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Etruscan civilization

A Wisdom Archive on Etruscan civilization

Etruscan civilization

A selection of articles related to Etruscan civilization

More material related to Etruscan Civilization can be found here:
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Etruscan Civilization
Etruscan civilization

ARTICLES RELATED TO Etruscan civilization

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Etruscan civilization

Please remove this notice after the article has been expanded. Details are on this talk page or at Wikipedia:Requests for expansion. The Etruscan civilization flourished in Etruria and the Po valley in the northern part of what is now Italy, prior to the arrival of Gauls in the Po valley and the formation of the Roman Republic. Etruscan culture developed in northern and central Italy after ca 800 BC without a serious break out of the preceding Villanovan culture. The Villanovan culture, the earliest ...

Including:

Read more here: » Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Etruscan civilization

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Language

The 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 - Collapse of Etruscan politics, Etruscan civilization - Influence, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan cities, Etruscan civilization - Some Etruscan rulers, Etruscan civilization - Bibliography

Read more here: » Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan civilization - Language

Etruscan civilization: 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

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Raetic language

Raetic or Rhaetic is an obscure language of antiquity, which used to be spoken in the province of Raetia, in the Eastern Alps, to the north and west of Venetic. It is very sparsely attested, leaving room for much speculation on its ancestry, but an affiliation with Etruscan seems most probable. See also. Aegean languages -- The language group to which Raetic belongs. Etruscan civilization Etruscan language Liber Linteus - An Etruscan inscription. < ...

Read more here: » Raetic language: Encyclopedia - Raetic language

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Cippus perusinus

The Cippus Perusinus or Cippus of Perugia is a stone tablet discovered near Perugia, Italy, in 1822. The tablet bears 46 lines of Etruscan text exquisitely carved into it. Surprisingly well-preserved , the cippus is often assumed to be a text dedicating a legal contract between two Etruscan families; however there is severe doubt about the validity of such a translation when these translated values are carefully cross-referenced with the same words found in other Etruscan texts. Rather, an alternative and more likely view is that this is simply a tombstone for the deceased. The date of the ...

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Read more here: » Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia - Cippus perusinus

Etruscan civilization: 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

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Eteocretan language - Known inscriptions

Dreros 1 1: ---rmaw|et|isalabre|komn 2: ---d|men|inai|isaluria|lmo 3: ----tonturonmēa.oaoiewad 4: eturo---munadoa-enē-- 5: --matritaia-- Part of the inscription (lines 3 to 5) is written in Greek, probably the Doric dialect. Due to the lack of preservation of many of the words, it is difficult to ascertain what even the Greek text is saying. It has been pointed out that <ewade> ...

See also:

Eteocretan language, Eteocretan language - Known inscriptions

Read more here: » Eteocretan language: Encyclopedia II - Eteocretan language - Known inscriptions

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Pyrgi Tablets - The Phoenician Text

Since the Phoenician text has long been known to be a Semitic language (related to such languages as Hebrew, Canaanite, Ugaritic, Arabic and Akkadian), it's decipherment was achieved very early. There is hardly any doubt concerning the values of the above words. ...

See also:

Pyrgi Tablets, Pyrgi Tablets - The Phoenician Text, Pyrgi Tablets - Phoenician Vocabulary, Pyrgi Tablets - The Etruscan Text, Pyrgi Tablets - Etruscan Vocabulary

Read more here: » Pyrgi Tablets: Encyclopedia II - Pyrgi Tablets - The Phoenician Text

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Cippus perusinus - Discussion of its translation

As with most Etruscan inscriptions, translations have not been very trustworthy because of a lack of thorough organization on the part of the translators. One author says this [citation needed], another that [citation needed], and before long, the reader is hopelessly confused. Beyond the myths, attentive analysis and crossreferencing will help us sift through the mess to get at the heart of the Etruscan language. Currently, much work has been done [citation needed] to piece together Etruscan and these discoveries have helped to shatter previous ...

See also:

Cippus perusinus, Cippus perusinus - Discussion of its translation, Cippus perusinus - The text

Read more here: » Cippus perusinus: Encyclopedia II - Cippus perusinus - Discussion of its translation

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Lemnian language - Translation of the Lemnos Stele

In order to properly translate the stele, one must sift through a sea of hearsay and speculation that abounds about this cloudy text. Some words attract an especially inordinate amount of controversy, yielding multiple and conflicting translations for the same word. We need to obtain a more accurate picture of what this text is telling us. The only way to do this is through a balanced analysis of the smallest details while keeping sight of the larger context at the same time. Let's undo some of the myths that continue to ...

