Posts Tagged ‘Masters in Agriculture’
Hot posts this week (Oct. 20/ 2013)
Posted by: adonis49 on: October 26, 2013
Hot posts this week (Oct. 20/ 2013)
- If you have the talent and skills to pull off a Daydream project… Immigrate to greener pastures
- The Druze of Lebanon and Syria: Esoteric sect? Claiming to be Islam and tacitly cursing Prophet Muhammad?
- Who is Malu Halasa? Publication design? The Mosaic Rooms conducted an interview…
- Illustrious and immortal personalities: The Phoenician masters… Part 7
- Emotional Intelligence? And Performance criteria in Meditation research…
- What are you favorite cities? Even the Ugliest in the eyes of the beholders?
- Masters in Agriculture, Viticulture, Food preservation, Wine and Beer making, Textile, and Dying… The Phoenicians. Part 5
- When the ultimate of thieves is to pay us a visit? Have we gathered the tiny bits of great memoirs of our close relatives?
- Option to hide your name in search results on Facebook? This is history. Don’t bother…
- Mind soup and Breakdown of Typical AUB Students (Lebanon)
Masters in Agriculture, Viticulture, Food preservation, Wine and Beer making, Textile, and Dying… The Phoenicians. Part 5
Posted by: adonis49 on: October 18, 2013
Masters in Agriculture, Wine and Beer making, Food preservation, Textile, Dying, paper production… The Phoenicians
It is reported that Marcus Porcius Cato the Elder, after visiting Carthage and returning to Rome with the most exquisite and delightful crops of the orchards in Carthage, he exclaimed with raging indignation:
“Carthage is back to its former glory and power. I am of the opinion that Carthage must be destroyed…”
And Carthage was sacked in 149 BC, let burn for 17 days, and perishing 50,000 inhabitants…
The Roman senate ordered to retrieve from the ruins the 28 volumes of Mago masterful “Treatise on Agriculture”.
This treatise of the “Father of Agriculture” was translated into Latin. The Phoenicians considered agriculture as a precise science.
The Roman scholar Silanus translated the chief parts of the volumes.
St. Augustine, who spoke the still living Punic tongue in the 4th century AC, wrote: “On the word of many scholars, there was a great deal of virtue and wisdom in the Punic books…”
Even in the 20th century, many illustrious chemists did their best to decode the Phoenician purple color and their dying processes and failed.
The Phoenician textile industry was traded in every corner of the world, and silk, and cotton were common elements in the fabrics…
Papyrus and paper are derivation of the Phoenician term babir, and the City-State of Byblos, renowned for book production gave birth to Bible, bibliotheca, bibliography…
The Roman Strabo wrote:
“In Sidon and Tyre, one could learn astronomy and arithmetic, which are necessary for navigation… And one could also study all branches of philosophy…”
Paul Valery wrote in “Architecture, 1923”: “This audacious Phoenician ceaselessly agitated the Ocean…”
When archaeologists and paleontologists … claim that mankind civilization has the Near East as its hotbed, they mean:
“The Phoenician and Chaldean immigrated everywhere around the world and traded their goods, language, alphabet, industries… and left their imprint of high level civilization to future generations of mankind…”
Note 1: Colonized the Americas? https://adonis49.wordpress.com/2013/10/14/evidences-the-phoenicians-colonized-the-americas-and-new-zealand-part-3/
Note 2: Inspired from “6,000 years of peaceful contribution to mankind” by late Charles Corm