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Uni (mythology)

Uni is the ancient goddess of marriage, fertility, family, and women in Etruscan religion and myth, and was the patron goddess of Perugia. She is identified as the Etruscan equivalent of Juno in Roman mythology, and Hera in Greek mythology.[1] As the supreme goddess of the Etruscan pantheon, she is part of the Etruscan trinity, an original precursor to the Capitoline Triad,[2] made up of her husband Tinia, the god of the sky, and daughter Menrva, the goddess of wisdom.

Uni
Goddess of love, marriage, fertility, family, and women
Member of the Etruscan Triad
Terracotta bust of Uni featured at the National Etruscan Museum of Villa Giulia, c. 380 BCE. Clothed in a dress featuring a peplum over the shoulder, a royal diadem, and jewellery.
Personal information
ParentsSatre
SiblingsTinia, Nethuns, Aita, Zerene
ConsortTinia
Equivalents
Greek equivalentHera
Roman equivalentJuno
Hinduism equivalentShachi
Canaanite equivalentAstarte

She is often depicted with a goatskin cloak and sandals whilst holding a shield, similarly to Juno Sospita,[3] wearing a bridal veil, or completely nude.[4]

Livy states (Book V, Ab Urbe Condita) that Juno was an Etruscan goddess of the Veientes, who was adopted ceremonially into the Roman pantheon when Veii was sacked in 396 BC. This seems to refer to Uni. She also appears on the Liver of Piacenza.

Etymology edit

The name Uni is of uncertain etymology, however may be related to an Indo-European root iuni meaning "young",[4] connecting to her association with fertility, love, and marriage. In relation, it has also been suggested that the Latin Iuno (Juno) originated from Etruscan, changed from a feminine -i Etruscan ending.

Mythology edit

As most of Etruscan literature has not survived through time, mythological stories involving the Etruscan gods have been largely interpreted through engraved scenes in bronze mirrors,[5] and other mixed media artworks.[4]

Uni and Hercle edit

A notable mirror from Volterra depicts Uni nursing an adult demigod Hercle (the Greek Heracles or Roman Hercules). Tinia, amongst other gods present at the scene, points to a tablet with the inscription indicating the significance of the event: "eca: sren: tva: iχnac hercle:unial clan: θra:sce" meaning "this picture shows how Hercle became Uni's son".[6] In other depictions of this myth, deities such as Menrva, Turan, and Mean - the goddess of victory - are present as part of an animated crowd bearing witness to the adoption.[4]

The motif of Hercle suckling Uni is understood as holding Greek origins, where counterpart Hera was unknowingly deceived by Zeus (Tinia) into nursing, and by that process adopting, an infant Heracles against her will.[7]

Depiction of this myth in which the adoption process features an adult Hercle, and an obliging Uni is widely acknowledged as having developed entirely in Etruria.[6] Most scholars view this interpretation of the myth as the Hercle's welcome initiation to godhood; it has also been suggested that the scene represents Uni and Hercle's reconciliation, where the Etruscan recount accurately represents the meaning of Hercle's Greek name "Glory of Hera".[6]

The Judgement of Elcsntre edit

The Judgement of Elcsntre (equivalently known in Greek terms as the Judgement of Paris) is secondarily notable as a myth often represented on Etruscan terms through bronze mirrors. The major themes of the Greek myth remain intact; Elcsntre (Paris), as guided by Turms (Hermes), must choose who is ‘the fairest’ between Menrva, Uni, and Turan (Aphrodite) to be the recipient of a gifted egg[8] (golden apple) which had been presented at the wedding of Peleus and Thetis. Where Elcsntre could not easily choose between the three goddesses, they then resorted to bribing him. Etruscan interpretation of the specific offerings presented is not clear due to the lack of written sources, and various different representations on a number of mirrors, however there are common representations of Menrva's and Turan's gifts in alignment with their Greek counterparts. Menrva's spear and a wreath[9] are often depicted, as representative of offered glory in battle. Turan is often depicted holding branches of flowers and displaying her body,[9] representative of her offering to Elcsntre the most beautiful women in the world as his wife. Uniquely, Uni is depicted in a different manner which does not entirely correspond to the Greek origin of the myth. Amongst different mirrors, she has been depicted as being nude,[8] or fully clothed but holding a pomegranate branch with three pieces of fruit,[9] which has generally not been interpreted as the offering of political power from the Greek myth. Instead rather while there is no clear assertion of her offering, it has been argued that these depictions demonstrate her unique Etruscan characteristics where she is more greatly associated with the fruits of fertility.[9]

