Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Tyre' has mentioned 'Trade' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[23] In general, the first half of the second millennium BCE in the Eastern Mediterranean was "a time of peaceful trade and Tyre probably shared in the commercial activity.
Especially Tyre and Sidon benefited from the elimination of the former trade centers in Ugarit and Alalakh.
[32] However, it is widely assumed that it relied on trade as well as cultural exchange, rather than on military conquest.
Furthermore, Hiram's regional cooperation as well as his fight against Philistine pirates[3] helped to develop trade with Arabia, and North and East Africa.
[3] Tiglath-Pileser III (744xe2x80x93727 BCE) demanded tribute from Hiram II and tried to prohibit trade between Tyre and settlements to the South.
Asurbanipal, Esarhaddon's successor from 669 to 631, reportedly destroyed the hinterland of Tyre, but because of its economic potential preserved the once again rebellious city which reactivated its trade and continued to prosper.
As the Neo-Assyrian empire crumbled during the 7th century BCE, Tyre and the other Phoenician city-states not only enjoyed considerable independence but also booming trade activities.
After the start of the Mithridatic Wars between the expanding Roman Republic and the Kingdom of Pontus in 88 BCE, Tyrian trade activities increasingly suffered from the instability which persisted in the region.
[3] As in previous centuries, there were also Jewish residents, some of whom engaged in trade.
The main trade partners became French merchants, though both Hasan and Al-Nassar at times clashed with French authorities about the conditions of the commerce.
[86] In addition, the French colonial regime forcibly diverted agricultural products from Southern Lebanon to Syria and thus massively reduced trade activity in the port of Tyre.
[167] At the same time, Israel started engaging in a naval blockade of Tyre harbour and other Southern Lebanese ports to cut off supplies to the PLO, choking off most other maritime trade there as well.
[243] Threats to Tyre's ancient cultural heritage include development pressures and the illegal antiquities trade.