Etruscans
If someone living 2,000 years from now wanted to know what took place in the year 2005, it would be necessary to go through impossible amounts of information. Today, scores of individuals with varying agendas write about day-to-day events. Thousands of publications and electronic media maintain records. Before the Common Era the situation was naturally much different. Because so few accounts exist of this time period, anthropologists and historians have to make educated guesses to fill in the blanks. This same problem exists with early Rome and Italy. No account written earlier than the late 3rd century exists and no continuous account recorded before the age of Augustus now survives. Thus, most of the information concerning the Etruscan traditions either comes from individuals such as the Roman historian Livy, the Greeks, and archaeological finds.
Born in Northern Italy in 59 BC, Livy wrote a 142-book history of Rome called Ab Urbe Condita (From the Founding of the City). As far as it is known, Livy never held public office but was somewhat acquainted with the emperor Augustus. It is also believed that Livy encouraged the future emperor Claudius in his historical studies. Most of Livy's original works were destroyed. Today, only books 1-10 and 21-45 survive. The second part consisted of ten books, which dealt with the conquest of Italy. Books 6 to 10 still exist from this section. In these remaining sections Rome recovers from her wars and, at the end of book 10, defeats the Etruscans in 295 BC. (Settis 1985, 30)
The Etruscan people are considered to be part of the Villanovan culture of the 9th and 8th centuries BC. There are many suggestions on their origin. Some scholars believe they were an indigenous group that had been in the area for some time. Others argue that they came from another location outside of Italy (Massa 1980, 2).
For example, some say that the Etruscans were part of the famous Pelasgians, or Sea Peoples of Lemnos. This is evidenced by the fact that the Pelasgians were a mixture of various peoples including some of the biblical Canaanites who later became the Phoenicians. This theory is supported by excavations on Lemnos that found a community dating to around 600 BC linking to the Etruscans. The inscription on a Lemnos Stele, dated 600 BCE and written in a language similar to Etruscan, was found in a warrior's tomb with weapons and pottery very similar to early Etrucia. The necropolis of the city contained 130 cremated burials. An early form of Etruscan Bucchero pottery was found in the women's burials. In addition, the people of Asia Minor used Bucchero clay as did the Etruscans. Likewise, daggers and axes of Cretan and Etruscan models were found in the male sites. (Bryce 1999)
Livy's theory is that the Etruscans came from the north and crossed the Alps. He says of this idea: "Even the Alpine populations have the same origin as the Etruscans, particularly the Raetians. The latter have been rendered savage by the very nature of the region, so much so that they have preserved nothing of their ancient fatherland except the accent, and even that in a very corrupt form." (1978 V, 33).
According to Bloch, the correct facts were used by Livy to arrive at the wrong conclusions (54). The presence of Etruscans in Raetia is certain. Yet it does not go back very far, nor to a hypothetical passage of the Etruscans through the Alpine valleys. It was only in the 4th century BC, when the Celtic invasion compelled the Etruscans of the Po plain to flee, that the latter sought refuge in the safe retreats offered by the Alpine foothills. In fact, Livy really did not mean to say much more, and the Etruscoid inscriptions of Raetia, which are all of a late date and not earlier than the 3rd century BC, can be perfectly well explained by this movement of Etruscan refugees towards the north.
Thus, none of the theories about the Etruscan origins is perfect. More information will be needed to make a definite conclusion. Most likely, the Etruscans were a combination of an indigenous group of people who were influenced by outside cultures. Even Livy was aware of the problems of writing a history of early Rome, admitting that: "Events before Rome was born have come down to us in old tales with more of the charm of poetry than of sound historical record, and such traditions I propose neither to affirm nor refute." One of these tales was that of Romulus and Remus. Livy is also careful to add that Roman legends describe...
E. The voices who argue that America should and could be an imperial superpower, but lacks sound practical judgment. The thesis of this paper is that the history of the Roman Empire can be matched to that of the United States in terms of economy, political power, as well as aspirations. In this sense, present day America is very similar to fourth of even fifth century Rome; this poses one stringent
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