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Aeneas

In Greco-Roman mythology, Aeneas (/ɪˈnəs/,[1] Latin: [äe̯ˈneːäːs̠]; from Ancient Greek: Αἰνείας, romanizedAineíās) was a Trojan hero, the son of the Dardanian prince Anchises and the Greek goddess Aphrodite (equivalent to the Roman Venus).[2] His father was a first cousin of King Priam of Troy (both being grandsons of Ilus, founder of Troy), making Aeneas a second cousin to Priam's children (such as Hector and Paris). He is a minor character in Greek mythology and is mentioned in Homer's Iliad. Aeneas receives full treatment in Roman mythology, most extensively in Virgil's Aeneid, where he is cast as an ancestor of Romulus and Remus. He became the first true hero of Rome. Snorri Sturluson identifies him with the Norse god Vidarr of the Æsir.[3]

Aeneas
Founder of Rome
Iapyx removing an arrowhead from the leg of Aeneas, with Aeneas's son, Ascanius, crying beside him. Antique fresco from Pompeii.
AbodeRome
Personal information
ParentsAnchises and Aphrodite
SiblingsLyrus
Consort
Offspring
Aeneas flees burning Troy, Federico Barocci, 1598 (Galleria Borghese, Rome, Italy)

Etymology

 
Coinage of Aenea, with portrait of Aeneas. c. 510–480 BCE.

Aeneas is the Romanization of the hero's original Greek name Αἰνείας (Aineías). Aineías is first introduced in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite when Aphrodite gives him his name from the adjective αὶνóν (ainon, "terrible"), for the "terrible grief" (αὶνóν ἄχος) he has caused her by being born a mortal who will age and die.[a][4] It is a popular etymology for the name, apparently exploited by Homer in the Iliad.[5] Later in the Medieval period there were writers who held that, because the Aeneid was written by a philosopher, it is meant to be read philosophically.[6] As such, in the "natural order", the meaning of Aeneas' name combines Greek ennos ("dweller") with demas ("body"), which becomes ennaios or "in-dweller"—i.e. as a god inhabiting a mortal body.[7] However, there is no certainty regarding the origin of his name.

Epithets

In imitation of the Iliad, Virgil borrows epithets of Homer, including: Anchisiades, magnanimum, magnus, heros, and bonus. Though he borrows many, Virgil gives Aeneas two epithets of his own, in the Aeneid: pater and pius. The epithets applied by Virgil are an example of an attitude different from that of Homer, for whilst Odysseus is poikilios ("wily"), Aeneas is described as pius ("pious"), which conveys a strong moral tone. The purpose of these epithets seems to enforce the notion of Aeneas' divine hand as father and founder of the Roman race, and their use seems circumstantial: when Aeneas is praying he refers to himself as pius, and is referred to as such by the author only when the character is acting on behalf of the gods to fulfill his divine mission. Likewise, Aeneas is called pater when acting in the interest of his men.[8]

Description

Aeneas was described by the chronicler Malalas in his account of the Chronography as "shortish, thick, good chest, strong, ruddy, flat-faced, good nose, pale, balding, good beard".[9] Meanwhile, in the account of Dares the Phrygian, he was illustrated as "auburn-haired, stocky, eloquent, courteous, prudent, pious, and charming. His eyes were black and twinkling."[10]

Greek myth and epos

Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite

 
Venus and Anchises by William Blake Richmond (1889 or 1890)

The story of the birth of Aeneas is told in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, one of the major Homeric Hymns. Aphrodite has caused Zeus to fall in love with mortal women. In retaliation, Zeus puts desire in her heart for Anchises, who is tending his cattle among the hills near Mount Ida. When Aphrodite sees him she is smitten. She adorns herself as if for a wedding among the gods and appears before him. He is overcome by her beauty, believing that she is a goddess, but Aphrodite identifies herself as a Phrygian princess. After they make love, Aphrodite reveals her true identity to him and Anchises fears what might happen to him as a result of their liaison. Aphrodite assures him that he will be protected, and tells him that she will bear him a son to be called Aeneas. However, she warns him that he must never tell anyone that he has lain with a goddess. When Aeneas is born, Aphrodite takes him to the nymphs of Mount Ida, instructing them to raise the child to age five, then take him to Anchises.[4] According to other sources, Anchises later brags about his encounter with Aphrodite, and as a result is struck in the foot with a thunderbolt by Zeus. Thereafter he is lame in that foot, so that Aeneas has to carry him from the flames of Troy.[11]

Homer's Iliad

 
Aeneas carrying Anchises, black-figured oinochoe, c. 520–510 BCE, Louvre (F 118)

Aeneas is a minor character in the Iliad, where he is twice saved from death by the gods as if for an as-yet-unknown destiny, but is an honorable warrior in his own right. Having held back from the fighting, aggrieved with Priam because in spite of his brave deeds he was not given his due share of honour, he leads an attack against Idomeneus to recover the body of his brother-in-law Alcathous at the urging of Deiphobus.[12] He is the leader of the Trojans' Dardanian allies, as well as a second cousin and principal lieutenant of Hector, son and heir of the Trojan king Priam.

Aeneas's mother Aphrodite frequently comes to his aid on the battlefield, and he is a favorite of Apollo. Aphrodite and Apollo rescue Aeneas from combat with Diomedes of Argos, who nearly kills him, and carry him away to Pergamos for healing. Even Poseidon, who usually favors the Greeks, comes to Aeneas's rescue after he falls under the assault of Achilles, noting that Aeneas, though from a junior branch of the royal family, is destined to become king of the Trojan people.

Bruce Louden presents Aeneas as "type": The sole virtuous individual (or family) spared from general destruction, following the mytheme of Utnapishtim, Baucis and Philemon, Noah, and Lot.[13] Pseudo-Apollodorus in his Bibliotheca explains that "... the Greeks [spared] him alone, on account of his piety."[14]

Other sources

The Roman mythographer Gaius Julius Hyginus (c. 64 BCE – CE 17) in his Fabulae[15] credits Aeneas with killing 28 enemies in the Trojan War. Aeneas also appears in the Trojan narratives attributed to Dares Phrygius and Dictys of Crete.

Roman myth and literature

 
Aeneas and Anchises

The history of Aeneas was continued by Roman authors. One influential source was the account of Rome's founding in Cato the Elder's Origines.[16] The Aeneas legend was well known in Virgil's day and appeared in various historical works, including the Roman Antiquities of the Greek historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus (relying on Marcus Terentius Varro), Ab Urbe Condita by Livy (probably dependent on Quintus Fabius Pictor, fl. 200 BCE), and Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus (now extant only in an epitome by Justin).

Virgil's Aeneid

 
Venus as Huntress Appears to Aeneas, by Pietro da Cortona

The Aeneid explains that Aeneas is one of the few Trojans who were not killed or enslaved when Troy fell. Aeneas, after being commanded by the gods to flee, gathered a group, collectively known as the Aeneads, who then traveled to Italy and became progenitors of the Romans. The Aeneads included Aeneas's trumpeter Misenus, his father Anchises, his friends Achates, Sergestus, and Acmon, the healer Iapyx, the helmsman Palinurus, and his son Ascanius (also known as Iulus, Julus, or Ascanius Julius). He carried with him the Lares and Penates, the statues of the household gods of Troy, and transplanted them to Italy.

