L'etruria N. 10 2016 Scarica

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

L'etruria N. 10 2016 Scarica Anno CXXIV - N° 10 Cortona - Martedì 31 maggio 2016 www.letruria.it e-mail: [email protected] EurO 1,80 PERIODICO QUINDICINALE CORTONESE FONDATO NEL 1892 Tariffa R.O.C.: “Poste Italiane S.p.A. - Sped. in abb. postale - D.L. 353/2003 (Conv. In - L. 27/02/2004 n. 46) art. 1, comma 1, DCB/2004-Arezzo” - Autoriz. Tribunale di Arezzo N° 3 del 27/03/1979 – Iscrizione Reg. Naz. della Stampa n. 5896 - Stampa: Grafiche Calosci Cortona. Redazione, Amm.ne: Giornale L’Etruria Soc. Coop. arl - Via Nazionale, 51 - 52044 Cortona - Tel. (0575) 60.32.06 - Una copia arretrata € 4,0. Abbonamento a L’Etruria: solo carta 12 mesi 35 euro; web 12 mesi 30 euro; carta + web 12 mesi 45 euro - C/C Post. 13391529 - Banca Popolare di Cortona Iban: IT 55 L 05496 25400 000010182236 Incontro a Roma tra il Sindaco e il Padre Generale Cortona On The Move 2016 Confidiamo in una soluzione positiva ’ conto alla rovescia per Le numerosissime mostre in racconterà l’azienda attraverso i Al-liquindoi. Un lavoro dedicato a di Enzo Lucente la nuova edizione di Cor - pro gramma saranno dislocate, co - volti dei suoi operatori. Cortona migranti e richiedenti asilo che si ontinuamo ad informare che ti possano aiutare nel difficile tona On The Move Foto- me di consueto, in angoli partico - On The Move 2016 ospita anche propone di far conoscere il nostro i nostri lettori sulla vicen- percorso di questa vita odierna. Egrafia in Viaggio, il festi - lari e spesso poco conosciuti della un evento straordinario: The Larry continente attraverso le immagini da del Convento e la Questo secondo aspetto è val internazionale giunto città, come l’ex magazzino delle Towell Show, la prima retrospetti - dell’archivio Magnum selezionate CChie sa di S. Francesco di cer at mente predominante perché alla sua sesta edizione. carni o abitazioni private di via Na - va europea del grande fotografo da Arianna Rinaldo. Europa sarà Cor ot na. non è giusto lasciare inascoltate le Dal 14 luglio al 2 ottobre la zionale, l’ex ospedale e la fortezza canadese. una delle mostre di Cortona On Come avevamo annunciato il istanze di quanti hanno necessità città tornerà ad ospitare una delle del girifalco, ma anche in esterna Tra i progetti speciali quest’an - The Move e un libro che sarà di - 18 maggio il padre Generale dei di un conforto “confessionale” manifestazioni più riuscite degli con un allestimento stabile al Par- no è in programma la mostra Eu - SEGUE frati conventuali, Padre Tasca, ha con il sacerdote. ultimi anni che raccoglie l’interes - terre nel cuore verde del centro. ropa realizzata insieme a Magnum A PAGINA 2 ricevuto il Sindaco di Cortona ed La risposta del Padre Gen e- se di migliaia di visitatori. Nelle giornate inaugurali del Photos e all’associazione spagnola una delegazione. rale, dopo oltre un’ora di scam bio Ancora protagonista l’eccel - festival (14-17 luglio) si daranno di opinioni, è stata “positiva” nel lenza della fotografia contempora - appuntamento a Cortona anche le senso che, per altri conventi si è nea selezionata dalla scrupolosa più grandi professionalità legate Nozze con “fichi secchi” già prevista la chiusura, per Cor - he si fosse alla frutta ce lo Spi rito Santo o terme di Manzano) tona, ha precisato, non è stata an - e ravamo immaginato; ma che non si facciano manuten - cora presa alcuna decisione . che si fosse con le pezze zioni questo sì che è un vero dan - Il Padre Generale Tasca ha Cnel sedere non ce lo sa - no. Si disperde il passato, non si co munque confermato l’intenzio- remmo aspettato; che si migliora non dico il futuro ma il ne di confrontarsi con il vescovo arrivasse al nulla non era negli pre sente. Fontana. A questo punto sappiamo auspici ma ci siamo. Purtroppo ci Cortona ha investito, ben