Abstract
Attic vases were imported to Etruria in large numbers during the Archaic period (650–450 B. C. E.). A large corpus of decorative imagery has been scrupulously recorded in great detail, presenting a contrast with the antiquarian excavation methods which unearthed them. This article considers a corpus of imported ceramic vessels excavated at Chiusi, Tarquinia and Vulci to explore the presence of different characters and themes in Greek mythology within Etruria, examining the popularity of particular mythological motifs and images. These are then compared with a subsidiary corpus of comparable date from the Athenian Agora. The results of the analysis are interpreted to suggest that Etruscan consumers were deliberately acquiring iconographic content that related to indigenous Italian mythologies, values and ideals. The analysis proposes that the reception of imported mythology reflects themes of consequence in Etruscan mythology, closely related to the context of the use of these vessels in both feasts and funerals.
Acknowledgment
I would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their insightful and constructive comments, as well as the editors and editorial team for their hard work. Theresa Huntsman read and commented on the draft with typical generosity and incisiveness. All errors, of course, remain my own.
Funding: Arts and Humanities Research Council. This research was partly funded by the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council.
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Thunder versus Lightning in Etruria
- The Vicchio Stele and Its Context
- The Vicchio Stele: The Inscription
- Stories in Clay: Mythological Characters on Ceramics in Archaic Etruria
- The Etruscans in Southern Gaul during the Fifth Century B.C.E.: A Vessel of the “Spurinas” Group Discovered at the Settlement of La Monédière in Bessan (Hérault, France)
- Book and Exhibition Reviews
- The Mediterranean Foundations of Ancient Art
- Gli Etruschi e La Campania settentrionale: atti del XXXVI Convegno di studi etruschi ed italici, Caserta, Santa Maria Capua Vetere, Capua, Teano, 11–15 novembre 2007
- L’Ombra degli Etruschi: Simboli di un popolo fra pianura e collina
- Couched in Death: Klinai and Identity in Anatolia and Beyond
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Thunder versus Lightning in Etruria
- The Vicchio Stele and Its Context
- The Vicchio Stele: The Inscription
- Stories in Clay: Mythological Characters on Ceramics in Archaic Etruria
- The Etruscans in Southern Gaul during the Fifth Century B.C.E.: A Vessel of the “Spurinas” Group Discovered at the Settlement of La Monédière in Bessan (Hérault, France)
- Book and Exhibition Reviews
- The Mediterranean Foundations of Ancient Art
- Gli Etruschi e La Campania settentrionale: atti del XXXVI Convegno di studi etruschi ed italici, Caserta, Santa Maria Capua Vetere, Capua, Teano, 11–15 novembre 2007
- L’Ombra degli Etruschi: Simboli di un popolo fra pianura e collina
- Couched in Death: Klinai and Identity in Anatolia and Beyond