The Etruscans built houses for their dead. At Cerveteri, north of Rome, the Banditaccia necropolis is a city of tombs, round burial mounds cut from the rock and carved inside like homes, with rooms, beds, chairs, even household objects rendered in stone. Streets run between them as in a real town. Because the Etruscans left almost no literature, these furnished tombs are much of what we know about them. Walking the necropolis is walking an Etruscan suburb, laid out for eternity around the 6th century BC.
Description via source. Coordinates and heritage data from the Atika atlas.
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