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Funded Projects › HORIZON

SETRU-2.0 · Stone sarcophagi of Etruria: renewing research in the digital era

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 February 202431 January 2026EU funding €188,590Call HORIZON-MSCA-2022-PF-01

Stone sarcophagi are one of the most important witnesses of Etruscan funerary art and craftmanship. Although a few examples areattested between the 8th and the 5th centuries BC (Orientalist, Archaic and Classical periods), most of the production dates from the4th-2nd centuries BC (Hellenistic period) and is mainly distributed in the necropolises of the southern Etruria (northern Lazio), andmore specifically in the territory of the city of Tarquinia. The reference publication on these objects dates from the mid-20th centuryand concerns only Hellenistic decorated pieces, studied through the prism of art history (iconography, stylistics); it was expanded in1974 and 2004 to form a corpus of ca. 420 decorated sarcophagi well preserved. The undecorated specimens have never been takeninto consideration, even though they represent between half and two third of the Etruscan stone sarcophagi of this period. Theearliest examples have never been the subject of a synthetic study any more.The SETRU-2.0 project aims to fill the gaps in research on all Etruscan stone sarcophagi and to establish a new reference publicationthat goes beyond artistic and stylistic considerations, through a complete inventory these objects and a methodological guideapplicable to future discoveries and other type of handmade products. Its originality lies in the fact that it considers the entireproduction (from the 8th to the 2nd century BC; sarcophagi whole or fragmentary, decorated or not, painted or not, inscribed or not,of fine or coarse workmanship), on a global and interdisciplinary approach (archaeology, art history, epigraphy, geology,anthropology, etc.), and on the implementation of a specific methodology, from the study of tool marks to the use of 2.5 and 3Dsurveying (RTI, photogrammetry, lasergrammetry) and analysis tools and techniques (GIS, 3D modelling). This project is definitivelyinnovative for this class of object and more widely in Etruscology.

Consortium · 1 organisation

coordinator

UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI ROMA LA SAPIENZA

IT · €188,590

Research fields

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