Trinity edit

Uni, alongside Tinia and Menrva, acts as one of the three deities which make up the Etruscan Trinity, equivalent to the Roman Capitoline Triad. Most scholars agree that this triad was imported by the Romans from original Etruscan custom, where Uni and Menrva traditionally played larger roles than their counterparts Juno and Minerva.[2] Ancient sources have described the expectation of towns to dedicate temples to Tinia, Uni, and Menrva at the end of three roads, leading to three gates, as a part of Etrusca disciplina.[10] Further, it was suggested by Vitruvius that these such temples should have been located on the most elevated sites of the town, and spread apart from one another.[11]

Cult edit

Uni was worshipped both individually at dedicated shrines, and alongside other deities as part of large public sanctuaries throughout Etruria. Established cults to Uni worshipped her status as a supreme goddess of family and reproduction.[12]

 
Copy of the Pyrgi tablets.

Shrine at Pyrgi edit

As part of a large Tuscan style temple, the north-located shrine at Pyrgi dedicated to Uni was built in approximately 500 BC,[13] and neighboured a smaller Greek temple. Compared to other locations, the cult of worship dedicated to Uni at Pyrgi held close resemblance to traditional Greek worship sanctuaries; at least 300 votive objects were dedicated there, alongside animal bones suggestive of sacrifice.[14] Additionally, two bowls made by the Etruscan Spurinas designated vota to Uni alongside Tinia and Thesan.[14]

Three gold plaques were excavated from the site in 1964, two written in Etruscan, and one in Phoenecian. The two longer Etruscan and Phoenecian inscriptions clarify the dedication of the temple was to unialastres as the genitive form of uni-astre, an amalgamated goddess of the Etruscan Uni as uni and Phoenecian Astarte as astre.[15] The dedication came from the ruler of Caere, in gratitude for her support of his reign.[16] The shorter of the Etruscan inscriptions outlines distinct annual rituals which took place to ensure the ongoing purity of the temple.[16]

Sanctuary at Gravisca edit

 
Excavations at Gravisca.

At the port of Gravisca in the 6th century BC, Uni was worshipped amongst other Etruscan and pan-Hellenic deities in a large network of sanctuaries. Dedication to Uni was aggregated in a singular room at the sanctuary in the southern area of the complex.[12] Nearby, a similar room was dedicated individually to Turan.[12] Both rooms featured statuettes of swaddled babies, and a myriad of votive anatomical dedications such as breasts and uteri.[12] There is little difference between type of votive offering presented to Uni and Turan, however the numbers of these votives differentiate the rooms comparatively; 145 votive uteri were excavated from Uni's dedicated sanctuary, compared to the 74 recovered from Turan's.[12] Additionally, 22 swaddled babies were found dedicated to Uni, where two were found dedicated to Turan. Both sanctuaries featured two votive breasts.[12] It has been suggested that this difference could represent specialisation of offerings.[17]

Poggio Colla edit

An Etruscan sanctuary at Poggio Colla, located near the town of Vicchio in the Mugello region of northern Tuscany, was part of an ongoing archaeological project run from 1995 until 2015 by the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project and Poggio Colla Field School (PCFS). Excavations over the 21-season project potentially suggested Uni as the nominal deity of the area, with the uncovering of a bucchero vase depicting a, potentially sacred, birth scene, ritual behaviour at west of the sanctuary's network, and other dedications made by women.[18] In 2015, the Vicchio Stele was excavated from a temple on site, and recovered as one of the longest recorded sacred Etruscan texts thus far.[18] The date extrapolated from letter-forms and punctuation, and the place in which it was found link the stele to have being presented at the sanctuary in its “phase 0” of architectural history;[19] this phase predated stone architecture, and was characterised by huts.[20] Inscriptions on the edges of the stele were written in a form of “pseudo-boustrophedon”,[19] and potentially have up to 200 letters. Around 120 of these are legible.[19] Etruscan archaeologist Adriano Maggiani has dated the inscription as being from 525 to 510 BCE., right before the building of the foundations in which it was placed[19]

