Etruscan Tomb Paintings

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Mark Cartwright
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published on 08 February 2017
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Available in other languages: French

The Etruscans flourished in central Italy from the 8th to 3rd century BCE, and one of their greatest legacies is the beautifully painted tombs found in many of their important towns. Tarquinia, Cerveteri, Chiusi, and Vulci, in particular, possess tombs with outstanding wall paintings which depict lively and colourful scenes from Etruscan mythology and daily life, and, sometimes, even the tomb's occupant themselves. As the civilization was ruthlessly crushed, absorbed and eliminated almost without trace by the all-conquering Romans, these tomb paintings are a tantalising glimpse into the lost world of the Etruscans.

Velcha, Tomb of Orcus, Tarquinia
Velcha, Tomb of Orcus, Tarquinia
Unknown Artist (Public Domain)

Techniques & Purpose

The colours used by Etruscan artists were made from paints of organic materials. White came from chalk or kaolin, black from a vegetable mix, and green from malachite. Red, ochre and yellow came from iron oxides. Blue occurs rarely and was perhaps made from imported material. There is very little use of shading until influence from Greek artists via Magna Graecia and their new chiaroscuro method with its strong contrasts of light and dark in the 4th century BCE.

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Magnificent though these paintings are, it is to be remembered that they were not seen by anyone except at the burial ceremony or perhaps briefly when another family member was later interred.

At Tarquinia, the paintings are applied to a thin base layer of plaster wash with the artists first drawing outlines using chalk or charcoal. In contrast, many of the wall paintings at Cerveteri and Veii were applied directly to the stone walls without a plaster underlayer. This has, unfortunately, meant that they have deteriorated much more than at other Etruscan sites. Chiusi's Tomb of the Monkey offers another intriguing insight into technique. There the artist may have used a template for his subjects as not only do some of the scenes closely resemble those in tombs at Tarquinia but also a pair of boxers, who stand facing each other, mirror each other's outlines exactly.

Magnificent though these paintings are, it is to be remembered that they were not seen by anyone except at the burial ceremony or perhaps briefly when another family member was later interred. The tombs, then, are a supreme example of conspicuous consumption – an elite (only 2% of tombs were painted) demonstrating in a brief moment their wealth and superiority within the community. Beyond, this, though, the paintings have another purpose and almost certainly a more important one. The Etruscan tomb paintings show that these people believed in an afterlife and that such decoration, along with the provision of grave goods from gold jewellery to dinner sets, somehow comforted and helped the deceased on their journey into that new and unknown world.

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Tomb of The Lionesses, Tarquinia
Tomb of The Lionesses, Tarquinia
AlMare (Public Domain)

General Subjects

The earliest painted Etruscan tombs date to the mid-6th century BCE and have only painted heraldic figures around doorways or the central wide column supporting two entrances. These are typically representations of sphinxes or mythical monsters which acted as guardians and show an influence from Phoenicia and the Near East. The 6th-century BCE Campana Tomb at Veii is a good example of this type. In subsequent centuries the walls of tombs of the Etruscan elite were painted more ambitiously with portions of the tomb divided for specific types of decoration: a dado at the bottom, a large central space, a top cornice or entablature, and the triangular space reaching the ceiling like the pediment of a classical temple.

In the large central wall space and pediment area colourful and lively scenes were painted from mythology, religious practices and ceremonies, and Etruscan daily life, especially outdoor banquets, dancing, hunting, fishing, and sporting events such as funerary games with competitions of running, jumping, wrestling, boxing, and discus. There is also the occasional erotic scene. Musicians are another common subject, playing tortoiseshell lyres, castanets, and the double aulos flute. These instruments, the reclining diners on low one-armed couches, wine-mixing vessels, and the symposium game of throwing wine slops into a vase (kottabos) all show a Greek, and particularly Ionian, influence.

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Musicians Wall-painting, Tarquinia
Musicians Wall-painting, Tarquinia
Yann Forget (Public Domain)

The tombs, perhaps surprisingly, have very few scenes connected with burial and death and, instead, concentrate on the joys of living. Feasting is a scene repeated over and over again at tombs across Etruscan sites. Indeed, the Etruscans were famous throughout the Mediterranean for their lives of luxury and banquets stuffed with exotic foodstuffs. The scenes give an important insight into social status as they show that Etruscan women could attend drinking parties when their counterparts in Greece could not. There only courtesans could entertain the guests, but the inscriptions of some scenes indicate that respectable women participated on an equal footing with males in these Etruscan soirées. We can only speculate the true significance of the painted banquets. Are they depictions of the deceased in a happy moment long since passed or mourners putting on a funeral feast for their lost loved one? Could they even be a view of the afterlife where food and drink and merriment never cease? Perhaps, we shall never know.

