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Thread: Out of pure curiosity...

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    COYATOYPIKC Senior Member Flatout Minigame Champion Arjos's Avatar
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    Question Out of pure curiosity...

    Are there going to be any etruscan elements in EBII? (:
    Last edited by Arjos; 08-19-2010 at 09:11.

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    Guitar God Member Mediolanicus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    What do you mean with "Etruscan elements" exactly?
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    Speaker of Truth Senior Member Moros's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Well I've never heard of chemical elements that are specific to the region, so I'm not sure what he means with elements either...

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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Units or something related to their assimilation by the romans (about this last one it just came to my mind the new "peoples" buildings)...

    If elements of civilization is wrong, which word is more suited? (English isn't my first language)
    Last edited by Arjos; 08-19-2010 at 13:26.

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    urk! Member bobbin's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Moros View Post
    Well I've never heard of chemical elements that are specific to the region, so I'm not sure what he means with elements either...
    Haven't you heard of Etruscium? It's slightly radioactive and decays over time, producing Romium. Tends to react violently with Punicium and Gallium too.
    Last edited by bobbin; 08-19-2010 at 14:19.


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    Member Member Gustave's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Geeks

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    Guitar God Member Mediolanicus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Arjos View Post
    Units or something related to their assimilation by the romans (about this last one it just came to my mind the new "peoples" buildings)...

    If elements of civilization is wrong, which word is more suited? (English isn't my first language)
    Well.. You have just answered your own question.
    Their culture is assimilated with early Roman culture. So yeah, the Romans will be portraited as Romans.
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    COYATOYPIKC Senior Member Flatout Minigame Champion Arjos's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    I remember of Etruscans fighting aside the Boii and Senones, and even involved during the Social War...
    In EBI it was like they never existed...

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    Speaker of Truth Senior Member Moros's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    The answer is yes. More details will follow in a preview or a release in the future.

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    Guitar God Member Mediolanicus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    IIRC when the Etruria region in EB I rebelled, the rebels were called "Etruscans". I don't know how else they could be represented by the game enigne. IMO they were not any different from the Oscans, Samnites, Romans, or any other Italian people that was part of the SPQR in 270BC.

    Probably we'll get some information in the province description.
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    COYATOYPIKC Senior Member Flatout Minigame Champion Arjos's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Mediolanicus View Post
    IMO they were not any different from the Oscans, Samnites, Romans, or any other Italian people that was part of the SPQR in 270BC.
    Well they wouldn't arm themselves as Hastati and Equites for example...
    There was even a Cohors Perusina ^^
    Last edited by Arjos; 08-19-2010 at 16:43.

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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Arjos View Post
    I remember of Etruscans fighting aside the Boii and Senones, and even involved during the Social War...
    In EBI it was like they never existed...
    There is one Northern Italian unit that is composed of Celts and Etruscans planned, and another already done is Gallic with Etruscan influences in it's arms and armor. You could refer to it as Gallo-Etruscan.

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    Villiage Idiot Member antisocialmunky's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Didn't they have some sort of very odd probably Asiatic language?
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by antisocialmunky View Post
    Didn't they have some sort of very odd probably Asiatic language?
    Seems like they migrated from Anatolia after the bronze age collapse, but other say that they where native...
    BTW great news Power2the1 ^^