a ra - che ci sono stati contatti con il siamo ma non avremmo voluto gione, molto, moltissimo sul tu - Un particolare del cortile del Convento Vescovo per far si che nel prossi- tan to perché Cortona non si me - rismo e questo ha avuto risposte mo incontro o colloquio telefoni- rita il vuoto che si sta costruendo del tutto rispettabili anche se si è Da quanto ci è stato riportato, co tra i due interlocutori, il ve sco- intorno ad essa; non si merita la trattato di un turismo mordi e fug - l’incontro si è svolto in uno spirito vo Fontana possa suggerire al china del declino che si sta pro - gi. Ma il turismo, come tutti i beni di serena collaborazione e con padre Generale di effettuare una spettando e derivante da errori so - o dierni, vivono se dotati di un mo - volontà propositiva. eccezione al disposto dell’Ordine pra errori compiuti nel passato re - tore propulsivo, se sottoposti a Inanzitutto dobbiamo riporta- di non chia mare frati conventuali direttrice artistica Arianna Rinaldo alla fotografia della scena mondia - moto e recente. La politica adotta - frequenti revisioni di presentazio - re il caldo intervento del sindaco di altre naz io nalità. insieme al team dell’associazione le, per incontrare giovani ed e- ta dalle amministrazioni monoco - ne del prodotto, in breve, se pub - Francesca Ba sanieri che, forte Abbiamo fatto sapere che in On The Move capitanato dall’infa - mer genti fotografi. lori, senza soluzione di disconti - blicizzati in maniera adeguata. E la dell’ordine del giorno, votato all’u- questi giorni era presente a Cor- ticabile Antonio Carloni che pro- Il percorso espositivo dell’edi - nuità, senza possibilità di incidere pub blicità, come per l’essere u - nanimità dal Consiglio Comunale, tona il Padre Provinciale ru meno prio 6 anni fa decise di scommet - zione 2016 porterà dalle single da parte delle minoranze con voti ma no, ciò che ti dà forza, che ti ha presentato a Padre Tasca una che, a questo proposito, si è di- tere sull’idea oggi diventata un room occupancy per tossicodi - sfavorevoli e tali da arrestare gli invigorisce, non è che l’anima, lo istanza dettagliata relazionando i chiarato ben felice di inviare in punto fermo e irrinunciabile della pendenti di Family Love di Darcy errori ed orrori che sindaci tutto - spi o stesso del prodotto. Il prodot - motivi per i quali è giusto che il Italia altri frati rumeni se il Padre stagione culturale di Cortona. Il Padilla ai paradisi fiscali fotografa - fare avrebbero potuto compiere to di qualità non ha bisogno di complesso di S. Francesco resti Generale glielo avesse richiesto. grup po potrà contare anche que- ti da Paolo Woods e Gabriele durante il loro mandato fin dal tante frasche ma di essere cono - aperto al culto e al pubblico. Il problema teoricamente po - st’anno sul volontariato con la Galimberti in The Heavens, dai più 1990, ci hanno portato alle tragi - sciuto. Hanno evidenziato al Padre trebbe essere risolto in modo par tecipazione di decine di giovani cruenti conflitti mondiali raccon - che conseguenze e risultati in cui Ebbene anche il turismo deve Generale l’importante attività ec- sem lpice. L’importante è che tutti provenienti da tutto il mondo che tati da Lynsey Addario in It’s What I ci troviamo. L’attuale baby ammi - essere pubblicizzato e per essere cle siale che i tre frati conventuali re mino nella stessa direzione. hanno deciso di dare il proprio Do all’America di frontiera foto- nistrazione che ci ritroviamo ha le pubblicizzato occorrono strutture stanno svolgendo nel territorio Confidiamo che S.E. mons. supporto al progetto. grafata da Lucas Foglia con Front- mani legate e non può muoversi ed investimenti. Pur comprenden - con una loro presenza costante Fon atna abbia compreso la neces- Il festival, grazie al lavoro co- country. Insieme a Daesung Lee, per come sono