Other decorative elements in the tomb paintings include architectural features which are present framing such scenes mentioned above or are even depicted in them. Tombs frequently have a painted door and frame, for example, as a metaphor for the deceased's passage into the next life. Other features appearing in paint include windows and columns, and these are helpful in substantiating archaeological excavations of real Etruscan buildings.

The Tombs at Tarquinia

Tarquinia has around 200 Etruscan tombs, which were rich in artefacts and decorated with magnificent wall-paintings earning it the status of a UNESCO World Heritage site. The earliest tombs are rectangular rock-cut chambers which are painted to replicate the architectural features of real houses. Others have ceilings painted to mimic tent fabric, alluding to the earlier Etruscan practice of using tents to cover the deceased. Mythical creatures are commonly painted on pillars and banquet scenes near the ceilings. Later tombs have false doorways and more ambitious painted scenes covering entire walls, especially of diners reclining on couches, drinkers on mats, hunting, games, and figures bidding a fond farewell to the deceased.

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Tomb of the Funeral Couch, Tarquinia
Tomb of the Funeral Couch, Tarquinia
Jan van der Crabben (CC BY-NC-SA)

The Tomb of the Bulls, dating to 540-530 BCE, has the name of its occupant painted on one wall: Aranth Spurianas. Painted scenes include Achilles attacking Troilus, the young Trojan prince. A frieze above this scene shows two copulating couples (one heterosexual trio and one homosexual couple) and two bulls. Another wall in the tomb has the myth of Bellerophon and Pegasus with the hero riding a horse and facing the Chimera and a sphinx. Finally, there is a scene of a young man riding a hippocamp (mythical sea-horse) over the ocean, perhaps as a metaphor for the tomb occupant's journey into the next life.

The misleadingly named Tomb of the Lionesses, built 530-520 BCE, actually has two painted panthers, a large drinking party scene, and is interesting for its unusual checkered pattern ceiling and six painted wooden columns. There is also a fine frieze of dolphins, birds, palmettes and lotus flowers. The Tomb of the Augurs (c. 520 BCE) has a scene of two nude wrestlers – named as Teitu and Latithe and probably slaves - while between them lies three bowls, the prizes for the victor. There is also a representation of a figure who appears in several other tombs, Phersu - a man wearing a black-bearded mask who holds a ferocious dog on a long leash which attacks a man whose head is wrapped in a cloth.

Typhon, Tarquinia
Typhon, Tarquinia
Unknown Artist (Public Domain)

The Tomb of The Baron (named after its discoverer Baron Kestner), dating to c. 510 BCE, has various human figures either standing or riding, and these include a woman caught in the act of saying farewell, presumably to the tomb's occupant. Contemporary with this tomb is the Cardarelli Tomb (named after a local poet), which has a scene of a woman, wearing a flowing cape and red pointed shoes, accompanied by a slave girl and boy, the latter carrying a fan. Other figures include two nude boxers, dancers, and musicians.

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The c. 480 BCE Tomb of the Bigas has a representation of athletic games and a chariot (bighe) race watched by a large crowd of spectators imaginatively drawn with some figures in three-quarter view and others foreshortened to provide perspective. The Tomb of the Dying and the Tomb of the Dead Man (c. 470 BCE) are unusual in that they actually portray the occupant laid out on their deathbed surrounded by mourning relatives. Finally, the Tomb of the Blue Demons (420-400 BCE) gives a rare glimpse of the Etruscan vision of the underworld (or perhaps a view now more heavily influenced by Greek ideas). Here it is inhabited by blue- and black-skinned demons, one of which holds two snakes, but there are also the more welcoming, already dead relatives of the tomb's occupant, awaiting their reunification in the afterlife.

Tomb of the Triclinium
Tomb of the Triclinium
Muesse (CC BY-SA)

The Tomb of the Monkey at Chiusi

Tombs with wall paintings include the Tomb of the Monkey, constructed 480-470 BCE, which has a scene of a monkey sitting in a tree and another where a woman wearing a red robe is shown sitting under a parasol with her feet up on a stool while she watches a parade of jugglers, athletes, dancers, and chariots. Another female figure is dancing while balancing an incense burner on her head in order to provide a target for drinkers to throw their wine slops at. The ceiling has an interesting single painted coffer which has four sirens supporting a rosette with a four-leafed plant. The motif would reappear in later Roman and early Christian architecture but with angels instead of sirens.

