Byblos tells the fascinating tale of a Lebanese port. This epic, which started over 8,500 years ago, is about sailors and merchants, kings and pharaohs, heroes and fortune-seekers. Their stories are all intrinsically linked to the legendary cedars that grow in the Lebanon Mountains, just behind Byblos.
The Lebanese cedar acquired a mythical status from Egypt to Mesopotamia. The tree reaches a height of up to 40 meters. The wood is fairly light and hardly shrinks, is highly resistant to decay, and can easily be used for ships, roof beams, and coffins. The hills east of Byblos, that reach between 2,500 and 3,000 meters, belong to the southernmost region in which the large cedars grow.
From 3200 years BC to nearly 2000 years later, Byblos is the most prominent port in the Mediterranean. The city owes its reputation to the unique relation it establishes with the Egyptian pharaohs. Byblos gives them access to the riches of the cedar woods and acts as a gateway between the Middle-East and Egypt. The search for wood alters the history of Byblos and in turn the history of the Mediterranean. The sea becomes a place where merchants and other travellers exchange goods and ideas.
This book combines these stories about the beginning of seafaring, trade, religion, and diplomacy. The book ends with the Roman era during which Byblos is transformed into a place of worship and pilgrimage. In the centuries that followed, the old myths lost their power and new religions and stories arose.