state lasciate le fi - do che in un momento di crisi, di per la celebrazione della messa sità di tenere aperti i due conventi stante dell’associazione, riesce a vincitore del premio Happiness nanze asfittiche; hanno poche pos - recessione economica, di conteni - domenicale nelle zone più disagia- e le relative chiese e che operi, intercettare un pubblico ampio On The Move 2015, scopriremo la sibilità di manovra se non quelle mento della spesa, gli investimenti te del Comune, ovvero nella mon - visto che viene ascoltato in modo composto non solo da appassio - Mongolia e la sua desertificazione di vendere o svendere qualche be - si stanno assottigliando, non si ve - tagna cortonese. Hanno evidenzia- par itcolare dal padre Generale Ta - nati del settore. Tra le promozioni attraverso Futuristic Archaeology, ne che non sarebbe giusto ne op - de però perché si debbano sman - to l’importanza della loro presen- sca, per la soluzione migliore sen - portuno. Si è con l’acqua alla gola tellare le strutture che peraltro so - za nell’ospedale della Fratta e la za tagli e soppressioni. o con la gola alla canna del gas. no state sempre presenti nel terri - loro utilità nel sop perire ad esi- Questo momento trascorso di Nell’ultimo mio articolo, in questo torio fin dagli anni sessanta, in - genze impreviste per la precaria difficile rapporto tra la popolazio- stesso giornale, mi chiedevo se cominciando da quella che era salute di molti sa cerdoti cortonesi ne di Cortona “centro storico” e il Cortona non stesse diventando chia mata “Pro Loco”. Smantellata “anziani”. suo Vescovo, in questo anno della una stella cadente, se non stesse la provincia (solo parzialmente Non solo la storia richiede misericordia, trovi uno sbocco im boccando la via del declino per carità, perché in Italia gli or - una presenza attiva, perché nella positivo ed una “pacificazione” perché priva di ideali, di passioni pelli devono rimanere a memoria chiesa sono presenti le spoglie di nel al stessa chiesa di S.
Recommended publications
  • Hammond2009.Pdf (13.01Mb)
    Postgraduate Programmes in the SCHOOL of HISTORY, CLASSICS and ARCHAEOLOGY The Iconography of the Etruscan Haruspex Supervisor: Name: Sarah Hammond Dr Robert Leighton 2009 SCHOOL of HISTORY, CLASSICS and ARCHAEOLOGY DECLARATION OF OWN WORK This dissertation has been composed by Sarah Hammond a candidate of the MSc Programme in MScR, Archaeology, run by the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh. The work it represents is my own, unless otherwise explicitly cited and credited in appropriate academic convention. I confirm that all this work is my own except where indicated, and that I have: Clearly referenced/listed all sources as appropriate Referenced and put in inverted commas all quoted text of more than three words (from books, web, etc) Given the sources of all pictures, data etc. that are not my own Not made any use of the essay(s) of any other student(s) either past or present Not sought or used the help of any external professional agencies for the work Acknowledged in appropriate places any help that I have received from others (e.g. fellow students, technicians, statisticians, external sources) Complied with any other plagiarism criteria specified in the Course handbook I understand that any false claim for this work will be penalised in accordance with the University regulations Signature: Name (Please PRINT): SARAH HAMMOND Date: 22/06/2009 The Iconography of the Etruscan Haruspex by Sarah Naomi Hammond MSc by Research, Archaeology The University of Edinburgh 2009 Word count: 25,000 Abstract The religious rituals of the Etruscans incorporated several forms of divination including the practices of extispicy and hepatoscopy, the arts of divining through the examination of sacrificed animal entrails, and specifically the liver.
