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Cippus perusinus | A Wisdom Archive on Cippus perusinus |  | Cippus perusinus A selection of articles related to Cippus perusinus |  |
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Cippus perusinus, Cippus perusinus - Discussion of its translation, Cippus perusinus - The text, <i>Liber Linteus</i> - An Etruscan inscription., <i>Tabula Cortonensis</i> - An Etruscan inscription., <i>Pyrgi Tablets</i> - An Etruscan inscription., Etruscan civilization, Lemnian language, Eteocypriot, Eteocretan, Etruria
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Cippus perusinus | |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Etruscan Society
Etruscan civilization - Kinship.
The cemetaries of the Etruscans give us considerable information about their society. They were a monogamous society that emphasized pairing. The word for married couple was tusurthir. The lids of large numbers of sarcophagi are adorned with sculpted couples, smiling, in the prime of life (even if the remains were of persons advanced in age), reclining next to each other or with arms around each other ...
See also:Etruscan civilization, Etruscan civilization - Language, Etruscan civilization - Mysterious origins, Etruscan civilization - The first scientific ethnographic study, Etruscan civilization - Eastern Mediterranean combinations, Etruscan civilization - A possible Etruscan sea people, Etruscan civilization - Archaeological possibilities, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan Society, Etruscan civilization - Kinship, Etruscan civilization - Government, Etruscan civilization - Religion, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan heritage at Rome, Etruscan civilization - The Question of the founding population, Etruscan civilization - Foundation of Rome, Etruscan civilization - Populus Romanus, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan architecture, Etruscan civilization - Additional information, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan cities, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan rulers, Etruscan civilization - Bibliography Read more here: » Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Etruscan Society |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - HistoryThe Etruscans are thought by some to be indigenous people of Italy, living there before the Indo-European migration and the arrival of the Latins, around 1000 BC. Herodotus (Histories I.94), however, describes the Tyrrhenians as immigrants from Lydia in western Anatolia, led west, fleeing famine, by their leader Tyrrhoeus, to settle in Umbria [1]; the Tyrrhenians of Herodotus are sometimes identified with the Etruscans, although there is no material cultural evidence to back this up. Literacy was fairly common, as can be seen by the g ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - History |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Discovery
Liber Linteus - Purchase of the mummy.
In 1848, Mihajlo Barić (1791–1859), a Croatian minor official in the Hungarian Royal Chancellery, resigned his post and embarked upon a tour of several countries, including Egypt. While in Alexandria, he purchased a sarchophagus containing a female mummy, as a souvenir of his travels.
Barić displayed the mummy at his home in Vienna, standing it upright in the corner of his sitting room. He often told his visitors that it was the body of King Stephen of Hungary's s ...
See also:Liber Linteus, Liber Linteus - Discovery, Liber Linteus - Purchase of the mummy, Liber Linteus - Initial examinations, Liber Linteus - Production, Liber Linteus - Text, Liber Linteus - Structure, Liber Linteus - Content, Liber Linteus - Disuse and disposal Read more here: » Liber Linteus: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Discovery |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - LanguageThe Etruscans are generally believed to have spoken a non-Indo-European language. Herodotus (c. 400 BC) records the legend that they came from Lydia (modern western Turkey). Contrarily, Dionysius of Halicarnassus (c. 100 BC) pronounced that the Etruscans were indigenous to Italy, calling themselves Rasenna and being part of an ancient nation "which does not resemble any other people in their language or in their way of life, or customs." Knowledge of the Etruscan language only began with the discovery of the bilingual ...
See also:Etruscan civilization, Etruscan civilization - Language, Etruscan civilization - Mysterious origins, Etruscan civilization - The first scientific ethnographic study, Etruscan civilization - Eastern Mediterranean combinations, Etruscan civilization - A possible Etruscan sea people, Etruscan civilization - Archaeological possibilities, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan Society, Etruscan civilization - Kinship, Etruscan civilization - Government, Etruscan civilization - Religion, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan heritage at Rome, Etruscan civilization - The Question of the founding population, Etruscan civilization - Foundation of Rome, Etruscan civilization - Populus Romanus, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan architecture, Etruscan civilization - Additional information, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan cities, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan rulers, Etruscan civilization - Bibliography Read more here: » Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Language |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Mysterious originsOn the one hand the Etruscans were said in legend to have come from Anatolia, either Lydia or Troy, where they must have been urbane and international. On the other, they came from an indigenous people of Italy practicing the relatively unsophisticated and rural Villanovan culture. The poet Virgil said in the Aeneid that Trojans fled to the Italian penninsula. If they called themselves Rasenna, there is no obvious connection between that name and Etrusci or Tyrrheni. These origins are mysterious, being apparently contradictory.
Etruscan ci ...
