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Dido



 
 
Dido was, according to ancient Greek
Ancient Greece

The term Ancient Greece refers to the period of History of Greece lasting from the Greek Dark Ages ca. 1100 BC and the Dorian invasion, to 146 BC and the Roman Republic conquest of Greece after the Battle of Corinth ....
 and Roman
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 sources, the founder and first Queen of Carthage
Carthage

Carthage refers both to an ancient city in present-day Tunisia, and a modern-day suburb of Tunis. The civilization that developed within the city's sphere of influence is referred to as Punic or Carthaginian....
 (in modern-day Tunisia
Tunisia

Tunisia , officially the Tunisian Republic , is a country located in North Africa. It is bordered by Algeria to the west and Libya to the southeast....
). She is best known from the account given by the Roman
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 poet Virgil
Virgil

Publius Vergilius Maro was a classical Roman poet, best known for three major works?the Bucolics , the Georgics and the Aeneid?although several Appendix Vergiliana are also attributed to him....
 in his Aeneid
Aeneid

The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
. In some sources she is also known as Elissa.

The name Elissa is probably a Greek rendering of the Phoenicia
Phoenicia

Phoenicia was an ancient civilization centered in the north of ancient Canaan, with its heartland along the coastal regions of modern day Lebanon, extending to parts of Israel, Syria and the Palestinian territories....
n Elishat. The name Dido, used mostly by Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 writers, seems to be a Phoenician form meaning "Wanderer" and was perhaps the name under which Elissa was most familiarly known in Carthage.

person of Elissa can be traced back to references by Roman historians to lost writings of Timaeus
Timaeus (historian)

Timaeus , Ancient Greece historian, was born at Tauromenium in Sicily. Driven out of Sicily by Agathocles, he migrated to Athens, where he studied rhetoric under a pupil of Isocrates and lived for fifty years....
 of Tauromenium
Taormina

Taormina is a comune and small town on the east coast of the island of Sicily, Italy, in the Province of Messina, about midway between Messina and Catania....
 in Sicily
Sicily

Sicily is an Autonomous regions with special statute of Italy. Of all the regions of Italy, Sicily covers the largest land area at 25,708 km? and currently has just over five million inhabitants....
 (c. 356
356 BC

Events...
–260 BC).






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Quotations


And the last words I heard him say were I shall return for you my love on Christmas Day..

Christmas Day

At school I was pretty sociable, but I did like to come home and be on my own and make music and write my dreams down.

I like being a strong, independent woman, and to be honest, I was never afraid to be on my own.

If you're cold I'll keep you warmIf you're low just hold onCause I will be your safetyOh don't leave home.

Don't Leave Home

It's all right to make mistakes, you're only humanInside everybody's hiding something.

Slide

It's great to just disappear, grab a suitcase, switch the answering machine on and just go somewhere else.






Encyclopedia


Dido was, according to ancient Greek
Ancient Greece

The term Ancient Greece refers to the period of History of Greece lasting from the Greek Dark Ages ca. 1100 BC and the Dorian invasion, to 146 BC and the Roman Republic conquest of Greece after the Battle of Corinth ....
 and Roman
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 sources, the founder and first Queen of Carthage
Carthage

Carthage refers both to an ancient city in present-day Tunisia, and a modern-day suburb of Tunis. The civilization that developed within the city's sphere of influence is referred to as Punic or Carthaginian....
 (in modern-day Tunisia
Tunisia

Tunisia , officially the Tunisian Republic , is a country located in North Africa. It is bordered by Algeria to the west and Libya to the southeast....
). She is best known from the account given by the Roman
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 poet Virgil
Virgil

Publius Vergilius Maro was a classical Roman poet, best known for three major works?the Bucolics , the Georgics and the Aeneid?although several Appendix Vergiliana are also attributed to him....
 in his Aeneid
Aeneid

The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
. In some sources she is also known as Elissa.

The name Elissa is probably a Greek rendering of the Phoenicia
Phoenicia

Phoenicia was an ancient civilization centered in the north of ancient Canaan, with its heartland along the coastal regions of modern day Lebanon, extending to parts of Israel, Syria and the Palestinian territories....
n Elishat. The name Dido, used mostly by Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 writers, seems to be a Phoenician form meaning "Wanderer" and was perhaps the name under which Elissa was most familiarly known in Carthage.

