November 22, 2024

Brighton Journal

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24 2,300-year-old Roman and Etruscan statues and thousands of coins unearthed in Italy | Experts say the archaeological treasure will “rewrite history”.

24 2,300-year-old Roman and Etruscan statues and thousands of coins unearthed in Italy |  Experts say the archaeological treasure will “rewrite history”.

Italian authorities announced the unusual discovery on Tuesday 2,000 year old bronze statues A An old hot spring in TuscanyAnd noted that The discovery will “rewrite the history” of the transition between the Etruscan civilization and the Roman Empire.

Discovered at the archaeological site of San Cassiano dei Bagni near Siena, One of the most important ever undertaken in the Mediterranean Massimo Osanna, director of museums at the Ministry of Culture, said it was “undoubtedly the best since the discovery of Riyas’ famous bronze warriors underwater in 1972.”

Thanks to the land that protected them, The stats were spot on. Next to them were 5,000 gold, silver and bronze coins.added the ministry. A young Ebebe appears to be sleeping inside the large Roman pool where the statues were found; Hygeia, goddess of health, with a snake coiled around her arm, partly submerged in water, Apollo.

As a testament to the discovery’s importance, the ministry announced that a new museum would be built in the area.

Jacopo Tabolli, who coordinated the excavations for the University for Foreigners in Siena, noted. The discovery is important because it sheds new light on the end of the Etruscan civilization and the expansion of the Roman Empire between the 2nd and 1st centuries BC.

Although this period is today marked by wars and conflicts in the regions of Tuscany, Umbria and Lazio, bronze images show Etruscan and Roman families praying together to the gods in the sanctuary of the Holy Baths. The figures have Etruscan and Latin inscriptions.

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“While social and civil wars were fought outside the sanctuary, inside, families of the Etruscan and Roman elite prayed together in an atmosphere of peace surrounded by conflict,” Taboli said. “This possibility is an exceptional opportunity to rewrite the relationship and dialectic between the Etruscans and the Romans.”

Some of the more than two dozen pieces are full-length figures of humans or gods, while others represent body parts and organs that are offered to gods to cure certain ailments through terminal water, the ministry said in a statement.