Several attempts to find a new home failed; one such stop was on Sicily, where in Drepanum, on the island's western coast, his father, Anchises, died peacefully.

 
Aeneas tells Dido about the fall of Troy, by Pierre-Narcisse Guérin

After a brief but fierce storm sent up against the group at Juno's request, Aeneas and his fleet made landfall at Carthage after six years of wanderings. Aeneas had a year-long affair with the Carthaginian queen Dido (also known as Elissa), who proposed that the Trojans settle in her land and that she and Aeneas reign jointly over their peoples. A marriage of sorts was arranged between Dido and Aeneas at the instigation of Juno, who was told that her favorite city would eventually be defeated by the Trojans' descendants. Aeneas's mother Venus (the Roman adaptation of Aphrodite) realized that her son and his company needed a temporary respite to reinforce themselves for the journey to come. However, the messenger god Mercury was sent by Jupiter and Venus to remind Aeneas of his journey and his purpose, compelling him to leave secretly. When Dido learned of this, she uttered a curse that would forever pit Carthage against Rome, an enmity that would culminate in the Punic Wars. She then committed suicide by stabbing herself with the same sword she gave Aeneas when they first met.

After the sojourn in Carthage, the Trojans returned to Sicily where Aeneas organized funeral games to honor his father, who had died a year before. The company traveled on and landed on the western coast of Italy. Aeneas descended into the underworld where he met Dido (who turned away from him to return to her husband) and his father, who showed him the future of his descendants and thus the history of Rome.

 
Aeneas defeats Turnus, by Luca Giordano, 1634–1705. The genius of Aeneas is shown ascendant, looking into the light of the future, while that of Turnus is setting, shrouded in darkness

Latinus, king of the Latins, welcomed Aeneas's army of exiled Trojans and let them reorganize their lives in Latium. His daughter Lavinia had been promised to Turnus, king of the Rutuli, but Latinus received a prophecy that Lavinia would be betrothed to one from another land – namely, Aeneas. Latinus heeded the prophecy, and Turnus consequently declared war on Aeneas at the urging of Juno, who was aligned with King Mezentius of the Etruscans and Queen Amata of the Latins. Aeneas's forces prevailed. Turnus was killed, and Virgil's account ends abruptly.

Other sources

The rest of Aeneas's biography is gleaned from other ancient sources, including Livy and Ovid's Metamorphoses. According to Livy, Aeneas was victorious but Latinus died in the war. Aeneas founded the city of Lavinium, named after his wife. He later welcomed Dido's sister, Anna Perenna, who then committed suicide after learning of Lavinia's jealousy. After Aeneas's death, Venus asked Jupiter to make her son immortal. Jupiter agreed. The river god Numicus cleansed Aeneas of all his mortal parts and Venus anointed him with ambrosia and nectar, making him a god. Aeneas was recognized as the god Jupiter Indiges.[17]

English mythology

The English once widely claimed as history,[18] an original peopling of their isle – prior to the event, a land only of fantastical giants – by descendants of Eneas, though even in the time of the Renaissance, a non-English audience as well at least one English writer found details of the stories less than convincing.[19]

The island known later as Britain, was also previously known as Alba, similarity of name supporting connection to the city of Alba in Italy, said to have been built by Alcanius, son of Eneas, and third ruler of the Latins after Latinus, being either his grandson or step-grandson.

Even if one ignored obviously far-fetched elements of this foundation myth of Britain, Johannes Rastell writing in 1529 questioned, along these lines:  Supposing the original Brits were descendents of a line of Latin kings — Brute the son of Silvius, son Alcanius, son of Eneas who came to the Italian peninsula from Troy — then why should such a fact have escaped record in the writings of Julius Caesar when that Roman military supreme commander had personally surveyed the lands there he had conquered for Rome by 48 BC? And indeed, why should the son Brutus have escaped from Latin histories altogether, given they did deal with Silvius and Alcanius, and 'all theyr childera & what became of them & how they endyd that succeeded them as kyngis'?

Other details he found were able to be discounted without resort to factual records, or with only very few facts needed other than everyday experience. Were the early inhabitants of Britain giants, descended from the Devil in union with 32 daughters of a king Dioclisian of Syria? To Rastell, if the devil had power to sow such seeds at the earlier time, then why not in his own time? Where were the giants today?

Other fanciful elements he reduced by logical deduction from intuitive psychological insights, for example the greatly diminished chance of 32 daughters married to 32 kings on a single day, and all cooperating to kill those 32 husbands in a single night ; or in combination with analysis of logistical realities, such as the suggested voyage of all 32 murderous widows to Britain without dispersion or diversion, over three thousand miles.

Rastell was further able to discount the likelihood of any factuality to that ancient tale, due to his failure to discover after diligent research, any authentic record of its origin or explanation as to why such record should be absent.

Further reading

  • One surviving version of the Brut chronicle is a late Middle Ages manuscript, known as the St Albans Chronicle.[20]

Medieval accounts

Snorri Sturlason, in the Prologue of the Prose Edda, tells of the world as parted in three continents: Africa, Asia and the third part called Europe or Enea.[3][21] Snorri also tells of a Trojan named Munon) (or Mennon), who marries the daughter of the High King (Yfirkonungr) Priam called Troan and travels to distant lands, marries the Sybil and got a son, Tror, who, as Snorri tells, is identical to Thor. This tale resembles some episodes of the Aeneid.[22] Continuations of Trojan matter in the Middle Ages had their effects on the character of Aeneas as well. The 12th-century French Roman d'Enéas addresses Aeneas's sexuality. Though Virgil appears to deflect all homoeroticism onto Nisus and Euryalus, making his Aeneas a purely heterosexual character, in the Middle Ages there was at least a suspicion of homoeroticism in Aeneas. The Roman d'Enéas addresses that charge, when Queen Amata opposes Aeneas's marrying Lavinia.[23]

Medieval interpretations of Aeneas were greatly influenced by both Virgil and other Latin sources. Specifically, the accounts by Dares and Dictys, which were reworked by the 13th-century Italian writer Guido delle Colonne (in Historia destructionis Troiae), colored many later readings. From Guido, for instance, the Pearl Poet and other English writers get the suggestion[24] that Aeneas's safe departure from Troy with his possessions and family was a reward for treason, for which he was chastised by Hecuba.[25] In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (late 14th century) the Pearl Poet, like many other English writers, employed Aeneas to establish a genealogy for the foundation of Britain,[24] and explains that Aeneas was "impeached for his perfidy, proven most true" (line 4).[26]

Family and legendary descendants

 
Aeneas and the god Tiber, by Bartolomeo Pinelli

Aeneas had an extensive family tree. His wet-nurse was Caieta,[27] and he is the father of Ascanius with Creusa, and of Silvius with Lavinia. Ascanius, also known as Iulus (or Julius),[28] founded Alba Longa and was the first in a long series of kings. According to the mythology used by Virgil in the Aeneid, Romulus and Remus were both descendants of Aeneas through their mother Rhea Silvia, making Aeneas the progenitor of the Roman people.[29] Some early sources call him their father or grandfather,[30] but once the dates of the fall of Troy (1184 BCE) and the founding of Rome (753 BCE) became accepted, authors added generations between them. The Julian family of Rome, most notably Julius Cæsar and Augustus, traced their lineage to Ascanius and Aeneas,[31] thus to the goddess Venus. Through the Julians, the Palemonids make this claim. The legendary kings of Britain – including King Arthur – trace their family through a grandson of Aeneas, Brutus.[32]

Character and appearance

 
Dido and Aeneas, from a Roman fresco, Pompeian Third Style (10 BCE – 45 CE), Pompeii, Italy

Aeneas's consistent epithet in Virgil and other Latin authors is pius, a term that connotes reverence toward the gods and familial dutifulness.