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 - Translation of the Lemnos Stele

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - History

The 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

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Volci

Volci or Vulci is a Latinized form of an Etruscan city, which the Etruscans called Velch. Neither form is any more modern than the other, as neither are modern at all. They are ancient spelling or dialectical variants. The Latinized word is in the nominative plural case, undoubtedly reflecting an ancient custom of naming a city after the ethnic unity that lived there, usually organized under a polity and generally designated "tribe." The Vulci were a tribe or people as well as a city. They were one of the legendary twelve peoples of Etruscan civilization, who formed into the Etru ...

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Read more here: » Volci: Encyclopedia - Volci

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - 8th century BC

(2nd millennium BC - 1st millennium BC - 1st millennium) 8th century BC - Overview. 8th century BC - Events. Assyria conquers Damascus and Samaria Nineveh destroyed (789 BC) First recorded Olympic Games held in Greece (776 BC) Zhou Dynasty moved its capital to Luoyang (771 BC); The Spring and Autumn Period (771-481 BC) began. According to tradition, Rome founded (753 BC, 21 April) Destruction of the Kingdom of Israel by Assyrian ...

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Read more here: » 8th century BC: Encyclopedia - 8th century BC

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - 4th century BC

(2nd millennium BC - 1st millennium BC - 1st millennium) 4th century BC - Overview. 4th century BC - Events. Invasion of the Celts into Ireland Battle of the Allia and subsequent Gaulish sack of Rome 383 BCE Second Buddhist Councel at Vesali. 100 years after the Parimirvana. 312 BCE Seleucus I Nicator established himself in Babylon. Begins the Seleucid Empire. 323 BCE Alexander the Great conqueres the Persian ...

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Read more here: » 4th century BC: Encyclopedia - 4th century BC

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Iron Age

In archaeology, the Iron Age is the stage in the development of any people where the use of iron implements as tools and weapons is prominent. The adoption of this new material coincided with other changes in past societies often including differing agricultural practices, religious beliefs and artistic styles. The Iron Age is the last principal period in the three-age system for classifying pre-historic societies and its meaning varies depending on the country or geographical region. This variation even occurs within Europe wh ...

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Read more here: » Iron Age: Encyclopedia - Iron Age

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Carthage

Carthage (from the Phoenician Qart-Hadasht "New City" (written without vowels as QRT HDŠT قرت-حدش or קרת חדשת), was an ancient city in North Africa located on the eastern side of Lake Tunis, across from the center of modern Tunis in Tunisia. It remains a popular tourist attraction. Carthage - Founding of Carthage. In approximately 814 BC, Carthage was founded by Phoenician settlers from the city of Tyre, bringing with them the city-god Melqart. Traditionally, the city was founded ...

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Read more here: » Carthage: Encyclopedia - Carthage

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - Villanovan culture

The Villanovan culture was the earliest Iron Age culture of central and northern Italy, abruptly following the Bronze Age Terramare culture and giving way in the 7th century to an increasingly Orientalizing culture influenced by Greek traders, which was followed without a severe break by the Etruscan civilization. Villanovan cultural origins, but perhaps not all its peoples, lay in the Eastern Alps, with connections to the Halstatt culture. The Villanovans introduced iron-working to the Italian peninsula; they practiced cremation and buried the ashes of the ...

Including:

Read more here: » Villanovan culture: Encyclopedia - Villanovan culture

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Lemnian language - Classification

Due 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

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Classification

The majormost consensus is that Etruscan is related only to other members of what is called the Tyrrhenian language family which in itself is isolate, that is, unrelated to other language groups as far as we can tell. There is no doubt that Rhaetic and Lemnian 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 cities. The Gauls maintain that the Raetians descend from the Etruscans, pushed b ...

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 - Classification

Etruscan civilization: Encyclopedia - 700s BC

Centuries: 9th century BC - 8th century BC - 7th century BC Decades: 750s BC 740s BC 730s BC 720s BC 710s BC - 700s BC - 690s BC 680s BC 670s BC 660s BC 650s BC 700s BC - Events and trends. 708 BC - Spartan immigrants found Taras (Tarentum, the modern Taranto) colony in southern Italy. 705 BC - Sennacherib succeeds his brother Shalmaneser V as king of Assyria 704 BC - Sennacherib moves the capital of Assyira back to Nineveh 701 BC - King Hezekiah ...

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Read more here: » 700s BC: Encyclopedia - 700s BC

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