Virgil: The Aeneid

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Virgil: The Aeneid

Virgil: The Aeneid

Introduction

The Aeneid by Publius Vergilius Maro (Virgil) is one of the most important pieces of classical literature because it had such an immeasurable impact on the Roman world. The Aeneid gives modern scholars an important tool in understanding both Roman mythology and the times during which the Aeneid was written, during the reign of Rome's first emperor Augustus. Under Augustus, Roman memories of the bitter civil wars that had plagued Rome for a century and the resulting chaos gave all Romans a sense of insecurity. The epic poem, the Aeneid, was commissioned by Augustus with the hope of uniting all Romans and giving them a sense of shared history worthy of pride and containing lessons to emulate. Virgil's works are often compared to those of the Greek poet Homer. The Aeneid was written in a way that lacked the originality of the Homeric epics however the two authors use similar themes and character which share common traits. Virgil intended to surpass the Homeric epics in quality while at the same time relying on them heavily, an element that draws criticism from many modern scholars.

Vergil: The Aeneid

The Aeneid tells the story of the Trojan hero Aeneas's dangerous flight from Troy to Italy following the Trojan War. It was prophesied by Apollo that in Italy, Aeneas's descendents would go on to found the great city of Rome. As Aeneas and his companions sail towards Rome a storm sends them off course and they land in Carthage. Carthage's founder and queen, Dido, welcomes them and encourages Aeneas to tell her the tale of how the city of Troy fell and the events of their journey that led them to Carthage. Aeneas complies and tells a detailed story of the events of the war. Some elements of his story mirror those found in the Homeric epics, such as the Greek 'gift' of the wooden horse to the Trojans. With intervention by the gods, Dido falls in love with Aeneas and is utterly destroyed when, at the insistence of Jupiter, he departs to continue on to the Italian Peninsula. The fourth book ends with Dido's cursing of Aeneas by and her dramatic suicide.

Major themes that are consistent throughout the Aeneid include; fate, the suffering of wanderers and others and prophesies and predictions. Themes are the fundamental aspects that make up the epics of both Virgil and Homer. The role of fate is the most important aspect of the Aeneid for throughout the epic the direction and destination of Aeneas are predetermined and announced by the gods. The sufferings that the Trojans, and Aeneas in particular, suffer through are only things that postpone his inevitable fate; something repeated throughout the epic by Jupiter as the god follows Aeneas's actions. Although some of the events that interfere with Aeneas's fate are indeed caused by gods, Jupiter the most powerful of the gods knows that these set backs will not affect the overall outcome.

The first four books of the Aeneid focus primarily on suffering of ...
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