- chapter 51: Engraved gems –
27 Hansson 2005: 43–68. Southern Italy is especially rich in fi nds, but a globolo gems have been
found all over the Mediterranean region and as far away as the coastal areas around Kertsch in
Crimea.
28 Martini 1971.
29 Martini 1971: 21–23, 164: Aquileia, Chiusi, Dalmatia, Rome.
30 Martini 1971: 119–122, 164.
31 Martini 1971: 116–126. See also Zazoff 1983: 250–259; Zwierlein-Diehl 2007: 95–97.
32 For example, Sena Chiesa 1966; Zazoff 1983: 260–305; Zwierlein-Diehl 2007: 98–107.
33 Sena Chiesa 1966: nos. 567, 874, 1051, 1052.
34 Zazoff dates the end of scarab production circa 100 bce (1983: 237–247).
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ambrosini, L. (2011) Gemme etrusche con iscrizioni, (Mediterranea, Suppl. 6) Rome: Fabrizio Serra.
Bartoloni, G. et al. (2000) Principi etruschi: tra Mediterraneo e Europa, Venice: Marsilio.
Berges, D. (1997) Die Tonsiegel aus dem karthagischem Tempelarchiv, Mainz: von Zabern.
Boardman, J. (1968) Archaic Greek Gems: Schools and artists in the sixth and early fi fth ceturies BC,
Evanston: Indiana University Press.
——(1970) Greek Engraved Gems: Archaic to early Classical, London: Thames & Hudson.
——(1975) Intaglios and rings, Greek, Etruscan and Eastern, from a private collection, London and New
York: Thames & Hudson.
——(1991) “Colour questions,” Jewellery Studies, 5: 29–31.
Chiesa, F. (2009) “Uno scaraboide fi gurato dal ‘complesso monumentale’ a Tarquinia” in S. Bruni
(ed.), Etruria e Italia preromana: studi in onore di Giovannangelo Camporeale, Rome and Pisa:
Fabrizio Serra, pp. 227–232.
Devoto, G. (1990) “Scarabei etrusco-italici in serpentina,” Acta geoarcheologica urbica 2: 34–36.
Devoto, G. and Molayem, A. (1990) Archeogemmologia: pietre antiche, glittica, magia e litoterapia,
Rome: La Meridiana.
Fábry, N. B. (2009) “Lo scarabeo della Tomba 7 di Monterenzio Vecchio e le parures d’ambra delle
necropoli etrusco-celtiche della Valle dell’Idice,” Ocnus 17: 23–28.
Giovanelli, E. (2012) “Le prime testimonianze di glittica etrusca: scaraboidi e sigilli tra VIII e VII
a.C.” in Preistoria e protostoria in Etruria: Atti del decimo incontro di studi. L’Etruria dal Paleolitico
al Primo Ferro: lo stato delle ricerche, Milan: Centro di Studi di Preistoria e Archeologia, II:
783–796.
Hansson, U. R. (2005) “A globolo gems: late Etrusco-Italic scarab intaglios,” Unpublished PhD
Diss., Gothenburg University. Forthcoming publication.
Hölbl, G. (1979) Beziehungen der ägyptischen Kultur zu Altitalien, Leiden: Brill.
Krauskopf, I. (1995) Heroen, Götter und Dämonen auf etruskischen Skarabäen: Listen zur Bestimmung,
(Peleus, Beiheft zu Thetis, 1) Mannheim: University of Mannheim.
——(1996) “Interesse privato nel mito: il caso degli scarabei etruschi” in F.-H. Massa-Pairault
(ed.), Le mythe grec en Italie antique: fonction et image, (CEFR, 253), Rome: École Française de
Rome, pp. 405–421.
Martelli, M. (1981) “Un sigillo etrusco,” Quaderni Urbinati di Cultura Classica, 9: 169–172.
Martelli, M. and Gilotta, F. (2000) “Sphragistics and glyptics” in M. Torelli (ed.), The Etruscans,
New York: Rizzoli, pp. 455–462.
Martini, W. (1971) Etruskische Ringsteinglyptik, Heidelberg: F.H. Kerle.
Phillips, K. M. (1978) “Orientalizing gem stones from Poggio Civitate (Murlo),” Parola del
Passato, 33: 355–369.
Richter, G. M. A. (1968) The Engraved gems of the Greeks, Etruscans and Romans, 1, London: Phaidon.