As a three-dimensional, life size monument, the sarcophagus of Seianti Hanunia TIesnasa is immediately an eye-catching object. Now situated in the British Museum, it forms the paramount piece of the Etruscan collection. Both effigy, tomb and the skeleton within have been valuable for wider research on Etruscan artistic styles and methods, as well as the role of elite women in the society of Chiusi where the figure in question was originally from and buried. Though its paint work still remains, the tomb monument would have been more heavily decorated in its original form, now offering mere glimpses of the skilled hand of the artist(s) who designed and produced the structure. The maker was aware of the multiple functions of the tomb, not just for housing the dead but allowing the body to be recognisable in the afterlife and producing an accessible portrait for memorialisation, all tied together through the creation of an architectonic, three-dimensional structure that commanded the tomb