id,collection,dc.coverage.spatial[],dc.coverage.temporal[],dc.date.accessioned,dc.date.available,dc.description[],dc.format.extent[],dc.format.medium[],dc.identifier.uri,dc.identifier[],dc.subject,dc.title[],dc.type[],refterms.dateFOA "8380","10898/10202","Phoenician","1200 BC||Late Bronze Age","2017-08-09T15:19:09Z","2017-08-09T15:19:09Z","A bronze male figurine with knee britches and a conical hat. Its arms are missing, perhaps cut off. It is probably a male deity from Early Iron Age (about 1000 BC). It came from Byblos, an important Phoenician city. The leading Phoenician god was Baal; 800 years later, the former Phoenician colony of Carthage in North Africa would give rise to the great general Hannibal, whose name refers to the god. Part of Lovelace Collection.","5.5 inches (14 cm) high x 1.75 inches (4 cm) wide","Bronze","http://hdl.handle.net/10898/4281","2016-HC10B-002","Phoenician Artifacts||Sculpture (Bronze)","Figure of the God Baal","Sculpture (Bronze)","2020-09-29T13:42:56Z"