The purple dye the Phoenicians made from a shellfish. We talk today of Royal Purple.
Yes, especially royalty.
Royalty is a payment to an owner for the use of property, especially patents, copyrighted works, franchises or natural resources.
Hans Holbein the Younger regularly painted portraits, especially those of royalty, in the 1500s.
The Phoenicians are the first recorded sea-trading power, and they exported lumber, glass, objects, purple dye, and wine. Emphasis on the purple dye because purple soon becomes the color of royalty, which means it's worth a lot of money. The Phoenicians also established the colony of Carthage, which later became a big deal due to its political power in North Africa and its perfect location for trade.
He won the prize for physics "for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect"
The Phoenicians are About 100 to 0BC
The Greeks, the British, the French, the Americans, the Chinese, The Phoenicians.
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1958 was awarded to Frederick Sanger for his work on the structure of proteins, especially that of insulin.
The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.The royalty had complete disdain for the commoners.
The person who discovered the dye for purple was the Phoenicians. They extracted a dye from a type of sea snail called murex to create the rich purple color, known as Tyrian purple. This dye became highly prized and was often reserved for royalty and nobility due to its rarity and expense.
Richard Martin Willstatter won The Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1915.
The answer is of course the afro-Phoenicians were the Carthaginians, who were Phoenicians who established their city and trading empire in north Africa (in today's Tunisia).