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|The three fundamental and intertwined tenets of Near Eastern kingship can thus be identified in Phoenician royal ideology: that the monarch belonged to heaven and thus his kingship was a god-given gift; that he had a judicial responsibility to guard and protect his subjects against the harsh realities of life; and that kingship was sacred.<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 57-58.</ref>  
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|The three fundamental and intertwined tenets of [[Near East]]ern [[kingship]] can thus be identified in [[Phoenician]] [[royal]] [[ideology]]: that the [[monarch]] belonged to [[heaven]] and thus his [[kingship]] was a [[god-given]] gift; that he had a [[judicial]] [[responsibility]] to [[guard]] and [[protect]] his [[subject]]s against the harsh [[reality|realities]] of [[life]]; and that [[kingship]] was [[sacred]].<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 57-58.</ref>  
 
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17.02, 17 Ekim 2021 tarihindeki hâli

The three fundamental and intertwined tenets of Near Eastern kingship can thus be identified in Phoenician royal ideology: that the monarch belonged to heaven and thus his kingship was a god-given gift; that he had a judicial responsibility to guard and protect his subjects against the harsh realities of life; and that kingship was sacred.[1]
  1. Woolmer, Mark (2002). A Short History of the Phoenicians. London, New York: I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. s. 57-58.