Academic literature on the topic 'Women, Etruscan'

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Journal articles on the topic "Women, Etruscan"

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Amann, Petra. "Women and Votive Inscriptions in Etruscan Epigraphy." Etruscan Studies 22, no. 1-2 (2019): 39–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/etst-2019-0003.

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Abstract This paper aims at giving an overview of the quantitative and qualitative dimension of the female element in the field of Etruscan votive inscriptions. It offers a systematic discussion of dedications set by Etruscan women and attested by inscriptions from the Archaic to the Hellenistic period. The study does not focus primarily on religious aspects, but by taking into account the underlying social context it tries to cast some additional light on the role of women in Etruscan society.
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Rašlová, Kristína. "Etruscan hedonism, women, and cruelty : interpretation of ancient writings and archaeological sources." Graeco-Latina Brunensia, no. 2 (2020): 149–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/glb2020-2-11.

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Petsalis-Diomidis, Alexia. "Pottery workers, ‘the Ladies’, and ‘the Middling Class of people’: production and marketing of ‘Etruscan and Grecian vases’ at Wedgwood c.1760–1820*." Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 63, no. 1 (2020): 34–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bics/qbaa006.

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Abstract Collections of Greek vases, and their reproductions in the form of luxury publications and vessels displayed atop bookshelves in libraries, were the domain of male elites in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain. Less well explored is the consumption of creative reproductions of Greek vases by elite and ‘middling’ women, and the participation of women across the social spectrum in the production of ceramics inspired by Greek vases. This article uses the Wedgwood archive to tell such stories. The subjects range from aristocratic designers through paintresses to women doing the har
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Seguin, Guillaume, Emmanuel d'Incau, Pascal Murail, and Bruno Maureille. "The earliest dental prosthesis in Celtic Gaul? The case of an Iron Age burial at Le Chêne, France." Antiquity 88, no. 340 (2014): 488–500. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00101139.

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The discovery of an iron pin in place of an upper incisor tooth from a La Tène burial at Le Chêne in northern France may represent one of the earliest examples of a dental implant in Western Europe. The body was that of a young woman who had been buried in a richly furnished timber chamber. The iron pin may have been inserted during life to replace a lost tooth, or before burial to restore the visual integrity of the corpse. The concept of the dental prosthesis may have been taken from the Etruscans by returning Celtic mercenaries, although dental implants of this specific kind have not been f
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Gruen, Erich S. "Did Romans Have an Ethnic Identity?" Antichthon 47 (2013): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s006647740000023x.

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AbstractThis paper begins with a stark contrast. Whereas the Athenians took great pride in claiming autochthony, a bloodline unsullied by admixture with barbarians or even other Hellenes, Rome's legendary genealogy unhesitatingly encompassed a host of divergent blends and multiple minglings. Greek forbears from Arcadia, Trojan immigrants who merged with Latins, Sabine and Etruscan kings, the fabled intermarriage of Romans and Sabine women – all indicate a firm belief in ethnic mixture at the origins of the nation. This article asks a pointed question: if Romans were perfectly comfortable with
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Scirè Calabrisotto, C., M. E. Fedi, F. Taccetti, M. Benvenuti, L. Chiarantini, and L. Quaglia. "Radiocarbon Reveals the Age of Two Precious Tombs in the Etruscan Site of Populonia-Baratti (Tuscany)." Radiocarbon 51, no. 3 (2009): 915–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200033981.

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The archaeological site of Populonia-Baratti, in the southern part of Tuscany (Italy), was one of the most important centers in ancient Etruria, as seen in the evidence of metallurgical activities carried out at that time. During recent archaeological excavations (2005) in the ancient industrial area of Populonia, along the Baratti beach, 2 interesting tombs were found. The 2 graves were unusually located in an area dedicated to metallurgical activity and showed a particular structure of the burial chambers and an extreme richness in the grave goods. The unique character of the 2 tombs prompte
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HARPER-SCOTT, J. P. E. "Britten's opera about rape." Cambridge Opera Journal 21, no. 1 (2009): 65–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954586709990085.

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AbstractLucretia's principal virtue is her undoing. Her chastity is vaunted as the guarantor of Collatinus's honour and standing, as the trigger for Tarquinius's lust, and its brutal loss as the symbol of the corruption of the Etruscans and thus the catalyst for Junius's ascent to power. She is established in a patriarchal system as a desexed woman, as innocent as a child, who can only exist as a chaste wife. When her virtue is polluted by rape, she has no choice but to kill herself in an attempt to restore her function as chaste wife.Britten's opera encodes the naming of Lucretia in terms red
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Gretchen E. Meyers. "Women and the Production of Ceremonial Textiles: A Reevaluation of Ceramic Textile Tools in Etrusco-Italic Sanctuaries." American Journal of Archaeology 117, no. 2 (2013): 247. http://dx.doi.org/10.3764/aja.117.2.0247.

