Aeneid
Home ] Up ]

Everything you need to know about the Aeneid can be found here.  This is essentially the same as the sheet that you were given in class.  This is a review sheet and a guide for our reading.

The Aeneid

The Aeneid is an epic poem written by the Latin poet Vergil (70-19 BC). An epic poem explains the history of a group of people or a culture through a hero. The main hero in the Aeneid is Aeneas, a Trojan who escaped from Troy during its destruction by the Greeks. An epic usually starts in media res or in the middle of things. It uses a flashback or telling of a story to explain how the character got to where he is. It then is told as the action happens.

The main theme of the Aeneid is Juno’s never ending hatred of Aeneas. The reason for this is that Aeneas is destined to get to Italy, and his descendants will found Rome. The Romans will one day destroy Carthage which is Juno’s favorite city. She thinks that if she can stop Aeneas from getting to Italy, Carthage will never be destroyed. However, your fate is unstoppable. Aeneas absolutely must get to Italy. He doesn’t have a choice and neither does Juno.

Some other things that are strange about epic poems are the use of transferred epithets. This means that certain descriptions are used repeatedly to describe things. Aeneas is dutiful or pious Aeneas. His best friend is always faithful Achates. Other descriptions will be discussed as we read.

Latin poetry did not use rhymes. It used meter. The Aeneid was written using dactylic hexameter. This means that each line of the Aeneid has six feet made up of either dactyls (-uu) or spondees (--). There are certain rules that govern long or short marks, and the process of determining the rhythm of a line is called scansion. We have practiced doing this with the first 10 or so lines of the Aeneid. This is the web address of a page that will help you if you have trouble with this – http://suberic.net/~marc/scansion.html

You have been given a sheet with some questions to think about and answer regarding the Aeneid. They are thought questions, and similar questions will be used on an upcoming test. Make sure that you can answer these questions. They are important to make sure that you understand what we are reading. The questions come from a web site called  http://www.hsc.edu/class/vegil.html .

Here is an outline for Book I that I found from a website (http://www.unbsj.ca/arts/classics/courses/clas1302/aenout.html )

Invocation
Juno’s wrath
The storm (Aeolus)
Neptune calms the storm
Trojans lands near Carthage
Venus complains to Jupiter
Jupiter’s prophecy
Mercury prepares a favorable reception in Carthage
Aeneas meets with Venus, learns of Carthage and Dido
Aeneas in the city of Carthage
Aeneas encounters Dido
Venus causes Dido to begin to fall in love with Aeneas

The names in the Aeneid are used interchangeably from time to time. I found a chart with the names of the major characters, the other names for the people in the books, and other useful information at http://www.southwestern.edu/academic/classical.languages/myth/myth1127.html  This is very useful. The most useful part is the names of the groups that appear in the Aeneid.

Trojans = Teucrians, Phrygians, Dardanians
Carthaginians = Tyrians, Phoenicians
Greeks = Danaans, Argives, Achaeans, Pelasgians

The main characters are as follows (in alphabetic order)

Aeneas, son of Anchises and Venus
Aeolus, god of the winds
Anchises, father of Aeneas
Ascanius, (Iulus) son of Aeneas and Creusa
Creusa, Aeneas’ Trojan wife
Cupid (Eros), son of Venus
Dido, queen of Carthage
Evander, Greek settler in Italy
Hector, son of Priam and Hecuba, greatest Trojan hero
Hecuba, Priam’s wife
Juno (Hera)
Jupiter (Zeus)
Laocoon, Trojan priest of Neptune
Lavinia, Italian princess
Mercury (Hermes)
Minerva (Pallas Athena)
Neptune (Poseidon)
Polyphemus, one-eyed giant (Cyclops)
Priam, king of Troy
Sibyl, priestess of Apollo at Cumae
Sinon, the lying Greek
Turnus, Italian king
Ulysses, (Odysseus) clever Greek
Venus (Aphrodite)

There is a lot of information out there about the Aeneid.  Go to your favorite search engine and see what you can find.  Here are some places that I found helpful:

An online version of someone's translation.  The English is hard to read, but this is one of the classics.  Beware.  This is tough and a big page to download.  The whole text is here - all 12 books.  Click here.  (U of Oregon)
Wanna see Vergil's Home Page?  Besides the images from old manuscripts, there is not much of use here at the moment, but it does have some links. Click here to see what the fuss is about. ( UPenn)
Some quotes from Virgil (the author) can be found by clicking here.  Not a lot, but it is interesting. 
Someone actually put the Latin online.  You can see all the Latin text of Vergil's works by going to this site.
A site written by students about the life of Vergil.  Pretty accurate as far as I can tell.  Click here to see the ThinkQuest site.
Here are some pictures of a text from about 1500 AD.  That is 500 years old (even older than me.  Wow.  At the BYU library. 
There is a site called Virgil.org.  It has maps and links and lots of other helpful stuff.  Click here to check it out.  
Some more pictures from old texts can be found here.  Check it!
A nice summary of the Aeneid in chronological order (not in media res).  You may actually find this helpful.  Go see what you think.
This site is fabulous.  It is a series of questions you may have about this work.  It has links and the answers are understandable for a change.  Click here.
There are some questions here for review, but this guy uses another translation.  If you can get past that, the questions are good. I like them and may use them on the next test.  Click here to see them.
Wanna see a Vergil Study Guide?  These are the questions I put on the sheet with vocabulary.  Click here to see the page and additional questions.
This site has excellent information about how to read the Aeneid.  You really should read what you can of this site. It asks good questions, and you have to think.  More questions for the test will come from here. 
A person named Laura Gorney created a web site that summarizes the Aeneid, discusses it's style, and has images of the characters in a slide show.   Wander around this fantastic site about Latin epic poetry.  Click here. 
This gentleman at the University of Virginia has done a remarkable job in compiling images from several parts of the story of the Trojan War.  They go page by page, so check it out by clicking here.