Introduction The Aeneid is a text which elicits many questions from the reader. One of the fascinating aspects is the depiction of Dido, queen of Carthage, in this epic. Dido, the founder of the might of the Carthaginians, the arch-enemies of those who would later becqme the Romans, is one of the most captivating figures in this epic. While one could argue thac the poet simply had the insight to juxtapose one figure of greatness with the other in order to place Aeneas, the primogenitor of the Romans, in heroic relief, Vergil actually goes much further, according to most modern commentators. Mackie (1988:82), for example, states that the poet gives Dido a privileged position in the epic: "Vergil does not desire that the reader's sympathy be ...
Dido, Queen of Carthage, is a female figure from an exotic afar who has never ceased to offer, in di...
Some introductory remarks on the subject-matter of the Aeneid, and on the immediate historical conte...
Love and tragedy dominate book four of Virgil's most powerful work, building on the violent emotions...
The text is an analysis of the story of Dido as shown in Virgil’s Aeneid. The author presents pre-Vi...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. disssertation. Major:Classical and Near Eastern Studies. Advisor: Chri...
A millenary tradition of commentators of the Aeneid has demonstrated that Book IV contains elements ...
In the Aeneid, the recurrent themes of ‘construction’ and ‘destruction’ can be connected to generic ...
29 p. -- Bibliogr.: p. 20-21The relevance of Virgil´s The Aeined has prevailed over time and specifi...
<p><span>In <em>Aeneid</em>’s book IV, Virgil makes use of elegiac topics while narrating Dido and A...
The Servian commentary on Vergil's Aeneid has two primary authors: one, Servius himself; two, eviden...
This project investigates the relationships between gender, emotion, and madness in a range of pre-m...
A particular instance of intertextuality that has received much critical attention is a line of the ...
Many scholars believe that literary and artistic level of Book V of Vergil`s Aeneid is much lower th...
In Aeneid’s book IV, Virgil makes use of elegiac topics while narrating Dido and Aeneas’ ill-fated l...
This thesis is a commented critical edition of Alessandro Pazzi de’ Medici’s Dido in Cartagine (1524...
Dido, Queen of Carthage, is a female figure from an exotic afar who has never ceased to offer, in di...
Some introductory remarks on the subject-matter of the Aeneid, and on the immediate historical conte...
Love and tragedy dominate book four of Virgil's most powerful work, building on the violent emotions...
The text is an analysis of the story of Dido as shown in Virgil’s Aeneid. The author presents pre-Vi...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. disssertation. Major:Classical and Near Eastern Studies. Advisor: Chri...
A millenary tradition of commentators of the Aeneid has demonstrated that Book IV contains elements ...
In the Aeneid, the recurrent themes of ‘construction’ and ‘destruction’ can be connected to generic ...
29 p. -- Bibliogr.: p. 20-21The relevance of Virgil´s The Aeined has prevailed over time and specifi...
<p><span>In <em>Aeneid</em>’s book IV, Virgil makes use of elegiac topics while narrating Dido and A...
The Servian commentary on Vergil's Aeneid has two primary authors: one, Servius himself; two, eviden...
This project investigates the relationships between gender, emotion, and madness in a range of pre-m...
A particular instance of intertextuality that has received much critical attention is a line of the ...
Many scholars believe that literary and artistic level of Book V of Vergil`s Aeneid is much lower th...
In Aeneid’s book IV, Virgil makes use of elegiac topics while narrating Dido and Aeneas’ ill-fated l...
This thesis is a commented critical edition of Alessandro Pazzi de’ Medici’s Dido in Cartagine (1524...
Dido, Queen of Carthage, is a female figure from an exotic afar who has never ceased to offer, in di...
Some introductory remarks on the subject-matter of the Aeneid, and on the immediate historical conte...
Love and tragedy dominate book four of Virgil's most powerful work, building on the violent emotions...