Early accounts

Meister Des Vergilius Vaticanus 001
The person of Elissa can be traced back to references by Roman historians to lost writings of Timaeus
Timaeus (historian)

Timaeus , Ancient Greece historian, was born at Tauromenium in Sicily. Driven out of Sicily by Agathocles, he migrated to Athens, where he studied rhetoric under a pupil of Isocrates and lived for fifty years....
 of Tauromenium
Taormina

Taormina is a comune and small town on the east coast of the island of Sicily, Italy, in the Province of Messina, about midway between Messina and Catania....
 in Sicily
Sicily

Sicily is an Autonomous regions with special statute of Italy. Of all the regions of Italy, Sicily covers the largest land area at 25,708 km? and currently has just over five million inhabitants....
 (c. 356
356 BC

Events...
–260 BC). Timaeus apparently dated the foundation of Carthage to 814 BC (or 813 BC), but he also placed the founding of Rome in the same year, which suggests legend had been at work.

Other historians gave other dates, both for the foundation of Carthage and the foundation of Rome. Appian
Appian

Appianus , of Alexandria was a Ancient Rome historian who flourished during the reigns of Trajan, Hadrian and Antoninus Pius. He is commonly referred to by the anglicised form of his name, Appian....
 in the beginning of his Punic Wars claims that Carthage was founded by a certain Zorus and Carchedon, but Zorus looks like an alternate transliteration of the city name Tyre and Carchedon is just the Greek form of Carthage. Timaeus made Carchedon's wife Elissa the sister of King Pygmalion of Tyre
Pygmalion of Tyre

Pygmalion was king of Tyre from 831 to 785 BC and a son of King Mattan I .During Pygmalion's reign, Tyre seems to have shifted the heart of its trading empire from the Middle East to the Mediterranean, as can be judged from the building of new colonies including Kition on Cyprus, Sardinia , and, according to tradition, Carthage....
, and modern scholars still put Pygmalion (Pumayyaton) on the throne of gold at that time, so Timaeus' date usually appears in modern chronologies as the normal dubious and legendary date for the founding of Carthage. Yet archaeology has yet to find any evidence of settlement on the site of Carthage before the last quarter of the 8th century BC. So the whole story might be legendary or the synchronism between Elissa and Pygmalion might be legendary or archaeologists may have as yet missed important evidence for earlier settlement. That the city is named Qart-hadasht "New City" at least indicates it was a colony. (There is another Qart-hadasht in Cyprus
Cyprus

Cyprus , officially the Republic of Cyprus , is an island country situated in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, east of Greece, west of Lebanon, Syria, and Israel, south of Turkey and north of Egypt....
 as well as in Spain).

The only surviving full account before Virgil's treatment is that of Virgil's contemporary Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus
Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus

Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus, known as Pompeius Trogus, Pompey Trogue, or Trogue Pompey, was a 1st century BC Roman historian of the Celtic tribe of the Vocontii in Gallia Narbonensis, flourished during the age of Augustus Caesar, nearly contemporary with Livy....
 in his Philippic histories as rendered in a digest or epitome made by Junianus Justinus
Junianus Justinus

'Justin' was a Latin historian who lived under the Roman Empire. His name is mentioned only in the title of his own history, and there it is in the genitive, which would be M....
 in the 3rd century.

According to Justin (18.4–6), a king of Tyre whom Justin does not name, made his very beautiful daughter Elissa and son Pygmalion his joint heirs. But on his death the people took Pygmalion alone as their ruler though Pygmalion was yet still a boy. Elissa married Acerbas
Acerbas

Acerbas, a Tyre priest of Hercules, who married Dido , the daughter of king Mutgo, and sister of Pygmalion of Tyre. He was possessed of considerable wealth, which, knowing the avarice of Pygmalion, who had succeeded his father, he concealed in the earth....
 her uncle who as priest of Hercules
Heracles

In Greek mythology, Heracles or Herakles meaning "glory of Hera", or "Glorious through Hera" Alcides or Alcaeus " was a hero, the son of Zeus and Alcmene, foster son of Amphitryon and great-grandson of Perseus....
— that is, Melqart
Melqart

Melqart, properly Phoenician language Milk-Qart "King of the City", less accurately Melkart, Melkarth or Melgart , Akkadian language Milqartu, was tutelary god of the Phoenician city of Tyre as Eshmun protected Sidon....
— was second in power to King Pygmalion. Rumor told that Acerbas had much wealth secretly buried and King Pygmalion had Acerbas murdered in hopes of gaining this wealth. Elissa, desiring to escape Tyre, expressed a wish to move into Pygmalion's palace, but then ordered the attendants whom Pygmalion sent to aid in the move, to throw all Acerbas' bags of gold into the sea apparently as an offering to his spirit. In fact these bags contained only sand. Elissa then persuaded the attendants to join her in flight to another land rather than face Pygmalion's anger when he discovered what had supposedly become of Acerbas' wealth. Some senators also joined her in her flight.