Translation of the stele is incomplete, but from preliminary readings, scholars have tentatively linked a reference to Uni, based on the way the stele was placed in the foundations of the temple,[21][22] and where it may mention a goddess presiding over birth, potentially connecting her as the patron divinity of the cult at Poggio Colla, along with brief mention of her consort Tinia.[23] Part of the text which has been deciphered seems to display requirements of practice for the cult, demanding two objects of something for Tinia, “in the place of Uni”.[19]

Archeologists have stated that "The centre of worship was an underground fissure that was ritually treated after the destruction of the temple," and that. "Underground cults of this type were often associated with female divinities."[21] The university of Florence is currently undertaking the process of 3D documentation of the Vicchio Stele in order to create a more complete reconstruction of the entire text.[23]


Regional placement in Heaven edit

 
Diagram of the inscriptions on the Liver of Piacenza - Uni is representative of the fourth "house".

In a practice that has been argued by scholars as having originated in Etruria,[24] Etrusca disciplina divided the Heavens into sixteen different cosmological regions.[25] Reflected in the Piacenza Liver, deities were assigned respective ‘houses’ where labels were inscribed into the sixteen sections of the bronze work. Etruscan temples held no unified orientation; temples dedicated to Uni have commonly been found to be oriented southwest, and dedications to Tinia oriented south, unlike Greek temples which have been found to all be usually directed east.[25] It is clear that the placements of deities in the Liver of Piacenza held influence over orientation and places of worship, however there has been some debate towards interpretation of the plate. Two predominant schools of thought have largely dominated readings of the regions of the Liver, however a third theory which somewhat reconciles the two mutually exclusive views has emerged as suggested by Stevens. This theory demonstrates Uni's placement in heavenly region number four as flexible with the seasons and in alignment with the difference in sunset and sunrise positions throughout the year.[26] Where the temple of Fontanile di Legnisina dedicated to Uni found in Vulci, is located in the fixed terrestrial region number 10, and its entrance is opposite to region number 2 rather than 4, the non-corresponding position by two regions is explained by this theory of a “rotating Etruscan heaven”.[27] Similarly, at Pyrgi, the orientation of a temple belonging to Uni is southeast. This positioning places it in fixed terrestrial regions 10 and 11 where opposite to the entrance, Uni's heavenly region number 4 is still evident in the terrestrial region number 2 to allow for seasonal fluctuation.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ de Grummond, Etruscan Myth, Sacred History and Legend, pp. 78–84
  2. ^ a b Ryberg, Inez Scott (1931). "Was the Capitoline Triad Etruscan or Italic?". The American Journal of Philology. 52 (2): 145–156. doi:10.2307/290109. JSTOR 290109.
  3. ^ Stoddard, Simon K. F. (2009). Historical dictionary of the Etruscans. Plymouth, UK: The Scarecrow Press. p. 203. ISBN 9780810863040.
