Phoenician joints explained

Phoenician joints
Sector:Woodworking, shipbuilding
Feedstock:Timber
Product:Watercraft hulls secured with locked mortise and tenon joints
Inventor:The Phoenicians

Phoenician joints is a locked mortise and tenon wood joinery technique used in shipbuilding to fasten watercraft hulls. The locked (or pegged) mortise and tenon technique consists of cutting a mortise, or socket, into the edges of two planks and fastening them together with a rectangular wooden knob. The assembly is then locked in place by driving a dowel through one or more holes drilled through the mortise side wall and tenon.

The Phoenicians pioneered the use of locked mortise and tenon joints in nautical joinery to secure the underwater planking of seagoing ships. The use of pegged mortises and tenons in shipbuilding spread westward from the Levantine littoral. Examples of the use of Phoenician joints in the ancient Mediterranean include the Uluburun ship, dated, and the Cape Gelidonya ship dated to .

By the first millennium BC, Phoenician joints became a common edge-to-edge fastening method. Ancient Greek and Roman shipbuilders adopted the technique of Phoenician joinery. Roman writers credited the joinery technique to Phoenicians by calling it or . The ancient Greek historian Polybius reported that the Romans copied the locked mortise and tenon technique from a Punic warship that ran aground in 264 BC. They exploited this technique to their advantage early in the First Punic War in 260 BC which allowed them to build a fleet of 100 quinqueremes within a period of two months.

One factor contributing to their success was the abundance of cedar forests in their territory. These forests provided them with a steady supply of high-quality timber, a crucial resource for shipbuilding This access to timber enabled the Phoenicians to construct large seafaring vessels capable of carrying hundreds of people. Due to the amount of timber they were producing, logs were brought onto the ship for trade, bringing them to other civilizations in exchange goods such as gold and tin.[1] These forested mountains, documented by ancient writers such as Homer, Pliny, and Plato, as well as the Old Testament, provided the Phoenicians with a large supply of high-quality cedar wood. Cedar was particularly prized for its strength, durability, and resistance to rot, making it ideal for shipbuilding.[2] These ships, often depicted with rows of oars on either side, facilitated long-distance travel and trade across the Mediterranean Sea and beyond.

History

Phoenician joints postdate the sewn watercraft lacing joinery technique. Archaeological finds have revealed transitional watercrafts integrating elements from both mortise and tenon, and other joinery techniques.

Chinese Neolithic societies used the locked mortise and tenon method, but did not use a separate rectangular tenon nor edge-to-edge plank joining.

The locked mortise and tenon method occurs as of in non-nautical Ancient Egyptian joinery, but not in hull-planking, which only featured unlocked mortises.

In the third and early second millennium BC, the Ancient Egyptians employed a similar technique, however, the mortise and tenon joints were not locked in place using pegs. To ensure ship hull stability, the Egyptians used their unlocked fastening technique together with other methods of wood fastening. An example of this technique is the Fourth Dynasty Khufu funerary ship, an intact 43.6m (143feet) long Lebanon cedar lashed-lug vessel, that was unearthed in the Giza pyramid complex. The barque's cedar planks were joined together using unlocked mortise and tenon, and two types of lashings between bordering strakes and, from sheer to sheer. The mixed use of unlocked mortise and tenon with wood lashing is also attested in later ancient Egyptian ships from Lisht and Dashur . The use of pegged mortise and tenon shipbuilding in Egypt is not supported by material evidence before around 500 BC.

The Phoenicians pioneered the use of locked mortise and tenon joints in nautical joinery to secure the underwater planking of seagoing ships. The use of pegged mortises and tenons in shipbuilding spread westward from the Levantine littoral. According to McGrail, this joinery method could have given rise to the Phoenicians' reputation for seafaring excellence. The hull of the Uluburun ship, an early Phoenician/Canaanite vessel dated, is the earliest evidence of pegged Phoenician joints used in Mediterranean shipbuilding. The ship's hull was built with Lebanese cedar, with oak tenons. Additional early evidence of Phoenician joint usage comes from another Canaanite shipwreck in Cape Gelidonya in Turkey dated . The Uluburun and Gelidonya ships allowed scholars to date back the Phoenicians' maritime activity to an earlier period when it was thought that Canaanite seafaring did not start before the first millennium BC, and that maritime trade in the Eastern Mediterranean was solely conducted by Mycenaeans.

By the first millennium BC, Phoenician joints became a common edge-to-edge fastening method in the ancient Mediterranean. Greek shipbuilders abruptly abandoned the laced wood technique and adopted the Phoenician joinery. Scholars posit that Greek shipbuilders acquired the mortise and tenon joinery technique from the Phoenicians. Phoenician influence on Greek shipbuilding technology resulted from contact between the two people during the Phoenicians' westward colonization.

By the middle of the first millennium BC shipbuilders developed deeper understanding and expertise in the locked mortise and tenon joints as evidenced in the fourth century BC Kyrenia shipwreck and the third century BC wreckage of the Marsala Punic warship.

While the Phoenicians primarily focused on trade throughout the Mediterranean Sea, they did become involved in military conflicts throughout their history. Phoenician fleets participated in some of the most well-known battles of antiquity. [3] These engagements included both direct conflicts involving Phoenicia itself and those involving Carthage, its most prominent colony, located on modern day Tunisia, most notably during the Punic Wars.

During the First Punic War in 264 BC, the Romans seized a Phoenician penteres that ran aground. Prior to the war, the Romans had zero ships and were at a disadvantage, until they found one of the Phoenician ships ashore.

Polybius reports that the ship served as a model for the Romans' fleet ships; they realized the advantage of using Phoenician joints in shipbuilding, as the lumber used in edge-joined ship strakes does not have to be dried. Early in the First Punic War in 260 BC, the Phoenician joint technique allowed the Romans to build a fleet of 100 quinqueremes within a period of two months.Later, going on to win the Punic War after creating hundreds of replica ships to fight with.

The technique is also seen in Vietnam. Excavation carried out in waterlogged burials in Dong Xa in Vietnam revealed the adoption of a variety of the locked mortise and tenon technique in the construction of a logboat. The boat dates back to the Dong Son culture in the late Vietnamese prehistory (500 BC to AD 200).

Description

The locked (or pegged) mortise and tenon technique consists of cutting a mortise, or socket, into the faces of two planks to be fastened together. A piece of wood called a tenon, usually taking the form of a rectangle, is inserted into each mortise to join the two planks together. The assembly is locked by driving a peg (or dowel pin or treenail) through one or more holes drilled through the mortise side wall and tenon. This technique is known as Phoenician joint when applied to shipbuilding.

Etymology

The origin of the term Phoenician joinery comes from the Latin, since Roman writers credited the joinery technique to Phoenicians by calling it or . The Latin term is known through the extant writings such as that of Cato the Elder. In his treatise on agriculture, De agri cultura, Cato describes the construction of a wooden disk used in oil presses using locked mortise and tenon joinery; he refers to the technique as, thereby crediting Rome's enemies.

means Punic and derives from the Latin Latin: [[wikt:poenus|poenus]] and Latin: [[wikt:punicus|punicus]], which were used mostly to refer to the Carthaginians and other western Phoenicians. These terms derived from the Ancient Greek word Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Φοῖνιξ, plural form Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Φοίνικες, an exonym used indiscriminately to refer to both western and eastern Phoenicians.

translates to the English "coagment" meaning to join together or unite.

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cartwright . Mark . The Phoenicians - Master Mariners . 2024-05-09 . World History Encyclopedia . en.
  2. Web site: Tretheway .
  3. Web site: Mark . Joshua J. . Punic Wars Timeline .