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Tarquinia

Tarquinia (Italian: [tarˈkwiːnja]), formerly Corneto, is an old city in the province of Viterbo, Lazio, Central Italy, known chiefly for its ancient Etruscan tombs in the widespread necropoleis, or cemeteries, for which it was awarded UNESCO World Heritage status.

Tarquinia
Comune di Tarquinia
Skyline of Tarquinia
Location of Tarquinia
Tarquinia
Location of Tarquinia in Italy
Tarquinia
Tarquinia (Lazio)
Coordinates: 42°14′57″N 11°45′22″E / 42.24917°N 11.75611°E / 42.24917; 11.75611
CountryItaly
RegionLazio
ProvinceViterbo (VT)
FrazioniTarquinia Lido
Government
 • MayorAlessandro Giulivi
Area
 • Total279.50 km2 (107.92 sq mi)
Elevation
133 m (436 ft)
Population
 (30 June 2016)[2]
 • Total16,428
 • Density59/km2 (150/sq mi)
DemonymTarquiniesi
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Websitetarquinia.net
Tarquinia's town square, with the city hall (Palazzo Comunale) on the right.

In 1922, it was renamed after the ancient city of Tarquinii (Roman) or Tarch(u)na (Etruscan). Although little is visible of the once-great wealth and extent of the ancient city, archaeology is increasingly revealing glimpses of past glories.

Location edit

The Etruscan and Roman city is situated on the long plateau of La Civita to the north of the current town.

The ancient burial grounds (necropoleis), dating from the Iron Age (9th century BC, or Villanovan period) to Roman times, were on the adjacent promontories including that of today's Tarquinia.

History edit

 
View of Tarquinia from Ara della Regina
 
Site of the ancient city on the plateau of La Civita opposite the modern town

Etruscan city edit

Tarquinii (Etruscan Tarch(u)na[3]) was one of the most ancient and important Etruscan cities;[4] the ancient myths connected with Tarchuna (those of its eponymous founder Tarchon—the son or brother of Tyrrhenus—and of the infant oracle Tages, who gave the Etruscans the disciplina etrusca) all point to the antiquity and cultural importance of the city. Based on archaeological finds, Tarchuna eclipsed its neighbours well before the advent of written records. It is said to have already been a flourishing city when Demaratus of Corinth brought in Greek workmen.[4]

Descendants of Demaratus, Lucius Tarquinius Priscus and Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, became kings of ancient Rome. Numerous Roman religious rites and ceremonies derived from Tarchuna, and even in imperial times a collegium of sixty haruspices continued to exist there.[4]

The emergence of Tarchuna as a trading power as early as the 8th Century BC was influenced by its control of mineral resources located in the Tolfa Hills to the south of the city and midway to the Caeretan port of Pyrgi.

In 509 BC, after the overthrow of the Roman monarchy, the family of Tarquinius Superbus went into exile in Caere. He sought to regain the throne at first by the Tarquinian conspiracy and, when that failed, by force of arms. He convinced the cities of Tarchuna and Veii to support him and led their armies against Rome in the Battle of Silva Arsia. Although the Roman army was victorious, it is recorded by Livy that the forces of Tarchuna fought well on the right wing, initially pushing back the Roman left wing. After the battle the forces of Tarchuna returned home.[5]

At the end of the 5th century and during the first half of the 4th century BC a brief revival took place, both in the political and artistic sphere, probably under the ascendancy of the Spurinna family, whose members contributed to the renewed expansion of Tarchuna and the repopulation and growth of towns in the hinterland. The Spurinnas' tomb, known as the Tomba dell'Orco, is decorated with frescoes of a banquet uniting members of the family who are identified by inscriptions. The Spurinna family was prominent in Tarquinii up to the 1st century AD. Two fragmented slabs, known as the Elogia Tarquiniensis, pay tribute to Velthur Spurinnas and Aulus Spurinnas, and give a rare glimpse of Etruscan history, including the mention of one King Orgolnium of Caere, recalling the family name of Urgulanilla, which included among its members the wife of the emperor Claudius.