  4. ^ a b c d Nancy Thomson de Grummond, Etruscan Myth, Sacred History, and Legend (University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 2006).
  5. ^ Thomson de Grummond, Nancy (1985). "The Etruscan mirror". Source: Notes in the History of Art. 4 (2/3): 26–35. doi:10.1086/sou.4.2_3.23202423. JSTOR 23202423. S2CID 191384461.
  6. ^ a b c Bonftante, L. (2006). Etruscan inscriptions and Etruscan religion. In Thomson de Grummond, N. & Simon, E (Eds.), Religion of the Etruscans(pp. 9-26), Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press.
  7. ^ Mandowsky, E. (1938). The Origin of the Milky Way in the National Gallery. The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, 72(419), 88-93.
  8. ^ a b De Grummond, N. (2007). Corpus Speculorum Etruscorum GB 3. L'ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER. p. 15
  9. ^ a b c d de Grummond, Etruscan Myth, Sacred History and Legend, p. 78
  10. ^ Servius, In Aeneida ii.225
  11. ^ Vitruvius De architectura I 7
  12. ^ a b c d e f Demetriou, D. (2012). Negotiating identity in the ancient Mediterranean: The archaic and classical greek multiethnic emporia. New York, NY: Cambridge University press.
  13. ^ Neil, S. (2016). Materializing the Etruscans: The expression and negotiation of identity during the orientalising, archaic, and classical periods. In Bell, S. & Carpino, A. (Eds.) A companion to the Etruscans(pp. 15-27). West Sussex, UK: Wiley
  14. ^ a b Turfa, J. (2006). Votive offerings in Etruscan religion. In Thomson de Grummond, N. & Simon, E (Eds.), Religion of the Etruscans(pp. 90-106), Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press
  15. ^ Heurgon, J. (1966). The inscriptions of Pyrgi. The Journal of Roman Studies, 56(1-2), pp. 1-15.
  16. ^ a b Nagy, H. (2016). Votives in their larger religious context. In Bell, S. & Carpino, A. (Eds.) A   companion to the Etruscans(pp. 261-274). West Sussex, UK: Wiley
  17. ^ Glinister, F. (2008). Women, colonisation, and cult in Hellenistic central Italy. Archiv der Religionsgeschichte, 8(1), 89-104.
  18. ^ a b Warden, G. (2016). The Vicchio Stele and its context. Etruscan and Italic Studies, 19(2), 208-219.
  19. ^ a b c d e Steiner, A. & Neils, J. (2018). An imported attic kylix from the sanctuary at Poggio Colla. Etruscan and Italic Studies, 21(1-2), p. 107
  20. ^ Steiner, A. & Neils, J. (2018). An imported attic kylix from the sanctuary at Poggio Colla. Etruscan and Italic Studies, 21(1-2), p. 99
  21. ^ a b Bec Crew, This 2,500-Year-Old Stone Just Revealed The Name of a Powerful Etruscan Goddess, Science Alert, 26 August 2016.
  22. ^ Crew, Bec (26 August 2016). "This 2,500-Year-Old Stone Just Revealed The Name of a Powerful Etruscan Goddess". ScienceAlert. Retrieved 2022-04-23.
  23. ^ a b Maggiani, A. (2016). The Vicchio Stele: The inscription. Etruscan and Italic Studies,19(2), 220-224.
  24. ^ Ginge, B. (1991). The Bronze Liver of Piacenza. Analysis of a Polytheistic Structure by L. B. van der Meer. American Journal of Archaeology. 95(3), p. 557
  25. ^ a b Stevens, N. (2009). A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven. American Journal of Archaeology. 113(2), p. 153
  26. ^ Stevens, N. (2009). A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven. American Journal of Archaeology. 113(2), p. 162
  27. ^ a b Stevens, N. (2009). A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven. American Journal of Archaeology. 113(2), p. 113

