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Abstract Jean MacIntosh Turfa and Sarah Gettys A better understanding of the everyday realities of ancient life, for instance sheep-herding, could improve our study of such disparate fields as Etruscan religion and urbanism. The information acquired by participants in animal sacrifice, specifically haruspicy, the examination of sheep livers, could have given warning of hazardous situations and threats to the human community such as parasitic infection. The cultic response to such discoveries could also have led to the improvement of the human condition. We suggest some details of one such phenomenon, associated with artifacts such as the Piacenza model liver, an emblem of Etruscan divination. Article in volume 84, 2009, pages 41-52 Buy and download the article as PDF file
The other articles in volume 84, 2009 Anthony Russell Lorenza Grasso Conrad M. Stibbe Matthias Steinhart Benjamin D. Rous F. Vermeulen, M. De Dapper, B. Music, P. Monsieur, H. Verreyke, Roger Ling David J. Newsome Gioconda Di Luca L.B. van der Meer Devi Taelman, Sarah Deprez, Frank Vermeulen, Morgan De Dapper
Yael Wilfand Ine Jacobs |
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