See also:Etruscan civilization, Etruscan civilization - Language, Etruscan civilization - Mysterious origins, Etruscan civilization - The first scientific ethnographic study, Etruscan civilization - Eastern Mediterranean combinations, Etruscan civilization - A possible Etruscan sea people, Etruscan civilization - Archaeological possibilities, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan Society, Etruscan civilization - Kinship, Etruscan civilization - Government, Etruscan civilization - Religion, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan heritage at Rome, Etruscan civilization - The Question of the founding population, Etruscan civilization - Foundation of Rome, Etruscan civilization - Populus Romanus, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan architecture, Etruscan civilization - Additional information, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan cities, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan rulers, Etruscan civilization - Bibliography Read more here: » Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Mysterious origins |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Lemnian language - ClassificationDue to the high degree of similarity between Lemnian and Etruscan, it has been concluded that the two languages are closely related within a family which is called the Tyrrhenian or Aegean language family. It itself is isolate, that is, unrelated to other language groups as far as we can tell. There is no doubt that Rhaetic and Etruscan are among this family. In his Natural History (1st century AD), Pliny wrote about Alpine peoples: "The Rhaetians and the Vindelicans border with these [Noricans], all distributed in numerous cit ...
See also:Lemnian language, Lemnian language - Relationships to Other Languages, Lemnian language - Classical sources, Lemnian language - The Lemnos stela, Lemnian language - Translation of the Lemnos Stele, Lemnian language - Classification Read more here: » Lemnian language: Encyclopedia II - Lemnian language - Classification |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan citiesThe cities that composed the Etruscan Dodecapoli or league of "twelve cities" has no completely authoritative roster. Those Etruscan cities most often included (with their more familiar Latin and Italian equivalents) are:
Arretium (Arezzo)
Caisra (Caere or modern Cerveteri)
Clevsin, (Clusium or modern Chiusi)
Curtun (modern Cortona)
Perusna (Perugia)
Pupluna (Populonium)
Veii
Tarchna (Tarquinii or modern Tarquinia-Corneto)
Vetluna (Vetulonia)
Felathri (Volaterrae or modern Volterra)
Velzna (Volsinii, presumed ...
See also:Etruscan civilization, Etruscan civilization - Language, Etruscan civilization - Mysterious origins, Etruscan civilization - The first scientific ethnographic study, Etruscan civilization - Eastern Mediterranean combinations, Etruscan civilization - A possible Etruscan sea people, Etruscan civilization - Archaeological possibilities, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan Society, Etruscan civilization - Kinship, Etruscan civilization - Government, Etruscan civilization - Religion, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan heritage at Rome, Etruscan civilization - The Question of the founding population, Etruscan civilization - Foundation of Rome, Etruscan civilization - Populus Romanus, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan architecture, Etruscan civilization - Additional information, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan cities, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan rulers, Etruscan civilization - Bibliography Read more here: » Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan cities |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Etruscan heritage at RomeThose who subscribe to an Italic foundation of Rome, followed by an Etruscan invasion, typically speak of an Etruscan “influence” on Roman culture; that is, cultural objects that were adopted at Rome from neighboring Etruria. The prevalent view today is that Rome was founded by Etruscans and merged with Italics later. In that case Etruscan cultural objects are not influences but are a heritage.
The main criterion for deciding whether an object originated at Rome and travelled by influence to the Etruscans, or descended to the Roma ...
See also:Etruscan civilization, Etruscan civilization - Language, Etruscan civilization - Mysterious origins, Etruscan civilization - The first scientific ethnographic study, Etruscan civilization - Eastern Mediterranean combinations, Etruscan civilization - A possible Etruscan sea people, Etruscan civilization - Archaeological possibilities, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan Society, Etruscan civilization - Kinship, Etruscan civilization - Government, Etruscan civilization - Religion, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan heritage at Rome, Etruscan civilization - The Question of the founding population, Etruscan civilization - Foundation of Rome, Etruscan civilization - Populus Romanus, Etruscan civilization - Etruscan architecture, Etruscan civilization - Additional information, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan cities, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan rulers, Etruscan civilization - Bibliography Read more here: » Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Etruscan heritage at Rome |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - ProductionCertain local gods mentioned within the text allow the Liber Linteus's place of production to narrowed to a small area in the southeast of Tuscany near Lake Trasimeno. Four major Etruscan cities were in that area: modern day Arezzo, Perugia, Chiusi and Cortona. All of them would have had temples that could have both produced and used the Liber Linteus.
The age of the book is unknown, though a date of about 250 BCE is given due to the shape of the letters. It must have been made before use of the Etruscan language declined in opposition to Latin, as the cost involved would req ...
See also:Liber Linteus, Liber Linteus - Discovery, Liber Linteus - Purchase of the mummy, Liber Linteus - Initial examinations, Liber Linteus - Production, Liber Linteus - Text, Liber Linteus - Structure, Liber Linteus - Content, Liber Linteus - Disuse and disposal Read more here: » Liber Linteus: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Production |
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 |  |  | Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Geographic distributionEtruscan was spoken in north-west and west-central Italy, in the region that even now bears their name: Tuscany, and in the Po valley to the north of Etruria.
Etruscan language - Related Languages.
One language certain to be very closely related to Etruscan is the language once spoken on the island of Lemnos before the Athenian invasion (6th century BC), aptly named Lemnian. A stone tablet called the Lemnos stele was found there written with a script related to Etruscan and is dated to approximately 600 BC ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Geographic distribution |
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