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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Well there are province descriptions for that kind of thing. Unit wise you shouldn't expect much, certainly not for the first or second release: Etruria is undoubtedly a fascinating regions with a strong expression of its local culture *but* like on Sardinia it is already occupied by a major power (which is going to take precedence over a the quirks of a region) and on its own it will never be more than a mildly interesting rebel province.
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    Member Member Cyclops's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Arjos View Post
    Seems like they migrated from Anatolia after the bronze age collapse, but other say that they where native...
    BTW great news Power2the1 ^^
    Yeah one of those situatons. Obviously they have a cultural link to the east and adopt a lot of Greek ideas so an Aegean origin (at least for some of the ruling class) is quite probable, but there's heaps of continuity in the material culutre as well, so i'm guessing a great proportion of Etruscans were locals. Maybe a similar situation to "Celts" in the British Isles? Or English/Lallans speakers in Scotland?
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    Member Member Arkhis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Cyclops View Post
    Yeah one of those situatons. Obviously they have a cultural link to the east and adopt a lot of Greek ideas so an Aegean origin (at least for some of the ruling class) is quite probable, but there's heaps of continuity in the material culutre as well, so i'm guessing a great proportion of Etruscans were locals. Maybe a similar situation to "Celts" in the British Isles? Or English/Lallans speakers in Scotland?
    This is quite likely, yes. A bit like Turks and Turkish. They've been assimilated into the Anatolian populations, but the language of the conqueror remains. Such a scenario is most likely, I doubt the population of what is Etruria would have been small enough the be absorbed by the conqueror.

    But the language! It seems related to Rhaetian, and prossibly came from western Anatolia, but it's still an agglutinative language (adding suffixes to a base word, like Hungarian), which no Indo-European or Semitic languages are (they're inflective*). It must be said that inflective languages seem to be agglutinative languages where the suffixes have fused with the base word.

    *To varying degrees, ofcourse. Slavic languages are a prime example of inflective languages, with lost of declensions and conjugations. English, on the other hand, has very little left.
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    COYATOYPIKC Senior Member Flatout Minigame Champion Arjos's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Tellos Athenaios View Post
    on its own it will never be more than a mildly interesting rebel province.
    Of course, I wasn't expecting anything more than that, just something to show their presence along the roman side and also for other factions, as natives tried to fight against the Romans in many occasions...

    Quote Originally Posted by Arkhis View Post
    But the language! It seems related to Rhaetian
    Following the celtic migrations of the 4th and 3rd centuries BC into northern Italy, the etruscan "merchant outposts" were cutoff from the peninsula and so the colonist settled in Rhaetia...
    Last edited by Ludens; 08-20-2010 at 10:08. Reason: merged posts

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    Member Member Loverartis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Cyclops View Post
    Yeah one of those situatons. Obviously they have a cultural link to the east and adopt a lot of Greek ideas so an Aegean origin (at least for some of the ruling class) is quite probable, but there's heaps of continuity in the material culutre as well, so i'm guessing a great proportion of Etruscans were locals. Maybe a similar situation to "Celts" in the British Isles? Or English/Lallans speakers in Scotland?
    (I'm a new member and I'm sorry if my english isn't very fluent) Hi, Cyclops.

    I don't know anything about ancient people in England or in Scotland you refer to, but I agree with you on that: Etruscans, although they assimilated many aspects of Ellenism in 4rd and 3rd centuries b.C., maintained some of their cultural peculiarities but expressed them with greek art. In every case I think that their assimilation of Ellenistic and, then, Roman culture was slow and contiuous. Finally, their cultural identity was "standardized" to the Roman/Latin culture. That also happened to Iberians and to Veneti, for example.
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    Member Member Cyclops's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Loverartis View Post
    (I'm a new member and I'm sorry if my english isn't very fluent) Hi, Cyclops....
    Hello, your english is excellent.

    Quote Originally Posted by Loverartis View Post
    ... expressed them with greek art. ...
    AFAIK the Hellenes were a wonderfully open minded people and their language and their art are a magnificent synthesis of the many culture they visited/raided/traded with on their epic ocean voyages. Not that they weren't also evil tyrannous weak strong brave cruel good bad etc like eveyone else, just making the point that their culture was especially porous and assimilative so they became a carrier for many cultures. The Etruscans and their cultural step-children the Romans adopted it (I'm guessing) because it was so readily adaptable ("yeah that god looks a bit like Zeus, he can be your version of the Thnderer, and his wife is in charge of the household orright?") as well as bweing brilliantly attractive ("you got your statues, your painting, your philosophy, your symposiums...")

