Tomb of Lars Porsena

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Etruscan-Roman reservoir in Chiusi, alleged Tomb of Lars Porsena

The tomb of the Etruscan king Lars Porsena (Italian: Mausoleo di Porsenna) is a legendary ancient building in what is now central Italy.[1] Allegedly built around 500 BCE at Clusium (modern Chiusi, in south-eastern Tuscany), and was described as follows by the Roman writer Marcus Varro (116–27 BCE):

Porsena was buried below the city of Clusium in the place where he had built a square monument of dressed stones. Each side was three hundred feet in length and fifty in height, and beneath the base there was an inextricable labyrinth, into which, if any-body entered without a clue of thread, he could never discover his way out. Above this square building there stand five pyramids, one at each corner and one in the centre, seventy-five feet [c. 22 meters] broad at the base and one hundred and fifty feet [c. 44 meters] high. These pyramids so taper in shape that upon the top of all of them together there is supported a brazen globe, and upon that again a petasus from which bells are suspended by chains. These make a tinkling sound when blown about by the wind, as was done in bygone times at Dodona. Upon this globe there are four more pyramids, each a hundred feet [c. 30 meters] in height, and above them is a platform on which are five more pyramids.

Destruction of the tomb[edit]

This structure, standing some 200 meters high, was supposedly destroyed along with Clusium itself in 89 BCE by the Roman general Cornelius Sulla.[2] No trace of it has ever been found, and historians have generally regarded Varro’s account as a gross exaggeration at best, and downright fabrication at worst. [citation needed]

In the 18th century Angelo Cortenovis proposed that the tomb of Lars Porsena was a machine for conducting lightning.[3]

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Pollitt, Jerome Jordan (1983-05-12). The Art of Rome C.753 B.C.-A.D. 337: Sources and Documents. Cambridge University Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-521-27365-7.
  2. ^ Humboldt, Alexander von (2013-01-25). Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas: A Critical Edition. University of Chicago Press. p. 410. ISBN 978-0-226-86509-6. In 89 BCE the Roman general and politician Cornelius Sulla destroyed the tomb, together with the rest of the city.
  3. ^ von Humboldt, Alexander (1850). Cosmos: A Sketch of a Physical Description of the Universe Vol. 4. Harper & Brothers. p. 139.

External links[edit]