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Sabine Chariot unearthed.
#1
"An ancient king's war chariot found in a tomb near Rome has helped rewrite the history of the Romans and their Sabine rivals .

"This chariot is an exceptional find," said archaeologist Paola Santoro .

"It shows that the city of Ereteum remained independent long after the Sixth Century BC." "In other Sabine cities like Custumerium, conquered by the Romans, the custom of putting regal objects in king's tombs had died out by that time" .

"We can say that Eretum kept its independence until the Fourth Century BC." Santoro said her team had recovered all the metal parts of the bronze-and-iron decorated chariot and had used echo-soundings to trace the imprints of the long-decayed wooden parts .

"This will enable us to reconstruct the whole chariot," she said .

The chariot, which accompanied the king on his last journey, was placed at the entrance to the tomb, the largest chamber tomb ever found in Italy .

Santoro's team have also found an Etruscan-style terracotta throne - "a metre high, worthy of the king's stature" - and four large bronze cauldrons with bull-hoof supports .

Less than a dozen of this type of cauldron had been discovered before, Santoro said .

The tomb was found in the main room in the three-room complex, next to a wall recess where a wooden coffin containing the king's ashes would have been placed .

The horses that had drawn the chariot would have been sacrificed at the entrance to this room, Santoro said . "
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[url:t5fwi2xw]http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~mharrsch/2006_05_01_romanarch_archive.html#114746737591915385[/url]
Cristina
The Hoplite Association
[url:n2diviuq]http://www.hoplites.org[/url]
The enemy is less likely to get wind of an advance of cavalry, if the orders for march were passed from mouth to mouth rather than announced by voice of herald, or public notice. Xenophon
-
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#2
Hi Arthes,

[url:25sp0h3t]http://ansa.it/main/notizie/awnplus/english/news/2006-05-12_1121483.html[/url]

can't wait to see photos of the reconstructed chariot, perhaps it will be as nice as the well-known Etruscan chariot from Monteleone. Big Grin

Greets - Uwe
Greets - Uwe
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#3
I'm not sure which one you're talking about, but the Etruscan chariot in the Met is most likely a fraud, according to my sources. It's still on display though, so I know that the curator there has confidence in it.

Travis
Theodoros of Smyrna (Byzantine name)
aka Travis Lee Clark (21st C. American name)

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#4
Hi Travis,

yes, I thought of the chariot from Monteleone, displayed in the Metropolitan Museum.

[url:1zj27s73]http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ho/04/eust/ho_03.23.1.htm[/url]

That shall be a fraud? :?

Greets - Uwe
Greets - Uwe
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#5
Greetings,
I don't know about it being a fake but it was supposedly obtained fraudently...
[urlConfusedot5jqev]http://www.elginism.com/20050127/116/[/url]
The reconstruction of the Sabine chariot will be awaited with interest.. Big Grin
regards
Arthes
Cristina
The Hoplite Association
[url:n2diviuq]http://www.hoplites.org[/url]
The enemy is less likely to get wind of an advance of cavalry, if the orders for march were passed from mouth to mouth rather than announced by voice of herald, or public notice. Xenophon
-
Reply
#6
Well, the Etruscan chariot is suspicious for many reasons. One is the manner in which it was procured, as Arthes points out, the other is that it is an isolate with no other comparable items (not that that doesn't happen in art history legitimately, but it's suspicious)

I'll have to ask Jane Evans what she thinks. She teaches a very popular course here at Temple on Frauds and Forgeries, by far her most popular course at Tyler school of Art.

Travis
Theodoros of Smyrna (Byzantine name)
aka Travis Lee Clark (21st C. American name)

Moderator, RAT

Rules for RAT:
<a class="postlink" href="http://www.romanarmy.com/rat/viewtopic.php?Rules">http://www.romanarmy.com/rat/viewtopic.php?Rules for posting

Oh! and the Toledo helmet .... oh hell, forget it. :? <img src="{SMILIES_PATH}/icon_confused.gif" alt=":?" title="Confused" />:?
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