Embed
Email

Etruscan Women

Document Sample

Shared by: xiuliliaofz
Categories
Tags
Stats
views:
35
posted:
10/23/2011
language:
English
pages:
42
Etruscan Women

Images of an Egalitarian

Society

Although we have many

inscriptions in the Etruscan

Language, we cannot read it.

Consequently most of our

information about the Etruscans

comes from

•Their art

•Prejudiced accounts by Romans,

for whom they were the “bad

guys” of history; and

•Prejudiced accounts by the

Greeks, who were scandalized by

the freedoms of the women



Small Etruscan bust of Juno, 300-100 BCE

The Etruscans shared in the culture

of the 6th century BCE and later

Mediterranean.

Their art was influenced by Greeks;

they made statues in Terracotta

very similar in style to what the

Greeks made in marble.









They imported a lot of Greek

pottery, and as with other

Italian cultures, some of their

own wares resembled Greek

work.

This map shows the

extent of the Etruscan

area of political

influence in the 6-5

cent. BCE. There were

other Etruscan holdings

to the south as well.

Women’s Standing Many of the mirrors have

inscriptions identifying the

Mirrors like this one, incised

mythological characters. This

with mythological themes,

shows that women were

are a popular Etruscan item.

expected to easily combine

their interest in beauty with

literacy.

Women’s tombs are as rich and

as common as men’s, and

women’s artifacts are prevalent.

Women were apparently equal

sharers in the society’s

resources.

Women’s names and images

show up frequently in

inscriptions as well, showing

their claim to public honor.

This ivory pyxis

(makeup box) was very

valuable; the materials

were imported from

Egypt and the

decorations beautifully

carved.

The animal motifs are a

common Etruscan

theme. Notice the

Mistress of Animals

figure on the bottom

row.

This scene from a tomb painting shows women and men both

sharing in a banquet. A nude slave boy serves them.

This was scandalous to the Greeks who visited Etruria, since they

were unaccustomed to men and women sharing such

celebrations. Theopompus (4th c. BCE) was appalled!

Most of the Etruscan

art that survives is

funerary art, simply

because the tombs,

buried for 2000

years, remained

intact. Funerary art

may show a different

realm of experience

from other forms of

art.

One consistent Sarcophagi such as this one show them

theme throughout in a fond embrace, the husband’s arm

Etruscan art seems to protectively around the wife, as they

be the shared recline on a banquet couch.

affection of husband

The same togetherness found in the

and wife.

banquet continues into the afterlife.

Some Etruscan sarcophagi

show couples nude or lightly

covered, indication that in

iconography at least, female

nudity was similar in meaning

to male nudity and implied,

probably, pleasure and

fertility.

Theopompus also comments

that the Etruscans raise all the

Theopompus says that the

children who are born, not

Etruscans practice wife

knowing whose they are.

sharing (not strictly for

procreation either), and that Did women have the legal

the women exercise, take care right to decide this issue?

of their bodies, and expose

them casually.

On this sarcophagus, the couple is shown

embracing in bed. Married sexuality and

friendship extends into death.

Apparently assertions of pleasure (dancing,

sex, banquets) were important elements of

the Etruscan response to the finality of

death – as well as of their lifestyle (if you

believe Theopompus . . .)

OK, not all Etruscans are young and

beautiful, even on their sarcophagi . . .

Like the Greeks and Romans, Etruscans had athletic events and

public entertainments. In contrast to Greek practice (but

aligned with Roman custom) Etruscan women attended

athletic events and games; their art sometimes shows them in

the audience.

Music and Dancing



Both men and women are shown dancing; sometimes female

professional dancers seem to be portrayed.

What is the status of these entertainers? Is it comparable to

that of Greek dancer/musicians?

This lampstand portrays a female

dancer playing cymbals, a

custom the Greeks and Romans

associated with the East.

Linguistically and in some

elements of material culture, the

Etruscans may be related to the

peoples of Asia Minor.

This modernized rendition of

an Etruscan tomb painting

shows a very expressive

dance.

Is it in a funerary context?

Does it represent social or

ritual dancing?

Is the performer professional

or an individual associated

with the deceased on whose

tomb the painting was

found?

Why is dance so commonly

portrayed in tombs?

In another tomb painting, men and women dance together in

this expressive mode.

Here a line dance of young women is shown.

Such dances were common throughout the Mediterranean and

Europe (and in many other societies as well).

