Javascript must be enabled to continue!
III. Villanovan Veii
View through CrossRef
The roads and gates described in the previous section are of very varied dates, and many of them were in use over a long period. They have been described first because they constitute the essential framework for any serious topographical study of Veii. Within this framework the city developed, and in this and the following sections will be found described, period by period, the evidence for that development, from the first establishment of Veii in Villanovan times down to its final abandonment in late antiquity.Whatever the precise relationship of the Villanovan to the succeeding phases of the Early Iron Age in central Italy in terms of politics, race or language, it is abundantly clear that it was within the Villanovan period that the main lines of the social and topographical framework of historical Etruria first took shape. Veii is no exception. Apart from sporadic material that may have been dropped by Neolithic or Bronze Age hunters, there is nothing from the Ager Veientanus to suggest that it was the scene of any substantial settlement before the occupation of Veii itself by groups of Early Iron Age farmers, a part of whose material equipment relates them unequivocally to the Villanovan peoples of coastal and central Etruria.
Title: III. Villanovan Veii
Description:
The roads and gates described in the previous section are of very varied dates, and many of them were in use over a long period.
They have been described first because they constitute the essential framework for any serious topographical study of Veii.
Within this framework the city developed, and in this and the following sections will be found described, period by period, the evidence for that development, from the first establishment of Veii in Villanovan times down to its final abandonment in late antiquity.
Whatever the precise relationship of the Villanovan to the succeeding phases of the Early Iron Age in central Italy in terms of politics, race or language, it is abundantly clear that it was within the Villanovan period that the main lines of the social and topographical framework of historical Etruria first took shape.
Veii is no exception.
Apart from sporadic material that may have been dropped by Neolithic or Bronze Age hunters, there is nothing from the Ager Veientanus to suggest that it was the scene of any substantial settlement before the occupation of Veii itself by groups of Early Iron Age farmers, a part of whose material equipment relates them unequivocally to the Villanovan peoples of coastal and central Etruria.
Related Results
Sorption Behaviors of Light Lanthanides(III) (La(III), Ce(III), Pr(III), Nd(III)) and Cr(III) Using Nitrolite
Sorption Behaviors of Light Lanthanides(III) (La(III), Ce(III), Pr(III), Nd(III)) and Cr(III) Using Nitrolite
The sorption of light lanthanides(III) (La(III), Ce(III), Pr(III), Nd(III)) and chromium(III) ions from acidic solutions on Nitrolite was studied at varying ions concentrations, pH...
New Reliefs from Veii and Mithraic Reliefs from Etruria (Regio VII): Iconography, Chronology and Archaeological Context
New Reliefs from Veii and Mithraic Reliefs from Etruria (Regio VII): Iconography, Chronology and Archaeological Context
Summary
This paper discusses the Mithraic reliefs found in Etruria (Regio VII). The reliefs are analysed and their iconographic, archaeological and chronological features c...
Spindle Whorls: their Symbolism in the Villanovan Cemetery of Quattro Fontanili, Veii
Spindle Whorls: their Symbolism in the Villanovan Cemetery of Quattro Fontanili, Veii
The hypothesis presented in this paper is that the apparently insignificant pottery spindle whorl is a symbol of transformation of death into new life by analogy with mankind's old...
Delicate, a study of structural change in ten-coordinated La(III), Ce(III), Pr(III), Nd(III), Sm(III) and Eu(III) sulfates
Delicate, a study of structural change in ten-coordinated La(III), Ce(III), Pr(III), Nd(III), Sm(III) and Eu(III) sulfates
We recently presented a new method that allows for a direct structural comparison of coordination complexes. The main difference to other approaches is that our AlignIT approach us...
Villanovan culture
Villanovan culture
AbstractThe label “Villanovan culture” describes the Early Iron Age (ca. 900–700BCE), cultures of central and northern Italy, specifically in the areas of Etruria and the province ...
Foodways of the dead: molecular approaches to Villanovan funerary rites in Po Valley
Foodways of the dead: molecular approaches to Villanovan funerary rites in Po Valley
Abstract
This paper presents a chemical analysis of organic residues preserved in ceramic vessels recovered from a Villanovan funerary context at the site of Granarolo ...
Complexes of Oxamic Acid with Al(III), Ga(III), In(III), Tl(III), Y(III), Fe(III), Mn(II) and V(III)
Complexes of Oxamic Acid with Al(III), Ga(III), In(III), Tl(III), Y(III), Fe(III), Mn(II) and V(III)
The preparation of complexes of oxamic acid with Al(III), Ga(III), In(III), Tl(III), Y(III), Fe(III), Mn(II) and V(III) is reported. From the study of the infrared and diffuse refl...
Mossbauer spectra of trispyrrolidylcarbodithioates of Cr(III), Co(III), Ga(III), and In(III) doped with Fe(III). Evidence of cross relaxation between Fe(III)–Cr(III)
Mossbauer spectra of trispyrrolidylcarbodithioates of Cr(III), Co(III), Ga(III), and In(III) doped with Fe(III). Evidence of cross relaxation between Fe(III)–Cr(III)
Mossabauer spectra have been measured at 298, 78, and 4.2°K on chromium (III), cobalt(III), gallium(III), and indium(III) trispyrrolidylcarbodithioates containing 1–35 at.% iron(II...

