EE2 Etruscans and Greeks | Italy
Travelingo Travel Guides
HomeEuropeItaly

Italy Etruscans and Greeks



Etruscans and Greeks

Greek settlers colonized parts of the Tuscan coast and the Bay of Naples in the eighth century BC, moving on to Naxos on Sicily's Ionian coast, and founding the city of Syracuse in the year 736 BC. The colonies they established in Sicily and southern Italy came to be known as Magna Graecia . Along with Etruscan cities to the north they were the earliest Italian civilizations to leave substantial buildings and written records.

The Greek settlements were hugely successful, introducing the vine and the olive to Italy, and establishing a high-yielding agricultural system. Cities like Syracuse and Tarentum were wealthier and more sophisticated than those on mainland Greece, dominating trade in the central Mediterranean, despite competition from Carthage. Ruins such as the temples of Agrigento and Selinunte , the fortified walls around Gela, and the theatres at Syracuse and Taormina on Sicily attest to a great prosperity, and Magna Graecia became an enriching influence on the culture of the Greek homeland - Archimedes, Aeschylus and Empedocles were all from Sicily. Yet these colonies suffered from the same factionalism as the Greek states, and the cities of Tarentum, Metapontum, Sybaris and Croton were united only when faced with the threat of outside invasion. From 400 BC, after Sybaris was razed to the ground, the other colonies went into irreversible economic decline, to become satellite states of Rome.

The Etruscans were the other major civilization of the period, mostly living in the area between the Tiber and Arno rivers. Their language, known mostly from funerary texts, is one of the last relics of an ancient language common to the Mediterranean. Some say they arrived in Italy around the ninth century BC from western Anatolia, others that they came from the north, and a third hypothesis places their origins in Etruria. Whatever the case, they set up a cluster of twelve city states in northern Italy, traded with Greek colonies to the south and were the most powerful people in northern Italy by the sixth century BC, edging out the indigenous population of Ligurians, Latins and Sabines. Tomb frescoes in Umbria and Lazio depict a refined and luxurious culture with highly developed systems of divination, based on the reading of animal entrails and the flight of birds. Herodotus wrote that the Etruscans recorded their ancestry along the female line, and tomb excavations last century revealed that women were buried in special sarcophagi carved with their names. Well-preserved chamber tombs with

© 2003 by Rough Guides Ltd. as trustee for its Authors. Published by Rough Guides. All rights reserved. Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd. Buy the book here! The Rough Guide to Italy

wall paintings exist at Cerveteri and Tarquinia , the two major sites in Italy. The Etruscans were technically advanced, creating new agricultural land through irrigation and building their cities on ramparted hilltops - a pattern of settlement that has left a permanent mark on central Italy. Their kingdom contracted, however, after invasions by the Cumans , Syracusans and Gauls , and was eventually forced into alliance with the embryonic Roman state.


South Italy

Leila says "the southern coast of italy"

www.italiana.co.uk

Claire McDonough says "Italiana.co.uk was formed in late 2005 to offer a unique reference point on everything about italian food and drink.

Italian food is enjoyed by people the world over. This great site offers a plethora of information about Italian cuisine and culture.

Our features and articles are written by professional journalists and experts - who have a particular interest or background in this area.
"

Tour Italy On Line (Video + Stills)

IntrepidBerkeleyExplorer says "My film "Gondola With the Wind 2" can be seen on the web if you have a high speed internet connection. The video features Rome, Florence, Venice, Pompeii, Capri, Pisa, and many other parts of north and south Italy.

This is a free, non-commercial, streaming video on the Windows Media Player. No ads and no strings attached. I sell absolutely nothing.

With any modem you can view a new gallery of still pictures from my trips to Italy at:

There are over 30 of my other amateur travel videos on-line covering all 7 continents, including trips to China, Australia, Russia, Antarctica, American National Parks, an African safari, Egypt, Peru, Mayan pyramids, Berlin & Paris, Greece and Turkey; see whales, penguins, or polar bears. One of these films is the original “Gondola With the Wind”, filmed seven years before Gondola 2. It begins with Italy, followed by Eastern Europe.

The planet is yours, including my Home Page giant galaxy of still pictures.

To watch the videos or check out stills, please ask a search engine for:
Intrepid Berkeley Explorer"

VaticanVista B&B - Rome

Silvia Epps says "Bed and breakfast overlooking St.Peter's dome and Vatican Museums.
"

obsessions

noob says "if your a obsess noob go to italy and own lvl 3 mages in the wildy"


Your Tip for Italy

Help other backpackers! Write your own guides and backpacking tips to Italy - they will appear instantly on this page - Please only write a tip/guide to Italy - visit the main Italy forum to ask a question!

Please do not post links to your site here (they won't work) - please use the Italy webguide section below! Thanks.

Your Name
A short title
Your guide/tip

Flag of Italy

Search places

Search hotels

Search flights











World Map North America Central America Caribbean South America Africa Europe Europe Asia Oceania

Italy

Abruzzo and Molise
Calabria and Basilicata
Campania
Emilia-Romagna
Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Lazio
Liguria
Lombardy and the lakes
Marche
Piemonte and Valle dAosta
Puglia
Sardinia
Sicily
Trentino-Alto Adige
Tuscany
Umbria
Venice and the Veneto

All other countries in Europe

Regions

Europe
Asia
Africa
North America
Caribbean
Central America
South America
Oceania
Antarctica

 

Copyright © 2008 travelingo.org. All Rights Reserved.

About Us •  Privacy Policy •  T&Cs •  SiteMap •  Webguide  •  Add Your Site
European Football • Lager • Searches 2 3 4 5 6

Travelingo.org is not a booking agent and does not charge any service fees to users of our site.
Travelingo.org is not responsible for content on external web sites.

11/23/2008 12:18:56 AM