    I wonder about Punic culture: they were submerged by Greeks in the East when Alexander swamped them and extinguished/absorbed by Romans in the West. Were they a similar talkative adoptive people? What trace have they left in plain sight that we possibly think of as Roman or Greek?

    There's a substantial caste of Syrian merchants in the Roman empire IIRC. I'm always reading about Syrian merchant colonies in Aquae Sulis in Brittania and at Marseille. Now were these "Syrians" Antiochian hellenes, Tyrian/Sidonian poeni, or something else? Assyrian descendants?

    Certainly "Rome" as an empire was built of massive cultural congeries. Probably Etruscan was the first significant civilised influence on the rustic Latin/Sabine settlement on the Tiber, and it shows in the their basic institutions of magistracy, religion and warfare.
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    Member Member Loverartis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    AFAIK the Hellenes were a wonderfully open minded people and their language and their art are a magnificent synthesis of the many culture they visited/raided/traded with on their epic ocean voyages. Not that they weren't also evil tyrannous weak strong brave cruel good bad etc like eveyone else, just making the point that their culture was especially porous and assimilative so they became a carrier for many cultures. The Etruscans and their cultural step-children the Romans adopted it (I'm guessing) because it was so readily adaptable ("yeah that god looks a bit like Zeus, he can be your version of the Thnderer, and his wife is in charge of the household orright?") as well as bweing brilliantly attractive ("you got your statues, your painting, your philosophy, your symposiums...")
    Thanks Cyclops,
    anyway we might ask this question: why greek culture was so "porous and assimilative", in comparison with other ancient cultures? You talk about religion: I agree, 'cause in my opinion religion was one of the aspects more assimilable.
    Then I read in an essay that greek culture made philosophy and science not only to solve practical problems of their real life, but also for pure knowledge. Does it means something for the assimilative process?

    There's a substantial caste of Syrian merchants in the Roman empire IIRC. I'm always reading about Syrian merchant colonies in Aquae Sulis in Brittania and at Marseille. Now were these "Syrians" Antiochian hellenes, Tyrian/Sidonian poeni, or something else? Assyrian descendants?
    Mmm... It's a curious question. I remember that a lot of Etruscan pottery was recently found tombs near Siracusa, one of the greatest cities of Magna Graecia, so in that city we might suppose there were Etruscan merchants.
    "[...]ἐπ[ὶ] γᾶν μέλαι[ν]αν ἔ]μμεναι κάλλιστον, ἔγω δὲ κῆν' ὄττω τις ἔραται."
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    urk! Member bobbin's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    I don't believe greek culture was particularly more "porous and assimilative" than others, the greeks just physically spread themselves out a lot more than most peoples and so they had the chance to interact with a greater number of different cultures


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    Member Member Loverartis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by bobbin View Post
    I don't believe greek culture was particularly more "porous and assimilative" than others, the greeks just physically spread themselves out a lot more than most peoples and so they had the chance to interact with a greater number of different cultures
    I approve what you say when I remember the high number of colonies they founded (Cyrene, Magna Graecia...); but I also ask myself this: the greek colonies met native population and their culture. Maybe there's a deeper reason if the native population often (not always, it's clear) assimilated greek culture and not the opposite (I think about the diffusion of the Greek language, it was a lingua franca like the more ancient akkadian language).
    "[...]ἐπ[ὶ] γᾶν μέλαι[ν]αν ἔ]μμεναι κάλλιστον, ἔγω δὲ κῆν' ὄττω τις ἔραται."
    ([...]on the black earth the most beautiful thing remains, I say, whatsoever a person loves) (Sappho, part of fragm. 16)

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    COYATOYPIKC Senior Member Flatout Minigame Champion Arjos's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    They invented "democracy", I find easy to imagine a rural group taking that in consideration...
    Could be the fact that they didn't want to conquer anyone, but instead find land to settle on the coast in order to start trading, so the natives dealt with them more and more...