During this period, Tarchuna overtook Caere and other Etruscan cities in terms of power and influence. In this period colossal walls were built around the city in response to threats from the Celts and from Rome. Tarchuna, not affected by Celtic invasions, finally colonised all its previously held territories in about 385 BC. This new flourishing state allowed a rapid recovery of all activities. Large burial monuments decorated by paintings, with sarcophagi and funerary sculptures in stone, reflect the eminent social position of the new aristocratic classes, but several inscriptions on walls and sarcophagi, including the important Sarcophagus of Lars Pulenas, show the gradual process of an increasingly democratic transition was taking place.

However, during the 4th century BC when Tarchuna's expansion was at its peak, a bitter struggle with Rome took place. In 358 BC, the citizens of Tarchuna captured and put to death 307 Roman soldiers; the resulting war ended in 351 BC with a forty years' truce, renewed for a similar period in 308 BC.[4]

Roman city edit

When Tarchuna came under Roman domination is uncertain, as is also the date at which it became a municipium; in 181 BC its port, Graviscae (modern Porto Clementino), in an unhealthy position on the coast (due to malaria from nearby marshes), became a Roman colonia that exported wine and had coral fisheries. Little is known about Tarquinii in Roman times, but the flax and forests of its extensive territory are mentioned by classical authors, and Tarquinii offered to furnish Scipio with sailcloth in 195 BC. A bishop of Tarquinii is mentioned in 456 AD.[4]

Post-Roman era edit

The ancient city had shrunk to a small fortified settlement on the "Castellina" location during the early Middle Ages, while the more strategically placed Corneto (possibly the "Corito" mentioned in Roman sources) grew progressively to become the major city of the lower Maremma sea coast, especially after the destruction of the port of Centumcellae (modern Civitavecchia). The last historic references to Tarquinii are from around 1250, and the last remains were destroyed in 1305.

The importance of Tarquinii to archaeologists lies mainly in its necropolis, situated to the southeast of the medieval town, on the hill named "Monterozzi". The oldest tombs are tombe a pozza, or shaft graves, containing the ashes of the dead in an urn. The oldest of them is probably pre-Etruscan; in some of these tombs are hut-shaped urns, many of which contain well-preserved paintings of various periods; some show close kinship to archaic Greek art, while others are more recent, and one may belong to the middle of the 4th century BC. Sarcophagi from these tombs, some showing traces of painting, were preserved in the municipal museum, as were numerous Greek vases, bronzes and other objects.[4]

The name of Corneto was changed to Tarquinia in 1922. Reversion to historical place names (not always accurately), was a frequent phenomenon under the Fascist Government of Italy as part of the nationalist campaign to evoke past glories.

Main sights edit

Tarquinia, Etruscan Necropolis of Monterozzi
UNESCO World Heritage Site
 
A fresco in the Etruscan Tomb of the Leopards
Part ofEtruscan Necropolises of Cerveteri and Tarquinia
CriteriaCultural: (i)(iii)(iv)
Reference1158-002
Inscription2004 (28th Session)
Area129.36 ha (319.7 acres)
Buffer zone3,108.0701 ha (7,680.208 acres)
Coordinates42°15′1.60″N 11°46′11.50″E / 42.2504444°N 11.7698611°E / 42.2504444; 11.7698611

Etruscan necropolis of Monterozzi edit

The main necropolis of Tarchuna, part of which can be visited today, is the Monterozzi necropolis with some 6,000 tombs, at least 200 of which include beautiful wall paintings, and many of which were tumulus tombs with chambers carved in the rock below.

The painted scenes are of a quality virtually unrivalled elsewhere in the Etruscan world and give a valuable insight into the secretive world of the Etruscans which is rarely documented. They show banquets with dances and music, sporting events, occasional erotic and mythical scenes. In the late period underworld demons escorting the dead on their journey to the beyond including scenes in the nether world were depicted, and also processions of magistrates and other symbols of the rank of the eminent members of the families buried there.

Famous tombs include the Tomb of the Bulls, Tomb of the Augurs and the Tomb of the Leopards.

During the second half of the 4th century sculpted and painted sarcophagi of nenfro, marble and alabaster came into use. They were deposited on rock-carved benches or against the walls in the by then very large underground chambers. Sarcophagi continued until the second century and are found in such numbers at Tarquinia that they must have been manufactured locally.

