VILLANOVAN CULTURE

the culture of a people of N Italy in the early Iron Age (c.1100–700 b.c.). The term is derived from the town of Villanova, near Bologna, where the first excavations of a Villanovan cemetery were conducted (1853–55). The Villanovans are believed to have come into Italy from Central Europe, the third of a wave of Central European-Danubian invasions. The Villanovans brought with them a reasonably advanced Iron Age culture, closely related to the Hallstatt culture of the E Alps. They lived over a large part of central Italy, including Etruria, Latium, and the region around Bologna. The Villanovans cremated their dead and buried the ashes in urns. The Villanovans were followed by the Etruscans (see Etruscan civilization).

See D. Randall-MacIver, Villanovans and Early Etruscans (1924); H. J. Rose, Primitive Culture in Italy (1926, repr. 1971); L. Barfield, Northern Italy before Rome (1971).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Villanovan Culture
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books on: Villanovan Culture  - 70 results

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...Italy A Reference Guide to History and Culture Roy Domenico Greenwood Press Westport...Italy : a reference guide to history and culture / Roy Domenico. p. cm. Includes bibliographical...to smother all rival local and ancient cultures. Its methods included taxation, national...
...and practised a culture not very different...and the so-called Villanovan iron-using people...in Italy, the Villanovans, still barbaric...the full-blown culture of classical...discovered. The Villanovans, then, seem to...advanced iron culture. The overwhelming...
...the Latial and the Etruscan Villanovan cultures. Binfords implication that...Phase I coincides with Proto-Villanovan culture in Etruria; the beginning...roughly tied to the beginning of Villanovan culture. The length of these periods...
...centum-satem dialect distinction 38 1.7. Aspects of Proto-Indo-European culture and civilization 39 1.7.1. The homeland 39 1.7.2. Lexical reflections of PIE culture 45 1.8. Summary 46 Chapter 2 An outline of Proto-Indo-European...
...bronze. Then, just when the Villanovan culture was beginning to decline...thought at one time that the Villanovan culture had immediately followed the...generally accepted that the Villanovan culture preceded the Oriental influence...
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journal articles on: Villanovan Culture  - 2 results

 
 
...miles between EBA III north-west Anatolia and the Villanovan-Etruscan culture-province of 1st millennium BC Italy. Some at least...Id), extending into the central European Urnfield culture and now evidently also into northern Italy, so it...
...Ceremonial Vase c. Late 7th Century, B.C. and a Set of Rare Villanovan and Archaic Etruscan Blackware with Bucchero and Impasto Ware...the antiquities donated to the museums were Ban Chiang, a culture that existed in Northeast Thailand from approximately 1000...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Villanovan Culture  - 2 results

 
 
VILLANOVAN CULTURE the culture...European-Danubian invasions. The Villanovans brought with them...advanced Iron Age culture, closely related...Randall-MacIver, Villanovans and Early Etruscans...Rose, Primitive Culture in Italy (1926...
...later in N Italy (see Etruscan civilization ; Villanovan culture ) and central Europe. The Early Iron Age in central...metal, pottery, and stone characterized many Iron Age cultures. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University...


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