- chapter 17: Etruria Marittima –
Principal locations cited in chapters 17 and 19: 1. Antibes, shipwreck La Love; 2.
Cassis, shipwreck Cassidaigne; 3. East of Marseille, shipwreck of Estéou dou Miet; 4. id.
shipwreck Grand Ribaud F; 5. Saint-Marcel, Marseille; 6. Vauvenargues, Bouches-du-
Rhône; 7. Pertuis, Vaucluse; 8. Arles; 9. Lyon-Vaise; 10. Chassey, Bourgogne; 11. Bragny,
Saône valley; 12. Auxerre; 13. Saint-Gemmes, Loire valley; 14. Fâ, Barzan, Gironde; 15.
Toulouse; 16. Carcassonne, Carsac and La Cité; 17. Roc de Buffens and Le Cros, Caunes-
Minervois, Languedoc; 18. Tamaris, Bouches-du-Rhône; 19. L’Arquet, id; 20. Saint-Pierre-
les-Martigues, id; 21. Agde, Agathé, Languedoc; 22. shipwrecks of Rochelongue and others,
id; 23. La Liquière, Calvisson, Gard; 24. Saint Julien, Pézenas; 25. Ensérune; 26. Béziers;
- Montlaurès, Narbonne; 28. Cayla de Mailhac; 29. Pech-Maho, Sigean; 30. Collioure,
Roussillon; 31. Elne, Illiberris; 32. Perpignan, Ruscino; 33. shipwreck Cap Creus, Girona; 34.
La Fonollera, Girona; 35. shipwreck Gava, Barcelona; 36. Penya del Moro, Barcelona; 37.
Moleta del Remei, Tarragona; 38. La Gessera, id; 39. Tarragona; 40. shipwreck near Valencia; - Xabia-Javea, Alacant; 42. Ibiza and Balaeric area; 43. Villaricos, Almeria; 44. Toscanos,
Vélez-Málaga; 45. Cerro del Villar, Guadalhorce; 46. Cádiz; 47. La Algaida, Guadalquivir; - Turuñuelo, Mérida; 49. Alcurrucén, Córdoba; 50. Mirador de Rolando, Granada; 51.
Segóbriga, Cuenca; 52. Los Villares, Albacete; 53. Pozo Moro, id; 54. Gouraya, Algeria; 55.
Utica, Tunisia; 56. Miliane valley, Tunisia; 57. Ksour es Saaf, Tunisia; 58. Tocra, Libya; 59.
Cyrene, Libya; 60. Naukratis, Egypt; 61. Corfu, Greece; 62. Rhodes; 63. Ras-el-Bassit, Syria; - Cyprus (Amathus and Kition).
3 Among the sites where the two paths of distribution most certainly meet, via the south of
France and via the Golasecca region and the Alps, we count Lyon and Bragny-sur-Saône on one
side, and the Heuneburg on the other. Several principle settlements of the Celtic hinterland
have been identifi ed in this regard, such as Bourges, Mont Lassois, Châtillon-sur-Glâne and
the Heuneburg. See Gran-Aymerich 2006c, 2008c, 2012. For the debate concerning the
southern French route versus that of the Alps, see Kimmig 1975, 1983, 2000; Shefton 1995,
2000; Rolley ed. 2003; Rolley 2006.
4 Pioneers in this fi eld are the works of Joseph Déchelette (1862–1914), Pere Bosch-Gimpera
(1891–1974), Wolfgang Kimmig (1910–2001). See in particular: Bernard, Roure 2010.
5 Gras 2004, 213–235.
6 These discoveries were contemporaneous with scientifi c research conducted on the north bank
of the Old Port by Gaston Vasseur (1855–1915), and then by Michel Clerc (1857–1931) with
the support of Edmond Pottier (1855–1934) for the study of Greek and Etruscan ceramics.
Sourisseau 2002.
7 Niemeyer 1990, 1995, 2005.
8 Rothe, Tréziny 2005; Actes Marseille 1999; Delestre dir. 2006; Hermary, Hesnard, Tréziny
2006; Sourisseau 2002 and 2004; Gantès, Sourisseau, Verger 2003.
9 Gantès 1992 and 1999.
10 Bouloumié 1982; Gantes, Sourisseau, Verger 2003.
11 Gantès 2002.
12 Gantès 2005, 695, 705, 729; Gran-Aymerich 2006b.
13 Gran-Aymerich 2010, 218–221, no 2, forthcoming b; Catalogue Marseille 2013, 132, Fig.
no 5.
14 Gran-Aymerich 1992: 86, pl. 38.2–9, 39 and 2006a.
15 Gran-Aymerich 1998, 2004.
16 Velde et al. 2002; Velde 2006.
17 Marchand 2006, 281–304, Fig. 3. BN07; Gran-Aymerich 2006a, 219, pl. I.c.
18 Briquel, Gantès, Gran-Aymerich, Mellinand 2006, 42–43; Briquel, Gran-Aymerich 2006,
69; Gantès 2006, 105, Fig. 72, no 204; Gran-Aymerich 2006b, 280, Fig. 23; id. 2009a, Fig.
4; Catalogue Marseille 2013, 174, Fig. no 52.