The most famous
attraction of Cerveteri is the Necropoli della Banditaccia, which has been
declared by UNESCO a World Heritage Site together with the
necropoleis in Tarquinia. It covers an area of 400 ha, of which 10
ha can be visited, encompassing a total of 1,000 tombs often housed in
characteristic mounds. It is the largest ancient necropolis in the
Mediterranean area. The name Banditaccia comes from the leasing (bando)
of areas of land to the Cerveteri population by the local landowners.
The tombs date from
the 9th century BC (Villanovan culture) to the late Etruscan age (3rd century
BC). The
most ancient ones are in the shape of a pit, in which the ashes of the dead
were housed; also simple potholes are present.
From the Etruscan
period are two types of tombs: the mounds and the so-called "dice",
the latter being simple square tombs built in long rows along
"roads". The visitable area contains two such "roads", the
Via dei Monti Ceriti and the Via dei Monti della Tolfa (6th century
BC).
The mounds are
circular structures, and the interiors, carved from the living rock, house
a reconstruction of the house of the dead, including a corridor (dromos), a
central hall and several rooms. Modern knowledge of Etruscan
daily life is largely dependent on the numerous decorative details and finds
from such tombs. The most famous of these mounds is the so-called Tomba
dei Rilievi (Tomb of the Reliefs, 3rd century BC), identified from an
inscription as belonging to one Matunas and provided with an exceptional series
of frescoes, bas-reliefs and sculptures portraying a large series of
contemporary life tools.
The most recent tombs date from the 3rd century BC. Some of them are marked by external cippi, which
are cylindrical for men, and in the shape of a small house for women.
A large number of
finds excavated at Cerveteri are in the National Etruscan Museum , with
others in the Vatican Museums and many other museums around the
world. Others,
mainly pottery, are in the Archaeological Museum at Cerveteri itself.
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