The party arrived at Cyprus where the priest of Jupiter
Jupiter (mythology)

In Roman mythology, Jupiter or Jove was the king of the gods,and the god of sky and thunder. He is the equivalent of Zeus in the Greek pantheon....
 joined the expedition. There the exiles also seized about eighty young women who were prostituting themselves on the shore in order to provide wives for the men in the party.

Eventually Elissa and her followers arrived on the coast of North Africa
North Africa

North Africa or Northern Africa is the northernmost region of the African continent, separated by the Sahara from Sub-Saharan Africa.Geopolitically, the United Nations subregion of Northern Africa includes the following seven countries or territories:...
 where Elissa asked the local inhabitants for a small bit of land for a temporary refuge until she could continue her journeying, only as much land as could be encompassed by an oxhide. They agreed. Elissa cut the oxhide into fine strips so that she had enough to encircle an entire nearby hill, which was therefore afterwards named Byrsa "hide". (This event is commemorated in modern mathematics: The "isoperimetric problem
Isoperimetry

The isoperimetric inequality is a geometry inequality involving the square of the circumference of a closed curve in the plane and the area of a plane region it encloses, as well as its various generalizations....
" of enclosing the maximum area within a fixed boundary is often called the "Dido Problem" in modern Calculus of variations
Calculus of variations

Calculus of variations is a field of mathematics that deals with functional , as opposed to ordinary calculus which deals with function . Such functionals can for example be formed as integrals involving an unknown function and its derivatives....
.) That would become their new home. Many of the locals joined the settlement and both locals and envoys from the nearby Phoenicia
Phoenicia

Phoenicia was an ancient civilization centered in the north of ancient Canaan, with its heartland along the coastal regions of modern day Lebanon, extending to parts of Israel, Syria and the Palestinian territories....
n city of Utica
Utica, Tunisia

Utica is an ancient city northwest of Carthage near the outflow of the Medjerda River into the Mediterranean Sea, traditionally considered to be the first colony founded by the Phoenicians in North Africa....
 urged the building of a city. In digging the foundations an ox's head was found, indicating a city that would be wealthy but subject to others. Accordingly another area of the hill was dug instead where a horse's head was found, indicating that the city would be powerful in war.

But when the new city of Carthage had been established and become prosperous, Iarbas, a native king of the Maxitani or Mauritani (manuscripts differ), demanded Elissa for his wife or he would make war on Carthage. Elissa's envoys, fearing Iarbas, told Elissa only that Iarbas' terms for peace were that someone from Carthage must dwell permanently with him to teach Phoenician ways and they added that of course no Carthaginian would agree to dwell with such savages. Elissa condemned any who would feel that way when they should indeed give their lives for the city if necessary. Elissa's envoys then explained that Iarbas had specifically requested Elissa as wife. Elissa was trapped by her words. But Elissa preferred to stay faithful to her first husband and after creating a ceremonial funeral
Funeral

A funeral is a ceremony marking a person's death. Funerary customs comprise the complex of beliefs and practices used by a culture to remember the dead, from the funeral itself, to various monuments, prayers, and rituals undertaken in their honour....
 pyre
Pyre

A pyre is a structure, usually made of wood, for burning a body as part of a funeral rite. As a form of cremation, a body is placed upon the pyre which is then set on fire....
 and sacrificing many victims to his spirit in pretense that this was a final honoring of her first husband in preparation for marriage to Iarbas, Elissa ascended the pyre, announced that she would go to her husband as they desired, and then slew herself with her sword. After this self-sacrifice Elissa was deified and was worshipped as long as Carthage endured. In this account, the foundation of Carthage occurred 72 years before the foundation of Rome.

Servius in his commentary on Virgil's Aeneid
Aeneid

The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
 gives Sicharbas as the name of Elissa's husband in early tradition.