    [Show full text]
  • Volume 16 Winter 2014
    Volume 16 Winter 2014 Tomb 6423 At right, the Below is the A Digger’s View: lastra sealing chamber as The Tomb of the Hanging the chamber found at the The perspective of a field Aryballos, Tarquinia shown in situ. moment of archaeologist by Alessandro Mandolesi Above it is the opening, by Maria Rosa Lucidi another lastra on the back The University of Turin and the possibly reut- wall a little The discovery of the tomb of the Superintendency for the Archaeological ilzed spolia aryballos still “hanging aryballos" has aroused great Heritage of Southern Etruria have been interest among the public in both Italy taken from hangs on its investigating the Tumulus of the Queen and internationally. The integrity of the original nail. and the necropolis surrounding it, the the tumulus unviolated tomb is definitely one of the Doganaccia, since 2008. The excava- of the queen, (photographs reasons for the attention it has received. tions have brought forth many important which stands by Massimo The uniqueness is even more pro- and unexpected results, thanks to subse- nearby. Legni). nounced when one considers that since quent research, and the infor- the second half of the nine- mation relating to the differ- teenth century the English ent phases of its use has made traveler George Dennis it possible to clarify many blamed the inability to recov- obscure points about the great er the contexts from intact era of the monumental tumuli chamber tombs in Etruscan at Tarquinia. Tarquinia on repeated looting Archaeologists working since ancient times. The
    [Show full text]
  • Etruscan News 19
    Volume 19 Winter 2017 Vulci - A year of excavation New treasures from the Necropolis of Poggio Mengarelli by Carlo Casi InnovativeInnovative TechnologiesTechnologies The inheritance of power: reveal the inscription King’s sceptres and the on the Stele di Vicchio infant princes of Spoleto, by P. Gregory Warden by P. Gregory Warden Umbria The Stele di Vicchio is beginning to by Joachim Weidig and Nicola Bruni reveal its secrets. Now securely identi- fied as a sacred text, it is the third 700 BC: Spoleto was the center of longest after the Liber Linteus and the Top, the “Tomba della Truccatrice,” her cosmetics still in jars at left. an Umbrian kingdom, as suggested by Capua Tile, and the earliest of the three, Bottom, a warrior’s iron and bronze short spear with a coiled handle. the new finds from the Orientalizing securely dated to the end of the 6th cen- necropolis of Piazza d’Armi that was tury BCE. It is also the only one of the It all started in January 2016 when even the heavy stone cap of the chamber partially excavated between 2008 and three with a precise archaeological con- the guards of the park, during the usual cover. The robbers were probably dis- 2011 by the Soprintendenza text, since it was placed in the founda- inspections, noticed a new hole made by turbed during their work by the frequent Archeologia dell’Umbria. The finds tions of the late Archaic temple at the grave robbers the night before. nightly rounds of the armed park guards, were processed and analysed by a team sanctuary of Poggio Colla (Vicchio di Strangely the clandestine excavation but they did have time to violate two of German and Italian researchers that Mugello, Firenze).
    [Show full text]
  • Etruscan Identity and Self-Representation in the Late Republic and Early Principate
    Etruscan Identity and Self-Representation in the Late Republic and Early Principate Chiara Strazzulla Supervisors: Cardiff University Dr Guy Bradley (Cardiff University) Prof. Elena Isayev (University of Exeter) Presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Ancient History 2018 Acknowledgements Research might often be portrayed as a solo enterprise, but no work of research is ever truly done alone. This work would most certainly not have been possible without the help and support of many others beside me, who gave their own precious insights, directed my investigation to unexpected corners of the subject topic, and generously gave assistance when assistance was needed. My heartfelt thanks go therefore to: My supervisors, Dr Guy Bradley and Prof. Elena Isayev, who have been present at every stage, providing fundamental clarifications, encouraging me to push my limits and find my strengths, helping me shape what was a disconnected bunch of ideas about Romans and Etruscans into something concrete. Their dedication to this work cannot be understated and without it none of it would have been possible. All at AHRC and the South, West and Wales Doctoral Training Partnership, for generously funding my PhD and providing invaluable occasions for personal and professional development, debate, and sharing. The discussions had at cohort days organised by the DTP have helped guide the direction my research was taking, provided me with additional tools and given me interdisciplinary insights. My thanks in particular to Chantelle Payne and Rose Jones, for their tireless organisational work; and to all the fellow DTP students with whom I exchanged opinions and ideas, most importantly Beatrice Hitchman, Sophie Payne, Maria Tomlinson, Anna Field, James Thomas Lloyd, and Jo Bryant.
