- Jean Gran-Aymerich –
19 Briquel, Gantès, Gran-Aymerich, Mellinand 2006, p. 42; Briquel, Gran-Aymerich 2006, p.
69; Gantès 2006, 105, Fig. 72, no 32; Gran-Aymerich 2006b, 280, Fig. 24; id. 2009a, Fig.
4; Catalogue Marseille 2013, 174, Fig. no 51, for the restitution of the architectural complex
Fig. 20, 37.
20 Colonna 1980, 2006b, 664, Fig. 2.
21 Colonna 2006b, 667, pl. Ic, Fig. 6. For the presence of an intra muros sanctuary to which we
might attach this fi nd: Gran-Aymerich 2009a, 28–29.
22 Colonna 1980, 2006b, 665, Fig. 3; Py 2009.
23 De Hoz 2008.
24 Cristofani 1983, 1993, 1995; Colonna 1980, 1988, 2006b; Belfi ore forthcoming.
25 I thank Jean Hadas-Lebel for the exchange of information in this regard, while releasing him
from any responsibility for this interpretation.
26 Sanmartí 1993, photo in the opposite direction; Gran-Aymerich 2006c, 2009a, 253, Fig. 4.
27 Catalogue Carcassonne 1989, Fig. coul. 121, “oenochoe de terre cuite de type étrusque de la
nécropole de Las Peyros à Couffoulens (il s’agit, probablement, d’une copie languedocienne)”.
28 According to C. Landes concerning the tombs with exclusively Etruscan furnishings recently
discovered in the excavations outside Lattes, see Catalogue Lattes 2002.
29 Catalogue Marseille 2002; Catalogue Hauterive-Laténium 2005; Pomey 2006.
30 Long, Gantès, Drap 2002, Fig. 1–2: Etruscan amphora of the type “Bon Porté,” with signs
inscribed on the rim, a small, globular olpe (Etruscan?) with signs inscribed on the base, an
amphora from Magna Graecia with an incised inscription on the neck.
31 Catalogue Marseille 2002; Catalogue Hauterive-Laténium 2005.
32 Chausserie-Laprée 2005a and 2005b, 5–9; Gantès 2003, 65–69, notices 1.1–23, 1.31–52.
33 Garcia 2004 and 2006; Garcia, Vital 2006; Ugolini 2010; Arcelin 2004; Py 1993 and 2003.
34 Verger 2003, Fig. 11. For a recent study of the protohistoric bronzes of southern France:
Campolo, Garcia 2004.
35 Gran-Aymerich 2006a, Fig. 10, mouth of a bucchero oinochoe from the area of the Bourse at
Marseille; Fig. 11, mouth of a pitcher in grey monochrome ware from Saint-Marcel.
36 Catalogue Lattes 2002, 129–139; Py, Dietler 2003; Py, Lebeaupin, Sejalon, Roure 2006, pl.
V.
37 For the inscription, Colonna 2006b, 667, Fig. 6. For the identifi cation of an intra muros
sanctuary at Saint-Blaise: Gran-Aymerich 2009a, 28–29, “Un sanctuaire intra-muros à Saint-
Blaise, Bouches-du-Rhône et une probable dédicace à Uni”.
38 For a historiographic approach on the various points of view on the evolution and/or
acculturation of southern French Gaul: Bernard, Roure 2010.
39 Gran-Aymerich 2006a, 214, Fig. 6 and 2006b, Fig. 11.
40 Gran-Aymerich 2006a, 214, Fig 8.
41 Gran-Aymerich 1995a, 1997, 2002a.
42 Mötsch 2008; Balzer 2009; Maffre, Chazalon forthcoming.
43 Abels 1992; Vorlauf 1997.
44 Kimmig 1991, 1999; Sankot 2006, Fig. p. 19, with examples of carinated cups with
perpendicular incisions from Tuchomerice, Bohemia, dating to the Late-Hallstat period.
45 Thus for the ivory workshops at Caere, the fi rst cut-stone walls at Tarquinia, the fi rst stone
sculptures at Ceri in the region of Caere, or in Casale Marittimo in the region of Vetulonia.
46 Botto, Vives Ferrándiz 2006, Fig. 4, importazioni “villanoviane”; Gran-Aymerich 2006b,
255.
47 Botto 2011.
48 Pallottino 1963; Heurgon 1965b and 1993; Scardigli 1991; Colonna 2007.
49 For the Cyrenaica fi nds: Jolivet 1980; Cristofani 1983; Hase 1992 (1989), 327–328, n. 2,
Fig. 27; Naso 2006c and 2011; Camporeale et al. 2001; Camporeale 2004, 231. For the
hypothetical presence of bucchero at Karnak: Naso 2011, 80, no 34.