Use "etruscan|etruscans" in a sentence

1. The kings of Rome who had been trying to disassociate from the Etruscans were in continuous Belligerencies with them and in the year 510 BC, in alliance with the Greeks from Syracuse defeated the Etruscans at Veius, (Veio in Italian) a rich and prosperous Etruscan town 10 miles North-West of Rome.

2. Bulla, characteristic Etruscan ornamental pendant

3. Etruscan Bulla depicting Icarus Roman Bullae

4. Prayers and offerings for the dead were practiced by the Etruscans.

5. The Etruscans created fine art with terra cotta, or baked clay.

6. As one source says, “the Etruscans always loved a monster.”

7. The Romans adopted the practice of wearing Bullae from the Etruscans

8. The Etruscans created fine art with terra cotta, or beitbaked clay.

9. Apartments and Villas a stone's throw from the beaches of Riva Etruscan!

10. However the Etruscan forces eventually fled the field, the Romans claiming the victory.

11. These soldiers were the staple unit after Rome threw off Etruscan rule.

12. The Etruscans soon engaged in active commerce, which they boosted through piracy and warfare.

13. Descended from wild cabbage native to the Mediterranean coast, Broccoli was bred by the ancient Etruscans.

14. There is no *safin- in Etruscan, a word Conjectured from an Italic ethnonym

15. The fifty-six Etruscan, Greek, and Italic carved Ambers date from around 650 to 300 B.C

16. Etruscans and Greek settlers produced wine in Italy before the Romans planted their own vineyards in the 2nd century BC.

17. About 60 words are known, but some were borrowed from Latin (liber.tos. < libertus) or Etruscan.

18. Variants of the name “Astarte” can be found in the Phoenician, Hebrew, Egyptian and Etruscan languages

19. 25 The exhibition organisers have preferred to explore the social, political and religious mechanisms of the Etruscan confederation of city-states.

20. In stark contrast with the Greeks or Romans, women in Etruscan society enjoyed a position of social equality.

21. The old town is wonderful, streets, buildings, main square, etruscan remains, but this Baptistery (and the cathedral) are only nice

22. Achilleus (Greek Ἀχιλλεύς transliterated Akhilleus Roman: Achilles, Etruscan; Achle or Achile) was a hero of the Greeks (Achaeans) in the legends of the Trojan War, i.e

23. The right bank of the Tiber was occupied by the Etruscan city of Veii, and the other borders were occupied by Italic tribes.

24. Ceremony (n.) late 14c., cerymonye, "a religious observance, a solemn rite," from Old French ceremonie and directly from Medieval Latin ceremonia, from Latin caerimonia "holiness, sacredness; awe; reverent rite, sacred Ceremony," an obscure word, possibly of Etruscan origin, or a reference to the ancient rites performed by the Etruscan pontiffs at Caere, near Rome.

25. Definitions for Aruspex (n.) One of the class of diviners among the Etruscans and Romans, who foretold events by the inspection of the entrails of victims offered on the altars of the gods.

26. HAruspices, ancient Etruscan diviners, “entrail observers” whose art consisted primarily in deducing the will of the gods from the appearance presented by the entrails of the sacrificial animal, especially the liver and gallbladder of sheep

27. Built on the site of an Etruscan settlement, Florence, the symbol of the Renaissance, rose to economic and cultural pre-eminence under the Medici in the 15th and 16th centuries.

28. The Romans, similarly, were indebted to their Etruscan neighbors and forefathers who supplied them with a wealth of knowledge essential for future architectural solutions, such as hydraulics and in the construction of arches.

29. The given name Martin is an Anglicisation of the Roman name Martinus, derived from Mars, the god of war. The name is thus likely to have an Etruscan derivation (see Mars ).

30. In the catalog to the 1986 exhibition in Casa Buonarroti, Filippo Buonarroti e la cultura Antiquaria sotto gli ultimi Medici, Daniela Gallo assumes he must have collected most of the Etruscan art in the collection.

31. A.F. Marcucci (1717-1778), in his "Saggio delle cose ascolane" (1766), asserted that the word Ophis has the same meaning - both in Greek and in Etruscan - that is "snake"; according to him, then, the Etrurians had founded Offida.

32. Within the Etruscan town walls, elderly Italian men with watchful eyes can be seen Commiserating in doorways, while Italian women tend to patio gardens, and hang laundry from small windows down hidden lanes.

33. The three stars hotel Alta La Vista is located in Tuscany in Marina di Castagneto, one of the best known places of the Etruscan Coast, awarded by the European Union with the Blue Flag for the sea and the services offered.

34. Diverse Maniere d'adornare i cammini ed ogni altra parte degli edifizi desunte dall'architettura Egizia, Etrusca, e Greca con un Ragionamento Apologetico in defesa dell'Architettura Egizia, e Toscana, opera del Cavaliere Giambattista Piranesi Architetto (Diverse Ways of ornamenting chimneypieces and all other parts of houses taken from Egyptian, Etruscan, and Grecian architecture with an

35. Volterra and its Etruscan lore and pottery have ever been a source of pride among Italian Antiquarians. ITALIAN HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS FROM A MOTOR CAR FRANCIS MILTOUN But we see amongst ourselves how great works are ascribed to the devil or to the Romans by Antiquarians. THE POSTHUMOUS WORKS OF THOMAS DE QUINCEY, VOL

36. Adonis (Άδωνις) was the God of Beauty and desire, and is an archetypal life-death-rebirth deity in Greek mythology, and a central cult figure in various mystery religions.1 He is closely related to the Egyptian Osiris, the Semitic Tammuz & Baal Hadad, the Etruscan Atunis and the Phrygian Attis, all of whom are deities of rebirth and vegetation (Some mythologists believe he was later

37. You can loll with the students from the International University on the steps of the Cathedral or amble down the broad pedestrian way from those steps to sit on a bench at the other end and watch as the Umbrian hills dissolve into a twilight vision that is the landscape behind the Mona Lisa. The more energetic can hike out to St. Angelo's in the northwest of the city, where sixteen ancient columns form the centrepiece of a brick church that glows with the light from garnet windows on a site that has been sacred from the times of the Etruscans.