![]() ![]() “And to the relics offered to their goddess to propitiate her benevolence, they added the weapons snatched from the enemies in that epic battle at sea.” “It is therefore possible that the fleeing from Alalia raised immediately after their arrival, as was their custom, after purchasing from the locals the land necessary to settle and resume the flourishing trade for which they were famous,” says Osanna in the translated statement. Experts suggest that Greek soldiers might have stolen this piece of armor from Etruscan forces during the Battle of Alalia. The archaeologists say the Phocaeans may have offered the enemy armor as a tribute to the goddess.Īrchaeologists unearthed two helmets including one, pictured here, that appears to be created in the Etruscan "Negua" style. Measuring about 60 feet long by 23 feet wide, the walls were likely constructed in the years just following the Battle of Alalia, says Massimo Osanna, the archaeological park director and head of Italian state museums, per Italian news agency ANSA. and may have once formed a temple to the mythical Greek goddess of war and wisdom, Athena, as Angela Giuffrida reports for the Guardian. In another major find, researchers also unearthed several brick walls that date to Velia’s founding in 540 B.C.E. The archaeologists suggest Greek soldiers might have stolen these helmets from conquered Etruscan troops during the Battle of Alalia, per the statement.Īn aerial view of the dig site at the acropolis of Velia, an ancient Greek colony in present-day southern Italy that was founded shortly after the Battle of Alalia. Initial studies of the helmets reveal that one was designed in the Greek Chalcidian style, while the other helmet resembles the Negua headpieces typically worn by Etruscan warriors, per ANSA. Settlers from Phocaea sailed for the mainland and purchased a plot of land that would eventually become Velia, according to the Guardian. ![]() ![]() Though the Greeks emerged victorious, the costly sea battle ultimately spurred the Phocaean colonists to leave Alalia and establish a colony closer to other Greek settlements along the southern coast of Italy. Between 541 and 535 BCE, a fleet of Phocaean ships-who had set up a colony, Alalia, on the island of Corsica-set sail on the nearby Tyrrhenian Sea to fend off attacks from neighboring Etruscan and Carthaginian forces, per the statement.Īn archaeologist works to free one of the helmets from the dig site.Ĭourtesy of the Parco Archeologico di Paestum & Velia Researchers, who have been working the site since last July, announced in a translated statement that they believe that these artifacts are linked to a major maritime battle that changed the balance of power in the Mediterranean nearly 2,500 years ago.Īncient Greeks may have left the items behind after the Battle of Alalia. Archaeologists in southern Italy announced last week that they unearthed two helmets, fragments of weapons and armor, bits of pottery and the remains of a possible temple to Athena at an archaeological excavation of the ancient Greek city of Velia, reports Frances D’Emilio for the Associated Press (AP). ![]()
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