In the Aeneid, Aeneas is described as strong and handsome, but neither his hair colour nor complexion are described.[33] In late antiquity however sources add further physical descriptions. The De excidio Troiae of Dares Phrygius describes Aeneas as "auburn-haired, stocky, eloquent, courteous, prudent, pious, and charming".[34] There is also a brief physical description found in the 6th-century John Malalas' Chronographia: "Aeneas: short, fat, with a good chest, powerful, with a ruddy complexion, a broad face, a good nose, fair skin, bald on the forehead, a good beard, grey eyes."[35]

Modern portrayals

Literature

Aeneas appears as a character in William Shakespeare's play Troilus and Cressida, set during the Trojan War.

Aeneas and Dido are the main characters of a 17th-century broadside ballad called "The Wandering Prince of Troy". The ballad ultimately alters Aeneas's fate from traveling on years after Dido's death to joining her as a spirit soon after her suicide.[36]

In modern literature, Aeneas is the speaker in two poems by Allen Tate, "Aeneas at Washington" and "Aeneas at New York". He is a main character in Ursula K. Le Guin's Lavinia, a re-telling of the last six books of the Aeneid told from the point of view of Lavinia, daughter of King Latinus of Latium.

Aeneas appears in David Gemmell's Troy series as a main heroic character who goes by the name Helikaon.

In Rick Riordan's book series The Heroes of Olympus, Aeneas is regarded as the first Roman demigod, son of Venus rather than Aphrodite.

Will Adams' novel City of the Lost assumes that much of the information provided by Virgil is mistaken, and that the true Aeneas and Dido did not meet and love in Carthage but in a Phoenician colony at Cyprus, on the site of the modern Famagusta. Their tale is interspersed with that of modern activists who, while striving to stop an ambitious Turkish Army general trying to stage a coup, accidentally discover the hidden ruins of Dido's palace.

Opera, film and other media

Lea Desandre performs an aria from Purcell's Dido and Aeneas with Les Arts Florissants in 2020

Aeneas is a title character in Henry Purcell's opera Dido and Aeneas (c. 1688), and Jakob Greber's Enea in Cartagine (Aeneas in Carthage) (1711), and one of the principal roles in Hector Berlioz' opera Les Troyens (c. 1857), as well as in Metastasio's immensely popular[37] opera libretto Didone abbandonata. Canadian composer James Rolfe composed his opera Aeneas and Dido (2007; to a libretto by André Alexis) as a companion piece to Purcell's opera.

Despite its many dramatic elements, Aeneas's story has generated little interest from the film industry. Ronald Lewis portrayed Aeneas in Helen of Troy, directed by Robert Wise, as a supporting character, who is a member of the Trojan Royal family, and a close and loyal friend to Paris, and escapes at the end of the film. Portrayed by Steve Reeves, he was the main character in the 1961 sword and sandal film Guerra di Troia (The Trojan War). Reeves reprised the role the following year in the film The Avenger, about Aeneas's arrival in Latium and his conflicts with local tribes as he tries to settle his fellow Trojan refugees there.

Giulio Brogi, portrayed as Aeneas in the 1971 Italian TV miniseries series called Eneide, which gives the whole story of the Aeneid, from Aeneas escape from to Troy, to his meeting of Dido, his arrival in Italy, and his duel with Turnus.[38]

The most recent cinematic portrayal of Aeneas was in the film Troy, in which he appears as a youth charged by Paris to protect the Trojan refugees, and to continue the ideals of the city and its people. Paris gives Aeneas Priam's sword, in order to give legitimacy and continuity to the royal line of Troy – and lay the foundations of Roman culture. In this film, he is not a member of the royal family and does not appear to fight in the war.

In the role-playing game Vampire: The Requiem by White Wolf Game Studios, Aeneas figures as one of the mythical founders of the Ventrue Clan.

in the action game Warriors: Legends of Troy, Aeneas is a playable character. The game ends with him and the Aeneans fleeing Troy's destruction and, spurned by the words of a prophetess thought crazed, goes to a new country (Italy) where he will start an empire greater than Greece and Troy combined that shall rule the world for 1000 years, never to be outdone in the tale of men (The Roman Empire).

In the 2018 TV miniseries Troy: Fall of a City, Aeneas is portrayed by Alfred Enoch.[39] He also featured as an Epic Fighter of the Dardania faction in the Total War Saga: Troy in 2020.[40]

Depictions in art

Scenes depicting Aeneas, especially from the Aeneid, have been the focus of study for centuries. They have been the frequent subject of art and literature since their debut in the 1st century.

Villa Valmarana

The artist Giovanni Battista Tiepolo was commissioned by Gaetano Valmarana in 1757 to fresco several rooms in the Villa Valmarana, the family villa situated outside Vicenza. Tiepolo decorated the palazzina with scenes from epics such as Homer's Iliad and Virgil's Aeneid.[41]

 
Aeneas Introducing Cupid Dressed as Ascanius to Dido, by Tiepolo (1757).
 
Venus Appearing to Aeneas on the Shores of Carthage, by Tiepolo (1757).
 
Mercury Appearing to Aeneas, by Tiepolo (1757).
 
Venus and Vulcan, by Tiepolo (between 1762 and 1766).

Aeneas flees Troy

 
Flight of Aeneas from Troy, by Girolamo Genga (between 1507 and 1510).
 
Aeneas and his Father Fleeing Troy, by Simon Vouet (c. 1635).
 
Aeneas & Anchises, by Pierre Lepautre (c. 1697).
 
Aeneas fleeing from Troy, by Pompeo Batoni (c. 1750).