External links edit

  •   Media related to Uni (goddess) at Wikimedia Commons

mythology, ancient, goddess, marriage, fertility, family, women, etruscan, religion, myth, patron, goddess, perugia, identified, etruscan, equivalent, juno, roman, mythology, hera, greek, mythology, supreme, goddess, etruscan, pantheon, part, etruscan, trinity. Uni is the ancient goddess of marriage fertility family and women in Etruscan religion and myth and was the patron goddess of Perugia She is identified as the Etruscan equivalent of Juno in Roman mythology and Hera in Greek mythology 1 As the supreme goddess of the Etruscan pantheon she is part of the Etruscan trinity an original precursor to the Capitoline Triad 2 made up of her husband Tinia the god of the sky and daughter Menrva the goddess of wisdom UniGoddess of love marriage fertility family and womenMember of the Etruscan TriadTerracotta bust of Uni featured at the National Etruscan Museum of Villa Giulia c 380 BCE Clothed in a dress featuring a peplum over the shoulder a royal diadem and jewellery Personal informationParentsSatreSiblingsTinia Nethuns Aita ZereneConsortTiniaEquivalentsGreek equivalentHeraRoman equivalentJunoHinduism equivalentShachiCanaanite equivalentAstarteShe is often depicted with a goatskin cloak and sandals whilst holding a shield similarly to Juno Sospita 3 wearing a bridal veil or completely nude 4 Livy states Book V Ab Urbe Condita that Juno was an Etruscan goddess of the Veientes who was adopted ceremonially into the Roman pantheon when Veii was sacked in 396 BC This seems to refer to Uni She also appears on the Liver of Piacenza Contents 1 Etymology 2 Mythology 2 1 Uni and Hercle 2 2 The Judgement of Elcsntre 3 Trinity 4 Cult 4 1 Shrine at Pyrgi 4 2 Sanctuary at Gravisca 4 3 Poggio Colla 5 Regional placement in Heaven 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEtymology editThe name Uni is of uncertain etymology however may be related to an Indo European root iuni meaning young 4 connecting to her association with fertility love and marriage In relation it has also been suggested that the Latin Iuno Juno originated from Etruscan changed from a feminine i Etruscan ending Mythology editAs most of Etruscan literature has not survived through time mythological stories involving the Etruscan gods have been largely interpreted through engraved scenes in bronze mirrors 5 and other mixed media artworks 4 Uni and Hercle edit A notable mirror from Volterra depicts Uni nursing an adult demigod Hercle the Greek Heracles or Roman Hercules Tinia amongst other gods present at the scene points to a tablet with the inscription indicating the significance of the event eca sren tva ixnac hercle unial clan 8ra sce meaning this picture shows how Hercle became Uni s son 6 In other depictions of this myth deities such as Menrva Turan and Mean the goddess of victory are present as part of an animated crowd bearing witness to the adoption 4 The motif of Hercle suckling Uni is understood as holding Greek origins where counterpart Hera was unknowingly deceived by Zeus Tinia into nursing and by that process adopting an infant Heracles against her will 7 Depiction of this myth in which the adoption process features an adult Hercle and an obliging Uni is widely acknowledged as having developed entirely in Etruria 6 Most scholars view this interpretation of the myth as the Hercle s welcome initiation to godhood it has also been suggested that the scene represents Uni and Hercle s reconciliation where the Etruscan recount accurately represents the meaning of Hercle s Greek name Glory of Hera 6 nbsp Bronze mirror from Volterra nbsp Bronze mirror depicting Uni nursing Hercle featuring Tinia Menrva Turan and Mean nbsp Uni nursing Hercle from Tomb 65 Tarquina nbsp Detail of inscription on bronze mirror from Volterra pointed to by Tinia The Judgement of Elcsntre editThe Judgement of Elcsntre equivalently known in Greek terms as the Judgement of Paris is secondarily notable as a myth often represented on Etruscan terms through bronze mirrors The major themes of the Greek myth remain intact Elcsntre Paris as guided by Turms Hermes must choose who is the fairest between Menrva Uni and Turan Aphrodite to be the recipient of a gifted egg 8 golden apple which had been presented at the wedding of Peleus and Thetis Where Elcsntre could not easily choose between the three goddesses they then resorted to bribing him Etruscan interpretation of the specific offerings presented is not clear due to the lack of written sources and various different representations on a number of mirrors however there are common representations of Menrva s and Turan s gifts in alignment with their Greek counterparts Menrva s spear and a wreath 9 are often depicted as representative of offered glory in battle Turan is often depicted holding branches of flowers and displaying her body 9 representative of her offering to Elcsntre the most beautiful women in the world as his wife Uniquely Uni is depicted in a different manner which does not entirely correspond to the Greek origin of the myth Amongst different mirrors she has been depicted as being nude 8 or fully clothed but holding a pomegranate branch with three pieces of fruit 9 which has generally not been interpreted as the offering of political power from the Greek myth Instead rather while there is no clear assertion of her offering it has been argued that these depictions demonstrate her unique Etruscan characteristics where she is more greatly associated with the fruits of fertility 9 nbsp Bronze mirror depicting