The Etruscan World (Routledge Worlds)

(Ron) #1

  • Fredrik Tobin –


Lawergren, B. (1984) “The Cylinder Kithara in Etruria, Greece and Anatolia” in Imago Musicae,
1: 147–174.
——(1993) “Lyres in the West (Italy, Greece) and East (Egypt, the Near East), ca. 2000–400 bc,”
Opuscula Romana, 19: 55–76.
——(2007) “Etruscan musical instruments and their wider context in Greece and Italy,” Etruscan
Studies, 10/1: 119–138.
Lawson, G. (2008) “Representation and Reality in the Late Roman World: Some Confl icts between
Excavated Finds and Popular Images of Panpipes, Lyres and Lutes” in A. A. Both, R. Eichmann,
E. Hickmann and L.-C. Koch (eds), Studien zur Musikarchäologie VI: Herausforderungen und Ziele
der Musikarchäologie: Vorträge des 5. Symposiums der Internationalen Studiengruppe Musikarchäologie
im Ethnologischen Museum der Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin, 19.–23. September 2006, Rahden: Marie
Leidorf, 179–196.
Martelli, M. (1987) La ceramica degli etruschi: La pittura vascolare, Novara: Istituto Geografi co de
Agostini.
Martinelli, M. (2007) Spettacolo e sport in Etruria: Musica, danza, agonismo e rappresentazioni tra Italia
e Mediterraneo, Florence: Regione Toscana.
Martinelli, M. and Melini, R. (2010) “L’aulòs etrusco di Chianciano: indagini attraverso la
comparazione archeologica ed iconografi ca” in M. Carrese, E. Li Castro and M. Martinelli (eds),
La musica in Etruria: Atti del convegno internazionale: Tarquinia 18/20 settembre 2009, Tarquinia:
Commune di Tarquinia, 93–120.
Meucci, R. (1989) “Roman Military Instruments and the Lituus,” The Galpin Society Journal, 42:
85–97.
Morandini, F. (2011) “All’origine della comunicazione musicale in Etruria” in C. Antonetti, G.
Masaro and L. Toniolo (eds), Comunicazione e linguaggi, Università Cà Foscari di Venezia. Contributi
della scuola di Dottorato in Scienze Umanistiche, Padova: Sargon, 135–158.
Pallottino, M. (1975) The Etruscans, revised and enlarged edition, trans. J. Cremona, London:
Allen Lane.
Paolucci, G. and Sarti, S. (eds) (2012) Musica e archeologia: Reperti, immagini e suoni dal mondo antico,
Rome: Quasar.
Petretto, M. A. (1996) “Musica e guerra: note sulla salpinx,” Sandalion, 18: 35–53.
Powley, H. (1996) “The Musical Legacy of the Etruscans” in J. F. Hall (ed.), Etruscan Italy: Etruscan
Infl uences on the Civilizations of Italy from Antiquity to the Modern Era, Provo: Brigham Young
University and Museum of Art, 287–303.
Rasmussen, T. (1995) “Rattling among the Etruscans and Greeks” in J. Swaddling, S. Walker and
P. Roberts (eds), Italy in Europe: Economic Relations 700BC–AD 50 , London: Department of Greek
and Roman Antiquities, 195–203.
Sarti, S. (2010) “Gli strumenti a corda degli Etruschi: uso e iconografi a” in M. Carrese, E. Li Castro
and M. Martinelli (eds), La musica in Etruria: Atti del convegno internazionale: Tarquinia 18/20
settembre 2009, Tarquinia: Commune di Tarquinia, 185–204.
Sutkowska, O. (2010) “Etruscan and Greek Double Pipes: An Iconographical Comparison of their
Organology” in M. Carrese, E. Li Castro and M. Martinelli (eds), La musica in Etruria: Atti
del convegno internazionale: Tarquinia 18/20 settembre 2009, Tarquinia: Commune di Tarquinia,
79–92.
Steingräber, S. (2006) Abundance of Life: Etruscan Wall Painting, Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum.
Swaddling, J. (2009) “Shake, Rattle and Rôle: Sistra in Etruria” in J. Swaddling and P. Perkins
(eds), Etruscan by Defi nition: The Cultural, Regional and Personal Identity of the Etruscans, London:
The British Museum Press, 31–47.
Warden, G. (2008) “Ritual and Representation on a Campana Dinos in Boston,” Etruscan Studies,
11/1: 121–133.

Free download pdf