Aeneas with Dido

 
Dido and Aeneas, by Rutilio Manetti (c. 1630)
 
The Meeting of Dido and Aeneas, by Nathaniel Dance-Holland
 
Landscape with Dido and Aeneas, by Thomas Jones (1769)
 
Dido meeting Aeneas, by Johann Heinrich the Elder Tischbein (3 January 1780)

Family tree

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "His name will be Aineias [Aeneas], since it was an unspeakable [ainos] akhos that took hold of me – grief that I had fallen into the bed of a mortal man." (Nagy 2001, 198–99)

References

  1. ^ "Aeneas". Merriam-Webster. 2015. Retrieved 2015-07-14.
  2. ^ J. Mira Seo (2013). Exemplary Traits: Reading Characterization in Roman Poetry. Oxford University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-19-973428-3.
  3. ^ a b The Prose Edda of Snorri Sturlson Translated by Arthur Gilchrist Brodeur [1916] Prologue II at Internet Sacred Texts Archive. Accessed 11/14/17
  4. ^ a b Nagy, Gregory, trans. (2001) Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, edited by C. Dué Hackney. Houston: University of Houston.
  5. ^ Andrew Faulkner, The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite: Introduction, Text, and Commentary (2008) p. 257
  6. ^ Desmond, Marilynn (1994), Reading Dido: Gender, Textuality, and Medieval Aeneid. pp. 85–86.
  7. ^ John of Salisbury, Polycraticus 8.24–25; Bernard Sylvestris of Tours, Commentum supra sex libros Eneidos Vergilii
  8. ^ Parry, Milman (1971), The Making of Homeric Verse: The Collected Papers of Milman Parry, edited by A. Parry. p.169
  9. ^ Malalas, Chronography 5.106
  10. ^ Dares Phrygius, History of the Fall of Troy 12
  11. ^ Virgil, Aeneid
  12. ^ Homer (2019) [1999]. The Iliad. Translated by Butler, Samuel. transcribed by A. Haines – via Project Gutenberg.
  13. ^ Louden, Bruce (2006). Aeneas in the Iliad: The one just man. 102nd Annual Meeting of Classical Association of the Middle West and South (CAMWS) (abstract).
  14. ^ Apollodorus. Frazer, James G. (ed.). Epitome. Persius. Tufts University. V, 21.
  15. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 115.
  16. ^ Stout, S.E. (1924). "How Vergil Established for Aeneas a Legal Claim to a Home and a Throne in Italy". The Classical Journal. 20 (3): 152–60. JSTOR 3288552.
  17. ^ Titus Livius. The History of Rome (Rev. Canon Roberts, trans.), Vol. I, J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., London, 1905
  18. ^ "About the Brut Chronicle and Manuscript 255". quod.lib.umich.edu. Retrieved 20 Jan 2022.
  19. ^ Rastell, Johannes (1529). The pastyme of people. in chepesyde at the sygne of the mearemayd next to pollys gate.
  20. ^ The St Albans Chronicle. 1400.
  21. ^ Edda Snorra Sturlusonar GUÐNI JÓNSSON bjó til prentunar. Prologus 2
  22. ^ The Prose Edda of Snorri Sturlson Translated by Arthur Gilchrist Brodeur [1916] Prologue III at Internet Sacred Texts Archive. Accessed November 14, 2017
  23. ^ Eldevik, Randi (1991). "Negotiations of Homoerotic Tradition". PMLA. 106 (5): 1177–78. doi:10.2307/462692. JSTOR 462692. S2CID 251026783.
  24. ^ a b Tolkien, J. R. R.; E. V. Gordon; Norman Davis, eds. (1967). Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (2 ed.). Oxford: Oxford UP. p. 70. ISBN 9780198114864.
  25. ^ Colonne, Guido delle (1936). Griffin, N. E. (ed.). Historia destructionis Troiae. Medieval Academy Books. Vol. 26. Cambridge: Medieval Academy of America. pp. 218, 234.
  26. ^ Laura Howes, ed. (2010). Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Translated by Marie Boroff. New York: Norton. p. 3. ISBN 9780393930252. In Marie Boroff's translation, edited by Laura Howes, the treacherous knight of line 3 is identified as Antenor, incorrectly, as Tolkien argues.
  27. ^ Vergil Aeneid 7.1–4
  28. ^ Vergil, Aeneid 1983 1.267
  29. ^ C.F. L'Homond Selections from Viri Romae p.1
  30. ^ Romulus by Plutarch
  31. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities I.70.4
  32. ^ Charles Selby Events to be Remembered in the History of Britain pp. 1–2
  33. ^ Mark Griffith, "What Does Aeneas Look like?", Classical Philology, Vol. 80, No. 4 (Oct., 1985), p. 309. doi:10.1086/366939. JSTOR 269615.
  34. ^ "Classical E-Text: Dares Phrygius, The Fall Of Troy". Theoi.com. Retrieved 2012-08-28.
  35. ^ Lowden, John. Illuminated prophet books: a study of Byzantine manuscripts of the major and minor prophets Penn State Press, 1988, p. 62
  36. ^ English Broadside Ballad Archive, ballad facsimile and full text
  37. ^ William Fitzgerald "Vergil in Music" in "A Companion to Vergil's Aeneid and its Tradition" Joseph Farrell, Michael C. J. Putnam eds, p.344 : "Metastasio's Didone Abbandonata was set over eighty times in the period between 1724 and 1824"
  38. ^ Eneide at IMDb
  39. ^ "'Troy: Fall Of A City': Bella Dayne, Louis Hunter & More Join BBC/Netflix Epic". Deadline. March 30, 2017. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
  40. ^ "Total War Troy: Aeneas guide – bonuses, faction units, builds". Game Guides – Game Pressure.
  41. ^ Michael Collins, Elise K. Kirk ed. Opera and Vivaldi p. 150

Sources

Further reading

  • Cramer, D. "The Wrath of Aeneas: Iliad 13.455–67 and 20.75–352." Syllecta Classica, vol. 11, 2000, pp. 16–33. doi:10.1353/syl.2000.0002.
  • de Vasconcellos, P.S. "A Sound Play on Aeneas' Name in the Aeneid: A Brief Note on VII.69." Vergilius (1959–), vol. 61, 2015, pp. 125–29. JSTOR vergilius1959.61.125.
  • Farron, S. "The Aeneas–Dido Episode as an Attack on Aeneas' Mission and Rome." Greece & Rome, vol. 27, no. 1, 1980, pp. 34–47. doi:10.1017/S0017383500027327. JSTOR 642775.
  • Gowers, E. "Trees and Family Trees in the Aeneid." Classical Antiquity, vol. 30, no. 1, 2011, pp. 87–118. doi:10.1525/ca.2011.30.1.87. JSTOR 10.1525/ca.2011.30.1.87.
  • Grillo, L. "Leaving Troy and Creusa: Reflections on Aeneas' Flight." The Classical Journal, vol. 106, no. 1, 2010, pp. 43–68. doi:10.5184/classicalj.106.1.0043. JSTOR 10.5184/classicalj.106.1.0043.
  • Noonan, J. "Sum Pius Aeneas: Aeneas and the Leader as Conservator/Σωτήρ" The Classical Bulletin. vol. 83, no. 1, 2007, pp. 65–91.
  • Putnam, M.C.J. The Humanness of Heroes: Studies in the Conclusion of Virgil's Aeneid. The Amsterdam Vergil lectures, 1. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2011.
  • Starr, R.J. "Aeneas the Rhetorician: 'Aeneid IV', 279–95." Latomus, vol. 62, no. 1, 2003, pp. 36–46. JSTOR 41540042.
  • Scafoglio, G. "The Betrayal of Aeneas." Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies, vol. 53 no. 1, 2013, pp. 1–14.
  • Schauer, M. Aeneas dux in Vergils Aeneis. Eine literarische Fiktion in augusteischer Zeit. Zetemata vol. 128. Munich: C.H. Beck, 2007.

