Etruscan religion

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

  • major reference
    • satyr
      In ancient Italic people: Religion and mythology

      The essential ingredient in Etruscan religion was a belief that human life was but one small meaningful element in a universe controlled by gods who manifested their nature and their will in every facet of the natural world as well as in objects created by humans. This belief permeates…

      Read More
  • literature
    • satyr
      In ancient Italic people: Language and writing

      An Etruscan religious literature did exist, and evidence suggests that there may have been a body of historical literature and drama as well. (Known, for example, is the name of a playwright, Volnius, of obscure date, who wrote “Tuscan tragedies.”) Etruscan had ceased to be spoken in…

      Read More
  • Minerva
    • Minerva as goddess of war, bronze statuette, early Etruscan; in the British Museum
      In Minerva

      …Athena introduced at Rome from Etruria. This is reinforced by the fact that she was one of the Capitoline triad, in association with Jupiter and Juno. Her shrine on the Aventine in Rome was a meeting place for guilds of craftsmen, including at one time dramatic poets and actors.

      Read More
  • Roman religion
    • Temple of Diana
      In Roman religion: Religion in the Etruscan period

      The apparent amalgamation of the Latin and Sabine villages of Rome coincided with, or more probably was soon followed by, a period in which Rome was under the control of at least one dynasty (the Tarquins) from Etruria, north of the Tiber (c.

      Read More
    • Temple of Diana
      In Roman religion: The divinities of the later Regal period

      …Servius Tullius reigned between two Etruscan kings, Tarquinius Priscus and Tarquinius Superbus. The Etruscan kings began and perhaps finished the most important Roman temple, devoted to the cult of the Capitoline Triad, Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva (the dedication was believed to have taken place in 509 or 507 bce after…

      Read More

divination

  • In divination: Nature and significance

    …was seen by the ancient Etruscans in Italy and the Maya in Mexico as sacred; his concern was for the very destiny of his people. Divination has many rationales, and it is difficult to describe the diviner as a distinctive social type. He or she may be a shaman (private…

    Read More
  • In divination: Types of divination

    …or “oracular,” style, and the Etruscans, in contrast, elaborated upon the more systematic but less versatile inductive practice of Mesopotamia—developing an authoritative state religion in which the positions were monopolized by the ruling class. Greek divination was eccentric in that sanctuaries were located apart from the centres of political power…

    Read More
  • In magic: Ancient Mediterranean world

    Divination took many forms—from the Etruscan art of haruspicina (reading entrails of animal sacrifices) to the Roman practice of augury (interpreting the behaviour of birds)—and was widely practiced as a means of determining propitious times to engage in specific activities; it often played a role in political decision making. Ancient…

    Read More
  • Haruspices
    • In Haruspices

      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. An Etruscan model liver from Piacenza survived in the 21st century. Haruspices…

      Read More