the Judgement of Elcsntre Figures from left to right Elcsntre Uni Menrva unknown nbsp Bronze mirror depicting the Judgement of Elcsntre Figures from left to right Elscntre Menrva Turan Althaia A chariot is being drawn in the upper extremities of the mirror and the lower extremities feature Vile strangling serpents Trinity editUni alongside Tinia and Menrva acts as one of the three deities which make up the Etruscan Trinity equivalent to the Roman Capitoline Triad Most scholars agree that this triad was imported by the Romans from original Etruscan custom where Uni and Menrva traditionally played larger roles than their counterparts Juno and Minerva 2 Ancient sources have described the expectation of towns to dedicate temples to Tinia Uni and Menrva at the end of three roads leading to three gates as a part of Etrusca disciplina 10 Further it was suggested by Vitruvius that these such temples should have been located on the most elevated sites of the town and spread apart from one another 11 Cult editUni was worshipped both individually at dedicated shrines and alongside other deities as part of large public sanctuaries throughout Etruria Established cults to Uni worshipped her status as a supreme goddess of family and reproduction 12 nbsp Copy of the Pyrgi tablets Shrine at Pyrgi edit As part of a large Tuscan style temple the north located shrine at Pyrgi dedicated to Uni was built in approximately 500 BC 13 and neighboured a smaller Greek temple Compared to other locations the cult of worship dedicated to Uni at Pyrgi held close resemblance to traditional Greek worship sanctuaries at least 300 votive objects were dedicated there alongside animal bones suggestive of sacrifice 14 Additionally two bowls made by the Etruscan Spurinas designated vota to Uni alongside Tinia and Thesan 14 Three gold plaques were excavated from the site in 1964 two written in Etruscan and one in Phoenecian The two longer Etruscan and Phoenecian inscriptions clarify the dedication of the temple was to unialastres as the genitive form of uni astre an amalgamated goddess of the Etruscan Uni as uni and Phoenecian Astarte as astre 15 The dedication came from the ruler of Caere in gratitude for her support of his reign 16 The shorter of the Etruscan inscriptions outlines distinct annual rituals which took place to ensure the ongoing purity of the temple 16 Sanctuary at Gravisca edit nbsp Excavations at Gravisca At the port of Gravisca in the 6th century BC Uni was worshipped amongst other Etruscan and pan Hellenic deities in a large network of sanctuaries Dedication to Uni was aggregated in a singular room at the sanctuary in the southern area of the complex 12 Nearby a similar room was dedicated individually to Turan 12 Both rooms featured statuettes of swaddled babies and a myriad of votive anatomical dedications such as breasts and uteri 12 There is little difference between type of votive offering presented to Uni and Turan however the numbers of these votives differentiate the rooms comparatively 145 votive uteri were excavated from Uni s dedicated sanctuary compared to the 74 recovered from Turan s 12 Additionally 22 swaddled babies were found dedicated to Uni where two were found dedicated to Turan Both sanctuaries featured two votive breasts 12 It has been suggested that this difference could represent specialisation of offerings 17 Poggio Colla edit An Etruscan sanctuary at Poggio Colla located near the town of Vicchio in the Mugello region of northern Tuscany was part of an ongoing archaeological project run from 1995 until 2015 by the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project and Poggio Colla Field School PCFS Excavations over the 21 season project potentially suggested Uni as the nominal deity of the area with the uncovering of a bucchero vase depicting a potentially sacred birth scene ritual behaviour at west of the sanctuary s network and other dedications made by women 18 In 2015 the Vicchio Stele was excavated from a temple on site and recovered as one of the longest recorded sacred Etruscan texts thus far 18 The date extrapolated from letter forms and punctuation and the place in which it was found link the stele to have being presented at the sanctuary in its phase 0 of architectural history 19 this phase predated stone architecture and was characterised by huts 20 Inscriptions on the edges of the stele were written in a form of pseudo boustrophedon 19 and potentially have up to 200 letters Around 120 of these are legible 19 Etruscan archaeologist Adriano Maggiani has dated the inscription as being from 525 to 510 BCE right before the building of the foundations in which it was placed 19 Translation of the stele is incomplete but from preliminary readings scholars have tentatively linked a reference to Uni based on the way the stele was placed in the foundations of the temple 21 22 and where it may mention a goddess presiding over birth potentially connecting her as the patron divinity of the cult at Poggio Colla along with brief mention of her consort Tinia 23 Part of the text which has been deciphered seems to display requirements of practice for the cult demanding two objects of something for Tinia in the place of Uni 19 Archeologists have stated that The centre of worship was an underground fissure that was ritually treated after the destruction of the temple and that Underground cults of this type were often associated with female divinities 21 The university of Florence is currently undertaking the process of 3D documentation of the Vicchio Stele in order to create