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The Urbanisation of Etruria

The Urbanisation of Etruria

The Urbanisation of Etruria

Funerary Practices and Social Change, 700–600 BC
Corinna Riva , University College London
October 2014
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Paperback
9781107428942

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    In this survey of the burial and settlement evidence of late Iron Age Etruria, Corinna Riva offers a new reading of the socio-political transformations that led to the formation of urban centres in Tyrrhenian central Italy. Through a close examination of burial ritual and the material culture associated with it, Riva traces the transformations of seventh-century elite funerary practices and the structuring of political power around these practices in Etruria, arguing that the tomb became the locus for the articulation of new forms of political authority at urban centres. Challenging established views that deem contact with eastern Mediterranean regions crucial to these developments, Riva offers a radically new interpretation of the so-called Orientalizing material culture, taking a long-term perspective on local changes and east-west contact across the Mediterranean.

    • Provides a unique synthesis of the archaeology of late Iron Age Etruria
    • Offers a new reading of urbanisation in central Tyrrhenian Italy
    • Places Etruria in its wider eighth- and seventh-century BC Mediterranean context

    Product details

    October 2014
    Paperback
    9781107428942
    260 pages
    254 × 178 × 14 mm
    0.59kg
    59 b/w illus. 3 maps
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. The ancient city and Etruria
    • 2. A long process and rapid change
    • 3. Orientalizing: accessibility and transformation
    • 4. The transformation of funerary ideology
    • 5. The transformation of political authority
    • 6. The transformation of grave-goods
    • 7. Etruria and its urban Mediterranean network.
      Author
    • Corinna Riva , University College London

      Corinna Riva is Lecturer in Mediterranean Archaeology at University College London. A scholar of Iron Age Italy and the first millennium BC in the central Mediterranean, she is co-director of the Upper Esino Valley Survey Project. She is co-editor, with Nicholas Vella, of Debating Orientalization: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Change in the Ancient Mediterranean and, with G. Bradley and E. Isayev, Ancient Italy: Regions without Boundaries.