Encyclopedia > Etruscan civilization

  Article Content

Etruscan civilization

The Etruscan civilization existed in Etruria in the northern part of what is now Italy prior to the formation of the Roman Republic.

Etruscans were a non-Aryan folk who inhabited northern and central Italy before 800 BC. Some scholars believed they migrated from the eastern steppes; Herodotus records the legend that they came from Lydia, which has support from non-Greek inscriptions found on the island of Lemnos that appear to be in a language related to Etruscan, and have been dated to the sixth century BC.

The Etruscans lived under a series of autonomous city-states: Arretium (Arezzo), Caisra (Caere or modern Cerveteri[?]), Clevsin (Clusium or modern Chiusi[?]), Curtun (modern Cortona[?]), Perusna (Perugia), Fufluna or Pupluna (Populonia), Veii, Tarchna (Tarquinii or modern Tarquinia-Corneto[?]), Vetluna (Vetulonia), Felathri (Volaterrae or modern Volterra[?]), Velzna (Volsinii or modern day Bolsena[?]), and Velch (Vulci or modern day Volci[?]). The Romans were under Etruscan power in the infancy of their own culture, and after they became independent always regarded the Etruscans with the half sneering condescension, half horrified fascination that former subject peoples usually view their erstwhile masters (this is an important point, for it lies at the heart of the very ambivalent Roman attitude towards Monarchies vs. Republics).

Knowledge about the Etruscans is fragmentary, and usually filtered through Roman eyes; knowledge of the Etruscan language only began with the discovery of the bilingual Phoenician-Etruscan Pyrgi Tablets found at the port of Caere[?] in 1964, and is still incomplete. It is known that they normally acknowledged one among their number as High King. By the 5th century BC they were under increasing pressure from turbulent Italics on the one hand, and ferocious Celts on the other, and by the 3rd century they had fallen under the authority of Rome (the last Etruscan city to be subdued by Rome was Velzna, 265 BC). In 90 BC they were granted Roman citizenship, but they backed Marius a decade later, and as a result their language was suppressed and their distinct culture and folkways outlawed. A century later, the future Emperor Claudius could find enough elderly rustics remaining to compile an Etruscan dictionary (now lost), but they vanished as a distinct ethnic group soon after. Nevertheless, a large number of old Roman families retained a memory of Etruscan roots, for example the Sempronii, Licinii, Minucii, and Larcii. Then too, a number of the older Roman divinities turn out to be based closely on Etruscan originals. Some Etruscan rulers :

  • Osiniu (at Clusium) probably early 1100s
  • Mezentius fl. c.1100 ?
  • Lausus (at Caere)
  • Tyrsenos
  • Velsu fl 8th century
  • Larthia (at Caere)
  • Arimnestos (at Arimnus)
  • Lars Porsena[?] (at Clusium) fl. late 6th century
  • Thefarie Velianas (at Caere) late 500s-early 400s
  • Aruns (at Clusium) fl c.500
  • Volumnius (at Veii) mid 400s-437
  • Lars Tolumnius (at Veii) late 400s-428

Bibliography

  • Bloch, Raymond. The ancient civilization of the Etruscans. Translated from the French by James Hogarth. Ancient Civilizations Series. New York: Cowles Book Co, 1969

See also:

External links

This article incorporates some information taken from http://www.hostkingdom.net with permission



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Christiania

... can refer to: Christiania - the name of Oslo, from 1624 to 1925. The Free State of Christiania - a partially self-governing neighborhood in the city of ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 38.9 ms