Dido: questions of historicity and dating

The oxhide story which explains the name of the hill must be of Greek origin since Byrsa means "oxhide" in Greek, not in Punic
Punic language

The Punic language is an extinct Semitic language formerly spoken in the Mediterranean region of North Africa and several List of islands in the Mediterranean, by people of the Punic culture....
. The name of the hill in Punic was probably just a derivation from Semitic brt "fortified place". But that does not prevent other details in the story from being Carthaginian tradition though still not necessarily historical. Michael Grant
Michael Grant

Michael Grant may refer to:* List of characters in Manhunt 2#Michael Grant, character in the 2007 video game Manhunt 2* Michael Grant, 12th Baron de Longueuil...
 in Roman Myths (1973) claims:

That is to say, Dido-Elissa was originally a goddess.


It has been conjectured that she was first converted from a goddess into a human queen in some Greek work of the later fifth century BC.


But others conjecture that Elissa was indeed historical.

It is not known who first combined the story of Elissa with the tradition that connected Aeneas either with Rome
Rome

Rome is the capital city of Italy and Lazio, and is Italy's largest and most populous city, with 2,724,347 residents in an urban area of some ....
 or with earlier settlements from which Rome traced its origin.

A fragment of an epic poem by Gnaeus Naevius
Gnaeus Naevius

Gnaeus Naevius , was a Roman epic poet and dramatist....
 who died at Utica in 201 BC includes a passage which might or might not be part of a conversation between Aeneas and Dido. Servius in his commentary (4.682; 5.4) cites Varro
Marcus Terentius Varro

Marcus Terentius Varro , also known as Varro Reatinus to distinguish him from his younger contemporary Varro Atacinus, was a Ancient Rome scholar and writer....
 (1st century BC ) for a version in which Dido's sister Anna killed herself for love of Aeneas.

Evidence for the historicity of Dido (which is a question independent of whether or not she ever met Aeneas) can be associated with evidence for the historicity of others in her family, such as her brother Pygmalion and their grandfather Balazeros. Both of these kings are mentioned, as well as Dido, in the list of Tyrian kings given in Menander of Ephesus
Menander of Ephesus

Menander of Ephesus was the historian whose lost work on the history of Tyre, Lebanon#History was used by Josephus, who quotes Menander's list of kings of Tyre in his apologia for the Jews, Against Apion ....
's list of the kings of Tyre, as preserved in Josephus
Josephus

Josephus , also known as Yosef Ben Matityahu and, after he became a Roman citizenship, as Titus Flavius Josephus, was a first-century Jewish historian and apologist of priestly and royal ancestry who survived and recorded the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70....
's Against Apion
Against Apion

Against Apion was a polemical work written by Flavius Josephus as a defense of Judaism as a classical religion and philosophy, stressing its antiquity against what he perceived as more recent traditions of the Greeks....
, i.18. Josephus ends his quotation of Menander with the sentence “Now, in the seventh year of his[Pygmalion’s] reign, his sister fled away from him and built the city of Carthage in Libya.”

The Nora Stone, found on Sardinia, has been interpreted by Frank Moore Cross
Frank Moore Cross

Frank Moore Cross, Jr. is a Professor Emeritus of the Harvard Divinity School, notable for both his work in the interpretation of the Dead Sea Scrolls as well as his analysis of the Deuteronomist ....
 as naming Pygmalion as the king of the general who was using the stone to record his victory over the local populace. On paleographic grounds, the stone is dated to the ninth century BC. Cross’s translation, with a fuller discussion of the Nora stone, is found in the Pygmalion
Pygmalion of Tyre

Pygmalion was king of Tyre from 831 to 785 BC and a son of King Mattan I .During Pygmalion's reign, Tyre seems to have shifted the heart of its trading empire from the Middle East to the Mediterranean, as can be judged from the building of new colonies including Kition on Cyprus, Sardinia , and, according to tradition, Carthage....
 article. If Cross’s interpretation is correct, this presents inscriptional evidence substantiating the existence of a 9th century BC king of Tyre named (in Greek) Pygmalion.

