, "rock"' Turos, "Tyrus"; modern Sur):
1. Physical Features:
The most noted of the Phoenician cities situated on the
coast, lat. 33ø 17 minutes, about 20 miles South of Sidon
and about 35 North of Carmel. The date of its foundation is
uncertain, but it was later than that of Sidon. It is
mentioned in the travels of the Egyptian Mohar, dating
probably from the 14th century BC, and in the Tell el-Amarna
Letters of about the same period. Herodotus describes the
temple of Hercules at Tyre and says it was built 2,300 years
before his time, which would carry back the beginning of the
city to more than 2700 BC. It was a double city, one part on
an island, a short distance from the shore, and the other on
the mainland opposite. The island city had two harbors,
connected by a canal, one looking North and the other South.
The island was rocky and the city was fortitled on the land
side by a wall 150 ft. high, the wall being of less
elevation on the other sides. It was an exceedingly strong
position, and is referred to in the Bible as the "strong" or
"fortitled" city (Josh 19:29). The space within the walls
was crowded with buildings, and is said to have contained
40,000 inhabitants. The town on the mainland was situated in
a plain extending from the Ras el-`Abyad, on the South to
Sarepta on the North, a distance of about 20 miles. It was
fertile and well watered, the river Leontes (Litany) passing
through it to the sea, about 5 miles N. of Tyre, and the
copious fountain of Ras el-`Ain, 3 miles to the South,
furnishing an abundant supply both for the city and the
gardens.
2. History:
(1) Tyre was for centuries subordinate to Sidon, but when
the Philistines subdued the latter city, probably in the
12th century. (see SIDON), Tyre received an accession of
inhabitants from the fugitives which gave it the pre-
eminence. From this time dates its great commercial and
colonial activity. Its mariners pushed boldly out to the
West and founded colonies in Spain and North Africa, some of
which, like Gades, Abdera and Carthage, became famous. They
extended their commerce more widely than Sidon had ever done
and ventured into the Atlantic and reached the coasts of
Britain and West Africa. They reached out to the East also,
and had their ships in the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean, and
their land routes threaded all Western Asia (see PHOENICIA).
Tyre, like all the Phoenician...
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