Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Terracotta Sarcophagus of Married Couple from Cerveteri, 520-510 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Terracotta Sarcophagus of Married Couple from Cerveteri, 520-510 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Nenfro (volcanic stone) Sphinx, Vulci, c. 550–530 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Stone Lion
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Terracotta Pottery, 8th-7th C. BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan terracotta cinerary urn with spouses on lid, Caere (modern Cerveteri), 510-500 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Bronze Artifacts
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Bronze Statuettes
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Red-figure Ceramic Calyx Krater depicting Athena & Poseidon in struggle for control of Athens; attributed to the Nazzano Painter of the Faliscan School; from Falerii, c. 360 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Pottery
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Stone Heads
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Stone Cinerary Relief from Crypt, 470-450 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Stone Cinerary Relief
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Limestone bas-relief from an Etruscan funerary monument, Chiusi, 490-480 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Stone Cinerary Relief from Crypt, 480-460 BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Alabaster Cinerary Urn Depicting Woman Holding Mirror, Volterra, Middle 2nd C. BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Alabaster Cinerary Urn, Volterra?, Depicts Abduction of Helen, late 2nd C. BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Alabaster Cinerary Urn, Volterra?, Beginning 1st C. BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Terracotta Sarcophagus Lid, Tuscany, Mid-3rd C. BC
Gary Lee Todd, Ph.D.:
Etruscan Terracotta Sarcophagus with Male Figure Holding a Phiale with Omphalos, & Griffins with a 2nd Phiale, Mid-3rd C. BC