External links

  • Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (about 900 images related to the Aeneid)
Legendary titles
Preceded by Latin king Succeeded by

aeneas, this, article, about, greco, roman, hero, other, uses, disambiguation, greco, roman, mythology, latin, ˈneːäːs, from, ancient, greek, Αἰνείας, romanized, aineíās, trojan, hero, dardanian, prince, anchises, greek, goddess, aphrodite, equivalent, roman, . This article is about the Greco Roman hero For other uses see Aeneas disambiguation In Greco Roman mythology Aeneas ɪ ˈ n iː e s 1 Latin ae ˈneːaːs from Ancient Greek Aἰneias romanized Aineias was a Trojan hero the son of the Dardanian prince Anchises and the Greek goddess Aphrodite equivalent to the Roman Venus 2 His father was a first cousin of King Priam of Troy both being grandsons of Ilus founder of Troy making Aeneas a second cousin to Priam s children such as Hector and Paris He is a minor character in Greek mythology and is mentioned in Homer s Iliad Aeneas receives full treatment in Roman mythology most extensively in Virgil s Aeneid where he is cast as an ancestor of Romulus and Remus He became the first true hero of Rome Snorri Sturluson identifies him with the Norse god Vidarr of the AEsir 3 AeneasFounder of RomeIapyx removing an arrowhead from the leg of Aeneas with Aeneas s son Ascanius crying beside him Antique fresco from Pompeii AbodeRomePersonal informationParentsAnchises and AphroditeSiblingsLyrusConsortCreusaDidoLaviniaOffspringAscanius by Creusa Silvius by Lavinia Aeneas flees burning Troy Federico Barocci 1598 Galleria Borghese Rome Italy Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Epithets 2 Description 3 Greek myth and epos 3 1 Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite 3 2 Homer s Iliad 3 3 Other sources 4 Roman myth and literature 4 1 Virgil s Aeneid 4 2 Other sources 5 English mythology 5 1 Further reading 6 Medieval accounts 7 Family and legendary descendants 8 Character and appearance 9 Modern portrayals 9 1 Literature 9 2 Opera film and other media 10 Depictions in art 10 1 Villa Valmarana 10 2 Aeneas flees Troy 10 3 Aeneas with Dido 11 Family tree 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology Edit Coinage of Aenea with portrait of Aeneas c 510 480 BCE Aeneas is the Romanization of the hero s original Greek name Aἰneias Aineias Aineias is first introduced in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite when Aphrodite gives him his name from the adjective aὶnon ainon terrible for the terrible grief aὶnon ἄxos he has caused her by being born a mortal who will age and die a 4 It is a popular etymology for the name apparently exploited by Homer in the Iliad 5 Later in the Medieval period there were writers who held that because the Aeneid was written by a philosopher it is meant to be read philosophically 6 As such in the natural order the meaning of Aeneas name combines Greek ennos dweller with demas body which becomes ennaios or in dweller i e as a god inhabiting a mortal body 7 However there is no certainty regarding the origin of his name Epithets Edit In imitation of the Iliad Virgil borrows epithets of Homer including Anchisiades magnanimum magnus heros and bonus Though he borrows many Virgil gives Aeneas two epithets of his own in the Aeneid pater and pius The epithets applied by Virgil are an example of an attitude different from that of Homer for whilst Odysseus is poikilios wily Aeneas is described as pius pious which conveys a strong moral tone The purpose of these epithets seems to enforce the notion of Aeneas divine hand as father and founder of the Roman race and their use seems circumstantial when Aeneas is praying he refers to himself as pius and is referred to as such by the author only when the character is acting on behalf of the gods to fulfill his divine mission Likewise Aeneas is called pater when acting in the interest of his men 8 Description EditAeneas was described by the chronicler Malalas in his account of the Chronography as shortish thick good chest strong ruddy flat faced good nose pale balding good beard 9 Meanwhile in the account of Dares the Phrygian he was illustrated as auburn haired stocky eloquent courteous prudent pious and charming His eyes were black and twinkling 10 Greek myth and epos EditHomeric Hymn to Aphrodite Edit Venus and Anchises by William Blake Richmond 1889 or 1890 The story of the birth of Aeneas is told in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite one of the major Homeric Hymns Aphrodite has caused Zeus to fall in love with mortal women In retaliation Zeus puts desire in her heart for Anchises who is tending his cattle among the hills near Mount Ida When Aphrodite sees him she is smitten She adorns herself as if for a wedding among the gods and appears before him He is overcome by her beauty believing that she is a goddess but Aphrodite identifies herself as a Phrygian princess After they make love Aphrodite reveals her true identity to him and Anchises fears what might happen to him as a result of their liaison Aphrodite assures him that he will be protected and tells him that she will bear him a son to be called Aeneas However she warns him that he must never tell anyone that he has lain with a goddess When Aeneas is born Aphrodite takes him to the nymphs of Mount Ida instructing them to raise the child to age five then take him to Anchises 4 According to other sources Anchises later brags about his encounter with Aphrodite and as a result is struck in the foot with a thunderbolt by Zeus Thereafter he is lame in that foot so that Aeneas has to carry him from the flames of Troy 11 Homer s Iliad Edit Aeneas carrying Anchises black figured oinochoe c 520 510 BCE Louvre F 118 Aeneas is a minor character in the Iliad where he is twice saved from death by the gods as if for an as yet unknown destiny but is an honorable warrior in his own right Having held back from the fighting aggrieved with Priam because in spite of his brave deeds he was not given his due share of honour he leads an attack against Idomeneus to recover the body of his brother in law Alcathous at the urging of Deiphobus 12 He is the leader of the Trojans Dardanian allies as well as a second cousin and principal lieutenant of Hector son and heir of the Trojan king Priam Aeneas s mother Aphrodite frequently comes to his aid on the battlefield and he is a favorite of Apollo Aphrodite and Apollo rescue Aeneas from combat with Diomedes of Argos who nearly kills him and carry him away to Pergamos for healing Even Poseidon who usually favors the Greeks comes to Aeneas s rescue after he falls under the assault of Achilles noting that Aeneas though from a junior branch of the royal family is destined to become king of the Trojan people Bruce Louden presents Aeneas as type The sole virtuous individual or family spared from general destruction following the mytheme of Utnapishtim Baucis and Philemon Noah and Lot 13 Pseudo Apollodorus in his Bibliotheca explains that the Greeks spared him alone on account of his piety 14 Other sources Edit The Roman mythographer Gaius Julius Hyginus c 64 BCE CE 17 in his Fabulae 15 credits Aeneas with killing 28 enemies in the Trojan War Aeneas also appears in the Trojan narratives attributed to Dares Phrygius and Dictys of Crete Roman myth and literature Edit Aeneas and Anchises The history of Aeneas was continued by Roman authors One influential source