What did Phoenicians use this new technology to record? The truth is that we don’t really know. We have more that 10,000 inscriptions in Phoenician, from all over the Mediterranean, but almost all are short and formulaic, recording dedications to the gods, the deaths of friends and family members, or occasional brief magical texts. ...This is a good overview of what we find in the sparse textual remains in ancient Phoenician. I already noted this essay when it came out in 2017. But BAS has just posted it again, so here are some more thoughts.
I can't imagine that the Phoenicians didn't write down their myths and legends, but it's likely that all the papyri and parchments they were written on have perished.
The surviving Greek quotations of the Phoenician History by the Roman-era writer Philo of Byblos do preserve some knowledge of Canaanite/Phoenician religion. Arguably his work is based on Phoenician sources, although it's difficult to say more than that.
The essay mentions the Phoenician administrative archive recently excavated at Idalion, Cyprus. Since it was published, another Phoenician archive has been excavated at nearby Kition-Pampoula (Kition-Bampoula) in Cyprus. More on it here and here. Alas, still no reports of any literary texts.
Cross-file under Phoenician Watch and Northwest Semitic Epigraphy.
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