Археологичид 600 гаруй хадны булш бүхий бүс нутгаас огт нээгдээгүй, бүрэн бүтэн хадгалагдсан эртний булшийг илрүүлж, түүхэн судалгаанд чухал ач холбогдолтой олдворуудыг оллоо.
Сан Жулианогийн археологийн судалгааны төслийн баг Ромын ойролцоох энэхүү бүсэд малтлага хийх явцдаа чулуун хаалт нь хөндөгдөөгүй булшийг олжээ. Этрусскийн үеийн ихэнх булшнууд эрт дээр үед тоногдсон байдаг бол энэ удаагийн олдвор нь эртний булшны зохион байгуулалт болон зан үйлийн эд зүйлсийг анхны байраар нь судлах ховор боломжийг олгож байна. Энэ нь 2025 онд тус багийн илрүүлсэн бүрэн бүтэн булшны ойролцоо олдсон бөгөөд хоёр булшийг зэрэгцүүлэн судлах нь тухайн үеийн оршуулгын соёлыг ойлгоход чухал мэдээллийн сан болж байна.
Булшны дотроос хоёр хүний шарил болон төрөл бүрийн эд зүйлс олдсоны дотор жадны үзүүр, олле хэмээх хадгалах савнууд, хар өнгийн буччеро ваар, үнэртэн хадгалах зориулалттай грек арибаллос зэрэг багтаж байна. Олдворуудын байрлал огт өөрчлөгдөөгүй байгаа нь судлаачдад эртний хүмүүс нас барагсдаа хэрхэн хүндэтгэн оршуулж байсныг бодитоор харах боломж олгож байгаа юм.
Доктор Барбара Барбарогийн тэмдэглэснээр, хууль бус малтлага, тонуул ихтэй энэ бүс нутагт ийм бүрэн бүтэн олдвор олдох нь онцгой үйл явдал юм. Цаашид эрдэмтэд шарилуудад нэмэлт шинжилгээ хийж, нас, хүйс болон тухайн үеийн хүмүүсийн эрүүл мэндийн байдлыг тогтоохоор төлөвлөж байна.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
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An Etruscan tomb sealed for about 2,600 years has been uncovered near Rome on the San Giuliano Plateau. Inside, archaeologists found two human burials and a set of ritual objects still arranged in place.
The discovery was made by the San Giuliano Archaeological Research Project, working on a necropolis already known for more than 600 rock-cut tombs. What stands out here is that the burial chamber was still closed by its original stone blocking, with no sign of ancient looting or later disturbance.
This find follows another major discovery in 2025, when the same team uncovered a fully intact tomb just a few feet away. In a region where most tombs were emptied long ago, these two sealed chambers offer something unusually complete: a preserved funerary context that is rarely seen in Etruscan archaeology.
Sealed Tomb Near Major Discovery
The newly found chamber sits only a short distance from the tomb excavated in 2025. According to the Superintendency for Archaeology, Fine Arts and Landscape of Southern Etruria, the entrance was still sealed with its original stone block, which immediately suggested the grave had never been opened since antiquity.
Once inside the chamber, the team said they had found what experts called “one of the richest funerary landscapes in southern Etruria,” with skeletons and grave goods still in place.
San Giuliano is already a major Etruscan burial site, with more than 600 known tombs carved into the rock. Most of them, however, were disturbed over time, especially after the Roman expansion in the late 3rd century B.C.E., when tomb looting became widespread in the region.
As explained by the researchers from Baylor University’s San Giuliano Archaeological Research Project, finding two intact tombs so close together gives a rare chance to better understand how this necropolis was originally organized.
“The San Giuliano necropolis contains more than 500 tombs around the site, most of which were looted by illegal excavators, whether in antiquity or more recently. It is extremely rare to find an intact tomb. Hence the exceptional nature of this discovery,” Dr Barbara Barbaro said in the translated press release.
Objects And Human Remains Preserved In Place
Inside the burial site, archaeologists identified the remains of two individuals accompanied by a range of grave goods. One of the most noticeable items is a spearhead placed near one of the skeletons. This could suggest the person was male, though that will need further analysis to confirm.
The burial also includes several types of pottery linked to Etruscan funerary traditions. These include large storage jars known as olle, polished black cups called bucchero, and a small Greek aryballos, used for oils or perfumes. The presence of the aryballos suggests a more personal aspect to the burial ritual and reflects contact between Etruscan and Greek cultural traditions. The mix of local and imported objects is typical of the period, but here it is especially meaningful because everything remains in situ.

The arrangement of the objects has not been disturbed, allowing researchers to observe how offerings were originally placed around the deceased. That kind of preservation is extremely rare in Etruscan archaeology, where most tombs were opened or emptied long ago.
Protected Ancient Burial Site
The discovery of two sealed tombs in such close proximity gives archaeologists a rare comparative dataset. It allows them to study burial structures not as isolated cases, but as part of a shared funerary landscape.
The site supervisor noted that the fact that a second sealed tomb was found a year after the first is “concrete proof that the territory has been protected.” The statement pointed out just how uncommon intact Etruscan burials are in this part of the region.The statement also pointed out just how uncommon intact Etruscan burials are in this part of the region.
“This is what happens when an untouched tomb is uncovered—it is a collective event. It is like the door to the tomb, once opened, forms a bridge to our past, a gateway to our ancestors. The silence… the awe, the respect for those who stayed waiting behind that great stone. The emotion,” Dr. Barbaroadded.

Researchers will carry out detailed analysis of the skeletons to determine age, sex, and health conditions at the time of death, alongside further study of the objects and their placement.
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