Vetulonia, formerly
called Vetulonium (Etruscan Vatluna), was an ancient town of Etruria, Italy,
the site of which is probably occupied by the modern village of Vetulonia,
which up to 1887 bore the name of Colonnata and Colonna di
Buriano: the site is currently a frazione of the comune of Castiglione
della Pescaia, with some 400 inhabitants.
It lies 300m above sea
level, about ten miles directly northwest of Grosseto, on the northeast
side of the hills which project from the flat Maremma and form the promontory of
Castiglione.
Vetulonia has Etruscan origins. Dionysius
of Halicarnassus places the city within the Latin alliance against Rome in
the seventh century BC. According to Silius Italicus (Punica VIII.485ff),
the Romans adopted their magisterial insignia, the Lictors rods
and fasces and the curule seat, from Vetulonia; in 1898, a
tomb in the necropolis was discovered with a bundle of iron rods with a
double-headed axe in the centre, and soon afterwards, a grave stela inscribed
for Avele Feluske was discovered, on which the fasces were pictured. Pliny
the Elder and Ptolemy also cite the town. The rich votive
furnishing from the two extensive necropoleis attest to the
importance of Vetulonia's elite.
The so-called Mura
dell'Arce (cyclopean walls) date probably from the 6th-5th century BC, and
aerial photography has revealed further stretches, which show the political and
commercial importance of Vetulonia, which was famous for its goldsmiths. Under
the Roman Empire, however, it shrank to a secondary center.
Little is known
also about medieval Vetulonia: first contended between the abbots of San
Bartolomeo di Sestinga and the Lambardi family of Buriano, it was acquired by
the commune of Massa Marittima in 1323. Nine
years later it was handed over to SIENA.
The site of the ancient city was not identified before
1881. The Etruscan city
situated on the hill of Colonna di Buriano, where there are remains of city
walls of massive limestone, in almost horizontal courses, was
accompanied by two necropolis partly excavated by Isidoro Falchi in
1885-86; the town was renamed Vetulonia by royal decree in 1887.
The objects
discovered in its extensive seventh-century necropolis, where over 1,000
tombs have been excavated, are now in the museums of Grosseto and Florence.
The most important tombs, in this "richest and most interesting tomb group
of northern Etruria", were covered by tumuli,
which still form a prominent feature in the landscape.
Vetulonia: Tomb of Pietrera.
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