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Morgan, Anthea. "Etruscan Dance Culture as Represented in Tomb Paintings from the UNESCO Heritage Site in Tarquinia (Italy)." Inquiry@Queen's Undergraduate Research Conference Proceedings, February 20, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/iqurcp.10440.

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Karen Kain, recipient of the Companion of the Order of Canada and artistic director of the National Ballet of Canada, wrote an autobiography entitled Movement Never Lies referring to a truism about professional dance. The UNESCO heritage site of Tarquinia (Italy) featuring Etruscan tomb dance imagery has never been studied through Classical scholarship from the perspective of a professional dancer nor from the perspective of analysis of depiction of movement. The author of this presentation, a former dancer with the National Ballet of Canada (1986-1992) who is a Classics Major, has endeavoured
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Bell, Sinclair. "Etruscans: Eminent Women. Powerful Men edited by Patricia S. Lulof and Iefke van Kampen and translated by M. Hendricks. Pp. 184, figs. 150+. $35.00. W Books in collaboration with the Allard Pierson Museum and the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Amsterdam 2011. ISBN 978-9040078071." Etruscan Studies 16, no. 1 (2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/etst-2013-0002.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Women, Etruscan"

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Alyasin, Ghaza. "Genus i gester : En studie om könsbundenhet inom etruskisk begravningskonst." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för arkeologi och antik historia, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-352845.

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Etruscan art was greatly influenced by Greek art, which is especially apparent in the Etruscan funerary art. A common motif within Greek funerary art is the prothesis, the lying in state, which appears in Etruria during the sixth and fifth centuries BCE. However, the Etruscan scenes differ from the Greek scenes in that they portray a wider flexibility when it comes to gender roles. Women and men are not limited to gestures or positions within the scenes of prothesis. This in turn, along with other factors not discussed in this paper, has led to discussions of a more gender equal Etruscan socie
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Books on the topic "Women, Etruscan"

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La donna etrusca. Paideia, 1985.

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Castelfranco Emilia (Italy). Museo civico archeologico, ed. Donne dell'Etruria padana dall'VIII al VII secolo a.C.: Tra gestione domestica e produzione artigianale. All'insegna del giglio s.a.s., 2015.

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Hamilton, Lyn. The Etruscan chimera: An archaeological mystery. Berkley Prime Crime, 2002.

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Centro di arte e cultura (Ladispoli, Italy), Italy. Guardia di finanza. Gruppo tutela prtrimonio archeologico, Italy. Soprintendenza per i beni archeologici dell'Etruria meridionale, and Ladispoli (Italy), eds. Mater et matrona: La donna nell'antico : Soprintendenza e Guardia di finanza a tutela del patrimonio archeologico del territorio. Gangemi Editore, 2014.

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Die Etruskerin: Geschlechterverhältnis und Stellung der Frau im frühen Etrurien (9.-5. Jh. v. Chr.). Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2000.

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Albini, Pierluigi. L' Etruria delle donne: Vita pubblica e privata delle donne etrusche. Scipioni, 2000.

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The Etruscan Chimera. Berkley Hardcover, 2002.

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The Etruscan Chimera. Berkley, 2003.

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Antonia, Rallo, ed. Le Donne in Etruria. L'Erma di Bretschneider, 1989.

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Josine, Blok, and Mason Peter 1952-, eds. Sexual asymmetry: Studies in ancient society. J.C. Gieben, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Women, Etruscan"

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"Etruscan marriage." In Women in Antiquity. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315621425-86.

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O’Donoghue, Eóin. "The power of Etruscan women revisited:." In Papers in Italian Archaeology VII: The Archaeology of Death. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1nzfvx7.26.

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"Etruscan Couples and Their Aristocratic Society." In Reflections of Women in Antiquity. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203036471-18.

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"Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa: an Etruscan aristocrat Judith Swaddling." In Women in Antiquity. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315621425-83.

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"Health and medicine for Etruscan women Jean MacIntosh Turfa." In Women in Antiquity. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315621425-85.

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Becker, Marshall Joseph. "5. Reconstructing the Lives of South Etruscan Women." In Reading the Body, edited by Alison E. Rautman. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9781512806830-007.