The Greeks (cf. Alkman’s Parthenaia) celebrated their maidens’

dances; the Romans were not very focused on this sort of

entertainment.

This tomb painting shows an

explicit sexual scene. Note

also the lower border design

which has a distinctly erotic

flavor.

Another tomb painting

shows a scene of two men,

one penetrating and one

receiving oral sex from a

woman, both whipping her –

scholars think this might

portray a Dionysian rite – or

are we back in the erotic

world of the Greek hetaira?

Other tombs show other

erotic scenes, including male

homoeroticism.

Etruscan Religion



Etruscan religion included a system

of learning the will of the gods,

haruspicy, which meant reading

omens from many different sources,

among them the entrails of sacrificial

animals.

The Etruscans (under Greek

influence?) also personified their

gods, though like the Romans, the

equivalence wasn’t too good.

This mirror shows

In the center of each Etruscan center

Chalchas (from Greek

was a temple dedicated to the Triad mythology) reading

of Tinia (Juppiter), Uni (Juno) and omens in the Etruscan

Minerva. fashion

Juno

Etruscan iconography of their gods

could be very different from the

Greek. Here the sun god Usil (not

looking too much like Apollo) runs

across the waves in winged shoes.









In this mirror, Minerva assists

Hercules.

Some Etruscan sanctuaries show many

kourotrophos figurines, with votive figurines of

men, women, children and animals, highlighting

the Etruscan focus on family affection.

This woman holds a

pomegranate in her

hand, a symbol often

associated with Kore/

Persephone, who was

widely worshipped

among South Italian

Greeks. Perhaps the

Etruscans also favored

this goddess with votive

images.

This ivory figurine of a nude woman is a

theme not commonly seen in Greek or

Roman art, but apparently fairly

common for the Etruscans. It uses some

of the conventions for portraying nude

men – again indicating that female

nudity had a different meaning for the

Etruscans than for the Greeks & Romans.

She holds a breast with one hand, and a

fruit (pomegranate? Apple?) with her

other – both fertility indicators. The

figurine may represent the Etruscan

Venus (Aphrodite); Aphrodite was

shown nude in Greek and Roman art,

though in more directly sensual

contexts.

Etruscans and Romans



In contrast to Roman

naming practices, Etruscans

gave their children a wide

variety of names (more like

Greek practice)

Apparently (from

inscriptional evidence)

women’s names were also

important in describing

family genealogy.

Women apparently passed

their social rank to their

children (in contrast to

Rome where the father’s

family officially mattered).

The Etruscans had an alliance of

cities, which were ruled by

kings, and early in Rome’s

history, Rome was subject to

Etruscan rule.

Roman history abounds with

stories of Etruscan oppression

and tyranny, along with dislike

of kings as opposed to the

Romans’ Republican mode of

government.

Women are often the key

symbolic figures in such stories.

Etruscan women, such as

Roman women such as Lucretia

Tanaquil, symbolized to the

and Cloelia exhibit Roman

Romans the proud dominance of

virtues and inspire Roman

the enemy.

political acts.

Tanaquil read the omen that

made her husband, Lucius

Tarquinius, the king of Rome.

Her ability in reading omens

may signify a difference in

Etruscan and Roman views of

women’s sacred abilities.

In both societies, reading

omens was important for

many public events; the

microcosm and macrocosm

reflected the ordinary

cosmos.

But in Rome, men were the

augurs; women may have

shared that ability in Etruria.

The End of Etruscan Dominance



Although Etruscan langauge

Etruscan military

persisted into the second century

expansion occurred at a

BCE, their culture waned and was

time when most of the

other peoples of Italy were incorporated into the Roman world.

less wealthy and less

technically advanced. It

was led by individual kings

or leaders, rather than the

focus of the entire people.

After a defeat by Greeks in

Syracuse, Etruscan power

waned. By c. 350 BCE,

Romans had asserted their

dominance in Italy.

finis



Related docs
Other docs by xiuliliaofz
March 08 Concussion BIggg.pub
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Pro_CV_Wadud
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
NSF-DMP_EAR_UvaTemplate with Guidance
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
MicroficheList04
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Report - by Incheon
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
21_B2_U10A
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
EOC EFCOG 2006
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
2010 budget
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
PS20090413 NYIPG2 only _2_
Views: 1  |  Downloads: 0
By registering with docstoc.com you agree to our
privacy policy

You are almost ready to download!

You are almost ready to download!