Home
Art and culture, food and tradition, museums www.wayin.net
search  Search
Museums and
   monuments
Music
Cinema
Theatre
Fashion
Contemporary art
Antiques
Events and festivals
Design
Literature
Great classics
Art and culture
Historical traditions
Fairs and food
   festivals
Religious traditions
Tradition and folklore
Tuscan people in the world
Arts and crafts
Hotels
Farm stays
Holiday apartments
   and campsites
Villas, castles and
   palaces
Beaches
Parks and nature
Beauty farms and
   thermal spas
Religious tourism
The way through
   romance
Untouched
Travelling
A passion for wine
Restaurants and
   trattorie
Gourmet trails
A matter of taste
From dawn to dusk
Nightlife
La dolce vita
Events
Sports centres
Sport
Corporate Tuscany
:: In practice ::
Region offices
Province offices
Municipalities
Tourism boards
Chambers of
   Commerce
Institutions
Universities
Schools
Academics
Rights and duties
Instructions for use
On holiday
Eating
Drinking
Walking
Wearing
Furnishing
Tuscany showcase
Institutions
Places
Events
Companies
Transportation
Chemists
Hospitals and clinics
Weather
Useful links





 :: ARTS AND CRAFTS ::

   Alabaster in Volterra

In the V and IV century BC the Etruscans who lived in Velathri (current Volterra), knew and appreciated the stone of which its ground was rich: alabaster. And already at that time they had discovered the secrets of that stone and its working: they built sarcophaguses and cinerary urns to accompany their dear ones in their journeys to the underworld. Findings collected in the excavations of Etruscan graves are kept at Volterra’s Guarnacci Museum and the Archaeological Museum in Florence.

And in Volterra, a symbol city in Tuscany for the extraction and working of alabaster, today as much as 2500 years ago, the ancient tradition of the working of this stone is handed down. The Volterra area, in the province of Pisa, is rich in alabaster quarries of a quality considered one of the most precious in Europe, many of them abandoned because of the market’s scarce demand.

Alabaster is a sedimentary rock found in two varieties: one called eastern alabaster or alabastrite and the other chalky alabaster, much softer and generally white, apparently very similar to marble. And this second variety is the one that is extracted in Volterra in the Castellina Marittima area.

Used for decorations and furnishings in all its historical ages, even if at alternate stages, alabaster saw its moment of maximum “splendour” owing to a noble and able Volterranean, Marcello Inghirami, whom at the beginning of the 19th century opened the first industrial workshop: Officina Inghirami. The workshop offered the possibility to younger people to learn the art under the guidance of true master teachers.

And walking along the ancient city of Volterra you will still encounter small craftsmen shops where the stone is worked with patience from a  distant era. Sculptors, squarers, turners and decorators who create with skill and follow the delicate stages of alabaster working.

March.2003

Volterra Municipality
Florence Archaeological Museum (In Italian)
Museo Guarnacci 

 

 
 

back send this page print this article


Cerca



All waytuscany's news by e-mail



A space reserved for traders




Home||Newsletter|ServiceValley|WayGreenpages
Write|Work with us|Disclaimer|Advertising on the network|Enter your company for free|Wayin.net|Credits
Waytuscany
a Wayin Spa project, e-media company, P. Iva 05025620484.
Wayin spa - Wayin Iberia S.L 
2000 - 2007 © All rights reserved