Tabula Capuana | |
---|---|
Material | Terracotta |
Height | 60 cm |
Width | 50 cm |
Created | c. 470 BC |
Discovered | 1898 Santa Maria Capua Vetere, Campania, Italy |
Present location | Berlin, Germany |
Language | Etruscan |
The Tabula Capuana ("Tablet from Capua"; Ital. Tavola Capuana),[1] is an ancient terracotta slab, 50 by 60 cm (20 by 24 in), with a long inscribed text in Etruscan, dated to around 470 BCE,[2] apparently a ritual calendar.[3] About 390 words are legible, making it the second-most extensive surviving Etruscan text.[4] The longest is the linen book (Liber Linteus), also a ritual calendar, used in ancient Egypt for mummy wrappings, now at Zagreb. The Tabula Capuana is located in the Altes Museum, Berlin.[5]