Several scholars have identified Baa‘li-maanzer, the king of Tyre who gave tribute to Shalmaneser III
Shalmaneser III

Shalmaneser III was king of Assyria , and son of the previous ruler, Ashurnasirpal II.His long reign was a constant series of campaigns against the eastern tribes, the Babylonians, the nations of Mesopotamia and Syria, as well as Kizzuwadna and Urartu....
 in 841 BC, with Ba‘al-‘azor (Phoenician form of the name) or Baal-Eser/Balazeros
Baal-Eser II

Baal-Eser II was a king of Tyre, Lebanon, the son of Ithobaal I.The primary information related to Baal-Eser II comes from Josephus?s citation of the Phoenician author Menander of Ephesus, in Against Apion i.18....
 (Greek form of the name), Dido’s grandfather. This lends credibility to the account in Josephus/Menander that names the kings of Tyre from Abibaal
Abibaal

Abibaal was a king of Tyre in the 10th century BC, father of the famous Hiram I. The only information known about him is derived from two passages in Josephus's Against Apion, i.17 and i.18....
 and Hiram I
Hiram I

Hiram I , according to the Bible, was the Phoenician king of Tyre, Lebanon. He reigned from 980 BC to 947 BC, succeeding his father, Abibaal. Hiram was succeeded as king of Tyre by his son Baal-Eser I....
 down to the time of Pygmalion and Dido.

Another possible reference to Balazeros is found in the Aeneid
Aeneid

The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
. It was a common ancient practice of using the hypocoristicon or shortened form of the name that included only the divine element, so that the “Belus” that Virgil names as the father of Dido in the Aeneid may be a reference to her grandfather, Baal-Eser II
Baal-Eser II

Baal-Eser II was a king of Tyre, Lebanon, the son of Ithobaal I.The primary information related to Baal-Eser II comes from Josephus?s citation of the Phoenician author Menander of Ephesus, in Against Apion i.18....
/Balazeros.

Even more important than the inscriptional and literary references supporting the historicity of Pygmalion and Dido are chronological considerations that give something of a mathematical demonstration of the veracity of the major feature of the Pygmalion/Dido saga, namely the flight of Dido from Tyre in Pygmalion’s seventh year, and her eventual founding of the city of Carthage. Classical authors give two dates for the founding of Carthage. The first is that of Pompeius Trogus
Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus

Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus, known as Pompeius Trogus, Pompey Trogue, or Trogue Pompey, was a 1st century BC Roman historian of the Celtic tribe of the Vocontii in Gallia Narbonensis, flourished during the age of Augustus Caesar, nearly contemporary with Livy....
, mentioned above, that says this took place 72 years before the foundation of Rome. At least as early as the first century BC, and then later, the date most commonly used by Roman writers for the founding of Rome was 753 BC. This would place Dido’s flight in 753 + 72 = 825 BC. Another tradition, that of the Greek historian Timaeus
Timaeus (historian)

Timaeus , Ancient Greece historian, was born at Tauromenium in Sicily. Driven out of Sicily by Agathocles, he migrated to Athens, where he studied rhetoric under a pupil of Isocrates and lived for fifty years....
 (c. 345-260 BC), gives 814 BC for the founding of Carthage. Traditionally most modern scholars have preferred the 814 date. However, the publication of the Shalmaneser text mentioning tribute from Baal-Eser II
Baal-Eser II

Baal-Eser II was a king of Tyre, Lebanon, the son of Ithobaal I.The primary information related to Baal-Eser II comes from Josephus?s citation of the Phoenician author Menander of Ephesus, in Against Apion i.18....
 of Tyre in 841 BC caused a re-examination of this question, since the best texts of Menander/Josephus only allow 22 years from the accession of Baal-Eser/Balazeros until the seventh year of Pygmalion, and measuring back from 814 BC would not allow any overlap of Balazeros with the 841 tribute to Shalmaneser. With the 825 date for the seventh year of Pygmalion, however, Balazeros’s last year would coincide with 841 BC, the year of the tribute. Additional evidence in favor of the 825 date is found in the statement of Menander, repeated by Josephus as corroborated from Tyrian court records (Against Apion
Against Apion

Against Apion was a polemical work written by Flavius Josephus as a defense of Judaism as a classical religion and philosophy, stressing its antiquity against what he perceived as more recent traditions of the Greeks....
 i.17,18), that Dido’s flight (or the founding of Tyre) occurred 143 years and eight months after Hiram
Hiram I

Hiram I , according to the Bible, was the Phoenician king of Tyre, Lebanon. He reigned from 980 BC to 947 BC, succeeding his father, Abibaal. Hiram was succeeded as king of Tyre by his son Baal-Eser I....
 of Tyre sent assistance to Solomon
Solomon

