Chapter 8: The Etruscans
So, what I got out of this chapter is a little interesting on a personal level and not what I was expecting. Before I state it, I would like to say that I honestly had not heard about the Etruscans before Any who, my realization and understanding is that the Etruscans are the better less known or less public Greeks in almost every way. My problems that I became aware of last week with the Greeks have been resolved by the Etruscans. This intrigues me since the cultures are so closely related geometrically and in the measurement of time.
I wasn’t exactly a fan of the depiction of women and how they were treated in their cultures of the previous chapters. The Etruscan culture and how it is shows how women were treated is much more in line with how I believe women should be treated. This week we learned that the Etruscans respected their women and they were not held in a sort of servitude that the Greeks and Egyptians had. In their art, the Etruscans showed that women were closer to equals to men than any of the other cultures we had experienced up to this point. They were able to go out in public and partake in events like banquets that were seen as male-centric in the Greek culture.
I love seeing that women were also given their own art pieces that were probably used on a daily basis. I speak of the mirrors with the mythological scenes of empowerment that also have inscriptions on them, thus showing that not only women were more equal, but also literateÂ
adding a layer of equality.  Continuing with the message of strong women, I loved that the majority of Etruscan art that was of mythological scenes shows mainly the goddesses and that these goddesses weren’t just pretty but had strong and sometimes higher purposes and titles than the gods.
The Etruscan funerary art and culture is treated much like I believe should be for anyone, especially for myself when the day comes. Instead of completely mourning and being sad for the life lost, the Etruscans also celebrate the life of the deceased. In doing this, they have urns that show the likeness of the deceased as well as where they lived. Then, there are the sarcophagi that continue to celebrate the deceased by showing their likeness and even the relationships between husband and wife. The fact the the closeness of husband and wife was not something to be ashamed of or even looked down on, but celebrated just makes me smile. The tomb paintings also continued this idea of celebration with the occasional mourner of the deceased. Even this, I appreciate. I think that this is a much better way to go about the rituals of previous cultures. Close to how the Egyptians in the way that they are the same styles of doing things, but way different in how they were completed. The Egyptians were much more of a reverence for only the nobility, where these tombs were for the individual as well and they showed who they were as people instead of how they wanted to be seen by the public.
Celebrating the dead is becoming more used as we progress through the text and I too also enjoy the idea of creating likenesses of those deceased and filling their tombs with decorated urns, paintings on the walls -- depicting various different activities that were once enjoyed by the deceased -- and even protecting the dead by drawing images of leopards for example to ward off evil spirits that seek to disturb those who were laid to rest inside their massive tombs.












