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Tyrian and shekel
Tyrian shekel

Tyrian and Rome
In ancient Rome, for example, only senators were permitted to wear garments dyed with Tyrian purple.
The Sumptuariae Leges of Ancient Rome were various laws passed to prevent inordinate expense ( sumptus ) in banquets and dress, such as the use of expensive Tyrian purple dye.
For example, in Ancient Rome only senators were permitted to wear garments dyed with Tyrian purple ; and in traditional Hawaiian society, only high-ranking chiefs could wear feather cloaks and palaoa or carved whale teeth.

Tyrian and for
Among many interesting entries are those for the elephant and the murex snail, the much sought-after source of Tyrian purple dye.
Josephus, citing Tyrian court records and Menander in Against Apion, gives a specific year during which Hiram I of Tyre sent materials to Solomon for the construction of the temple.
Yet in truth she discovered that a race was springing from Trojan blood to overthrow some day these Tyrian towers — a people late regem belloque superbum — kings of broad realms and proud in war who would come forth for Libya's downfall.
Production of Tyrian Purple for use as a fabric dye began as early as 1200 BCE by the Phoenicians, and was continued by the Greeks and Romans until 1453 CE, with the fall of Constantinople.
This area was primarily a bazaar, with vendors selling souvenirs, sacrificial animals, food, as well as currency changers, exchanging Roman for Tyrian money because the Jews were not allowed to coin their own money and they viewed Roman currency as an abomination to the Lord, as also mentioned in the New Testament account of Jesus and the Money Changers.
Josephus, citing both Tyrian court records and the writings of Menander, says that it was in Hiram ’ s 12th year that he sent assistance to Solomon for building the Temple.
As pointed out by William Barnes, the date for the start of Temple construction using the Tyrian data is derived “ wholly independently ” of the way that date is derived using the Scriptural data.
It is this consideration, plus the evidence of the tribute from Baa ‘ li-maanzer / Baal-Eser II to Shalmaneser III, that has led to the adoption of the chronologies of Frank M. Cross and other scholars for the Tyrian kings in the present article.
* Tyrian, an adjective for Tyre, a city in the South Governorate of Lebanon
Silver Tyrian shekels were the medium of payment for the Temple tax in Jerusalem, and have been suggested as a possible coin used as the " 30 pieces of silver " in the New Testament.
The two pence ( 2d ) Tyrian plum was a postage stamp produced by Britain in 1910 as a replacement for the existing two colour 2d stamp of King Edward VII.
Costly and labor-intensive dyes Tyrian purple ( or royal purple ) and Tekhelet were historically made by the ancient Phoenicians using mucus from the hypobranchial gland of two species commonly referred to as " murex ", Murex brandaris and Murex trunculus, which are the older names for Haustellum brandaris and the Hexaplex trunculus.
The doves were used for sacrifices and the standard Greek or Roman money used by people had to be changed into special blessed Jewish or Tyrian money suitable for use.
The ancient Phoenicians not only exploited numerous fisheries within this current zone, but also established a factory at Iles Purpuraires off present day Essaouira for extracting a Tyrian purple dye from a marine gastropod murex species ( Hogan, 2007 ).
They had Buce shot for his knowledge of Gravitium, which is a special mineral, unique to Tyrian, able to control the force of gravity.
In February 2007 the Pascal source code for Tyrian was licensed for a small group of developers to re-write it in C, in a project named OpenTyrian, licensed under the GNU General Public License.
Following that announcement, in April 2007 Daniel Cook announced the free availability of his Tyrian artwork ( not including the later work for the Game Boy Color edition and for Tyrian 2000 ) under generic liberal terms.
In the Roman Empire the colour Tyrian purple, produced with an extremely expensive Mediterranean mollusk extract, was in principle reserved for the Imperial Court.

Tyrian and type
The game also features 7 ( 9 in Tyrian 2000 ) hidden Super Arcade modes ( with specialized ships ), requiring the user to type in certain codewords which are shown after beating the game.

Tyrian and silver
The original Amman Museum records of the Qumran coin hoards and the museum bags where the coins where kept do not support the hypothesis that the 2nd and 3rd century Roman coins are intrusive in relation to the Tyrian silver.
* The " ships of Tarshish ", a Tyrian fleet equipped at Ezion Geber, make several trading voyages to the East bringing back gold, silver, ivory and precious stones.
Rawlinson identifies the long-debated " ships of Tarshish ," as a Tyrian fleet equipped at Ezion-Geber that made several trading voyages to the east bringing back gold, silver, ivory and precious stones.

Tyrian and used
A famous example of a bromine-containing organic compound that has been used by humans since ancient times is the fabric dye Tyrian purple.
The colour purple, which had been a mark of aristocracy and prestige since ancient times, was especially expensive and difficult to produce — the dye used, known as Tyrian purple, was made from the glandular mucus of certain molluscs.
The first halocarbon commercially used was Tyrian purple a natural organobromide of the Murex brandaris marine snail.
Sprites from Tyrian were used in AI War: Fleet Command.

Tyrian and .
Israelites of course abstained from pork, but Ahab was married to a Phoenician / Tyrian princess Jezebel, who was one of the most " powerful and notorious women of monarchic times " yet who died of a similarly seemingly random death like her husband, and his capital of Samaria was said to follow Canaanite gods.
Scarce dyestuffs that produced brilliant and permanent colors such as the natural invertebrate dyes Tyrian purple and crimson kermes were highly prized luxury items in the ancient and medieval world.
Tyrian Purple is a pigment made from the mucus of one of several species of Murex snail.
Greek merchants established a Tyrian purple dye factory here.
Near the eastern shore of the island of Gades / Gadeira ( modern Cádiz, just beyond the strait ) Strabo describes the westernmost temple of Tyrian Heracles, the god with whom Greeks associated the Phoenician and Punic Melqart, by interpretatio graeca.
It has been suggested that it means the " wrestler " or " struggler " and is an epithet of Heracles, with whom Melqart is identified by interpretatio graeca and referred to as the Tyrian Herakles, but there does not appear to be any traditional connection between Heracles and Palaemon.
The island was colonized at an early date by Phoenicians, attracted probably by its gold mines ; they founded a temple to the god Melqart, whom the Greeks identified as " Tyrian Heracles ", and whose cult was merged with Heracles in the course of the island's Hellenization.
Hippo was a Tyrian colony on the west coast of the bay to which it gave its name: Hipponensis Sinus, first settled by the Phoenicians probably in the 12th century BC ; the surname Regius ' of the King ' was bestowed on it as one of the places where the Numidian kings resided.
W. H. D. Rouse in 1940 wrote an ironic end note to Book 40 of his edition of Nonnus ' Dionysiaca about a very syncretistic hymn sung by Dionysus to Tyrian Heracles, that is, to Ba ‘ al Melqart whom Dionysus identifies with Belus on the Euphrates ( who should be Marduk!

Tyrian and Roman
Ulpian (; ; c. 170 – 228 ) was a Roman jurist of Tyrian ancestry.
The use of this dye was extended to various dignitaries, such as members of the Roman senate who wore stripes of Tyrian purple on their white togas, for whom the term purpuratus was coined as a high aulic distinction.

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