Product Details
The Etruscans

The Etruscans
By Graeme Barker, Tom Rasmussen

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Product Description

The Etruscans were the creators of one of the most highly developed cultures of the pre-Roman Mediterranean.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #464048 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-04-20
  • Format: Illustrated
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 1.26 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 400 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"Written with scholarly precision but without condescension The Etruscans deserves to be on the shelves of all those who want an up-to-date overview of the subject." History Today, Volume 48, Sept 98.

"As well as offering new approaches and interpretations the book presents the reader with concise summaries of, often highly contentious, recent debates." Vedia Izzet, Christ's College, Cambridge.

"In an impressively comprehensive book, they weave together material from a wealth of sources, classical literature, land surveys and excavation - their text providing a lesson in itself in how to recreate ancient history." History Today.

Ingram
Before the rise of the Roman republic, the city states of the Etruscan civilization, based in west-central Italy in an area roughly covering modern Tuscany, flourished from about the 8th to the 4th century BC. Recent archaeological findings combined with a clearer understanding of Etruscan inscriptions gives us the first full account of the Etruscan people and their society. 54 photos. 40 figures. 21 maps.

From the Back Cover
The Etruscans are one of history's extraordinary casualties. For many centuries they flourished exuberantly in central Italy, only to be completely absorbed into the growing Roman state. Their power, at its height, extended well beyond their borders: they were known and feared by Romans and Greeks alike. Their arresting visual culture was second to none in the peninsula, embracing complex funerary and domestic architecture, tomb-painting, narrative art, and jewellery of great luxury and refinement. Their cities grew to notable size and sophistication.

But they wrote no connected account of themselves that survives, and so this book focuses on three types of evidence for reconstructing Roman society: the extremely rich archaeological data, the accounts of Greek and Roman writers, and the inscriptions on Etruscan monuments.

Until recently there has been little effort to relate the Etruscans to ancient Mediterranean society as a whole or to the physical landscape that sustained them. This book attempts both. Included are some of the more recent findings from landscape archaeology which help to explain in what kinds of settlement the Etruscans lived, how densely the land was peopled, and how the landscape was organized for agriculture.

This approach is balanced by sections on material and visual culture, where the focus is on interpretation within the specific context and setting, and even here the landscape is never far from view. The landscape, ancient and modern, figures too in what is one of the book's unique features: a description of more than sixty sites and a listing of some thirty-five local museums in a format that is both analytical and practical.