François Tomb
Ground plan of the François Tomb | |
Shown within Lazio | |
Location | Comune di Vulci, Italy |
---|---|
Region | Province of Viterbo |
Type | tomb |
History | |
Founded | late fourth century BC |
Periods | Hellenistic |
Cultures | Etruscan |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 1857 |
Archaeologists | Alessandro François and Adolphe Noël des Vergers |
Condition | ruined |
Public access | no |
Coordinates: 42°25′2.8″N 11°38′20.6″E / 42.417444°N 11.639056°E
The François Tomb is an important painted Etruscan tomb from the Ponte Rotto Necropolis in the Etruscan city of Vulci, in central Italy. It was discovered in 1857 by Alessandro François[1] and Adolphe Noël des Vergers. It dates to the last quarter of the fourth century BC. The tomb seems to belong to the Etruscan family of the Saties (or Seties) and one of its chief occupants is Vel Saties, who appears with his dwarf, Arnza.[2] Its painted frescoes are significant both iconographically and also in terms of their comments on Etruscan history and identity. Some pottery vessels from the tomb are now in the British Museum.[3]
The François Tomb also contains a fresco depicting Caelius Vibenna (whom the Romans believed the Caelian Hill was named after) and Mastarna (a legendary figure whom the Emperor Claudius identified with Servius Tullius).[4]
See also
Sources
Wikimedia Commons has media related to François Tomb (Vulci). |
- Bloom, Marcia G. 1974. The François tomb at Vulci, an Etrusco-Hellenistic monument. Thesis/dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.
- Holliday, Peter James. 1993. Narrative and event in ancient art. Cambridge University Press.
References
- ↑ https://dictionaryofarthistorians.org/francoisa.htm
- ↑ Jane DeRose Evans (1992). The Art of Persuasion: Political Propaganda from Aeneas to Brutus. University of Michigan Press. pp. 14–. ISBN 0-472-10282-6.
- ↑ British Museum Collection
- ↑ Anna Maria Sgubini Moretti (2004). Eroi etruschi e miti greci: gli affreschi della Tomba François tornano a Vulci. Cooperativa archeologia.