Priesthood , 2nd century BCE,
Carthage National Museum. . The Carthaginians appear to have had both part-time and full-time priests, the latter called (singular , cognate with the
Hebrew term
kohen), led by high priests called . Lower-ranking religious officials, attached to specific sanctuaries, included the "chief of the gatekeepers," people called "servants" or "slaves" of the sanctuary (male: , female: or ), and functionaries like cooks, butchers, singers, and barbers. Goddesses may have been worshiped together and shared the same priests. A class of cultic officials known as the (vocalized , usually translated "Awakener of the god") was responsible for ensuring that the
dying-and-rising god Melqart returned to watch over the city each year. Sanctuaries had associations, referred to as in
Punic and
Neo-Punic inscriptions, who held ritual banquets. M'Hamed Hassine Fantar proposes that the part-time priests, appointed in some way by the civil authorities, were in control of religious affairs, while the full-time priests were primarily responsible for rites and the interpretation of myth. At Carthage, for example, there was a thirty-person council that regulated sacrifices. Some Phoenician communities practiced
sacred prostitution; in the Punic sphere this is attested at Sicca Veneria (
El Kef) in western Tunisia and the sanctuary of
Venus Erycina at
Eryx in western Sicily.
Funerary practices The funerary practices of the Carthaginians were very similar to those of Phoenicians located in
Levant. They include the rituals surrounding the disposal of the remains, funerary feasts, and
ancestor worship. A variety of grave goods are found in the tombs, which indicate a belief in
life after death. Cemeteries were located outside settlements. They were often symbolically separated from them by geographic features like rivers or valleys. A short papyrus found in a tomb at
Tal-Virtù in
Malta suggests a belief that the dead had to cross a body of water to enter the afterlife. Tombs could take the form of
fossae (rectangular graves cut into the earth or bedrock),
pozzi (shallow, round pits), and
hypogea (rock-cut chambers with stone benches on which the deceased was laid). There are some
built tombs, all from before the sixth century BC. Tombs are often surmounted by small funerary stelae and
baetyls. At different times, Punic people practiced both
cremation and
inhumation. Until the sixth century BCE,
cremation was the normal means of disposing of the dead. In the sixth century BCE, cremation was almost entirely superseded by
inhumation. Thereafter, cremation was largely restricted to infant burials. This change is sometimes associated with the expansion of Carthaginian influence in the western Mediterranean, but exactly how and why this change occurred is unclear. Around 300 BC, cremation once again became the norm, especially in Sardinia and
Ibiza. Cremation pits have been identified at
Gades in Spain and
Monte Sirai in Sardinia. After cremation, the bones were cleaned and separated from the ashes and then placed carefully in urns before burial. At Hoya de los Rastros, near
Ayamonte in Spain, for example, the bones were arranged in order in their urns so that the feet were at the bottom and the skull at the top. Cremated and inhumed remains could be placed in wooden coffins or stone sarcophagi. Examples are known from
Tharros and
Sulci in Sardinia,
Lilybaeum in Sicily, Casa del Obispo at Gades in Spain, and Carthage and
Kerkouane in Tunisia. Before burial, the deceased was anointed with perfumed resin, coloured red with
ochre or
cinnabar, traces of which have been recovered archaeologically. The funeral was accompanied by a feast in the cemetery. This banquet, called a
mrz, is attested in inscriptions of the fourth and third centuries BC, but is known in the Levant in earlier periods. The attendees decorated an altar and sacrificed an animal which they then ate. The feasts included the consumption of wine, which may have had symbolic links to blood, the fertility of the Earth, and new life, as it did for other Mediterranean peoples. At the end of the feast, the crockery was smashed or buried in order to ritually kill it. Cemeteries included spaces and equipment for food preparation. The feast may have played a role in determining inheritance and could have symbolised the enduring bond between the deceased and their survivors. These funerary feasts were repeated at regular intervals as part of a
cult of the ancestors (called
rpʼm, cognate with the Hebrew
rephaim). In
Neo-Punic texts, the
rpʼm are equated with the
Latin Manes. At Monte Sirai in Sardinia, tombs included amphorae to channel
libations offered on these occasions down into the tomb. The funerary stelae and baetyls erected on top of tombs, which are often inscribed with the name of the deceased and anthropomorphised, may have been intended as the focus for worship of the deceased within the context of this ancestor cult. Small stone altars were found in the cemeteries at Palermo and Lilybaeum in Sicily and are depicted on funerary stelae in Sardinia and Sicily. It appears that fires were lit on top of them as part of purification rites. A range of grave goods are found deposited with the deceased, which seem to have been intended to provide the deceased with protection and symbolic nourishment. These do not differ significantly based on the gender or age of the deceased. Grave offerings could include carved masks and amulets, especially the
eye of Horus (
wadjet) and small glass
apotropaic heads (
protomae), which were intended to protect the deceased. Offerings of food and drink were probably intended to nourish the deceased in the afterlife. They were often accompanied by a standardised set of feasting equipment for the deceased, consisting of two jugs, a drinking bowl, and an oil lamp. Oil and perfume may have been intended to provide the deceased with heat and light. Chickens and their eggs were particularly frequent offerings and may have represented the soul's resurrection or transition to the afterlife in Punic thought. Razors, left next to the head of the deceased, may indicate that the corpse was shaved before burial or an expectation that priests would continue to shave in death as they had in life. Bronze
cymbals and bells found in some tombs may derive from songs and music played at the funeral of the deceased - perhaps intended to ward off evil spirits. Terracotta figurines of musicians are found in graves, and depictions of them were carved on funerary stelae and on razors deposited in the grave. Almost all these musicians are female, suggesting that women had a particular role in this part of the funeral; most play the drums,
kithara, or
aulos.
