The burials from Tarquinia (province of Viterbo) span the later centuries of independent Etruscan culture as it met the expanding Roman world. Archaeological data indicates graves come from the necropolis zones of Tarquinia — including the famed Monterozzi area — where painted chamber tombs and simpler pit graves record social distinction and ritual practice. The material culture associated with these burials (pottery styles, grave goods, funerary architecture) ties them to the broader Etruscan tradition that developed in central Italy from the early Iron Age onward.
Cinematic fragments of life — painted banquets, carved sarcophagi, and ceramic trade wares — speak to persistent local identity and Mediterranean exchange. Limited evidence suggests continuity with earlier regional populations in central Italy, but later centuries show increasing interaction with Greek colonies and Roman neighbors. Genetic sampling from 17 individuals provides a maternal snapshot of this community, allowing archaeologists to test hypotheses about mobility and continuity in a period of political transformation. While the dataset is regionally focused and time-limited (400–1 BCE), it contributes to a layered picture: local traditions refracted through networks of trade, marriage, and cultural exchange across the Tyrrhenian littoral.