    [Show full text]
  • The Tabula Cortonensis and Land Transactions
    THE TABULA CORTONENSIS AND LAND TRANSACTIONS Recently R. A. Wallace has dedicated a chapter of his book ‘Zikh Rasna. A Manual of Etruscan Language and Inscriptions' (2008) to the inscription of the bronze Tabula Cortonensis\ The Tablet of Cortona, hereafter TCo, was handed in by a carpenter to the Carabinieri at Camucia (Cortona) in 1992. The editio princeps was published by L. Agostiniani and F. Nicosia in 2000. The text is extremely important since it is, after the Liber linteus Zagrabiensis and the Tabula Capuana, the third longest extant Etruscan text (206 words; 32 lines on side A and 8 lines on side B). It is, however, difficult to interpret and translate for lexical, morphological, grammatical, and syntactical reasons. Wallace’s tentative translation of the text is based on interpretations and translations advanced by Agostiniani and Nicosia (2000), H. Rix (2000, 2002), G. Μ. Facchetti (2000, 2002b), A. Maggiani (2001, 2002b), V. Scarano Ussani and Μ. Torelli (2003), K. Wylin (2002a, 2006b) and I.-J. Adiego (2005). The publications of C. De Simone (1998-2007), P. Amann (2005), Wylin (2005) and Torelli (2005) were not used by Wallace. It appears that there is no consensus on the meaning(s) of about half of the sixty different non- onomastic lexical units, many of which are or look like hapax legomena. This article aims to detect their semantic values from the textual context and with the use of the combinatory method, that is, by comparing words in the TCo text with those in the corpus of ca 11,000 Etruscan inscriptions. Some words and syntagmata will also be studied from a chrono-typological, interlinguistic, etymological, and contemporary, bicultural perspective (e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Jean Macintosh Turfa, Divining the Etruscan World: the Brontoscopic Calendar and Religious Practice
    Jean MacIntosh Turfa, Divining the Etruscan World: The Brontoscopic Calendar and Religious Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012. Pp. xiii + 408; Figs. 24: ISBN 978-1-107-00907-3 (Hardback, £ 65.00). Nigidius Figulus’ brontoscopic calendar, preserved in Joannes Lydus’ De Ostensis, is, without doubt, an intriguing source for scholars of Etruscan culture. It was created around the mid-1st century BC by a “senator, statesman, grammarian, occultist, and natural historian (or encyclopedist)”1 and we can read it thanks to a transcription made in the 6th century AD by a “burocrate un po’ pedante, dai gusti eruditi e dalle ambizioni letterarie”2. As a matter of fact, it can be considered to be the only comprehensive and easily understandable Etruscan calendar: neither the liber linteus Zagabriensis (2nd century BC)3 nor the Capua tile (first decades of the 5th century BC), both written in Etruscan, are still fully comprehensible. Notwithstanding this, the scholar dealing with this document must bear in mind that the last two are direct sources, while Figulus’ brontoscopic calendar is a “third-hand source”, to use Jean MacIntosh Turfa’s (hereafter Turfa) expression. Firstly, its lengthy and complex historical journey has, surely, affected its contents, and, secondly, it is the written record of a religious practice, originally created by a culture (the Etruscan) and kept alive and transmitted through another one (the Roman). Bearing in mind these methodological premises, Turfa’s book can be read on a number of levels. Firstly, the book provides the first complete English translation of Figulus’ brontoscopic calendar. The author had already published a first version of it in 2006 in a book on Etruscan religion edited by Nancy de Grummond and Erika Simon4.
    [Show full text]
  • Etruscan News 1-14 (2002-2012) Index
    1 Etruscan News 1-14 (2002-2012) Index Articles: Amici Pigorini, 11, Winter 2009, p. 18. Ancient Skeleton Unearthed in Rome, 7, Winter 2006, p. 5. Anderson, Amanda, A Villanovan Hut Urn, 10, Spring 2008, p. 7, 1. de Angelis, Francesco, Controversy on the Discovery of the Lupercal, 9, Winter 2008, p. 5. Ara Pacis in Color, 12, Spring 2010, p. 9. Archaeologists in Rome dig up ancient tannery, 9, Winter 2008, p. 8. Asthana, Anushka, Latin storms state schools: Once the preserve of private schools, the language of the Romans is even booming in Britain's inner cities, 8, Summer 2007, p. 15. Babington, Deepa, Intact 2,000-year old Etruscan tomb discovered, 9, Winter 2008, p. 8. Ball, Philip, Ancient Acoustics: Why the Greeks could hear plays from the back row, 8, Summer 2007, p. 3. Barbujani, Guido, DNA and Etruscan Origins, 8, Summer 2008, p. 4. Bartlett, Charles, Representations of Etruscan Ships, 13, Winter 2010, p. 5. Bartoloni, Gilda, Veii and the Teracotta Dog, 14, Winter 2012, p. 7-8. Beckwith, Miles, Review of Bonfante, Larissa; Bonfante, Giuliano, The Etruscan Language: An Introduction, 4, Winter 2004, p. 16. Bellelli, Vincenzo, New Investigations at the Manganello Sanctuary (Cerveteri), 9, Winter 2008, p. 7-8. Bonfante, Larissa; Bevilacqua, Paolo, Etruscan Capitals at Montefiascone: Etruscan Influence in Romanesque Architecture, 7, Winter 206, p. 10-11. Bonfante, Larissa, An Etruscan Inscription in New York, 8, Summer 2007, p. 9. Bonfante, Larissa, The Etruscan Roots of an Italian Language School in New York, 3, Winter 2003, p. 3. Bonfante, Larissa, Museum News, 4, Winter 2004, p.
