<P> Etruscan architecture was created between about 700 BC and 200 BC, when the expanding civilization of ancient Rome finally absorbed Etruscan civilization . The Etruscans were considerable builders in stone, wood and other materials of temples, houses, tombs and city walls, as well as bridges and roads . The only structures remaining in quantity in anything like their original condition are tombs and walls, but through archaeology and other sources we have a good deal of information on what once existed . </P> <P> From about 630 BC, Etruscan architecture was heavily influenced by Greek architecture, which was itself developing through the same period . In turn it influenced Roman architecture, which in its early centuries can be considered as just a regional variation of Etruscan architecture . But increasingly, from about 200 BC, the Romans looked directly to Greece for their styling, while sometimes retaining Etruscan shapes and purposes in their buildings . </P> <P> The main monumental forms of Etruscan architecture, listed in decreasing order of the surviving remains, were: the houses of the wealthy elite, the mysterious "monumental complexes", temples, city walls, and rock - cut tombs . Apart from the podia of temples and some house foundations, only the walls and rock - cut tombs were mainly in stone, and have therefore often largely survived . </P>

How is this etruscan temple the temple of minerva at veii similar to a greek temple
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