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  2. Pyrgi Tablets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrgi_Tablets

    The exact nature of the rule of Tiberius Velianas has been the subject of much discussion. The Phoenician root MLK refers to sole power, often associated with a king. But the Etruscan text does not use the Etruscan word for 'king', lauχum, instead presenting the term for 'magistrate', zilac (perhaps modified by a word that may mean 'great ...

  3. Daily life of the Etruscans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daily_life_of_the_Etruscans

    Table service from 550 - 500 BCE found in a tomb at Chiusi.. Nevertheless, a Greek historian, Posidonios, described the richness of the Etruscan table: "Twice a day, the Etruscans prepared a sumptuous table with all the amenities of a fine life; arranged tablecloths embroidered with flowers; covered the table with a large quantity of silver crockery; had a considerable number of slaves serve ...

  4. Curzio Inghirami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curzio_Inghirami

    These texts, the topography of Volterra and several objects – such as a lamp and an incomplete figurine – are displayed in woodcuts and engravings throughout the book. In reality, the discoveries were ingeniously fabricated by Inghirami, inspired by the forger of Etruscan antiquities Annio da Viterbo (1437-1502).

  5. Golini Tomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golini_Tomb

    In the same tomb, to the left of this scene, we see a table, bearing several metal vessels, a thymiaterion, and an ivory box for incense, and flanked by two candelabra with lighted candles stuck into birds’ beaks, the Etruscans were considered inventors of the art of candle-making and taught the Romans to manufacture different kinds of ...

  6. Lapidary Museum (Avignon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lapidary_Museum_(Avignon)

    The Greek, Roman, Etruscan and Gallic objects include vases and lamps as well as bas-reliefs and statues, along with a number of Etruscan funerary monuments. Greece [ edit ]

  7. Askos (pottery vessel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Askos_(pottery_vessel)

    An unusually large askos at the Louvre. Etruscan askos in the form of a rooster, 4th century B.C., Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Askos (Ancient Greek ἀσκός "tube"; plural: ἀσκοί - askoi) is the name given in modern terminology to a type of ancient Greek pottery vessel [1] used to pour small quantities of liquids such as oil.

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