Funerary iconography I 2992 from Carthage, showing
"crescent and disc" (above), "
Tanit symbol" (below, middle), and a pair of
caducei or
standards (below, left and right). The text reads: "[Stela dedicated] to the Lady to Tinnit-Phane[b]al, and to the Lord to Baal-Ḥa[mm]on, that has vo[wed] Garas(?)".File:CIS 1828 with hand drawing Punic inscription.png|thumb|180px|right|Inscription CIS I 1828 from Carthage, showing (slightly damaged)
"hand" (above) and "
bottle" (below) symbols. The text reads: "[Stela dedicated] to the Lady to Tinnit-Phaneb[al, and] to the Lord to Baal-Ḥammon, th[at] has vowed Ḥann[... ...]".Most Punic grave stelae, in addition to an engraved text and sometimes a standing figure bearing a libation cup, show a standard repertoire of (religious) symbols. It is thought that such symbols, which may be compared to a
cross on a Christian gravestone, generally represent "deities or beliefs related to the after-life, aimed probably at facilitating or at protecting the eternal rest of the deceased". The symbols also helped the large majority of people who were illiterate to understand the function of the stela. The main Punic funerary symbols are: • the so-called
"Tanit symbol", a female figure built up from a triangle (the body), plus a circle (the head), and a horizontal line (the arms, often with hands stretched out upwards). The symbol often appears on stelae dedicated to the two gods "
Tinnit-Phanebal and
Baal-Hammon". Of unknown origin, unlike the other funerary symbols, the worship of Tanit (or Tinnit) seems autochthonous: it is found hardly anywhere else but in Punic culture. Little is known about Tanit, but she is considered to be a symbol of fertility and abundance (the Tanit symbol also looks very similar to the Egyptian
Ankh symbol, a symbol of life). The Tanit symbol is found most often in the
neo-Punic period (after 146 BCE). • the
"crescent and disc", a very common symbol on Carthaginian grave stelae, a circle covered by a sickle. Probably portraying the new ("crescent") and full ("disc") moon. This symbol seems to refer to the passage of time, but the precise meaning is unknown. Used rarely on later neo-Punic stelae. Sometimes replaced by a "rosette and crescent", where the rosette is placed above an inverted, ship-like crescent. • a
raised right hand, hand palm outward, seemingly picturing a blessing or prayer. Often combined with a text like "He (the god) blessed me" or "I was blessed". This symbol disappeared completely by the neo-Punic period. • a
caduceus, or messenger's staff. It basically consists of three elements, from below to top a stem, a circle, and a "U" shape. Maybe adopted from the
caduceus of the Greek god
Hermes, who was a guide to the
Netherworld. However, in Carthage the
caduceus symbol often seems to have been associated not with death but with healing, and with
Esmun, the god of healing. The symbol was common in the 4th-2nd century BCE, but became ever more rare in the neo-Punic period. • a
standard. Usually used pairwise, one of the two "standards" placed at left and the other one at the right of a central picture. Often combined with the "Tanit symbol". In the 2nd century BCE it "fused" with the
caduceus. • a
bottle or
vase symbol, appearing in the 4th and 3rd century BCE. Attempts to interpret it have been widely varying, but there seem to be parallels with an Egyptian sign picturing the grave of
Osiris, which has led to speculation that the symbol "expressed the hope of personal renewal in the afterlife".
