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Iberia

Highly interesting artistic flowerings occurred in Spain at the end of the protohistoric era. First, in the southwest of the peninsula, near the town of Cádiz, there developed at the extreme end of the 2nd millennium bce a civilization, still poorly understood, that is attributed to the semi-historic, semilegendary state of Tartessus. Archaeology has not yet revealed evidence of the splendour ascribed by the ancients to the Tartessian culture, which was strongly influenced by early Phoenician commercial contacts from the southern coast of Spain. Along the coasts of the Levant and penetrating deeply into the interior of the peninsula, an indigenous population, the Iberians, developed a truly original art under combined Grecian, Carthaginian, and Phoenician influences.

Many Iberian dwelling sites have been discovered on the eastern coasts of Spain, where they were established on high places such as steep-sloped plateaus and protected by surrounding walls with round and square towers and doors. Their street networks did not seem to follow a regular plan. Great temples such as those of Castellar de Santisteban and Despeñaperros in the Sierra Morena have sacred storerooms where a great number (about 6,000 for the two sites) of votive statuettes have been discovered.

Italy

The fate and art of the Etruscan people—who made their appearance in the heart of Italy between the Arno and Tiber rivers about 700 bce and vanished, under the legions’ blows, in the last centuries of the Roman Republic—must be mentioned here because in the early years of their existence they were deeply involved in Italic protohistory. In antiquity the Etruscans were regarded as skillful architects and excellent builders. Precise ritual rules of town planning made it possible for them to construct cities on regular plans, the most beautiful remains of which are those of Marzabotto, near Bologna, and of Capua, in Campania. Nothing much remains of the Tuscan cities, which were, nevertheless, very splendid. On the other hand, there remain thousands of tombs that reveal the structure of the vanished houses. The tomb was the dwelling of the dead and simulated the appearance of one or several rooms, constructed in bedrock and built of stone. Thus well protected, Etruscan grave goods and artistic creations were preserved.

Raymond Bloch David John Watkin

What little remains of Etruscan stonework has survived by virtue of its massiveness. Foundations of city walls survive at Volterra, Volsinii, and Cortona, but those of Perugia are more complete and have surviving vaulted gates. The tombs, themselves replicas of house interiors, show something of moldings, arches, and vaults. True vaulting and arching were known, and these enabled buildings larger than those of Greece to be constructed. Wood was the chief building material for domestic purposes and for temples, but only the terra-cotta decorations survive. Blocks of houses in carefully paved streets are known only from Marzabotto, although the layout of the tombs with paved streets in the Banditaccia at Caere and the Cuccumella at Vetulonia makes them veritable cities of the dead. The Latian hut urns show that houses of the Villanovan period (8th century bce) were circular in plan with conical roofs, but a stone urn from Clusium is modeled in the form of a rectangular Etruscan house erected on a tall, stepped platform. The roof is a hipped gable and has a gabled gallery over it. In this connection it is interesting that the Romans attributed to the Etruscans the construction of the atrium house. Temples were rectangular in plan and divided into three cellae (chambers); ground plans and nothing more are known from Rome and Bolsena. Etruscan temples, such as those of which remains survive at Bolsena and Orvieto, were built of wood and brick upon high platforms of dressed stone and were consequently more perishable than their Greek equivalents. They were crowned and decorated by brightly painted statues and revetments of terra-cotta, many of which have survived.

William Culican David John Watkin