Etruscan votive bust of a woman from Cerveteri 300-200 BCE

"For this reason, therefore, I am persuaded that the Pelasgians are a different people from the Tyrrhenians. And I do not believe, either, that the Tyrrhenians were a colony of the Lydians; for they do not use the same language as the latter, nor can it be alleged that, though they no longer speak a similar tongue, they still retain some other indications of their mother country. For they neither worship the same Gods as the Lydians nor make use of similar laws or institutions, but in these very respects they differ more from the Lydians than from the Pelasgians. Indeed, those probably come nearest to the truth who declare that the nation migrated from nowhere else, but was native to the country, since it is found to be a very ancient nation and to agree with no other either in its language or in its manner of living. And there is no reason why the Greeks should not have called them by this name, both from their living in towers and from the name of one of their rulers."

-Dionysius of Halicarnassus, The Roman Antiquities: Book 1.30


Votive bust of a woman. Terracotta. 300-200 BC. Sculpted in Cerveteri. Etruscan art. Current location: British Museum.



Source:

https://www.akg-images.fr/archive/-2UMDHUX4X85I.html

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Etruscan_votive_heads.jpg

https://www.pinterest.fr/pin/257620041174403067/?nic_v2=1a6bCHPW9

 

Quote:

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

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