Abstract
The Etruscans are notable for , amongst other things , the production of bronze mirrors. More than 3,000 mirrors are known to us, mostly dating from the sixth to the second centuries ВС, offering an insight into Etruscan bronze technology and developments in Etruscan art. The focus of this paper is on a previously unpublished mirror housed in the National Museum of Ireland on Kildare Street, Dublin. The mirror, dating to the Hellenistic period, has an engraving of a minor Etruscan divinity, a Lasa, on its reverse. The potential meaning of this imagery in relation to the object 's function is examined.