byblos
Byblos is one of the top contenders for
the "oldest continuously inhabited city" award.
According to Phoenician tradition it was founded by the God El,
and even the Phoenicians considered it a city of great antiquity.
Although its beginnings are lost in time, modern scholars say the
site of Byblos goes back at least 7,000 years.
Ironically, the words "Byblos" and "Phoenicia" would not
have been recognized by the city's early inhabitants. For several
thousand years it was called "Gubla" and later "Gebal," while the
term "Canaan" was applied to the coast in general.
It was the Greeks, some time after 1200 B.C., who gave us the name
"Phoenicia" referring to the coastal area. And they called the city
"Byblos" (papyrus" in Greek), because this commercial center was
important in the papyrus trade.
Today Byblos (Jbeil in Arabic) on the coast 37 kilometers
north of Beirut, is a prosperous place
with glass-fronted office buildings and crowded streets.
But within the old town, medieval Arab and Crusader
remains are continuous reminders of the past. Nearby are the
extensive excavations that make Byblos one of the most important
archaeological sites in the area.
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