Solomon is a figure described in the Hebrew Bible and the Qur'an. The biblical accounts identify Solomon as the son of David. He is also called Jedidiah in the Tanakh , and is described as the third king of the United Monarchy, and the final king before the northern Kingdom of Israel and the southern Kingdom of Judah split; following th...
 for the building of the Temple. Using the 825 date, this Tyrian record would then date the start of Temple construction in 969 or 968 BC, in agreement with the statement in 1 Kings 6:1 that Temple construction began in Solomon’s fourth regnal year. Solomon's fourth year can be calculated as starting in the fall of 968 BC when using the widely-accepted date of 931/930 BC for the division of the kingdom after the death of Solomon. These chronological considerations therefore definitely favor the 825 date over the 814 date for Dido’s departure from Tyre. More than that, the agreement of this date with the timing of the tribute to Shalmaneser and the year when construction of the First Temple began provide evidence for the essential historicity of at least the existence of Pygmalion and Dido as well as their rift in 825 BC that eventually led to the founding of Carthage.

According to J. M. Peñuela, the difference in the two dates for the foundation of Carthage has an explanation if we understand that Dido fled Tyre in 825 BC, but eleven years elapsed before she was given permission by the original inhabitants to build a city on the mainland, years marked by conflict in which the Tyrians first built a small city on an island in the harbor.Additional information about Dido’s activities after leaving Tyre are found in the Pygmalion
Pygmalion of Tyre

Pygmalion was king of Tyre from 831 to 785 BC and a son of King Mattan I .During Pygmalion's reign, Tyre seems to have shifted the heart of its trading empire from the Middle East to the Mediterranean, as can be judged from the building of new colonies including Kition on Cyprus, Sardinia , and, according to tradition, Carthage....
 article, along with a summary of later scholars who have accepted Peñuela’s thesis.

If chronological considerations thus help to establish the basic historicity of Dido, they also serve to refute the idea that she could have had any liaison with Aeneas
Aeneas

This article is about the Roman hero. For other uses, see Aeneas .In Greco-Roman mythology, Aeneas was a Troy hero, the son of prince Anchises and the goddess Venus_....
. Aeneas fought in the Trojan War
Trojan War

In Greek mythology, the Trojan War was waged against the city of Troy by the Achaeans after Paris of Troy stole Helen from her husband Menelaus, the king of Sparta....
, which is conventionally dated anywhere from the 14th to the 12th centuries BC, far too early for Aeneas to have been alive in the time of Dido. Even with the date of 864 BC that historical revisionist David Rohl
David Rohl

David M. Rohl is a United Kingdom Egyptology and historian who has put forth several controversial theories concerning the chronology of Ancient Egypt and History of ancient Israel and Judah....
 gives for the end of the Trojan War, Aeneas would have been about 77 years old when Dido fled Tyre in 825 BC and 88 when she began to build Carthage in 814 (following Peñuela’s reconstruction), hardly consistent with the romantic intrigues between Dido and Aeneas imagined by Virgil
Virgil

Publius Vergilius Maro was a classical Roman poet, best known for three major works?the Bucolics , the Georgics and the Aeneid?although several Appendix Vergiliana are also attributed to him....
 in the Aeneid
Aeneid

The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
.

Virgil's Aeneid

Virgil's back-references in his Aeneid generally agree with what Justin's epitome of Trogus recorded. Virgil names Dido's father as Belus, this Belus sometimes being called Belus II
Belus II

For other individuals with this name, see Belus.Belus II is in Virgil's Aeneid the king of Tyre and father of Dido , Pygmalion of Tyre, and Anna. As such this Belus is to be equated with the historical King Matan I of Tyre....
 by later commentators to distinguish him from Belus
Belus (Egyptian)

In Greek mythology, Belus was the son of Poseidon and Libya . He was a king of Egypt and father of Aegyptus and Danaus and brother to Agenor and Phoenix....
 son of Poseidon
Poseidon

In Greek mythology, Poseidon was the god of the sea and, as "Earth-Shaker," of earthquakes. The name of the god Nethuns in Etruscan mythology was adopted in Latin for Neptune in Roman mythology: both were sea gods analogous to Poseidon....
 and Libya
Libya (mythology)

Libya is the name given to both a region of North Africa and a daughter of Epaphus, King of Egypt, in both Greek mythology and Roman mythology....
 in earlier Greek mythology
Greek mythology

Greek mythology is the body of myths and legends belonging to the Ancient Greece concerning their List of Greek mythological figures#Immortals and Greek hero cult, Cosmology#Metaphysical cosmology, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices....
. If the story of Elissa/Dido has a factual basis and is synchronized properly with history then this Belus stands for Mattan I
Mattan I

