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| − | |Significantly, as evinced in ''De Dea Syria'', the Phoenician | + | |Significantly, as evinced in ''De Dea Syria'', the [[Phoenician]] [[city>citie]]s still showed signs of [[religious]] [[autonomy]] in the second century CE despite all of the inducements towards [[syncretism]] which had been offered firstly by [[Hellenisation]] and then by [[Romanisation]].<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 108.</ref> |
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08.42, 19 Ekim 2021 tarihindeki hâli
| Significantly, as evinced in De Dea Syria, the Phoenician [[city>citie]]s still showed signs of religious autonomy in the second century CE despite all of the inducements towards syncretism which had been offered firstly by Hellenisation and then by Romanisation.[1] |
- ↑ Woolmer, Mark (2002). A Short History of the Phoenicians. London, New York: I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. s. 108.