Detail of the lid of an ash urn in the form of an old married couple. From Volterra. Late second-early first century BCE. Terracotta. H. 41 cm. Volterra, Museo Etrusco Guarnacci
Object 18: Ash Urn Lid: Old Married Couple (Volterra)
Themes: Portraiture and aging, marriage, regional funerary tradition, terracotta ash urns
Visual Description
A terracotta ash urn or lid (hollow, with circular holes in each head for ash insertion) depicting an old married couple lying on a couch, found in the Ulimeto necropolis, Volterra (discovered 1743; collected by Mario Guarnacci). The man wears a tunic, mantle, and thick wreath on his receding hairline; he leans on cushions, resting a veined, be-ringed hand on a drinking bowl, gazing into the distance. The woman lies in front of him on her stomach in a contorted position — sleeveless tunic and mantle — her face in profile turned toward him with a grim, bitter expression. Her elegantly waved hair is gathered in a bun. The woman's forearm (missing) was probably raised to caress his cheek.
Significance
Sometimes called 'the portrait of marriage,' this urn is among the most emotionally powerful surviving Etruscan works. The man's apparently individual features (deep furrows, veined hand) are in fact paralleled on other Volterran urns, confirming that even 'realistic' features are generic Hellenistic portrait types with age-indicating additions. The woman's grim expression — in poignant contrast to her loving gesture — has been read as a 'life full of care.' The hollow terracotta construction (ashes could be inserted through the heads) is a uniquely Etruscan solution uniting the ash container with the image of the deceased. The choice of terracotta (rare in Volterra, where alabaster was common) may be a deliberate archaizing gesture.
Broader Themes & Connections
Realistic vs. idealized portraiture in Hellenistic Etruria; the ash urn as surrogate body; marriage as a theme in funerary art (compare Sarcophagus of Ramtha Visnai); terracotta as an archaizing material choice; Northern Etruscan funerary traditions; the Guarnacci Museum and the preservation of Etruscan heritage.
Key Terms Volterra, ash urn, married couple, Guarnacci Museum, realistic portraiture, terracotta, Hellenistic, aging, marriage, archaizing











