Etruscan Hercle appears in the elaborate illustrative engraved designs on the backs of Etruscan bronze mirrors made during the fourth century BC, which were favoured grave goods.
Corpus Speculorum Etruscorum is an international project with the goal to publish all existing Etruscan bronze mirrors.
Looking at them was like looking at ancient Etruscan bronzes or Renaissance enameled boxes.
Turan appears in toilette scenes of Etruscan bronze mirrors.
On Etruscan bronze mirrors Thalna is present and looking on in scenes pertaining to birth and infancy.
In the Palazzo dei Conservatori is the most celebrated piece, the superb Etruscan bronze Capitoline She-Wolf (Lupa Capitolina), symbol of the city.
On the coin from Phaistos (illustration) he is winged; in Greek vase-paintings and Etruscan bronze mirrors he is not.
The Museum contains several other important Etruscan bronzes.
Carlos Picón, curator of the museum's Greek and Roman department, has called it "the grandest piece of sixth-century Etruscan bronze anywhere in the world."
Buried with Celtic princes in the time around 400 BC (La Tène A) were Etruscan bronze beak-spouted ewers, a luxury that few could afford.