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Etruscan - The lost pyramid of Italy

Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2019 11:12 pm
by Alys-RaccoonReadings
ROME – “Discovery” is a difficult term. It places emphasis on the current civilization and places privilege, and even bestows power, to a specific culture. The North and South American continents were already here when Europeans arrived as were the indigenous people. No actual discovery occurred–the term actually means that a group ignorant of a specific reality was enlightened, even corrected regarding their previous knowledge....

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What is it?
The name Etruscan “pyramid” is a misnomer. The structure is not a pyramid, at least the way most of would imagine having seen images from Egypt or Mexico. Rather, the structure is a huge piece of volcanic peperino rock that was naturally and generally triangular and then carved with multiple levels. It has 26 steps hewn out of the rock that rise to the first level and the steepness of the steps echo the shape of the Mayan pyramids of Mexico. The steep stairway leads to two flattened levels that may have served as intermediate altars and the main altar at the top. The flattened levels are connected by a smaller set of stairs with a final short set to the top of the structure. There are also some carved gutters about 6 inches deep. In total, the structure is about 24ft (~8m) by 53ft (~16m) and rises to about 30ft (~10m) in height. It is the largest such structure in Europe.

What was it for?
Its purpose is somewhat unknown as archaeologists have yet to focus attention on the structure, but it appears to be an altar for offerings and is surrounded by other Etruscan ruins. At the top altar, there is an off-set area that overlooks the cliff face on which the structure sits. Some claim that human offerings were conducted here but without specific evidence, the nature of the offerings remains unknown. Etruscans, however, depicted human sacrifice in both their art and literature and recent evidence from an excavation in Tarquinia appears to affirm the practice. The altar itself faces northwest, which aligns with direction of the Etruscan underworld; and indeed the channel for any flowing liquid follows that direction until it falls over the cliff.

It is also part of a complex of other structures carved into adjacent areas of the cliff. One such area, the “preacher’s stone”, reportedly contained a sarcophagus. It was part of a two-level structure carved in the cliff face near the pyramid. But again, the exact rituals constructed here and the possible roles the inhabitants had in relation to the adjacent carvings are mostly unknown or passed along as assumptions.

Etruscan Culture and Religion
Centered in the now Italian province of Tuscany whose names derives from these prior inhabitants, Etruscan civilization flourished from about 900 BCE to about 100 BCE when it was overcome and assimilated by the Roman Republic. The civilization stretched the Tyrrhenian Sea northeast to the modern Veneto region and along the Italian coast toward modern-day Naples. Their wealth and power remain attested to in their art. They were also heavily influenced by Greek culture both Archaic and Hellenistic. Their language, apparently unrelated to Indo-European, is an isolate to the region and remains incompletely understood.

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Etruscan religion centered on Tages, a child deity who sprung from cultivated earth and revealed the religious elements to the culture. Those teachings culminate in the Etrusca Disciplina; itself heavily influencing Roman Religion. Other deities of Etruscan religion are known and appear to be indigenous, while other deities entered the religion through contact with Greece. However, sources suggest that Etruscan were immanent polytheists, with all reality and observable phenomenon connected to divine forces.

They also believed in a responsibility to feed their deities and ancestors. Like many other religions, they placed particularly importance on blood. They also appear to have practiced various types of animal augury, again lending some support to the use of the Pyramid’s altar.
You can see the full article here: https://wildhunt.org/2019/03/the-lost-p ... italy.html

Re: Etruscan - The lost pyramid of Italy

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 9:12 am
by darkwing dook
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Re: Etruscan - The lost pyramid of Italy

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 10:36 am
by Likes2Read
I’m curious as heck about the Etruscans, given the part of the world from which my DNA originates. I’m always interested in info about them. :)

Re: Etruscan - The lost pyramid of Italy

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 12:50 pm
by Alys-RaccoonReadings
darkwing dook wrote:Image

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Lol!!!!!

Re: Etruscan - The lost pyramid of Italy

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 6:23 pm
by no name
Thank you, Alys, for sharing this great information. As a lover of Tuscany, I am more than happy to read it :)