Etruscan mortal mother of the wine-god Fufluns by Tinia — the Etruscan reception of Greek Semele (Latin Semele/Semela). Attested by name on 4th-century-BCE engraved bronze mirrors that show her, thyrsus in hand, embracing the young Fufluns. In the shared myth she is killed by Tinia's lightning while pregnant, the infant carried to term in Tinia's thigh, and later sought by the grown Fufluns in the underworld. Carried in the registry implicitly (Fufluns' prose names "the mortal Semla" as his mother) until materialized here. Mortal class.