The dawn of dentistry: Dentistry among the Etruscans

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Abstract

The Etruscans were a group of agricultural people who evolved into an urban population of craftsmen, traders, and navigators who lived in a network of cities and dominated the area of the Mediterranean around Italy in the 8th and 9th centuries BC. What has come to be known, and is of importance in our study of the history of dentistry are a significant number of very interesting works of art which include gold dental prostheses. The Etruscan prostheses are remarkable because they used gold bands which were soldered into rings instead of the gold wires which are seen in other cultures (Egyptians, Phoenicians) of the same time.

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Loevy, H. T., & Kowitz, A. A. (1997). The dawn of dentistry: Dentistry among the Etruscans. International Dental Journal, 47(5), 279–284. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1875-595X.1997.tb00790.x

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