    [Show full text]
  • The Etruscan Civilization
    The Etruscan Civilization Fred Hamori Introduction The Etruscans and their civilization have long disappeared from Europe, but their legacy lives on in many ways, even though their many contributions are often unrecognized for their proper origin. Why were they important, when we hear so little about them in our history books? Long before Rome was founded and grew into a major power, Etruscans ruled a large portion of Italy and the surrounding seas and were one of the 3 major naval powers of the Mediterranean Sea. They were famous for their architectural innovations, metal works and technology, as well as their fine artistic skills. The Etruscans have also given us many cultural terms, which we still use today, that are often thought to be from Latin. Their descendants are part and parcel of the people of Italy along with several others, like the Latins, who gave Italians and many others their language. Among the most important contributions to Rome, besides the construction of the city, are many Roman customs, the alphabet, symbols and customs of monarchy that came from the Etruscans. As a language and a culture, they were unique in Europe, because, unlike much of Europe in Roman and modern times, they were not speakers of Indo-European languages and their customs were also different. The Etruscans' name Various old languages have called Etruscans by different names. The Romans called them Tursci or Etrusci. In Attic Greek they were called Tyrrhenians. The related name Teresh was used by the Egyptians, who also knew them as "Sea People", who attacked Egypt.
    [Show full text]
  • ETRUSCAN STUDIES: Journal of the Etruscan Foundation
    ETRUSCAN STUDIES Journal of the Etruscan Foundation ISBN, ISSN and eISSN Number Designations & TABLE OF CONTENTS for VOLUMES 1 – 17.1 ETRUSCAN STUDIES: Journal of the Etruscan Foundation VOLUME 1 – 1994 Paper - 160 pages ISBN: 978-0-8143-2474-6 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1 of 1 EDITORIAL REMARKS Foreword by Jane K. Whitehead………………………………………………………………………………………………iii NEWS AND REVIEWS Recent Publications in Etruscan Studies by Larissa Bonfante…………………………………………………………………………………………………1 ARTICLES Gods and places in Etruscan Religion by Ingrid E.M. Edlund-Berry………………………………………………………………………………………11 Celtomachia: The Representation of Battles with Gauls on Etruscan Funerary Urns by Peter J. Holiday…………………………………………………………………………………………………23 The Necropoleis of Satricum, Italy, 800 – 300 B.C.: Biological Evidence for Cultural Continuities During a Period of Political Change by Marshall J. Becker……………………………………………………………………………………………...46 Sea People in Etruria? Italian Contacts with the Eastern Mediterranean in the Late Bronze Age by Robert H. Tykot…………………………………………………………………………………………………59 REPORTS FROM THE FIELD Excavations at Cetamura del Chianti, 1987 – 1991 by Nancy T. de Grummond, Patrick Rowe, Rochelle Marrinan, and Glen H. Doran……………………………..84 Appendix: The Geology and Hydrology of Cetamura del Chianti by J.K. Osmond…………………………………………………………………………………………………...116 Survey and Excavations of the Etruscan Foundation, 1989 – 1991: La Piana, Mocali, and Ripstena by Jane K. Whitehead……………………………………………………………………………………………..123 ETRUSCAN STUDIES: Journal of the Etruscan Foundation VOLUME 2 - 1995 Paper - 159 pages ISBN: 978-0-8143-2475-4 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1 of 1 EDITORIAL REMARKS Foreword by Jane K. Whitehead………………………………………………………………………………………………iii NEWS AND REVIEWS Museum News and Reviews by Larissa Bonfante and Nancy T. de Grummond…………………………………………………………………..1 Review of J.G. Szilágyi and J. Bouzek, Corpus Speculorum Etruscorum, Hongrie.
