"An ancient friend of mine". A tribute to...
Velathri (Italy), third century BC.

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"An ancient friend of mine". A tribute to...
Velathri (Italy), third century BC.
L'Ombra della Sera (The Evening Shadow)
Volterra in Etruscan times, known as Velathri, was one of the most important centers in northern Etruria. Its hilltop location overlooking the Cecina Valley made it naturally fortified and strategically positioned to control the surrounding land and trade routes.
Already inhabited during the Villanovan period (9th–8th century BC), Volterra fully developed between the 7th and 4th centuries BC, becoming part of the Etruscan League, a group of twelve city-states that included Tarquinia and Cerveteri. During this time, the city grew prosperous thanks to agriculture, livestock, and especially the exploitation of local mineral resources.
One of the most distinctive features of Etruscan Volterra is its alabaster craftsmanship. This soft, luminous stone was carved into funerary urns, statues, and decorative objects. Many of these works are now preserved in the Guarnacci Etruscan Museum, a key institution for understanding the ancient city.
From an urban and defensive standpoint, impressive sections of the Etruscan walls still survive today, built from massive stone blocks. One of the most striking examples is the Porta all’Arco, a monumental gate from the 4th century BC that remains remarkably well preserved and is decorated with three carved heads, likely with a protective or religious meaning.
The society of Velathri was aristocratic and deeply connected to funerary rituals. Its necropolises, with richly decorated tombs and sculpted urns, reflect a complex view of the afterlife. It is within this cultural context that the “Shadow of the Evening” was created, with its mysterious and symbolic character.
With the expansion of Rome, Volterra was gradually absorbed into the Roman world between the 4th and 3rd centuries BC, though it retained elements of its Etruscan identity for a long time.
Volterra today is a small Tuscan town that has preserved its medieval character, with stone streets, historic buildings, and ancient walls. It’s known for its alabaster craftsmanship, cultural tourism, and its strong connection to its Etruscan past, which remains a central part of its identity.
A Museo Etrusco Guarnacci, when the last visitors had gone and the lights softened into a dim, amber glow, the little bronze figure stood alone in its glass case.
The Ombra della sera had watched centuries pass without moving. It did not sleep, because it did not need to. It remembered.
It remembered Velathri, the ancient Volterra, when the city’s walls were new and the wind carried the scent of earth and fire from the kilns. It remembered the artisan who shaped it—hands steady, eyes intent—stretching the body into that impossible length. Not a mistake, not a whim: a vision. “You are not a man,” the artisan had whispered while polishing the bronze. “You are what remains of a man.”
At dusk, the artisan had held the figure up against the fading light. The shadow cast on the wall was long, thin, almost endless. That was when the name was born.
For a time, the statuette had stood in a sanctuary, an offering between the human and the divine. People came, murmuring prayers. They saw in its form something they could not quite explain—something between presence and absence. A body, yes, but also a trace.
Then came change. The world shifted, as it always does. Rome grew powerful, and Velathri became something else. The statuette was moved, forgotten, buried. Darkness settled over it—not the gentle darkness of evening, but the long, heavy sleep of earth.
Centuries passed.
When it emerged again, it no longer belonged to a single pair of hands or a single belief. It belonged to history. To memory. To curiosity.
Now it stood in the museum, behind glass, observed instead of worshipped.
But something had not changed.
One evening, a young woman lingered longer than the others. She had wandered through the rooms of the museum, past urns and faces carved in stone, until she found herself standing before the elongated figure.
She tilted her head.
“It looks… modern,” she said quietly, almost to herself.
The room was silent. Outside, beyond the walls of the museum, the modern town of Volterra moved in its usual rhythm—cars passing, voices echoing through narrow streets, lights flickering on as the sun disappeared behind the hills.
The woman stepped closer. In the glass, she saw her reflection overlapping with the thin bronze figure. For a moment, the two shapes aligned—her living form and that stretched, ancient one.
And in that instant, something subtle shifted.
Not movement, not truly. But a recognition.
The statuette had seen this before—not her, specifically, but this feeling. The moment when a living person recognizes themselves in something impossibly distant. The same question, repeated across millennia:
What remains of us, when time stretches us into shadows?
The woman smiled faintly, as if she had found an answer she couldn’t quite put into words. Then she turned and left.
The lights dimmed further.
Night settled over Volterra.
And the Ombra della sera remained, as it always had— a bridge between the Etruscan city it once knew and the modern one that surrounds it now, a silent figure, endlessly stretched between past and present, like a shadow that never quite disappears.
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