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"To give and to receive: the role of women in Etruscan sanctuaries." In Women in Antiquity. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315621425-88.

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Ellis, David. "A change of heart." In Love and Sex in D. H. Lawrence. Liverpool University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781942954026.003.0005.

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Returning to Europe in 1925, Lawrence abandoned politics and went back to love and sex as his principal concerns. In The Virgin and the Gipsy, sex’s transforming power takes a semi-allegorical form but then, in three successive versions of Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Lawrence recast the essentials of his story in a more realist mode. The decision to publish privately allowed him to describe sexual intercourse explicitly and produce passages which, in the 1960s, helped to make him an unlikely hero of sexual liberation. Some of these are indeed beautiful yet, in `the night of sensual passion’ episode, the old concern with anal intercourse re-appears and passages from the novel which defence witnesses at the trial took care not to read out include Mellors’s unpleasant account of his sexual history, with its bitter complaints about women who `grind their own coffee’. There is some romantic nostalgia in Lady Chatterley’s Lover, perhaps relating to the fact that Lawrence was impotent when he wrote it; but its evident flaws make it unfortunate that the interest it incites distracts attention from the fine writing he did afterwards, in Etruscan Places or The Man Who Died, for example, or in the later poetry.
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"of the house, both practically and symbolically — a role which links women, not only with the traditional concept of hearth and home, but also indicates her authority and control in that sphere (Bonomi & Ruta Serafini 1994). Keys and women are further symbolised in religious iconography, as we will see later. Sex The depiction of love-making, on both beds and chairs, is very graphically represented in situla art (fig. 6). Boardman wrote that "love-making has iconographie conventions like any other . . . whether the intention is pleasure, display, procreation or cult" and indeed all these explanations have been offered as explanation for such scenes in situla art. I would concur with Boardman and Bonfante that these depictions are purely secular (Boardman 1971; Bonfante 1981), rather than ritual, as suggested by Kastelic and Eibner. The scene on the Castelvetro mirror (fig. 6, 1), which, as we have seen, is for Kastelic a hieros gamos, could, perhaps, be more plausibly can be read in the form of a strip cartoon, in which a rider arrives on horseback, a prostitute is procured, with price being negotiated between a man and a woman — with the women holding up two fingers the man one — and the act subsequently carried out after further arrangements between a woman and a seated man. In all probability this was a recognisable story, perhaps related to the one about the inn-keeper's daughter still celebrated in Italian popular song, or, if we take into account the link between this and Etruscan mirrors, perhaps even some myth or legend. Even though the bed is in the form of the Urnfield bird-headed sun-boat, since the latter is such a common decorative motif, it cannot be used to interpret this as a religious image. The fact that this 'tale' is depicted on a mirror, which one presumes was a female item, is rather surprising and suggests that, either it was intended as a gift for a high class prostitute, or can be seen a rather crude allusion to sex on a gift for a more respectable woman. Whatever the interpretation, there is surely some relationship between the mirror, as an object of self adornment, and the subject matter depicted on it, which again follows the tendency of situla art to relate decoration to the function of the object. This and other depictions of love-making, rich in the sensuous detail of vibrating mattresses and pubic hair, indeed are more redolent of an earthy Italic sense of enjoyment than any religious allusion to sacred marriage. Such sexually explicit designs are comparable with Eruscan tomb painting and may reflect the open sexuality held to be characteristic of Etruscan women, which was commented on by Theopompus in the 4th century BC (Bonfante 1994). We can conclude that women may be shown in mainly subservient roles on the situlae because these were used in the context of male entertainment and festivals, but on the rattle they appear in a more productive light. The mirror, certainly belonging to someone with wealth, if not respectability, carries a more uncertain message. On Greek red figure drinking cups, objects of male use, we sometime find a duality of the representation of the hetairai and the virtuous wife, sometimes on the same cup, with the latter, incidentally, often engaged in spinning or weaving (Beard 1991: 28- 9). Female deities The representation of a goddess with the keys, as well as animals, is found in situla art on five votive plaques probably found in a hoard near Montebelluna (Fogolari 1956) (fig. 7). The figure, accompanied by both plants and animals, is, according to Fogolari, probably a fertility goddess, Pothnia theron — a Venetic equivalent of Demeter — carrying the key to both the opening of the fertility of plants and help in the birth of animals and women (Fogolari 1956). Keys, however, as we have seen, are also found in female graves in the area, where they suggest the role of women as keepers of the household, a role which may also have been sanctioned in the supernatural world (Bonomi & Ruta Serafini 1994)." In Gender & Italian Archaeology. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315428178-25.

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