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1 Notes  





2 See also  














Sethlans (mythology)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


InEtruscan mythology, Sethlans was the god of fire, the forge, metalworking, and by extension craftsmanship in general, the equivalent, though their names share no etymology, to Greek Hephaestus, Egyptian Ptah and the Roman Vulcan. Sethlans is one of the indigenous Etruscan gods. In Etruscan arts Sethlans may be identified by his tools, the hammer and tongs of the blacksmith, and by the pileus or conical cap he wears.[1]

By what appears to be a curious omission,[2] his name does not appear on the bronze liver of Piacenza.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ King, C. W. (Charles William) (1872). Antique gems and rings. Getty Research Institute. London, Bell and Daldy.
  • ^ Noted in this context by H.J. Rose, "The Cult of Volkanus at Rome", The Journal of Roman Studies 23 (1933:46-63) p. 49
  • See also[edit]


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