    [Show full text]
  • 9789047442622.Pdf
    Votives, Places and Rituals in Etruscan Religion Religions in the Graeco-Roman World Editors H. S. Versnel D. Frankfurter J. Hahn VOLUME 166 Votives, Places and Rituals in Etruscan Religion Studies in Honor of Jean MacIntosh Turfa Edited by Margarita Gleba Hilary Becker LEIDEN • BOSTON 2009 This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Votives, places, and rituals in Etruscan religion : studies in honor of Jean MacIntosh Turfa / edited by Margarita Gleba, Hilary Becker. p. cm. — (Religions in the Graeco-Roman world ; v. 166) English and French. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. ISBN 978-90-04-17045-2 (hardback : alk. paper) 1. Etruscans—Religion. 2. Etruria—Antiquities. I. Turfa, Jean MacIntosh, 1947– II. Gleba, Margarita. III. Becker, Hilary. BL813.E8V68 2009 299’.9294—dc22 2008036977 ISSN 0927-7633 ISBN 978 90 04 17045 2 Copyright 2009 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Hotei Publishing, IDC Publishers, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and VSP. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Brill has made all reasonable efforts to trace all right holders to any copyrighted material used in this work. In cases where these efforts have not been successful the publisher welcomes communications from copyright holders, so that the appropriate acknowledgements can be made in future editions, and to settle other permission matters. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke Brill NV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910, Danvers, MA 01923, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • Divining the Etruscan World Jean Macintosh Turfa Frontmatter More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-00907-3 — Divining the Etruscan World Jean MacIntosh Turfa Frontmatter More Information Divining the Etruscan World Th e Etruscan Brontoscopic Calendar is a rare document of omens foretold by thunder. It long lay hidden, embedded in a Greek translation within a Byzantine treatise from the age of Justinian. Th e fi rst complete English translation of the Brontoscopic Calendar , this book provides an understanding of Etruscan Iron Age society as revealed through the ancient text, especially the Etruscans’ concerns regarding the environment, food, health, and disease. Jean MacIntosh Turfa also analyzes the ancient Near Eastern sources of the calendar and the subjects of its predictions, thereby creating a picture of the complexity of Etruscan society reaching back to before the advent of writing and the recording of the calendar. Jean MacIntosh Turfa is Rodney Young Fellow in the Mediterranean Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology and Adjunct Professor of Classics and Ancient Studies at St. Joseph’s University, Philadelphia. She has published catalogs of collections of Etruscan antiquities and articles on Etruscan art, seafaring, votive off erings, and divination and medicine. © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-00907-3 — Divining the Etruscan World Jean MacIntosh Turfa Frontmatter More Information apasi atialc alcsentresc, cen zic zichu turce © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org
    [Show full text]
  • Presentation of Italia Ante Romanum Imperium an Etruscan Herbal?
    VOLUME: 5WINTER, 2006 An Etruscan Herbal? Presentation of Italia ante by Kyle P. Johnson New York University Romanum imperium Among the approximately 200 Etruscan words which have come down to us are over fifty glosses, synonyms of Greek and Latin words from ancient authors found in the margins of medieval man- uscripts and preserved in the manuscript tradition. 1 Among these glosses, thirteen plant names are of particular inter- est. They are preserved in two codices (R and V) of Dioscorides of Anazarbus’ de Materia Medica, a first-century compendium of pharmacologi- cal uses of plants, minerals, and animal products.2 These glosses have a fascinating history and are of value not only to philolo- gists of the Etruscan lan- The Bay of Pyrgi seen from the Castle of Santa Severa, with a storm at sea. The arrows guage, but also to scholars of indicate the site of the monumental sanctuary (left) and the Area Sud (right). In the Roman religious practice. background, the Monti Ceriti. (Photo G. Colonna 1993). The source of the glosses in the de Materia Medica is a matter for speculation. The likeli- Italia ante Romanum imperium. Scritti di sion by reading a letter by Giovanni Pugliese est candidate is the first-century CE lexicog- Henbane (Hyoscyamus niger L. © 1995- antichità etrusche, italiche e romane (1958- Carratelli, who could not be present. rapher Pamphilus of Alexandria, who com- 2005 Missouri Botanical Garden 1998) , 6 vols., by Giovanni Colonna. Roma, Giovanni Colonna, Professor of Etruscan http://www.illustratedgarden.org/) piled a now-lost lexicon in ninety-five Pisa, Istituti Editoriali e Poligrafici Studies at the Sapienza University in Rome, is 3 books.
    [Show full text]