- chapter 19: Etruscan goods in the Mediterranean world –
be defi nitely Etruscan in manufacture. Shefton furnishes an updated list (2009: 128–138) of
“Rhodian” oinochoai, thus altering the picture of Archaic Mediterranean trade, since some
reached Sicily (Ragusa), Spain (Huelva), the Danube region, and even Rhodes, where an
Etruscan oinochoe was buried in Kameiros tomb A22.
43 Jiménez Avila 2002; Tekki 2009.
44 Mainly Jacobsthal, Langsdorff 1929; Reineke 1933; Bouloumié 1973; Haffner 1976, 1993;
Abels 1992; Vorlauf 1997.
45 Almago-Gorbea 1983; Gran-Aymerich 1994; Graells 2008b; Bardelli, Graells 2012, 34–35.
46 Bardelli, Graells 2012, 34–35; Graells forthcoming.
47 Santrot and Santrot forthcoming.
48 Bouloumié 1986; Shefton 1995; Milcent 2006b.
49 Catalogue Paris 1992a, 193.
50 Catalogue Paris 1992a, 166, Figs 264–265.
51 Delor, Rolley 1995.
52 Gran-Aymerich 2006c, 278, Fig. 13; Botto, Vives-Ferrándiz 2006, 196, Fig. 59; Bardelli,
Graells 2012, 33, Fig. 16.
53 Rolley 2005; Jantzen 1955, “groupe de Cumes.”
54 Bouloumié 1986, 1987; Catalogue Lattes 1992.
55 Bérard-Azzouz, Feugère 1997; basin no 1141, from La Petite Roche; Gran-Aymerich 2006b,
210, Fig. 5.
56 Robin, Soyer 2003; Adam 2003; Gran-Aymerich 2008a, map Fig. 1, 2009a, 252, Fig. 3.
57 Milcent 2007, Fig. 17; Catalogue Saint-Germain 2009, Fig. III.11, 159.
58 Actes Barcelone 1990, 337, 364, Fig. 2; Botto, Vives-Ferrándiz 2006; 143, Fig. 52; Bardelli,
Graells 2012, 34–35.
59 Hase 1992; Adam 2003, 2006.
60 De Marinis 2000b; most recently Camporeale 2009.
61 Graells 2010a, 2011; Graells, Sarda, forthcoming.
62 Catalogue Paris 1992a, 159, Fig. 267; Camporeale 2009, 13.
63 Amourette, Nadalini, Rolley 1993. The necropolis of La Picardie (Gurgy), at the foot of
Auxerre, has revealed several Etruscan bronze vases (stamnoi: Delor, Rolley 1995) and earrings
decorated with fi ligree of a possibly Etruscan infl uence: Eluère 1989.
64 Following the opinion of C. Rolley, vid. Verger 2006, 42.
65 Catalogue Barcelona 1990, 399, pl. VI; Torelli 1986; Gran-Aymerich 2008a, 90, Fig. 4,
2009a, 252, Fig. 2; Bardelli, Graells 2012, p. 25, Fig. 1–3.
66 Cancho Roano: Gran-Aymerich 2006b, Figs 3–4; Botto-Ferrándiz 2006, Fig. 23; Cyrene:
Naso 2011, 78, Fig. 5. For Spain: Bardelli, Graells 2012.
67 Vigie 2011, Fig. 32. All our thanks to Marta Santos in Empúries and François Gantès in
Marseille for their personal communications on this topic.
68 Botto, Vives-Ferrándiz 2006, Figs 51.1, 51.3; Gran-Aymerich 2006b, Figs 10.1–3 with
also a bronze spit. For the role of the small wine jug with rounded mouth in the Etruscan
symposium and its diffusion outside of Etruria, see most recently Donati, forthcoming.
69 Catalogue Paris 1992a, 164.
70 Verger 2006, 36–37.
71 Catalogue Paris 1992a, 159. See Jurgeit 1999, 515–516 no. 865.
72 Such as the bucchero kantharos of Koscielec, Cujavia in Poland (Fogel, Makiewicz 1989) or
the “frammento di bucchero relativo alla parete di una forma chiusa” from Karnak in Egypt (Naso
2011, 80, no 34).
73 Bouloumié 1976, 23; Catalogue Paris 1992a, 159, Fig. cat. 269.
74 Bellon, Perrin 1992; Perrin, Bellon 1992; Bellon et al., 1992; 1995a, 2006a, 2012b. Gran-
Aymerich 1998, Fig. 5.
75 Catalogue Carcassonne 1989, 121; Mötsch 2008; Chaume, Mordant 2011.