Sacrifice and dedications by
Louis Félicien de Saulcy, 1847 Animals and other valuables were sacrificed to propitiate the gods; such sacrifices had to be done according to strict specifications, which are described on nine surviving inscriptions known as "sacrificial tariffs." The longest of these is
KAI 69, known as the
Marseille Tariff, after its find-spot, which probably originally stood in Carthage. It lists the portions of sacrifices that the priests of a temple of Baal Saphon were entitled to. The other sacrificial tariffs are
CIS I.165, 167–170, 3915–3917, all found in North Africa. These tariffs are similar to a pair of fifth-century BC tariff inscriptions found at the Phoenician city of
Kition in
Cyprus. They also share some terminology and formulae with
Ugaritic and
Biblical Hebrew texts on sacrifice. There is also a list of festival offerings,
CIS I.166 and many short
votive inscriptions, mostly associated with the tophets. Many of these tophet inscriptions refer to the sacrificial ritual as (vocalized or ), which some scholars connect with the biblical
Moloch. Votive inscriptions are also found in other contexts; a long inscription on an eighth-century BC bronze statuette found at
Seville dedicates it to Athtart (
KAI5 294). A fifth-century BC inscription (
KAI 72) from
Ebusus records the dedication of a temple, first to Rašap-Melqart, and then to Tinnit and Gad by a priest who states that the process involved making a
vow. A stele erected at Carthage in the mid-second century BC by a woman named Abibaal shows the sacrifice of a cow's head by burning on an altar; the details of the image show continuity with much earlier Near Eastern sacrificial rituals. Libations and incense also appear to have been an important part of sacrifices, based on archaeological finds. A custom attested at
Byblos by the Greek author
Lucian of Samosata that those sacrificing to Melqart had to shave their heads may explain ritual razors found in many Carthaginian tombs.
Tophets and child sacrifice Various Greek and Roman sources describe and criticize the Carthaginians as engaging in the practice of sacrificing children by burning. Classical writers describing some version of child sacrifice to "Cronos" (Baal Hammon) include the Greek historians
Diodorus Siculus and
Cleitarchus, as well as the Christian apologists
Tertullian and
Orosius. These descriptions were compared to those found in the Hebrew Bible describing the sacrifice of children by burning to
Baal and
Moloch at a place called
Tophet. The ancient descriptions were seemingly confirmed by the discovering of the so-called "Tophet of
Salammbô" in Carthage in 1921, which contained the urns of cremated children. However, modern historians and archaeologists debate the reality and extent of this practice. Some scholars propose that all remains at the tophet were sacrificed, whereas others propose that only some were.
Archaeological evidence The specific sort of open aired sanctuary described as a Tophet in modern scholarship is unique to the Punic communities of the Western Mediterranean. Over 100 tophets have been found throughout the Western Mediterranean, but they are absent in Spain. The largest tophet discovered was the Tophet of Salammbô at Carthage. The Tophet of Salammbô seems to date to the city's founding and continued in use for at least a few decades after the city's destruction in 146 BCE. No Carthaginian texts survive that would explain or describe what rituals were performed at the tophet. When Carthaginian inscriptions refer to these locations, they are referred to as
bt (temple or sanctuary), or
qdš (shrine), not Tophets. This is the same word used for temples in general. As far as the archaeological evidence reveals, the typical ritual at the Tophet – which, however, shows much variation – began by the burial of a small urn containing a child's ashes, sometimes mixed with or replaced by that of an animal, after which a
stele, typically dedicated to Baal Hammon and sometimes Tanit was erected. In a few occasions, a chapel was built as well. Uneven burning on the bones indicate that they were burned on an open air pyre. The dead children are never mentioned on the stele inscriptions, only the dedicators and that the gods had granted them some request. While tophets fell out of use after the fall of Carthage on islands formerly controlled by Carthage, in North Africa they became more common in the Roman Period. In addition to infants, some of these tophets contain offerings only of goats, sheep, birds, or plants; many of the worshipers have Libyan rather than Punic names. Their use appears to have declined in the second and third centuries CE.
Controversy The degree and existence of Carthaginian child sacrifice is controversial, and has been ever since the Tophet of Salammbô was discovered in 1920. Some historians have proposed that the Tophet may have been a cemetery for premature or short-lived infants who died naturally and then were ritually offered. The Greco-Roman authors were not eye-witnesses, contradict each other on how the children were killed, and describe children older than infants being killed as opposed to the infants found in the tophets. Accounts such as Cleitarchus's, in which the baby dropped into the fire by a statue, are contradicted by the archaeological evidence. There are not any mentions of child sacrifice from the
Punic Wars, which are better documented than the earlier periods in which mass child sacrifice is claimed. Child sacrifice may have been overemphasized for effect; after the Romans finally defeated Carthage and totally destroyed the city, they engaged in postwar propaganda to make their archenemies seem cruel and less civilized. Matthew McCarty argues that, even if the Greco-Roman testimonies are inaccurate "even the most fantastical slanders rely upon a germ of fact." Many archaeologists argue that the ancient authors and the evidence of the Tophet indicates that all remains in the Tophet must have been sacrificed. Others argue that only some infants were sacrificed. Paolo Xella argues that the weight of classical and biblical sources indicate that the sacrifices occurred. He further argues that the number of children in the tophet is far smaller than the rate of natural infant mortality. In Xella's estimation, prenatal remains at the tophet are probably those of children who were promised to be sacrificed but died before birth, but who were nevertheless offered as a sacrifice in fulfillment of a vow. He concludes that the child sacrifice was probably done as a last resort and probably frequently involved the substitution of an animal for the child. ==See also==