Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXIV, No. 6, June 1849

Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXIV, No. 6, June 1849

Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXIV, No. 6, June 1849The Grotta del Tifonan Etruscan tomb opened by the Chevalier...
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Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXIV, No. 6, June 1849

Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXIV, No. 6, June 1849

$105.31 $52.63

Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXIV, No. 6, June 1849

$105.31 $52.63
Author: Various
Format: eBook
Language: English

Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXIV, No. 6, June 1849

The Grotta del Tifonan Etruscan tomb opened by the Chevalier Manzi, in 1833discovered some peculiarities at the time of its opening, which greatly mystified the cognoscenti of Italy. It was found, by certain Roman inscriptions upon two of the sarcophagi, that the inmates belonged to another people, and that the vaults of the noble Tarquinian family of Pomponius, had, for some unaccountable reasons, been opened for the admission of the stranger. No place was so sacred among the Etruscans as that of burial; and the tombs of the Lucumones of Tarquinia, were held particularly sacred to the immediate connections of the chief. Here he lay in state, and the scions and shoots of his blood and bosom were grouped around him, being literally, as the old Hebrew phraseology hath it, gathered to their fathers. It was not often, and then only under peculiar circumstances, which rendered the exception to the rule proper, that the leaves of stone which closed the mausoleum were rolled aside for the admission of foreigners. The Grotta del Tifon, so called from the Etruscan Typhon, or Angel of Death, which appears conspicuously painted upon the square central pillar, was the last resting-place of the distinguished family of Pomponius. It is a chamber eighteen paces long, and sixteen broad, and is hewn out in the solid rock. The sarcophagi were numerous when first discovered. The ledges were fullevery place was occupied, and a further excavation had been made for the reception of other tenants. These tombs were all carefully examined by the explorers with that intense feeling of curiosity which such a discovery was calculated to inspire. The apartment was in good preservation; the paintings bright and distinct, though fully twenty-two centuries must have elapsed since the colors were first spread by the hands of the artist. And there were the inscriptions, just declaring enough to heighten and to deepen curiosity. A name, a fragmentand that in Latin. That a Roman should sleep in a tomb of the Etruscan, was itself a matter of some surprise; but that this strangeness should be still further distinguished by an inscription, an epitaph, in the language of the detested nationas if the affront were to be rendered more offensive and more imposingwas calculated still further to provoke astonishment! Why should the hateful and always hostile Roman find repose among the patriarchs of Tarquinia?the rude, obscure barbarian, in the mausoleum of a refined and ancient family? Why, upon an Etruscan tomb, should there be other than an Etruscan inscription? One of the strangers was a woman! Who was she, and for what was she thus distinguished? By what fatality came she to find repose among the awful manes of a people, between whom and her own, the hatred was so deep and inextinguishableending not even with the entire overthrow of the superior race? The sarcophagus of the other stranger was without an inscription. But he, too, was a Roman! His effigy, betraying all the characteristics of his people, lay at length above his tomb; a noble youth, with features of exquisite delicacy and beauty, yet distinguished by that falcon visage, which so well marked the imposing features of the great masters of the ancient world. ......Buy Now (To Read More)

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Ebook Number: 53963
Author: Various
Release Date: Jan 14, 2017
Format: eBook
Language: English

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Editor: Graham, George R., 1813-1894

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