The Ancient City (La Civita) edit

The city towered above the Marta valley and was about 6 km from the sea. La Civita is made up of two adjoining plateaux, the pian di Civita and the pian della Regina, joined by a narrow saddle.

 
Ara della Regina

The Temple Ara della Regina edit

Measuring c. 44 × 25 m and dating to c. 4th–3rd century BC, it was built in tufa with wooden structures and decorations, notably the famous and exquisite frieze of winged horses in terracotta that is considered a masterpiece of Etruscan art.

 
Horses from the Ara della Regina

City walls edit

 
City gate of "Porta Romanelli".

The large walls were built during the city's most prosperous period in the 6th century BC and measured about 8 km long, enclosing 135 ha, and long parts of the northern section are visible.

Other sights edit

  • Tarquinia National Museum: with a large collection of archaeological finds, it is housed in the Renaissance Palazzo Vitelleschi, begun in 1436 and completed around 1480–1490.
 
The church of Santa Maria di Castello.
  • Santa Maria di Castello: church built in 1121–1208 with Lombard and Cosmatesque influences. The façade has a small bell-tower and three entrances. The interior has a nave and two aisles, divided by massive pilasters with palaeo-Christian capitals and friezes. Noteworthy are also the rose-window in the nave and the several marble works by Roman masters.
  • Tarquinia Cathedral: once in Romanesque-Gothic style but rebuilt after the 1643 fire, it has maintained from the original edifice the 16th-century frescoes in the presbytery, by Antonio del Massaro
  • San Pancrazio: Gothic-Romanesque church
  • San Giacomo and Santissima Annunziata, churches showing different Arab and Byzantine influences
  • San Martino: 12th-century Romanesque church
  • San Giovanni Battista: 12th-century church with an elegant rose-window in the simple façade.
  • Communal Palace, in Romanesque style, begun in the 13th century and restored in the 16th
  • The numerous medieval towers, including that of Dante Alighieri
  • Palazzo dei Priori. The façade, remade in Baroque times, has a massive external staircase. The interior has a fresco cycle from 1429.

Tarquinia DOC edit

The Italian wine DOC of Tarquinia produces red, white frizzante style wine. The grapes are limited to a harvest yield of 12 tonnes/ha with finished wines needing a minimum 10.5% alcohol level. The reds are a blend of at least 60% Sangiovese and/or Montepulciano, up to 25% Cesanese and up to 30% of other local red grape varieties such as Abbuoto. The whites are composed of at least 50% Trebbiano and/or Giallo, up to 35% Malvasia and up to 30 other local grape varieties with the exception of Pinot grigio that is specifically excluded from the DOC wines of Tarquinia.[6]

Twin towns edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. ^ "Popolazione Residente al 1° Gennaio 2018". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  3. ^ The Etruscan Language: An Introduction, Giuliano Bonfante, Larissa Bonfante, 2002 ISBN 978-0-7190-5539-3
  4. ^ a b c d e f Ashby 1911.
  5. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita, 2.6-7
  6. ^ Saunders, P. (2004). Wine Label Language. Firefly Books. p. 205. ISBN 1-55297-720-X.

Sources edit

  • R. Leighton, Tarquinia, an Etruscan City (Duckworth, London, 2004).
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainAshby, Thomas (1911). "Tarquinii". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 430. This work in turn cites:
    • L. Dasti, Notizie storiche archeologiche di Tarquinia e Corneto (Rome, 1878)
    • G. Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria (London, 1883), i. 301 sqq.
    • Notizie degli Scavi, passim, especially 1885, 513 sqq.
    • E. Bormann in Corp. Inscr. Lai., xi. (Berlin, 1888), p. 510 sqq.
    • G. Körte, "Etrusker" in Pauly-Wissowa, Realencyklopädie, vi. 730 sqq.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tarquinia at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Corneto" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (9th ed.). 1878.
  • "Corneto Tarquinia" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
  • Official website
  • Awayaway.com 4 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine, Tarquinia - ancient history of Italy: descriptions of some Etruscan tombs
  • Uchicago.edu (3 chapters of George Dennis's Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria)
  • Discoversoriano.com, Information about Tarquinia's Cattle Branding Festival
  • / Tarquinia Tourism Information