was the account of Rome s founding in Cato the Elder s Origines 16 The Aeneas legend was well known in Virgil s day and appeared in various historical works including the Roman Antiquities of the Greek historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus relying on Marcus Terentius Varro Ab Urbe Condita by Livy probably dependent on Quintus Fabius Pictor fl 200 BCE and Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus now extant only in an epitome by Justin Virgil s Aeneid Edit Venus as Huntress Appears to Aeneas by Pietro da Cortona The Aeneid explains that Aeneas is one of the few Trojans who were not killed or enslaved when Troy fell Aeneas after being commanded by the gods to flee gathered a group collectively known as the Aeneads who then traveled to Italy and became progenitors of the Romans The Aeneads included Aeneas s trumpeter Misenus his father Anchises his friends Achates Sergestus and Acmon the healer Iapyx the helmsman Palinurus and his son Ascanius also known as Iulus Julus or Ascanius Julius He carried with him the Lares and Penates the statues of the household gods of Troy and transplanted them to Italy Several attempts to find a new home failed one such stop was on Sicily where in Drepanum on the island s western coast his father Anchises died peacefully Aeneas tells Dido about the fall of Troy by Pierre Narcisse Guerin After a brief but fierce storm sent up against the group at Juno s request Aeneas and his fleet made landfall at Carthage after six years of wanderings Aeneas had a year long affair with the Carthaginian queen Dido also known as Elissa who proposed that the Trojans settle in her land and that she and Aeneas reign jointly over their peoples A marriage of sorts was arranged between Dido and Aeneas at the instigation of Juno who was told that her favorite city would eventually be defeated by the Trojans descendants Aeneas s mother Venus the Roman adaptation of Aphrodite realized that her son and his company needed a temporary respite to reinforce themselves for the journey to come However the messenger god Mercury was sent by Jupiter and Venus to remind Aeneas of his journey and his purpose compelling him to leave secretly When Dido learned of this she uttered a curse that would forever pit Carthage against Rome an enmity that would culminate in the Punic Wars She then committed suicide by stabbing herself with the same sword she gave Aeneas when they first met After the sojourn in Carthage the Trojans returned to Sicily where Aeneas organized funeral games to honor his father who had died a year before The company traveled on and landed on the western coast of Italy Aeneas descended into the underworld where he met Dido who turned away from him to return to her husband and his father who showed him the future of his descendants and thus the history of Rome Aeneas defeats Turnus by Luca Giordano 1634 1705 The genius of Aeneas is shown ascendant looking into the light of the future while that of Turnus is setting shrouded in darkness Latinus king of the Latins welcomed Aeneas s army of exiled Trojans and let them reorganize their lives in Latium His daughter Lavinia had been promised to Turnus king of the Rutuli but Latinus received a prophecy that Lavinia would be betrothed to one from another land namely Aeneas Latinus heeded the prophecy and Turnus consequently declared war on Aeneas at the urging of Juno who was aligned with King Mezentius of the Etruscans and Queen Amata of the Latins Aeneas s forces prevailed Turnus was killed and Virgil s account ends abruptly Other sources Edit The rest of Aeneas s biography is gleaned from other ancient sources including Livy and Ovid s Metamorphoses According to Livy Aeneas was victorious but Latinus died in the war Aeneas founded the city of Lavinium named after his wife He later welcomed Dido s sister Anna Perenna who then committed suicide after learning of Lavinia s jealousy After Aeneas s death Venus asked Jupiter to make her son immortal Jupiter agreed The river god Numicus cleansed Aeneas of all his mortal parts and Venus anointed him with ambrosia and nectar making him a god Aeneas was recognized as the god Jupiter Indiges 17 English mythology EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Aeneas news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The English once widely claimed as history 18 an original peopling of their isle prior to the event a land only of fantastical giants by descendants of Eneas though even in the time of the Renaissance a non English audience as well at least one English writer found details of the stories less than convincing 19 The island known later as Britain was also previously known as Alba similarity of name supporting connection to the city of Alba in Italy said to have been built by Alcanius son of Eneas and third ruler of the Latins after Latinus being either his grandson or step grandson Even if one ignored obviously far fetched elements of this foundation myth of Britain Johannes Rastell writing in 1529 questioned along these lines Supposing the original Brits were descendents of a line of Latin kings Brute the son of Silvius son Alcanius son of Eneas who came to the Italian peninsula from Troy then why should such a fact have escaped record in the writings of Julius Caesar when that Roman military supreme commander had personally surveyed the lands there he had conquered for Rome by 48 BC And indeed why should the son Brutus have escaped from Latin histories altogether given they did deal with Silvius and Alcanius and all theyr childera amp what became of them amp how they endyd that succeeded them as kyngis Other details he found were able to be discounted without resort to factual records or with only very few facts needed other than everyday experience Were the early inhabitants of Britain giants descended from the Devil in union with 32 daughters of a king Dioclisian of Syria To Rastell if the devil had power to sow such seeds at the earlier time then why not in his own time Where were the giants today Other fanciful elements he reduced by logical deduction from intuitive psychological insights for example the greatly diminished chance of 32 daughters married to 32 kings on a single day and all cooperating to kill those 32 husbands in a single night or in combination with analysis of logistical realities such as the suggested voyage of all 32 murderous widows to Britain without dispersion or diversion over three thousand miles Rastell was further able to discount the likelihood of any factuality to that ancient tale due to his failure to discover after diligent research any authentic record of its origin or explanation as to why such record should be absent Further reading Edit One surviving version of the Brut chronicle is a late Middle Ages manuscript known as the St Albans Chronicle 20 Medieval accounts EditSnorri Sturlason in the Prologue of the Prose Edda tells of the world as parted in three continents Africa Asia and the third part called Europe or Enea 3 21 Snorri also tells of a Trojan named Munon or Mennon who marries the daughter of the High King Yfirkonungr Priam called Troan and travels to distant lands marries the Sybil and got a son Tror who as Snorri tells is identical to Thor This tale resembles some episodes of the Aeneid 22 Continuations of Trojan matter in the Middle Ages had their effects on the character of Aeneas as well The 