Tomb of the Reliefs, Cerveteri
Tomb of the Reliefs, Cerveteri
Roberto Ferrari (CC BY-SA)

The Tomb of the Stucco Reliefs at Cerveteri

The splendid Tomb of the Stucco Reliefs was constructed at Cerveteri for the Matuna family during the last quarter of the 4th century BCE. It is accessed via a steep stepped corridor which opens into a chamber with stone benches on all sides and places for 32 bodies. The chamber's two columns and walls are covered in painted stucco depictions of everyday objects such as rope, banners, jugs, cutlery, axes, fans, bed linen, armour, trumpets, and even board games. Many of the objects hang from nails in imitation of the typical Etruscan household where storage cabinets were largely unknown and possessions were hung from the walls. Animals also appear seemingly at random with geese, ducks, and even a pet Maltese dog chasing a lizard.

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The Francois Tomb at Vulci

Vulci's outstanding contribution to Etruscan wall painting is the late 4th-century BCE Francois Tomb, named after its discoverer Alessandro Francois. The atrium of the tomb had two main scenes, both of which are bloody massacres: an episode from Theban myth and another from Homer's Iliad. The former shows Eteocles (King of Thebes and son of Oedipus) and his brother Polyneikes, both nude, just at the moment of killing each other with their swords and blood spurting everywhere. The scene from the Iliad shows the sacrifice of Trojan prisoners during the funeral of Achilles' favourite sidekick Patroclus. Also depicted are the figures of Charun, the gatekeeper to the underworld carrying his usual hammer, and a winged Vanth, one of the Etruscan female messenger divinities.

Battle Scene, Francois Tomb, Vulci
Battle Scene, Francois Tomb, Vulci
Yann Forget (Public Domain)

Another wall seems to be a representation of an actual battle between the Etruscans of Vulci and rivals from the Etruscan towns of Volsinii and Sovana. To add another layer of complexity, several of the ten figures are named along with their town in Etruscan, and while some have Etruscan names, others have Roman ones, in reference perhaps to the 6th-century BCE conflict between the Etruscans and Romans which saw various dynastic power struggles where several of Rome's early kings were of Etruscan origin.

The names in the battle include three heroes of Vulci: Macstrna, who may be Rome's legendary second Etruscan king Servius Tullius by another name, and Caile and Avle Vipinas (two brothers) who probably were actual historical figures with tradition stating that they had settled in Rome on the Caelian Hill. Macstrna is in the act of freeing Caile Vipinas whose hands are tied, while Avle Vipinas and three others, presumably also from Vulci, attack with swords a coalition group from Volsinii, Sovana, and Rome. The Roman is identified as Cnaeus Tarquinius (Cneve Tarchunies Rumach), and he is cowering beneath the sword of Marce Camitlnas about to be killed. Some historians regard the Roman figure as Tarquinius Priscus, the legendary king of Rome (r. 616-579 BCE), or a younger relation. If it is the king, then the painting provides an alternative to the Roman tradition that Priscus was assassinated by his sons. The Francois Tomb would suggest that he lost his throne in battle with the Etruscans.

Vel Saties & Arnza, Francois Tomb
Vel Saties & Arnza, Francois Tomb
Louis-garden (CC BY-SA)

Another painting in the tomb, originally located by the doorway of the atrium, shows a man named in an inscription as Vel Saties, perhaps the occupant of the tomb. The figure, possibly a magistrate or auspicium (reader of omens), wears a dark blue embroidered cloak which has several nude male figures who are dancing while carrying shields. The man also wears a laurel crown and is accompanied by a dwarf who is named as Arnza. The dwarf is kneeling while holding a woodpecker or swallow attached to a string. The bird is about to be released, and Vel Saties looks on, perhaps, as in one interpretation, he is about to read the flight of the bird and divine its significance as an omen, a practice common in the Etruscan religion. Alternative interpretations suggest the bird is no more than a child's pet, and a third that Vel Saties gazes at the bird about to be released in a metaphor for his own imminent passage into the next life.

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About the Author

Mark Cartwright
Mark is a full-time author, researcher, historian, and editor. Special interests include art, architecture, and discovering the ideas that all civilizations share. He holds an MA in Political Philosophy and is the WHE Publishing Director.

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Cite This Work

APA Style

Cartwright, M. (2017, February 08). Etruscan Tomb Paintings. World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1013/etruscan-tomb-paintings/

Chicago Style

Cartwright, Mark. "Etruscan Tomb Paintings." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified February 08, 2017. https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1013/etruscan-tomb-paintings/.

MLA Style

Cartwright, Mark. "Etruscan Tomb Paintings." World History Encyclopedia. World History Encyclopedia, 08 Feb 2017. Web. 12 Dec 2023.

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