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The Aeneid: Roman Epic

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Themes: wandering hero, piety, how to live a good ... Dido Assaulted by Eros ... Venus & Cupid infect Dido with eros for Aeneas, Aeneas tells the Carthaginians ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Aeneid: Roman Epic


1
The Aeneid Roman Epic
  • CNE/ENG 120
  • 10/13/04

2
The Aeneid
  • Author Vergil
  • Culture Roman
  • Time 1st c. BCE
  • Genre epic poetry
  • Names to Know Aeneas, Dido, Venus, Juno,
    Jupiter, Turnus
  • Themes wandering hero, piety, how to live a good
    life, devotion to duty, family

3
Narrative Structure
  • Books 1-6 The Odyssean part
  • Aeneas as a wandering hero. His god-sent mission
    is to found a new city.
  • Books 7-12 The Iliadic part
  • Aeneas and the Trojans at war with the Italians
    their allies.

4
The Roman Hero
  • Aeneas epithet pious
  • Roman heroism on behalf of the community, not
    the individual. Aeneas is a corporate hero,
    subsumes his personal desires for the good of the
    community.

5
Why the Aeneid?
  • The emperor Augustus told Vergil to write a
    national epic as part of his propaganda program,
    to celebrate the new golden age of peace that
    Augustus reign ushered in.
  • Background Romes civil wars, death of the
    Republic.

6
The Proem, lines 1-12
  • As usual in epic, Vergil gives us a proem that
    tells us what his poem will be about.
  • I sing of warfare a man at war. From the
    sea-coast of Troy in early days he came to Italy
    by destiny, to our Lavinian western shore, a
    fugitive, this captain, buffeted cruelly on land
    as on the sea by blows from powers of the air -
    behind them baleful Juno in her sleepless rage.
    And cruel losses were his lot in war, till he
    could found a city and bring home his gods to
    Latium, land of the Latin race, the Alban lords,
    the high walls of Rome.

7
Book 1 Aeneas in Carthage
  • In lines 13-49, we learn why Aeneas suffers - the
    wrath of Juno.
  • Two reasons
  • Troy (Judgment of Paris, a past event)
  • Carthage (she knew Rome would conquer this, her
    favorite city, a future event)

8
The Mediterranean
9
Phoenician Trade Routes
10
Carthage, a Phoenician City
11
The Wrath of Juno
  • Angry, Juno asks Aeolus to drive the Trojan ships
    off course, shipwreck them if possible.
  • The bribe the lovely nymph Deiopeia
  • Result one shipwreck before Neptune calms the
    sea.

12
Arrival in Libya
  • Aeneas puts into shore with only 7 ships from his
    fleet.
  • He gives a pep talk to his men, recalling the
    horrors they have already survived (Scylla, land
    of the Cyclopes, etc.)

13
A Mothers Appeal
  • While the Trojans recover onshore, Aeneas mother
    Venus approaches her father Jupiter on behalf of
    her son (lines 294-332).

14
Jupiters Prophecy
  • Lines 333-387.
  • For these I set no limits, world or time, but
    make the gift of empire without end . . Lords of
    the world, the toga-wearing Romans

15
Two Mythic Traditions
  • Greek The Trojan War in 1250 BCE.

16
Two Mythic Traditions
  • Roman Romulus and Remus, the founding of Rome in
    753 BCE.

17
Dido and the Carthaginians
  • Jupiter sends Mercury down to make Dido and her
    people receptive to the Trojans.
  • Meanwhile, Aeneas encounters his disguised
    mother, who tells him Didos history.

18
Aeneas on Himself
  • Book 1.500-505
  • I am Aeneas, duty-bound (translation of the
    Latin pius), and known above high air of heaven
    by my fame, carrying with me in my ships our gods
    of hearth and home, saved from the enemy. I look
    for Italy to be my fatherland, and my descent is
    from all-highest Jove. . . I followed the given
    fates.

19
The Temple of Juno
  • Hidden in a cloud, Aeneas goes into Carthage. He
    sees the temple of Juno, its walls painted with
    scenes from the Trojan War (lines 590-649).
  • We know from this that the Carthaginians are
    civilized we get this Trojans reactions to the
    events his city suffered. Trojan POV.

20
Dido Assaulted by Eros
  • While Venus Cupid infect Dido with eros for
    Aeneas, Aeneas tells the Carthaginians about the
    Fall of Troy and his wanderings.
  • Book 2 The Fall of Troy from the Trojan POV. The
    ghost of Hektor, the omen with Iulus, the gods
    fighting, death of Creusa.
  • Book 3 Aeneas wanderings, from Thrace, Crete,
    Sicily, to Carthage.

21
Book 4 Dido/Cleopatra
  • This book troubles many modern readers, since it
    seems to portray Aeneas in a bad light.
  • Consider
  • Why does Aeneas linger in Carthage?
  • What does he do there with Dido?
  • Why does he leave? How does he leave?
  • What does Dido do?

22
Book 6 The Underworld
  • Like Odysseus before him, Aeneas goes to the
    underworld his mission is to speak with his
    father.
  • His guide the Sibyl, a female prophet.
  • The geography of Hades.

23
Aeneas Meets . . .
  • Dido, who treats him much as Ajax treated
    Odysseus
  • Trojan War dead (just as Odysseus does)
  • Mythical monsters, old-time gods (the Furies, the
    Titans), famous sinners (Ixion, etc)
  • Anchises gives Aeneas a tour of the souls not yet
    born - the great heroes of Roman history from
    Romulus to Iulius Caesar to Augustus.

24
Augustus
25
Book 8 Evander
  • Aeneas makes a pact with King Latinus of the
    Latins, to marry his daughter to Lavinia, who is
    already engaged to Turnus. In Book 7, war broke
    out between the Trojans and the Latins over this
    broken engagement.
  • In Book 8, Aeneas sails up the Tiber to get
    allies. He meets Evander, a Greek king, whose
    kingdom is on the future site of Rome.

26
Allies
  • Their alliance made, Evander entrusts Pallas his
    son to Aeneas care.
  • Turnus kills Pallas and strips him of his sword
    belt (standard operating procedure).
  • Battle rages, each side wins victories.

27
Book 12 Death of Turnus
  • Juno strikes a deal with Jupiter (lines
    1106-1140).
  • When he has been wounded, Turnus makes an appeal
    to Aeneas (lines 1255-1267). Does it seem fair?

28
Aeneas Response
  • How does Aeneas reply to Turnus request?
  • Was he right to do as he did?
  • What is the effect of the ending of the poem on
    the reader?
  • Why did Vergil choose this ending? What does it
    say about Augustus? The Romans?
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