12th century French Roman d Eneas addresses Aeneas s sexuality Though Virgil appears to deflect all homoeroticism onto Nisus and Euryalus making his Aeneas a purely heterosexual character in the Middle Ages there was at least a suspicion of homoeroticism in Aeneas The Roman d Eneas addresses that charge when Queen Amata opposes Aeneas s marrying Lavinia 23 Medieval interpretations of Aeneas were greatly influenced by both Virgil and other Latin sources Specifically the accounts by Dares and Dictys which were reworked by the 13th century Italian writer Guido delle Colonne in Historia destructionis Troiae colored many later readings From Guido for instance the Pearl Poet and other English writers get the suggestion 24 that Aeneas s safe departure from Troy with his possessions and family was a reward for treason for which he was chastised by Hecuba 25 In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight late 14th century the Pearl Poet like many other English writers employed Aeneas to establish a genealogy for the foundation of Britain 24 and explains that Aeneas was impeached for his perfidy proven most true line 4 26 Family and legendary descendants Edit Aeneas and the god Tiber by Bartolomeo Pinelli Aeneas had an extensive family tree His wet nurse was Caieta 27 and he is the father of Ascanius with Creusa and of Silvius with Lavinia Ascanius also known as Iulus or Julius 28 founded Alba Longa and was the first in a long series of kings According to the mythology used by Virgil in the Aeneid Romulus and Remus were both descendants of Aeneas through their mother Rhea Silvia making Aeneas the progenitor of the Roman people 29 Some early sources call him their father or grandfather 30 but once the dates of the fall of Troy 1184 BCE and the founding of Rome 753 BCE became accepted authors added generations between them The Julian family of Rome most notably Julius Caesar and Augustus traced their lineage to Ascanius and Aeneas 31 thus to the goddess Venus Through the Julians the Palemonids make this claim The legendary kings of Britain including King Arthur trace their family through a grandson of Aeneas Brutus 32 Character and appearance Edit Dido and Aeneas from a Roman fresco Pompeian Third Style 10 BCE 45 CE Pompeii Italy Aeneas s consistent epithet in Virgil and other Latin authors is pius a term that connotes reverence toward the gods and familial dutifulness In the Aeneid Aeneas is described as strong and handsome but neither his hair colour nor complexion are described 33 In late antiquity however sources add further physical descriptions The De excidio Troiae of Dares Phrygius describes Aeneas as auburn haired stocky eloquent courteous prudent pious and charming 34 There is also a brief physical description found in the 6th century John Malalas Chronographia Aeneas short fat with a good chest powerful with a ruddy complexion a broad face a good nose fair skin bald on the forehead a good beard grey eyes 35 Modern portrayals EditLiterature Edit Aeneas appears as a character in William Shakespeare s play Troilus and Cressida set during the Trojan War Aeneas and Dido are the main characters of a 17th century broadside ballad called The Wandering Prince of Troy The ballad ultimately alters Aeneas s fate from traveling on years after Dido s death to joining her as a spirit soon after her suicide 36 In modern literature Aeneas is the speaker in two poems by Allen Tate Aeneas at Washington and Aeneas at New York He is a main character in Ursula K Le Guin s Lavinia a re telling of the last six books of the Aeneid told from the point of view of Lavinia daughter of King Latinus of Latium Aeneas appears in David Gemmell s Troy series as a main heroic character who goes by the name Helikaon In Rick Riordan s book series The Heroes of Olympus Aeneas is regarded as the first Roman demigod son of Venus rather than Aphrodite Will Adams novel City of the Lost assumes that much of the information provided by Virgil is mistaken and that the true Aeneas and Dido did not meet and love in Carthage but in a Phoenician colony at Cyprus on the site of the modern Famagusta Their tale is interspersed with that of modern activists who while striving to stop an ambitious Turkish Army general trying to stage a coup accidentally discover the hidden ruins of Dido s palace Opera film and other media Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Lea Desandre performs an aria from Purcell s Dido and Aeneas with Les Arts Florissants in 2020 Aeneas is a title character in Henry Purcell s opera Dido and Aeneas c 1688 and Jakob Greber s Enea in Cartagine Aeneas in Carthage 1711 and one of the principal roles in Hector Berlioz opera Les Troyens c 1857 as well as in Metastasio s immensely popular 37 opera libretto Didone abbandonata Canadian composer James Rolfe composed his opera Aeneas and Dido 2007 to a libretto by Andre Alexis as a companion piece to Purcell s opera Despite its many dramatic elements Aeneas s story has generated little interest from the film industry Ronald Lewis portrayed Aeneas in Helen of Troy directed by Robert Wise as a supporting character who is a member of the Trojan Royal family and a close and loyal friend to Paris and escapes at the end of the film Portrayed by Steve Reeves he was the main character in the 1961 sword and sandal film Guerra di Troia The Trojan War Reeves reprised the role the following year in the film The Avenger about Aeneas s arrival in Latium and his conflicts with local tribes as he tries to settle his fellow Trojan refugees there Giulio Brogi portrayed as Aeneas in the 1971 Italian TV miniseries series called Eneide which gives the whole story of the Aeneid from Aeneas escape from to Troy to his meeting of Dido his arrival in Italy and his duel with Turnus 38 The most recent cinematic portrayal of Aeneas was in the film Troy in which he appears as a youth charged by Paris to protect the Trojan refugees and to continue the ideals of the city and its people Paris gives Aeneas Priam s sword in order to give legitimacy and continuity to the royal line of Troy and lay the foundations of Roman culture In this film he is not a member of the royal family and does not appear to fight in the war In the role playing game Vampire The Requiem by White Wolf Game Studios Aeneas figures as one of the mythical founders of the Ventrue Clan in the action game Warriors Legends of Troy Aeneas is a playable character The game ends with him and the Aeneans fleeing Troy s destruction and spurned by the words of a prophetess thought crazed goes to a new country Italy where he will start an empire greater than Greece and Troy combined that shall rule the world for 1000 years never to be outdone in the tale of men The Roman Empire In the 2018 TV miniseries Troy Fall of a City Aeneas is portrayed by Alfred Enoch 39 He also featured as an Epic Fighter of the Dardania faction in the Total War Saga Troy in 2020 40 Depictions in art EditScenes depicting Aeneas especially from the Aeneid have been the focus of study for centuries They have been the frequent subject of art and literature since their debut in the 1st century Villa Valmarana Edit The artist Giovanni Battista Tiepolo was commissioned by Gaetano Valmarana in 1757 to fresco several rooms in the Villa Valmarana the family villa situated outside Vicenza Tiepolo decorated the palazzina with scenes from epics such as Homer s Iliad and Virgil