Mattan I ruled Tyre from 840 to 832 BC, succeeding Baal-Eser II of Tyre/Sidon.He was the father of Pygmalion of Tyre , king of Tyre from 831 to 785 BC, and of Dido ....
 who was father of the historical Pygmalion. Virgil (1.746f) adds that the marriage between Dido/Elissa and Sychaeus, as Virgil calls Dido's husband, occurred while her father was still alive, that Pygmalion slew Sychaeus secretly and that Sychaeus appeared in a dream to Dido in which he told the truth about his death, urged her to flee the country, and revealed to her where his gold was buried. None of these details contradict Justin's epitome. Indeed they clarify it and are likely enough to have been part of the tale Justin was abridging.

But Virgil very much changes the import and many details of the story when he brings Aeneas and his followers to Carthage.

(1.657f) Dido and Aeneas fall in love by the management of Juno
Juno (mythology)

File:Juno sospita pushkin.jpgJuno was an Roman religion, the protector and special counselor of the state. She is a daughter of Saturn and sister of the chief god Jupiter and the mother of Juventas, Mars , and Vulcan ....
 and Venus
Venus (mythology)

Venus was a major Roman mythology goddess principally associated with love, beauty and sexual reproduction, the equivalent of the Greek mythology Aphrodite....
, acting in concert though for different reasons. (4.198f) When the rumour of the love affair comes to King Iarbas the Gaetulian, "a son of Jupiter Ammon by a raped Garamantian
Garamantes

The Garamantes were a Saharan Berber languages-speaking people who used an elaborate underground irrigation system, and founded a kingdom in the Fezzan area of modern-day Libya, in the Sahara desert....
 nymph", Iarbas prays to his father, blaming Dido who has scorned marriage with him yet now takes Aeneas into the country as her lord. (4.222f) Jupiter dispatches Mercury
Mercury (mythology)

In Roman mythology, Mercury was a messenger, and a god of trade, profit and commerce, the son of Maia Maiestas, also known as Ops, the Roman version of Cronus, and Jupiter ....
 to send Aeneas on his way and the pious Aeneas sadly obeys. Mercury tells Aeneas of all the promising Italian lands and orders Aeneas to get his fleet ready.

(4.450f) Dido can no longer bear to live. (4.474) Dido has her sister Anna build her a pyre under the pretence of burning all that reminded her of Aeneas, including weapons and clothes that Aeneas had left behind and (what she calls) their bridal bed (though, according to Aeneas
Aeneas

This article is about the Roman hero. For other uses, see Aeneas .In Greco-Roman mythology, Aeneas was a Troy hero, the son of prince Anchises and the goddess Venus_....
, they were never officially married.) (4.584f) When Dido sees Aeneas' fleet leaving she curses him and his Trojans and proclaims endless hate between Carthage and the descendants of Troy
Troy

Troy is a legendary city and center of the Trojan War, as described in the Epic Cycle, and especially in the Iliad, one of the two epic poems attributed to Homer....
, foreshadowing the Punic Wars
Punic Wars

The Punic Wars were a series of three wars fought between Ancient Rome and Carthage from 264 to 146 BC. They were probably the largest wars yet of the ancient world....
. (4.642) Dido ascends the pyre, lies again on the couch which she had shared with Aeneas, and then falls on a sword that Aeneas had given her. (4.666) Those watching let out a cry; Anna rushes in and embraces her dying sister; Juno sends Iris
Iris (mythology)

In Greek mythology, Iris is the personification of the rainbow and messenger of the gods. As the sun unites Earth and heaven, Iris links the gods to humanity....
 from heaven to release Dido's spirit from her body. (5.1) From their ships, Aeneas and his crew see the glow of Dido's burning funeral pyre and can only guess what has happened. At least two scholars have argued that the inclusion of the pyre as part of Dido's suicide -- otherwise unattested in epic and tragedy -- alludes to the self-immolation that took the life of Carthage's last queen in 146 BC.

(6.450f) During his journey in the underworld Aeneas meets Dido and tries to excuse himself, but Dido does not deign to look at him. Instead she turns away from Aeneas to a grove where her former husband Sychaeus waits. T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot

'Thomas Stearns Eliot', Order of Merit , was a poet, dramatist, and literary critic. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948. Among his most famous writings are the poems The Love Song of J....
 once called this "the most telling snub" in Western literature.

