{"title":"In memoriam, Giovannangelo Camporeale","authors":"G. Warden","doi":"10.1515/ETST-2017-0019","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Giovannangelo Camporeale, Honorary Member of the Advisory Board of Etruscan Studies and Professor Emeritus of Etruscology and Italic Antiquity at the University of Florence, passed away at the age of 83 on July 2, 2017, at his house in Florence. The world of Etruscology has lost one of its leaders, a master teacher and scholar. Camporeale taught in Florence from 1962 to 2004 and trained an entire generation of archaeologists. He was an academic leader as well, serving as President of the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Etruschi, Lucumone of the Etruscan Academy of Cortona, Vice President of the Accademia Toscana “La Colombaria,” a fellow of the Accademia dei Lincei, and as a founding member of the board of the Lexicon IconographicumMythologiae Classicae. Camporeale authored over 300 publications. His scholarship was always firmly grounded in careful attention to material culture and archaeological context. Major publications include La tomba del Duce (Florence 1967), I commerci di Vetulonia in età orientalizzante (Florence 1969), La Collezione Alla Querce. Materiali archeologici orvietani (Florence 1970), Buccheri a cilindretto di fabbrica orvietana (Florence 1972), and La caccia in Etruria (Rome 1984). Recent publications were broader and synthetic in nature: Gli Etruschi. Storia e civiltà (Turin 2000/2004/ 2015), which has been translated into German, and Gli Etruschi fuori d’Etruria (Verona 2001), translated into English and issued as The Etruscans Outside Etruria (Los Angeles 2004). Camporeale directed the excavations at Massa Marittima, an Etruscan settlement of the Orientalizing and Archaic periods, which owed its existence to its proximity to the rich mineral resources of the Colline Metallifere. The results of those excavations were published in L’Etruria mineraria (Florence-Milan 1985), L’abitato etrusco dell’Accesa (Rome 1997), and in Il parco archeologico dell’Accesa a Massa Marittima (Follonica 2000). The research was important and timely because of its interrogation of settlements connected to the complex economic forces that transformed early Etruscan culture. The finds from those excavations greatly expanded the holdings of the Museo Civico in Massa Marittima, and in 2014 Camporeale was awarded honorary citizenship of that city. In 2017 he was made an honorary citizen of Cortona.","PeriodicalId":373793,"journal":{"name":"Etruscan Studies","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-11-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Etruscan Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1515/ETST-2017-0019","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
Giovannangelo Camporeale,伊特鲁里亚研究顾问委员会荣誉成员,佛罗伦萨大学伊特鲁里亚学和意大利古代名誉教授,于2017年7月2日在佛罗伦萨的家中去世,享年83岁。伊特鲁利学的世界失去了一位领袖,一位大师教师和学者。坎波雷莱从1962年到2004年在佛罗伦萨教书,培养了整整一代考古学家。他也是一位学术领袖,曾担任伊特鲁斯基国家研究学院院长、伊特鲁里亚科尔托纳学院院长、托斯卡纳学院副院长、林塞学院院士、《经典神话词典》董事会创始成员。Camporeale撰写了300多本出版物。他的学术研究始终坚定地建立在对物质文化和考古背景的认真关注之上。主要出版物包括La tomba del Duce(1967年佛罗伦萨),I commercici di Vetulonia in eteconorientalizzante(1969年佛罗伦萨),La Collezione Alla Querce。材料考古学(佛罗伦萨1970年),布切里a cilindretto di fabbrica orvietana(佛罗伦萨1972年),La caccia在伊特鲁里亚(罗马1984年)。最近的出版物是更广泛和综合的性质:Gli Etruschi。《文明的故事》(都灵2000/2004/ 2015)被翻译成德语,《伊特鲁里亚之旅》(维罗纳2001年)被翻译成英语并出版为《伊特鲁里亚以外的伊特鲁里亚人》(洛杉矶2004年)。Camporeale指导了Massa Marittima的发掘工作。Massa Marittima是伊特鲁里亚人在东方化和古代时期的一个定居点,它的存在归功于它靠近Colline Metallifere丰富的矿产资源。这些挖掘结果发表在《矿物学》(佛罗伦萨-米兰1985年)、《考古研究》(罗马1997年)和《考古研究》(意大利2000年)上。这项研究是重要而及时的,因为它对与改变早期伊特鲁里亚文化的复杂经济力量有关的定居点进行了调查。这些发掘的发现极大地扩大了马萨马里蒂玛的公民博物馆的馆藏,2014年,坎波雷莱被授予该市的荣誉公民。2017年,他被授予科尔托纳荣誉市民称号。
Giovannangelo Camporeale, Honorary Member of the Advisory Board of Etruscan Studies and Professor Emeritus of Etruscology and Italic Antiquity at the University of Florence, passed away at the age of 83 on July 2, 2017, at his house in Florence. The world of Etruscology has lost one of its leaders, a master teacher and scholar. Camporeale taught in Florence from 1962 to 2004 and trained an entire generation of archaeologists. He was an academic leader as well, serving as President of the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Etruschi, Lucumone of the Etruscan Academy of Cortona, Vice President of the Accademia Toscana “La Colombaria,” a fellow of the Accademia dei Lincei, and as a founding member of the board of the Lexicon IconographicumMythologiae Classicae. Camporeale authored over 300 publications. His scholarship was always firmly grounded in careful attention to material culture and archaeological context. Major publications include La tomba del Duce (Florence 1967), I commerci di Vetulonia in età orientalizzante (Florence 1969), La Collezione Alla Querce. Materiali archeologici orvietani (Florence 1970), Buccheri a cilindretto di fabbrica orvietana (Florence 1972), and La caccia in Etruria (Rome 1984). Recent publications were broader and synthetic in nature: Gli Etruschi. Storia e civiltà (Turin 2000/2004/ 2015), which has been translated into German, and Gli Etruschi fuori d’Etruria (Verona 2001), translated into English and issued as The Etruscans Outside Etruria (Los Angeles 2004). Camporeale directed the excavations at Massa Marittima, an Etruscan settlement of the Orientalizing and Archaic periods, which owed its existence to its proximity to the rich mineral resources of the Colline Metallifere. The results of those excavations were published in L’Etruria mineraria (Florence-Milan 1985), L’abitato etrusco dell’Accesa (Rome 1997), and in Il parco archeologico dell’Accesa a Massa Marittima (Follonica 2000). The research was important and timely because of its interrogation of settlements connected to the complex economic forces that transformed early Etruscan culture. The finds from those excavations greatly expanded the holdings of the Museo Civico in Massa Marittima, and in 2014 Camporeale was awarded honorary citizenship of that city. In 2017 he was made an honorary citizen of Cortona.