tarquinia, this, article, about, city, sister, tarquin, proud, last, king, rome, mother, lucius, brutus, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material,. This article is about the city For the sister of Tarquin the Proud last king of Rome see Tarquinia mother of Lucius Brutus This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tarquinia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Tarquinia Italian tarˈkwiːnja formerly Corneto is an old city in the province of Viterbo Lazio Central Italy known chiefly for its ancient Etruscan tombs in the widespread necropoleis or cemeteries for which it was awarded UNESCO World Heritage status TarquiniaComuneComune di TarquiniaSkyline of TarquiniaFlagCoat of armsLocation of TarquiniaTarquiniaLocation of Tarquinia in ItalyShow map of ItalyTarquiniaTarquinia Lazio Show map of LazioCoordinates 42 14 57 N 11 45 22 E 42 24917 N 11 75611 E 42 24917 11 75611CountryItalyRegionLazioProvinceViterbo VT FrazioniTarquinia LidoGovernment MayorAlessandro GiuliviArea 1 Total279 50 km2 107 92 sq mi Elevation133 m 436 ft Population 30 June 2016 2 Total16 428 Density59 km2 150 sq mi DemonymTarquiniesiTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Websitetarquinia wbr net Tarquinia s town square with the city hall Palazzo Comunale on the right In 1922 it was renamed after the ancient city of Tarquinii Roman or Tarch u na Etruscan Although little is visible of the once great wealth and extent of the ancient city archaeology is increasingly revealing glimpses of past glories Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Etruscan city 2 2 Roman city 2 3 Post Roman era 3 Main sights 3 1 Etruscan necropolis of Monterozzi 3 2 The Ancient City La Civita 3 2 1 The Temple Ara della Regina 3 2 2 City walls 3 3 Other sights 4 Tarquinia DOC 5 Twin towns 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksLocation editThe Etruscan and Roman city is situated on the long plateau of La Civita to the north of the current town The ancient burial grounds necropoleis dating from the Iron Age 9th century BC or Villanovan period to Roman times were on the adjacent promontories including that of today s Tarquinia History edit nbsp View of Tarquinia from Ara della Regina nbsp Site of the ancient city on the plateau of La Civita opposite the modern town Etruscan city edit Tarquinii Etruscan Tarch u na 3 was one of the most ancient and important Etruscan cities 4 the ancient myths connected with Tarchuna those of its eponymous founder Tarchon the son or brother of Tyrrhenus and of the infant oracle Tages who gave the Etruscans the disciplina etrusca all point to the antiquity and cultural importance of the city Based on archaeological finds Tarchuna eclipsed its neighbours well before the advent of written records It is said to have already been a flourishing city when Demaratus of Corinth brought in Greek workmen 4 Descendants of Demaratus Lucius Tarquinius Priscus and Lucius Tarquinius Superbus became kings of ancient Rome Numerous Roman religious rites and ceremonies derived from Tarchuna and even in imperial times a collegium of sixty haruspices continued to exist there 4 The emergence of Tarchuna as a trading power as early as the 8th Century BC was influenced by its control of mineral resources located in the Tolfa Hills to the south of the city and midway to the Caeretan port of Pyrgi In 509 BC after the overthrow of the Roman monarchy the family of Tarquinius Superbus went into exile in Caere He sought to regain the throne at first by the Tarquinian conspiracy and when that failed by force of arms He convinced the cities of Tarchuna and Veii to support him and led their armies against Rome in the Battle of Silva Arsia Although the Roman army was victorious it is recorded by Livy that the forces of Tarchuna fought well on the right wing initially pushing back the Roman left wing After the battle the forces of Tarchuna returned home 5 At the end of the 5th century and during the first half of the 4th century BC a brief revival took place both in the political and artistic sphere probably under the ascendancy of the Spurinna family whose members contributed to the renewed expansion of Tarchuna and the repopulation and growth of towns in the hinterland The Spurinnas tomb known as the Tomba dell Orco is decorated with frescoes of a banquet uniting members of the family who are identified by inscriptions The Spurinna family was prominent in Tarquinii up to the 1st century AD Two fragmented slabs known as the Elogia Tarquiniensis pay tribute to Velthur Spurinnas and Aulus Spurinnas and give a rare glimpse of Etruscan history including the mention of one King