- chapter 60: Animals in the Etruscan household –
TYRRHENIAN SEA
Montescudaio Volterra
Arezzo
Chianciano Chiusi
Cetona
Perugia
Todi
Orvieto
Roselle
Saturnia
Barbarano
Talamone
Giglio
Gravisca
San Giovenale
Marsiliana d’Albegna
Orbetello
Sovana
Bolsena
LAKE BOLSENA
Bisenzio
Tuscania Viterbo
BleraSutri
Nepi
Capena
CerveteriVeii
Pyrgi
Tolfa
Tarquinia
Rome
Palestrina
(Praeneste)
Velletri
Satricum
Vulci Norchia Castel d’AssoCivita Castellana (Falerii Veteres)
Poggio
Buco
Sarteano
LAKE TRASIMENE
Casal Marittimo
Vetulonia
Castellina
in Chianti
Populonia
Elba
Siena
Asciano
BrolioCortona
Montepulciano
Cécina
Tiber
Ombrone
Tiber
Ansedonia^ (
Cosa
)
A = domesticated animal motifs
B = wild animal motifs
C = exotic animal motifs
D = mythical animal motifs
A = domesticated animal motifs
B = wild animal motifs
C = exotic animal motifs
D = mythical animal motifs
Figure 60.9 Etruscan animal categories collated according to fi nd site.
Note that the cities of Vulci, Chiusi, Cerveteri and Tarquinia account for some 70% of the artefacts
catalogued. This may be biased because of the locations of major museums today – many small, regional
museums displaying recent discoveries can furnish different types or ratios of decorative motifs
(map modifi ed after Spivey, 1997: p. 6).
ETRUSCAN ANIMAL MOTIFS AND WAR, SPORT,
AGRICULTURE AND CULTURE
“...the horse is always the symbol of the strong animal life of man...”
Etruscan Places, Chapter 6 (D. H. Lawrence)
Certain animals have always been used as weapons on the battlefi eld and been seen as
the spoils of war to be taken freely by the victor (see Fig. 60.2r = GR 1856.12–26.796;
British Museum). Thus, put simply, the number and quality of, for example, horses
owned by an individual would surely have served as a sign of that individual’s status in
Etruscan society. Moreover, horses are often represented as being connected to the life-
style of the aristocrats and involved in hunting, competition and warfare (Wiman 2004).
If horses were seen as weapons by the Etruscans, then the number of horses that a
given region was capable of mustering must also have been seen in terms of that region’s
strength. Likewise, with horses being seized as the spoils of war, this would tend to make
wars with neighboring tribes a profi table enterprise. It is therefore perhaps not surprising