Etruscan priestess 200-100 BCE

"Now there was an oracle of Tethys in Tuscany, from which there was brought to Tarchetius a response that a virgin must have intercourse with this phantom, and she should bear a son most illustrious for his valour, and of surpassing good fortune and strength. Tarchetius, accordingly, told the prophecy to one of his daughters, and bade her consort with the phantom; but she disdained to do so, and sent a handmaid in to it. When Tarchetius learned of this, he was wroth, and seized both the maidens, purposing to put them to death. But the Goddess Hestia appeared to him in his sleep and forbade him the murder. He therefore imposed upon the maidens the weaving of a certain web in their imprisonment, assuring them that when they had finished the weaving of it, they should then be given in marriage. By day, then, these maidens wove, but by night other maidens, at the command of Tarchetius, unravelled their web. And when the handmaid became the mother of twin children by the phantom, Tarchetius gave them to a certain Teratius with orders to destroy them. This man, however, carried them to the river-side and laid them down there. Then a she-wolf visited the babes and gave them suck, while all sorts of birds brought morsels of food and put them into their mouths, until a cow-herd spied them, conquered his amazement, ventured to come to them, and took the children home with him. Thus they were saved, and when they were grown up, they set upon Tarchetius and overcame him. At any rate, this is what a certain Promathion says, who compiled a history of Italy."

-Plutarch, The Parallel Lives: The Life of Romulus, Ch.2

 

"Etrusco-Latin bronze votive statue, 200-100 BC. Possibly a priestess or Goddess.".Current location: British Museum.

Her necklace kinda looks like a Celtic torc.


Source:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/thewholeman/3152268289

https://fuckyeahetruscans.tumblr.com/post/18668714898/etruscan-bronze-british-museum

https://www.pinterest.co.uk/pin/379991287313074439/?nic_v2=1aMM3oNkZ

 

Quote:

 https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Dionysius_of_Halicarnassus/1B*.html#30.3

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