s Aeneid 41 Aeneas Introducing Cupid Dressed as Ascanius to Dido by Tiepolo 1757 Venus Appearing to Aeneas on the Shores of Carthage by Tiepolo 1757 Mercury Appearing to Aeneas by Tiepolo 1757 Venus and Vulcan by Tiepolo between 1762 and 1766 Aeneas flees Troy Edit Flight of Aeneas from Troy by Girolamo Genga between 1507 and 1510 Aeneas and his Father Fleeing Troy by Simon Vouet c 1635 Aeneas amp Anchises by Pierre Lepautre c 1697 Aeneas fleeing from Troy by Pompeo Batoni c 1750 Aeneas with Dido Edit Dido and Aeneas by Rutilio Manetti c 1630 The Meeting of Dido and Aeneas by Nathaniel Dance Holland Landscape with Dido and Aeneas by Thomas Jones 1769 Dido meeting Aeneas by Johann Heinrich the Elder Tischbein 3 January 1780 Family tree EditvteFamily tree of AeneasOceanusTethysAtlasPleioneScamanderIdaeaSimoeisZeus JupiterElectraTeucerDardanusBateaIlusErichthoniusAstyocheCallirrhoeTrosIlusGanymedeAssaracusHieromnemeLaomedonThemisteCapysPriamAnchisesAphrodite VenusLatinusCreusa of TroyAeneasLaviniaAscaniusSilviusAeneas SilviusLatinus SilviusAlbaAtysCapysCapetusTiberinus SilviusAgrippaRomulus SilviusAventinusProcasNumitorAmuliusAres MarsRhea Silvia IliaHersiliaRomulusRemusSee also EditCumaean Sibyl Lacrimae rerum The Golden Bough Latin kings of Alba LongaNotes Edit His name will be Aineias Aeneas since it was an unspeakable ainos akhos that took hold of me grief that I had fallen into the bed of a mortal man Nagy 2001 198 99 References Edit Aeneas Merriam Webster 2015 Retrieved 2015 07 14 J Mira Seo 2013 Exemplary Traits Reading Characterization in Roman Poetry Oxford University Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 19 973428 3 a b The Prose Edda of Snorri Sturlson Translated by Arthur Gilchrist Brodeur 1916 Prologue II at Internet Sacred Texts Archive Accessed 11 14 17 a b Nagy Gregory trans 2001 Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite edited by C Due Hackney Houston University of Houston Andrew Faulkner The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite Introduction Text and Commentary 2008 p 257 Desmond Marilynn 1994 Reading Dido Gender Textuality and Medieval Aeneid pp 85 86 John of Salisbury Polycraticus 8 24 25 Bernard Sylvestris of Tours Commentum supra sex libros Eneidos Vergilii Parry Milman 1971 The Making of Homeric Verse The Collected Papers of Milman Parry edited by A Parry p 169 Malalas Chronography 5 106 Dares Phrygius History of the Fall of Troy 12 Virgil Aeneid Homer 2019 1999 The Iliad Translated by Butler Samuel transcribed by A Haines via Project Gutenberg Louden Bruce 2006 Aeneas in the Iliad The one just man 102nd Annual Meeting of Classical Association of the Middle West and South CAMWS abstract Apollodorus Frazer James G ed Epitome Persius Tufts University V 21 Hyginus Fabulae 115 Stout S E 1924 How Vergil Established for Aeneas a Legal Claim to a Home and a Throne in Italy The Classical Journal 20 3 152 60 JSTOR 3288552 Titus Livius The History of Rome Rev Canon Roberts trans Vol I J M Dent amp Sons Ltd London 1905 About the Brut Chronicle and Manuscript 255 quod lib umich edu Retrieved 20 Jan 2022 Rastell Johannes 1529 The pastyme of people in chepesyde at the sygne of the mearemayd next to pollys gate The St Albans Chronicle 1400 Edda Snorra Sturlusonar GUDNI JoNSSON bjo til prentunar Prologus 2 The Prose Edda of Snorri Sturlson Translated by Arthur Gilchrist Brodeur 1916 Prologue III at Internet Sacred Texts Archive Accessed November 14 2017 Eldevik Randi 1991 Negotiations of Homoerotic Tradition PMLA 106 5 1177 78 doi 10 2307 462692 JSTOR 462692 S2CID 251026783 a b Tolkien J R R E V Gordon Norman Davis eds 1967 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 2 ed Oxford Oxford UP p 70 ISBN 9780198114864 Colonne Guido delle 1936 Griffin N E ed Historia destructionis Troiae Medieval Academy Books Vol 26 Cambridge Medieval Academy of America pp 218 234 Laura Howes ed 2010 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Translated by Marie Boroff New York Norton p 3 ISBN 9780393930252 In Marie Boroff s translation edited by Laura Howes the treacherous knight of line 3 is identified as Antenor incorrectly as Tolkien argues Vergil Aeneid 7 1 4 Vergil Aeneid 1983 1 267 C F L Homond Selections from Viri Romae p 1 Romulus by Plutarch Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities I 70 4 Charles Selby Events to be Remembered in the History of Britain pp 1 2 Mark Griffith What Does Aeneas Look like Classical Philology Vol 80 No 4 Oct 1985 p 309 doi 10 1086 366939 JSTOR 269615 Classical E Text Dares Phrygius The Fall Of Troy Theoi com Retrieved 2012 08 28 Lowden John Illuminated prophet books a study of Byzantine manuscripts of the major and minor prophets Penn State Press 1988 p 62 English Broadside Ballad Archive ballad facsimile and full text William Fitzgerald Vergil in Music in A Companion to Vergil s Aeneid and its Tradition Joseph Farrell Michael C J Putnam eds p 344 Metastasio s Didone Abbandonata was set over eighty times in the period between 1724 and 1824 Eneide at IMDb Troy Fall Of A City Bella Dayne Louis Hunter amp More Join BBC Netflix Epic Deadline March 30 2017 Retrieved April 1 2017 Total War Troy Aeneas guide bonuses faction units builds Game Guides Game Pressure Michael Collins Elise K Kirk ed Opera and Vivaldi p 150Sources EditHomer Iliad II 819 21 V 217 575 XIII 455 544 XX 75 352 Apollodorus Bibliotheca III xii 2 Epitome III 32 IV 2 V 21 Virgil Aeneid Ovid Metamorphoses XIII 623 715 XIV 75 153 581 608 Ovid Heroides VII Livy Book 1 1 2 Dictys Cretensis Dares Phrygius Further reading EditCramer D The Wrath of Aeneas Iliad 13 455 67 and 20 75 352 Syllecta Classica vol 11 2000 pp 16 33 doi 10 1353 syl 2000 0002 de Vasconcellos P S A Sound Play on Aeneas Name in the Aeneid A Brief Note on VII 69 Vergilius 1959 vol 61 2015 pp 125 29 JSTOR vergilius1959 61 125 Farron S The Aeneas Dido Episode as an Attack on Aeneas Mission and Rome Greece amp Rome vol 27 no 1 1980 pp 34 47 doi 10 1017 S0017383500027327 JSTOR 642775 Gowers E Trees and Family Trees in the Aeneid Classical Antiquity vol 30 no 1 2011 pp 87 118 doi 10 1525 ca 2011 30 1 87 JSTOR 10 1525 ca 2011 30 1 87 Grillo L Leaving Troy and Creusa Reflections on Aeneas Flight The Classical Journal vol 106 no 1 2010 pp 43 68 doi 10 5184 classicalj 106 1 0043 JSTOR 10 5184 classicalj 106 1 0043 Noonan J Sum Pius Aeneas Aeneas and the Leader as Conservator Swthr The Classical Bulletin vol 83 no 1 2007 pp 65 91 Putnam M C J The Humanness of Heroes Studies in the Conclusion of Virgil s Aeneid The Amsterdam Vergil lectures 1 Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press 2011 Starr R J Aeneas the Rhetorician Aeneid IV 279 95 Latomus vol 62 no 1 2003 pp 36 46 JSTOR 41540042 Scafoglio G The Betrayal of Aeneas Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies vol 53 no 1 2013 pp 1 14 Schauer M Aeneas dux in Vergils Aeneis Eine literarische Fiktion in augusteischer Zeit Zetemata vol 128 Munich C H Beck 2007 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aeneas Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Aeneas Warburg Institute Iconographic Database about 900 images related to the Aeneid Legendary titlesPreceded byLatinus Latin king Succeeded byAscanius Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aeneas amp oldid 1149206835, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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