- chapter 57: The tradition of votive bronzes in Etruria –
5 Turfa 2006, 96 and fi g. VI.6, with bibliography.
6 Cristofani 1985, 18.
7 A great number of bronzes come from Bolsena, Carsoli, and Vetulonia and were particularly
popular in central Etruria in the Volsinian or Volsinian/Umbrian workshops (Benz 1992,
passim).
8 Haynes 1960, 34–45; Cristofani 1985, 274–276; Turfa 2006, 93 and Fig. VI.5.
9 See in addition to the well-known statuettes of children, a boy with a dedicatory inscription
to Mantrn (CIE 447) from Castiglion Fiorentino (Cortona, MAEC) (Bruschetti 2002, 95–99)
and the series of bronzes from the stipe of Colle Arsiccio at Magione (National Museum at
Perugia) (Feruglio 1999, 116).
10 Benz 1992, 179–180; Fiorini 2005, 313; Turfa 2006, 92, Fig. VI.2.
11 Città del Vaticano, Museo Gregoriano Etrusco, Inv. 13886 (Roncalli 1973).
12 Colonna 1985, 174.
13 Maggiani 1990, 53–63 with bibliography, Maggiani 2001, 57–59; Warden 2011, 1–5.
14 Maggiani 2001, 60–64.
15 Colonna 1990, 110.
16 Cygielman 2008, 3–11, with bibliography.
17 The passage in Livy lists the large number of weapons and tools that Arezzo provided for
Scipio’s expedition to Africa.
18 Balty 1966; Maetzke 1987, 185–196.
19 Scarpellini 2009, 261–264; Scarpellini 2010, 88 and catalogue entries by P. Zamarchi Grassi,
104–105.
20 Fracchia 2005, 390–392, n. IX, 12.
21 Salvi and Zamarchi Grassi 2005, 286–290; Fedeli and Salvi 2006, 177–180.
22 Romualdi 1981 with bibliography and archival records, Scarpellini Testi 1995, 111–121.
23 Maggiani 1999, 188.
24 Scarpellini 2002, 66; Scarpellini 2009A, 72–72.
25 Colonna 1982, 33–44.
26 Scarpellini 2002, 65–83; Scarpellini 2008, 21–41; Scarpellini 2010A, 113–116.
27 Halbertsma 1991, 68–70; Scarpellini 2002A, 87–94, and in particular 88–89, where I
attribute to the group a bronze of a female worshipper with a patera on the basis of the treatise
of Coltellini 1750, 118–119, 163–164, tav. III, Fiorini 2005, 310–312.
28 Thymiaterion CIE 445; child with duck CIE 446.
29 Fiorini 2005, 294 with bibliography.
30 Bocci Pacini 1990, 73–91; Zamarchi Grassi 2001, 111–129 with bibliography.
31 For the votive deposit at S. Bartolomeo, see the document of Gamurrini in Zamarchi Grassi
1989 348 and Fig. 13, from which it is shown that the cult place connected with it was
frequented at least from the last quarter of the sixth century bc as documented at Fonte
Veneziana.
32 Rome, Museo di Villa Giulia, Inv. 24562. Cristofani 1985, n. 54, Cherici 2001, 77–78. For a
bronze leg found at Le Gagliarde in 1903, see Scarpellini Testi 1997, 70 and Scarpellini 2000,
40.
33 Edlund-Berry 2006, 117, fi g. VII.2.
34 Arezzo, Museo Archeologico Nazionale Mecenate, Inv. 11563. Bocci Pacini 1975, 67;
Scarpellini Testi 1996, 14, fi gs. 3–4.
35 Cristofani 1985, 268, n. 48 with bibliography; Scarpellini 2007, 48, fi g. 9.
36 CIE 380=TLE 668.
37 Arezzo is well represented through examples of this typology. In addition to the athlete
from Quarata there are a javelin thrower from Fonte Veneziana (Firenze, Museo Archeologico
Nazionale, Inv. 472), an athlete from Porta Colcitrone (Arezzo, Museo Archeologico Nazionale