Orgolnium of Caere recalling the family name of Urgulanilla which included among its members the wife of the emperor Claudius During this period Tarchuna overtook Caere and other Etruscan cities in terms of power and influence In this period colossal walls were built around the city in response to threats from the Celts and from Rome Tarchuna not affected by Celtic invasions finally colonised all its previously held territories in about 385 BC This new flourishing state allowed a rapid recovery of all activities Large burial monuments decorated by paintings with sarcophagi and funerary sculptures in stone reflect the eminent social position of the new aristocratic classes but several inscriptions on walls and sarcophagi including the important Sarcophagus of Lars Pulenas show the gradual process of an increasingly democratic transition was taking place However during the 4th century BC when Tarchuna s expansion was at its peak a bitter struggle with Rome took place In 358 BC the citizens of Tarchuna captured and put to death 307 Roman soldiers the resulting war ended in 351 BC with a forty years truce renewed for a similar period in 308 BC 4 Roman city edit When Tarchuna came under Roman domination is uncertain as is also the date at which it became a municipium in 181 BC its port Graviscae modern Porto Clementino in an unhealthy position on the coast due to malaria from nearby marshes became a Roman colonia that exported wine and had coral fisheries Little is known about Tarquinii in Roman times but the flax and forests of its extensive territory are mentioned by classical authors and Tarquinii offered to furnish Scipio with sailcloth in 195 BC A bishop of Tarquinii is mentioned in 456 AD 4 Post Roman era edit The ancient city had shrunk to a small fortified settlement on the Castellina location during the early Middle Ages while the more strategically placed Corneto possibly the Corito mentioned in Roman sources grew progressively to become the major city of the lower Maremma sea coast especially after the destruction of the port of Centumcellae modern Civitavecchia The last historic references to Tarquinii are from around 1250 and the last remains were destroyed in 1305 The importance of Tarquinii to archaeologists lies mainly in its necropolis situated to the southeast of the medieval town on the hill named Monterozzi The oldest tombs are tombe a pozza or shaft graves containing the ashes of the dead in an urn The oldest of them is probably pre Etruscan in some of these tombs are hut shaped urns many of which contain well preserved paintings of various periods some show close kinship to archaic Greek art while others are more recent and one may belong to the middle of the 4th century BC Sarcophagi from these tombs some showing traces of painting were preserved in the municipal museum as were numerous Greek vases bronzes and other objects 4 The name of Corneto was changed to Tarquinia in 1922 Reversion to historical place names not always accurately was a frequent phenomenon under the Fascist Government of Italy as part of the nationalist campaign to evoke past glories Main sights editTarquinia Etruscan Necropolis of MonterozziUNESCO World Heritage Site nbsp A fresco in the Etruscan Tomb of the LeopardsPart ofEtruscan Necropolises of Cerveteri and TarquiniaCriteriaCultural i iii iv Reference1158 002Inscription2004 28th Session Area129 36 ha 319 7 acres Buffer zone3 108 0701 ha 7 680 208 acres Coordinates42 15 1 60 N 11 46 11 50 E 42 2504444 N 11 7698611 E 42 2504444 11 7698611 Etruscan necropolis of Monterozzi edit Main article Monterozzi necropolis The main necropolis of Tarchuna part of which can be visited today is the Monterozzi necropolis with some 6 000 tombs at least 200 of which include beautiful wall paintings and many of which were tumulus tombs with chambers carved in the rock below The painted scenes are of a quality virtually unrivalled elsewhere in the Etruscan world and give a valuable insight into the secretive world of the Etruscans which is rarely documented They show banquets with dances and music sporting events occasional erotic and mythical scenes In the late period underworld demons escorting the dead on their journey to the beyond including scenes in the nether world were depicted and also processions of magistrates and other symbols of the rank of the eminent members of the families buried there Famous tombs include the Tomb of the Bulls Tomb of the Augurs and the Tomb of the Leopards During the second half of the 4th century sculpted and painted sarcophagi of nenfro marble and alabaster came into use They were deposited on rock carved benches or against the walls in