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La Tomba Galeassi di Palestrina.

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La Tomba Galeassi di Palestrina.
LAURA AMBROSINI, La Tomba Galeassi di Palestrina, Quaderni
dell’ISMA 1, Roma 2015, Quasar Edizioni, ISBN 978-88-7140-588-9,
Euro 25,00
Il volume è acquistabile on line sul sito http://www.edizioniquasar.it/
INDICE
1. Introduzione
2. I dati di scavo
3. L’errata provenienza di alcuni oggetti da Cerveteri e, in particolare,
dalla Tomba Regolini - Galassi
4. L’acquisizione degli oggetti da parte del British Museum di Londra
5. L’acquisizione degli oggetti da parte del Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia di Roma
6. I materiali della Tomba Galeassi suddivisi per contesti
7. Il Contesto A
7.1. Catalogo degli oggetti del Contesto A1
7.2. Catalogo degli oggetti del Contesto A2
8. Il Contesto B
8.1 Catalogo degli oggetti del Contesto B
9. Il Contesto C
9.1. Catalogo degli oggetti del Contesto C
10. Altri oggetti dallo scavo di Pier Luigi Galeassi talora riferiti alla Tomba Galeassi
11. Conclusioni
11.1. I Contesti
11.2. Le deposizioni femminili
11.3. I contatti con l’ambito laziale, piceno ed etrusco
11.4. Le oreficerie
11. 5. Il ruolo di Palestrina nel Latium vetus
Appendice 1 - Documenti d’archivio
1. Rapporto di Pietro Cicerchia al Governatore di Palestrina del 12 ottobre 1863
2. Lettera di Giuseppe Grimaldi al Ministro del Commercio e Lavori Pubblici del 14 ottobre 1863
3. Nota di Pietro Cicerchia al Governatore di Palestrina del 27 marzo 1865
Appendice 2 - Considerazioni tecniche (con Daniela Ferro)
Abbreviazioni bibliografiche
150 anni dalla sua scoperta, questo volume presenta per la prima volta lo studio
complessivo della Tomba Galeassi di Palestrina, una dell
orientalizzante rinvenute nel Latium vetus e celeberrima per le straordinarie oreficerie che ha
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Abstract
More than one hundred and fifty years after the discovery of the Galeassi Tomb at Palestrina, this
volume presents a new comprehensive study. This is one of the most important tombs of the
Orientalising period in Latium vetus. The analysis of the documents published by Raffaele Garrucci
and of archive documents allows us to specify the date of the excavation: October 1863, and not
1861, as is often said. The objects found were sold in 1865 (before the 27th March), some to Mr.
Castellani and some to Mr. Milani. It is argued that we can identify Mr. Milani with Giovan
Battista Milani, mentioned in the list of Roman
Jewellers , together with Fortunato Pio
Castellani. The objects found in the Galeassi Tomb entered the Castellani Collection, and they are
now divided between the British Museum in London, where they arrived in 1872 with the
acquisition of the Collection of Alessandro Castellani, and the Villa Giulia Museum in Rome, where
they arrived in 1926 with the acquisition of the Collection of Augusto Castellani. The part sold to
Mr. Milani is, unfortunately, impossible to find. The Galeassi Tomb was discovered in the Galeassi
vineyard, located behind the church of San Rocco, along a side road off the Via Labicana - or
road to Rome - and the Via della Marcigliana. It is now in an area close to Via Fratelli Bandiera
at Palestrina. The name of the owner of the Galeassi property was from an early point confused
with General Vincenzo Galassi, author of the discovery together with the Archpriest Alessandro
Regolini of the famous tomb in the necropolis of Sorbo in Cerveteri. This confusion coupled with
the presence of the same iconographic motifs on the jewelry of the two tombs has unfortunately
caused the objects from the Galeassi Tomb at Palestrina to be attributed erroneously to the
Regolini - Galassi Tomb in Cerveteri. This volume corrects as far as possible these methodological
errors. The tomb is of a type called sepolti sotti i sassi (buried under the stones) which means
that it was not a chamber tomb with a multiplicity of burials. The continuity of use of the
Colombella necropolis, from the half of the eighth century B.C. until the late Republican age, will
have favored contiguous burials and, in some cases, overlapping graves. Therefore, it seems
reasonable to think that there were at least four female burials (contexts A1, A2, B, C), dating from
the end of the eighth to the end of the sixth – early fifth century B. C. Nearly all of the objects found,
which consist almost exclusively of jewelry, were produced at Cerveteri, while others are probably
local productions that show close contacts with others found in Latium vetus and in the Picene
region. The study of archive documents and objects highlights the sophistication and wealth of the
Praenestine élite.
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