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    Member Member Loverartis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Arjos View Post
    They invented "democracy", I find easy to imagine a rural group taking that in consideration...
    Could be the fact that they didn't want to conquer anyone, but instead find land to settle on the coast in order to start trading, so the natives dealt with them more and more...
    Yes, trade is an important element for a fusion of different cultures. A similar thing happened to Egyptian and Minoan civilizations in II mill. BC.
    And what about Greek art?? During the Ellenism in Rome a part of population (with Cato the Censor) saw with apprehension the greek influence, specially for the importation of greek art. They feared that some elements of greek culture deleted Roman "Mos Maiorum".
    "[...]ἐπ[ὶ] γᾶν μέλαι[ν]αν ἔ]μμεναι κάλλιστον, ἔγω δὲ κῆν' ὄττω τις ἔραται."
    ([...]on the black earth the most beautiful thing remains, I say, whatsoever a person loves) (Sappho, part of fragm. 16)

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    urk! Member bobbin's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by Arjos View Post
    They invented "democracy", I find easy to imagine a rural group taking that in consideration...
    Why would they give two hoots about that? Firstly most greeks didn't use it and secondly it would just be seen as another way of governing, it didn't have the conotations back then that it does today.

    Quote Originally Posted by Loverartis View Post
    but I also ask myself this: the greek colonies met native population and their culture. Maybe there's a deeper reason if the native population often (not always, it's clear) assimilated greek culture and not the opposite (I think about the diffusion of the Greek language, it was a lingua franca like the more ancient akkadian language).
    No deeper reason, it became the lingua franca the same way latin did in western europe, because the ruling and administrative classes of the region spoke it for a long time (from alexander to muslim or turkish conquests).

    There wasn't anything inherent in greek culture that helped it spread, I should also point out that in many cases it wasn't adopted wholesale, for example Coptic (the egyptian language) was spoken by the majority of the population until after the muslim conquests.
    Last edited by bobbin; 08-23-2010 at 17:34.


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    Member Member Loverartis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    I should also point out that in many cases it wasn't adopted wholesale, for example Coptic (the egyptian language) was spoken by the majority of the population until after the muslim conquests.
    I agree, a similar thing happened in Alexandria during Hellenism.

    There wasn't anything inherent in greek culture that helped it spread
    If I've understood correctly, then I'd also add that a lot of ancient literatures talk about the diffusion of Greek culture by the circulation of "artists", teachers and philosophic writings of Greece.
    "[...]ἐπ[ὶ] γᾶν μέλαι[ν]αν ἔ]μμεναι κάλλιστον, ἔγω δὲ κῆν' ὄττω τις ἔραται."
    ([...]on the black earth the most beautiful thing remains, I say, whatsoever a person loves) (Sappho, part of fragm. 16)

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    COYATOYPIKC Senior Member Flatout Minigame Champion Arjos's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Quote Originally Posted by bobbin View Post
    Why would they give two hoots about that? Firstly most greeks didn't use it and secondly it would just be seen as another way of governing, it didn't have the conotations back then that it does today.
    Being most of the colonist from Ionia, or "original Ionians", and so democratic, maybe the comunities with whom they enter in contact adopted some of their system (mostly related to finance and burocracy).
    I didn't mean the boule...

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    Member Member paullus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    there are a few things in the works. after all, it's not like Roman control over Etruria was total in 272 BC. Arjos, as for you statement that they wouldn't fight in the same way as Romans, just how do you think they would fight?
    "The mere statement of fact, though it may excite our interest, is of no benefit to us, but when the knowledge of the cause is added, then the study of history becomes fruitful." -Polybios


  30. #30

    Default Re: Out of pure curiosity...

    Wasn't technology part of it as well? Greeks had quite developed school system compared to many other cultures and academics(relatively speaking for their time) often traveled with the trade and colonization missions and were invited to foreign courts.

    Also- weren't many of the more despotic cultures considering Greeks chaotic and barbarrians themselves due to democracy and the demagogues which frequently arose out of that system?

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