a more complete reconstruction of the entire text 23 Regional placement in Heaven edit nbsp Diagram of the inscriptions on the Liver of Piacenza Uni is representative of the fourth house In a practice that has been argued by scholars as having originated in Etruria 24 Etrusca disciplina divided the Heavens into sixteen different cosmological regions 25 Reflected in the Piacenza Liver deities were assigned respective houses where labels were inscribed into the sixteen sections of the bronze work Etruscan temples held no unified orientation temples dedicated to Uni have commonly been found to be oriented southwest and dedications to Tinia oriented south unlike Greek temples which have been found to all be usually directed east 25 It is clear that the placements of deities in the Liver of Piacenza held influence over orientation and places of worship however there has been some debate towards interpretation of the plate Two predominant schools of thought have largely dominated readings of the regions of the Liver however a third theory which somewhat reconciles the two mutually exclusive views has emerged as suggested by Stevens This theory demonstrates Uni s placement in heavenly region number four as flexible with the seasons and in alignment with the difference in sunset and sunrise positions throughout the year 26 Where the temple of Fontanile di Legnisina dedicated to Uni found in Vulci is located in the fixed terrestrial region number 10 and its entrance is opposite to region number 2 rather than 4 the non corresponding position by two regions is explained by this theory of a rotating Etruscan heaven 27 Similarly at Pyrgi the orientation of a temple belonging to Uni is southeast This positioning places it in fixed terrestrial regions 10 and 11 where opposite to the entrance Uni s heavenly region number 4 is still evident in the terrestrial region number 2 to allow for seasonal fluctuation 27 See also editCapitoline Triad Pyrgi Tablets Liver of PiacenzaReferences edit de Grummond Etruscan Myth Sacred History and Legend pp 78 84 a b Ryberg Inez Scott 1931 Was the Capitoline Triad Etruscan or Italic The American Journal of Philology 52 2 145 156 doi 10 2307 290109 JSTOR 290109 Stoddard Simon K F 2009 Historical dictionary of the Etruscans Plymouth UK The Scarecrow Press p 203 ISBN 9780810863040 a b c d Nancy Thomson de Grummond Etruscan Myth Sacred History and Legend University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology 2006 Thomson de Grummond Nancy 1985 The Etruscan mirror Source Notes in the History of Art 4 2 3 26 35 doi 10 1086 sou 4 2 3 23202423 JSTOR 23202423 S2CID 191384461 a b c Bonftante L 2006 Etruscan inscriptions and Etruscan religion In Thomson de Grummond N amp Simon E Eds Religion of the Etruscans pp 9 26 Austin Texas University of Texas Press Mandowsky E 1938 The Origin of the Milky Way in the National Gallery The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 72 419 88 93 a b De Grummond N 2007 Corpus Speculorum Etruscorum GB 3 L ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER p 15 a b c d de Grummond Etruscan Myth Sacred History and Legend p 78 Servius In Aeneida ii 225 Vitruvius De architectura I 7 a b c d e f Demetriou D 2012 Negotiating identity in the ancient Mediterranean The archaic and classical greek multiethnic emporia New York NY Cambridge University press Neil S 2016 Materializing the Etruscans The expression and negotiation of identity during the orientalising archaic and classical periods In Bell S amp Carpino A Eds A companion to the Etruscans pp 15 27 West Sussex UK Wiley a b Turfa J 2006 Votive offerings in Etruscan religion In Thomson de Grummond N amp Simon E Eds Religion of the Etruscans pp 90 106 Austin Texas University of Texas Press Heurgon J 1966 The inscriptions of Pyrgi The Journal of Roman Studies 56 1 2 pp 1 15 a b Nagy H 2016 Votives in their larger religious context In Bell S amp Carpino A Eds A companion to the Etruscans pp 261 274 West Sussex UK Wiley Glinister F 2008 Women colonisation and cult in Hellenistic central Italy Archiv der Religionsgeschichte 8 1 89 104 a b Warden G 2016 The Vicchio Stele and its context Etruscan and Italic Studies 19 2 208 219 a b c d e Steiner A amp Neils J 2018 An imported attic kylix from the sanctuary at Poggio Colla Etruscan and Italic Studies 21 1 2 p 107 Steiner A amp Neils J 2018 An imported attic kylix from the sanctuary at Poggio Colla Etruscan and Italic Studies 21 1 2 p 99 a b Bec Crew This 2 500 Year Old Stone Just Revealed The Name of a Powerful Etruscan Goddess Science Alert 26 August 2016 Crew Bec 26 August 2016 This 2 500 Year Old Stone Just Revealed The Name of a Powerful Etruscan Goddess ScienceAlert Retrieved 2022 04 23 a b Maggiani A 2016 The Vicchio Stele The inscription Etruscan and Italic Studies 19 2 220 224 Ginge B 1991 The Bronze Liver of Piacenza Analysis of a Polytheistic Structure by L B van der Meer American Journal of Archaeology 95 3 p 557 a b Stevens N 2009 A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven American Journal of Archaeology 113 2 p 153 Stevens N 2009 A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven American Journal of Archaeology 113 2 p 162 a b Stevens N 2009 A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven American Journal of Archaeology 113 2 p 113External links edit nbsp Media related to Uni goddess at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uni mythology amp oldid 1178429510, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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