- Jean Gran-Aymerich –
63 Missing the upper portion. The preserved fragment measures 50 cm, the diameter at the base
is 32.5 cm; Pallottino 1964, 114 (= Pallottino 1979, I, 393, pl. VIII, 1); MacIntosh 1974;
Turfa 1977, 369, n. 2; Blum ho fer 1993, 190–194, type I; Hase 1996, 189, and 2004, 76, 79.
64 For the Etruscan cippus and the plates of Genucilia type: Morel 1980, 29, 38, 65, 71, and
1981; Jolivet 1980; Hase 1996, 188–189, fi gs. 1–3. On the presence of funerary stelai in
the Carthage necropoleis (mostly from the Rabs sector of Sainte-Monique), and distinctions
among the stelai of the sanctuary: Cintas 1976, 359–360; Bénichou-Safar 1982.
65 Hase 1996, 194, n. 26.
66 Concerning the 29 cippi of Aléria, themselves without engraved inscriptions (but possibly
originally painted) as is the case for Carthage: Gran-Aymerich, Jehasse 2007; Hase 1996,
193, notes the marble example from Tomb 87, from the beginning of the fourth century. The
Etruscan cippi of this type were discovered at Spina and Marzabotto: Hase ibid. 191, n. 14,
with bibliography.
67 Bissing 1933, 119–129; Colozier 1953; Cintas 1976, 377–381, pl. LXIIILXV, LXVII, 2–3;
Haumesser 2007.
68 Boucher 1953; Ferron 1966; MacIntosh 1974; Turfa 1977 and 1986; Morel 1981; Thuillier
1985; Hase 1992 (1989); Niemeyer–Docter et al. 1993; Mackensen 1999; Lancel ed. 1982;
Lancel 1995; Docter et al. 1997; Vegas 1997; Docter 1998, 2000 and 2007; Mansel 2011.
69 Docter 1998, 2000 and 2007.
70 See in particular: Hase 1992 (1989), Fig. 2: “Arealen A1, A3, A7”; Vegas 1997; Trias 1999;
Docter 2007. For the early diffusion of Sardinian ceramics in the western Mediterranean and
at Carthage: Botto 2011.
71 We have observed on many occasions the remarkable presence at Carthage of Etruscan
fl asks and small containers for perfumed oil (aryballoi, alabastra, small bucchero and impasto
amphorae): Morel 1981; Gran-Aymerich, Bonnet, Domínguez-Arranz 2010. The majority
of these vessels pertain to the women’s world (with the probable exclusion of some aryballoi
believed to belong to the world of men): Szilágyi 1998; Naso 2011, 79, no 8. One might
deduce from the use of these vessels of perfumed oil the presence of Etruscan women at
Carthage. The fi gurine from Dar-Seniat (see below) seems to constitute an additional proof in
this regard: Gran-Aymerich 2008a and 2009a.
72 Berges 1993, 253, 255, pl. 67, 4–6 and 1997; Hase 2004, 78, notes the exceptional character
of these three impressions, probably made with Etruscan seals, amongst the 1437 discovered
examples. On the fi rst discoveries of clay bullae with sealings found in the quarter next to the
Carthage littoral: Cintas 1970, 304, n. 213; Sznycer 1969, fi gs p. 141–142.
73 Gran-Aymerich 2008a and 2009a.
74 Delattre 1923.
75 Chelbi 2006.
76 Gran-Aymerich 1991 and 2006b; Gran-Aymerich and Gran-Aymerich 2006.
77 Llobregat 1982, 1991 and 1998; Colonna 2006a, Fig. 19.
78 Arribas, Trias de Arribas 1961; Donati 1991; Gran-Aymerich 2006b; Botto, Vives Ferrándiz
2006; Colonna 2006a; Bruni 2007.
79 Colonna 1980, 2006a and 2006b; de Hoz 2008; Py 2009.
80 Actes Barcelone 1990; Fernández, Gómez Bellard, Ribera 1993; Catalogue Marseille 2002,
21; Bardelli, Graells 2012; Graells forthcoming.
81 Celestino Pérez 2001; Gran-Aymerich 1995d, 2006 and 2008a; Gran-Aymerich, du Puytison,
Lagarce 1995.
82 Shefton 1979; Jiménez Ávila 2002; Botto, Vives-Ferrándiz 2006, Figs 9 (Huelva) and 10
(from “Granada,” perhaps Malaga).
83 One of the Etrusco-Corinthian vases is part of the Senza Graffi to Group from Tarquinia:
Gran-Aymerich 2006b; Colonna 2006a, Fig. 1; Botto, Vives-Ferrándiz 2006, Fig. 8.