The polytheistic Etruscan belief system readily adopted gods from other religions, integrating them as important cult deities and adapting their names and aspects of their powers. The Etruscans, Romans, and other native Italic peoples all influenced each other's religious beliefs and practices, with the Romans adopting the practice of
haruspicy, and the Etruscans adopting the deities
Juno,
Minerva, and Neptunus as Uni, Minerva, and Nethuns. Excavations of the sanctuary at
Pyrgi have revealed that the goddess Uni was worshipped there. Ancient authors refer to her as
Leukotheo or
Mater Matuta, and she is equated with the Phoenician goddess Astarte by the
Pyrgi Tablets.Roman authors, including Livvy, Cicero, and Varro, frequently refer to the
Etrusca Disciplina in talking about Etruscan society and religion, which was supposedly a collection of sacred books which gave instructions for communication with the gods through the observation of natural signs, haruspicy, and augury. Two of these books are specifically attributed to the Etruscan prophets Tages and Veogia, who are known from other sources.
Publius Nigidius Figulus' (a contemporary of
Varro) Latin translation of Tages brontoscopic calendar survives in a Byzantine Greek manuscript. The Etruscan gods were seen as being heavily connected with places in the natural environment of Etruria. The landscape itself was an integral part of religious worship, as sanctuaries were often built near certain physical features, often those which resulted from the dramatic volcanic activity that formed the native landscape. Boundaries and borderlands were incredibly important in this regard; The boundaries between water and land (banks of rivers) and earth and sky (hills and mountains) were often considered sacred places, ideal for the construction of sanctuaries. Many of these sanctuaries, particularly those near water sources, have been used in some way since the Bronze Age. In several instances of Etruscan art, such as in the
François Tomb in
Vulci, a spirit of the dead is identified by the term
hinthial, literally "(one who is) underneath". A god was called an
ais (later
eis), which in the plural is
aisar /
eisar. The
Liber Linteus (column 5, lines 9–10, and elsewhere) seems to distinguish "Gods of Light"
aiser si from "Gods of Darkness"
aiser seu:
nunθene eiser śic śeuc /unuχ mlaχ nunθen χiś esviśc faśe: "Make an offering for both the Gods of Light and of Dark, / for them make an appropriate offering with oil from the Chi and from the Esvi rituals." The abode of a god was a
fanu or
luth, a sacred place, such as a
favi, a grave or temple. There, one would need to make a
fler (plural
flerchva), or "offering". Three layers of deities are portrayed in Etruscan art. One appears to be divinities of an indigenous origin:
Voltumna or Vertumnus, a primordial,
chthonic god;
Usil, god(-dess) of the sun;
Tivr, god of the moon;
Turan, goddess of love;
Laran, god of war;
Maris, goddess of (child-)birth;
Leinth, goddess of death;
Selvans, god of the woods;
Thalna, goddess (or god) of fertility and childbirth;
Turms, god of trade and messenger of the gods;
Fufluns, god of wine; the heroic figure
Hercle; and a number of underworld deities such as
Catha,
Lur,
Suri, Thanr and Calus (all listed on the
Lead Plaque of Magliano and elsewhere.) Ruling over them were higher deities that seem to reflect the
Indo-European system: Tin or
Tinia, the sky,
Uni his wife (
Juno),
Nethuns, god of the waters, and
Cel, the earth goddess. As a third layer, the Greek gods and heroes were adopted by the Etruscan system during the Etruscan Orientalizing Period of 750/700–600 BC. Examples are
Aritimi (
Artemis),
Menrva (
Minerva, Latin equivalent of
Athena), the heroic figure
Hercle (
Hercules), and Pacha (
Bacchus; Latin equivalent of
Dionysus), and over time the primary trinity became
Tinia,
Uni and
Menrva. This triad of gods were venerated in Tripartite temples similar to the later Roman
Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus.
Afterlife Etruscan beliefs concerning the hereafter appear to be an amalgam of influences. The Etruscans shared general early Mediterranean beliefs, such as the
Egyptian belief that survival and prosperity in the hereafter depend on the treatment of the deceased's remains. Etruscan tombs imitated domestic structures and were characterized by spacious chambers, wall paintings and grave furniture. In the tomb, especially on the sarcophagus (examples shown below), was a representation of the deceased in his or her prime, often with a spouse. Not everyone had a sarcophagus; sometimes the deceased was laid out on a stone bench. As the Etruscans practiced mixed inhumation and cremation rites (the proportion depending on the period), cremated ashes and bones might be put into an urn in the shapes of a house or a representation of the deceased. File:Banditaccia Tomba Dei Capitelli.jpg|Funerary home at
Banditaccia with couches File:Populonia - Necropoli etrusca.jpg|Funerary home at
Populonia Image:Etruscan sarcophagus SMS n1.jpg|Sarcophagus from
Siena Image:Etruskerin.jpg|Sarcophagus from
Chiusi Image:Sarcophage étrusque.jpg|Sarcophagus File:British Museum Etruscan burial.jpg|Burial urn File:DSC00432 - Statua cineraria etrusca - da Chiusi - 550-530 aC.jpg|Urn from
Chiusi In addition to the world still influenced by terrestrial affairs was a transmigrational world beyond the grave, patterned after the Greek
Hades. It was ruled by
Aita, and the deceased was guided there by
Charun, the equivalent of Death, who was blue and wielded a hammer. The Etruscan Hades was populated by Greek mythological figures and a few such as
Tuchulcha, of composite appearance. == Women in Etruscan religion ==