The overall investigation of the different districts of an Etruscan settlement is an extremely rare circumstance. The study of the urbanistic asset of Pyrgi's settlement and of the arrangement of the sacred areas is favoured by their abandonment after the phase of Romanization and by the possibility of performing large-scale research over its territory. The harbour and the sanctuary of Pyrgi were a fundamental pole of attraction for foreign haunters as the outpost of the metropolis Caere. Their development was strictly linked to Pyrgi's favourable geographic position along the Tyrrhenian maritime routes and to the presence of a water spring. The settlement was founded at the end of the 7th century, and was connected to Caere by means of a ...
The study of Etruscan cities had been substantially neglected until the last forty years. Indeed, th...
The gold sheets from Pyrgi are mostly interpreted as a testimony of Carthaginian political influence...
Etruscan harbours in Tyrrhenian Italy were rarely searched and found, even though much evidence prev...
The study of the urban alignment of the settlement of Pyrgi and of the arrangement of the sacred are...
Over the last decade, field research has mainly focussed on the Ceremonial Quarter at the intersecti...
The harbour of Pyrgi hosted the great maritime sanctuary of Caere, in the Archaic period one of the ...
From 2009 the Sapienza- Università di Roma has promoted the investigation of the intermediate area b...
The Montetosto locality lies 4 km to the west of Caere and is located along the road that connected ...
The territory along the coast north-west of Ro me, still well preserved; in the Etruscan period was ...
Excavations conducted by Quenn's University in the central area of the Etruscan city of Caere, near ...
Il sito di Pyrgi (S. Severa, RM) ha restituito un cospicuo numero di reperti contrassegnati da sigla...
Scavo archeologico svolto in regime di concessione nell'area del santuario e dell'abitato etrusco di...
The Etruscan site of Pyrgi extended over 10 ha along the Tyrrhenian coastline. Fieldwork has so far ...
he site of Montetosto is located 4 km to the west of Caere, along the monumental road that connected...
This work refers to an interdisciplinary study on the archaeological site of Pyrgi, an Etruscan harb...
The study of Etruscan cities had been substantially neglected until the last forty years. Indeed, th...
The gold sheets from Pyrgi are mostly interpreted as a testimony of Carthaginian political influence...
Etruscan harbours in Tyrrhenian Italy were rarely searched and found, even though much evidence prev...
The study of the urban alignment of the settlement of Pyrgi and of the arrangement of the sacred are...
Over the last decade, field research has mainly focussed on the Ceremonial Quarter at the intersecti...
The harbour of Pyrgi hosted the great maritime sanctuary of Caere, in the Archaic period one of the ...
From 2009 the Sapienza- Università di Roma has promoted the investigation of the intermediate area b...
The Montetosto locality lies 4 km to the west of Caere and is located along the road that connected ...
The territory along the coast north-west of Ro me, still well preserved; in the Etruscan period was ...
Excavations conducted by Quenn's University in the central area of the Etruscan city of Caere, near ...
Il sito di Pyrgi (S. Severa, RM) ha restituito un cospicuo numero di reperti contrassegnati da sigla...
Scavo archeologico svolto in regime di concessione nell'area del santuario e dell'abitato etrusco di...
The Etruscan site of Pyrgi extended over 10 ha along the Tyrrhenian coastline. Fieldwork has so far ...
he site of Montetosto is located 4 km to the west of Caere, along the monumental road that connected...
This work refers to an interdisciplinary study on the archaeological site of Pyrgi, an Etruscan harb...
The study of Etruscan cities had been substantially neglected until the last forty years. Indeed, th...
The gold sheets from Pyrgi are mostly interpreted as a testimony of Carthaginian political influence...
Etruscan harbours in Tyrrhenian Italy were rarely searched and found, even though much evidence prev...