the by then very large underground chambers Sarcophagi continued until the second century and are found in such numbers at Tarquinia that they must have been manufactured locally The Ancient City La Civita edit The city towered above the Marta valley and was about 6 km from the sea La Civita is made up of two adjoining plateaux the pian di Civita and the pian della Regina joined by a narrow saddle nbsp Ara della Regina The Temple Ara della Regina edit Measuring c 44 25 m and dating to c 4th 3rd century BC it was built in tufa with wooden structures and decorations notably the famous and exquisite frieze of winged horses in terracotta that is considered a masterpiece of Etruscan art nbsp Horses from the Ara della Regina City walls edit nbsp City gate of Porta Romanelli The large walls were built during the city s most prosperous period in the 6th century BC and measured about 8 km long enclosing 135 ha and long parts of the northern section are visible Other sights edit Tarquinia National Museum with a large collection of archaeological finds it is housed in the Renaissance Palazzo Vitelleschi begun in 1436 and completed around 1480 1490 nbsp The church of Santa Maria di Castello Santa Maria di Castello church built in 1121 1208 with Lombard and Cosmatesque influences The facade has a small bell tower and three entrances The interior has a nave and two aisles divided by massive pilasters with palaeo Christian capitals and friezes Noteworthy are also the rose window in the nave and the several marble works by Roman masters Tarquinia Cathedral once in Romanesque Gothic style but rebuilt after the 1643 fire it has maintained from the original edifice the 16th century frescoes in the presbytery by Antonio del Massaro San Pancrazio Gothic Romanesque church San Giacomo and Santissima Annunziata churches showing different Arab and Byzantine influences San Martino 12th century Romanesque church San Giovanni Battista 12th century church with an elegant rose window in the simple facade Communal Palace in Romanesque style begun in the 13th century and restored in the 16th The numerous medieval towers including that of Dante Alighieri Palazzo dei Priori The facade remade in Baroque times has a massive external staircase The interior has a fresco cycle from 1429 Tarquinia DOC editThe Italian wine DOC of Tarquinia produces red white frizzante style wine The grapes are limited to a harvest yield of 12 tonnes ha with finished wines needing a minimum 10 5 alcohol level The reds are a blend of at least 60 Sangiovese and or Montepulciano up to 25 Cesanese and up to 30 of other local red grape varieties such as Abbuoto The whites are composed of at least 50 Trebbiano and or Giallo up to 35 Malvasia and up to 30 other local grape varieties with the exception of Pinot grigio that is specifically excluded from the DOC wines of Tarquinia 6 Twin towns edit nbsp Jaruco Cuba nbsp Rabat MaltaReferences edit Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved 16 March 2019 Popolazione Residente al 1 Gennaio 2018 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved 16 March 2019 The Etruscan Language An Introduction Giuliano Bonfante Larissa Bonfante 2002 ISBN 978 0 7190 5539 3 a b c d e f Ashby 1911 Livy Ab urbe condita 2 6 7 Saunders P 2004 Wine Label Language Firefly Books p 205 ISBN 1 55297 720 X Sources editR Leighton Tarquinia an Etruscan City Duckworth London 2004 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Ashby Thomas 1911 Tarquinii In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 430 This work in turn cites L Dasti Notizie storiche archeologiche di Tarquinia e Corneto Rome 1878 G Dennis Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria London 1883 i 301 sqq Notizie degli Scavi passim especially 1885 513 sqq E Bormann in Corp Inscr Lai xi Berlin 1888 p 510 sqq G Korte Etrusker in Pauly Wissowa Realencyklopadie vi 730 sqq External links edit nbsp Media related to Tarquinia at Wikimedia Commons Corneto Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 9th ed 1878 Corneto Tarquinia Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Official website Awayaway com Archived 4 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine Tarquinia ancient history of Italy descriptions of some Etruscan tombs Uchicago edu 3 chapters of George Dennis s Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria Discoversoriano com Information about Tarquinia s Cattle Branding Festival Tarquinia Tourism Information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tarquinia amp oldid 1198191092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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