Ancient columbarium for breeding pigeons. Previously thought to be Etruscan-Roman burial grounds with cells for depositing cinerary urns.


Ancient columbarium in Tuscania, central Italy. A columbarium is a burial chamber in the walls of which were niches or niches for storing cinerary urns; so called in modern times because of the similarity of the niches to the small compartments of a dovecote (columbarium from columba, 'dove'). The origin of the columbarium is uncertain and the problem of whether the monumental arrangement of urn deposits was a Roman or Etruscan invention remains unsolved. In any case, the oldest examples found so far seem to be those of some localities in central-southern Etruria, which date from between the 3rd and 1st centuries BC. C.


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Keywords: ancient, archaeology, archeology, architecture, burial, colombario, colombarium, cultural, etruria, europe, heritage, historical, history, italy, medieval, niches, remains, rock, ruins, tufa, tuff, tuscania, vegetation