Marseille Tariff

The Marseille Tariff is a Punic language inscription from the third century BCE, found on two fragments of a stone in 1844/45 at Marseille in Southern France. It is thought to have originally come from the temple of Baal-Saphon in Carthage. It is one of the earliest published inscriptions written in the Phoenician alphabet, and one of the longest ever found. It was first published by Jean-Joseph-Léandre Bargès, and is known as KAI 69 and CIS I 165.

Marseille Tariff

The Marseille Tariff is a Punic language inscription from the third century BCE, found on two fragments of a stone in 1844/45 at Marseille in Southern France. It is thought to have originally come from the temple of Baal-Saphon in Carthage. It is one of the earliest published inscriptions written in the Phoenician alphabet, and one of the longest ever found. It was first published by Jean-Joseph-Léandre Bargès, and is known as KAI 69 and CIS I 165.