Virgil has included most of the motifs from the original: Iarbas who desires Dido against her will, a deceitful explanation for the building of the pyre, and Elissa/Dido's final suicide. In both versions Elissa/Dido is loyal to her original husband in the end. But whereas the earlier Elissa remained always loyal to her husband's memory, Virgil's Dido dies as a tortured and repentant woman who has fallen away from that loyalty.

Later Roman tradition

Letter 7 of Ovid
Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso was a Roman Empire poet known as Ovid to the English language-speaking world, who wrote about love, seduction, and Roman mythology transformation....
's Heroides is a feigned letter from Dido to Aeneas written just before she ascends the pyre. The situation is as in Virgil's Aeneid. In Ovid's Fasti (3.545f) Ovid introduced a kind of sequel involving Aeneas and Dido's sister Anna. See Anna Perenna
Anna Perenna

Anna Perenna was an old Ancient Rome deity of the circle or "ring" of the year, as the name clearly indicates. Herfestival fell on the Ides of March , which would have marked the first full moon in the year in the old lunar Roman calendar when March was reckoned as the first month of the year, and was held at the grove of the goddess at the...
.

The Barcid
Barcid

The Barcid family was a notable family in the ancient city of Carthage; many of its members were fierce enemies of the Roman Republic. The word "Barcid" was coined by scholars when talking about the family in general....
s, the family to which Hannibal belonged, claimed descent from a younger brother of Dido according to Silius Italicus
Silius Italicus

Silius Italicus, in full Tiberius Catius Silius Italicus , was a Latin epic poet....
 in his Punica (1.71–7).

The Augustan History ("Tyrrani Triginta" 27, 30) claims that Zenobia
Zenobia

Zenobia was a Roman Syrian queen who lived in the 3rd century. She was a Queen regnant of the Palmyrene Empire and the second wife of King Septimius Odaenathus....
 queen of Palmyra
Palmyra

Palmyra was in ancient times an important city of central Syria, located in an oasis 215 km northeast of Damascus and 120 km southwest of the Euphrates....
 in the late 3rd century AD was descended from Cleopatra
Cleopatra VII of Egypt

Cleopatra VII Philopator was a Hellenistic ruler of Egypt, originally sharing power with her father Ptolemy XII Auletes and later with her brothers/husbands Ptolemy XIII and Ptolemy XIV; eventually gaining sole rule of Egypt....
, Dido and Semiramis
Semiramis

Semiramis was a legendary Assyrian queen, also known as Semiramide, Semiramida, or Shamiram in Aramaic.Many legends have accumulated around her personality....
.

Continuing tradition

In The Divine Comedy
The Divine Comedy

The Divine Comedy , written by Dante Alighieri between 1308 and his death in 1321, is widely considered the central epic poem of Italian literature, and is seen as one of the greatest works of world literature....
 Dante sees the shade of Dido in the second circle of Hell, where she is condemned (on account of her consuming lust) to be blasted for eternity in a fierce whirlwind.

The story of Dido and Aeneas remained popular throughout the post-Renaissance era, and was the basis for many operas including :

  • 1641 : La Didone
    Didone (opera)

    Didone is an opera by Francesco Cavalli, set to a libretto by Giovanni Francesco Busenello . The opera was first performed at Venice's Teatro San Cassiano during 1641....
     by Francesco Cavalli
    Francesco Cavalli

    Francesco Cavalli was an Italy composer of the Baroque music#Early baroque music Baroque music period. His real name was Pietro Francesco Caletti-Bruni, but he is better known by that of Cavalli, the name of his patron, a Venetian nobleman....
  • 1656 : La Didone by Andrea Mattioli
  • 1689 : Dido and Aeneas
    Dido and Aeneas

    Dido and Aeneas is an opera by the English Baroque music composer Henry Purcell, from a libretto by Nahum Tate. The first known performance was at a girls' school in the spring of 1689 and hence is given catalogue number Z. 626....
     by Henry Purcell
    Henry Purcell

    Henry Purcell...
  • 1693 : Didon by Henry Desmarest
  • 1707 : Dido, Königin von Carthago by Christoph Graupner
    Christoph Graupner

    Christoph Graupner was a Germany harpsichordist and composer of high Baroque music who lived and worked at the same time as Johann Sebastian Bach, Georg Philipp Telemann and George Frideric Handel....
  • 1724 : Didone abbandonata by Domenico Sarro
    Domenico Sarro

    Domenico Sarro , was an Italian composer.He studied at the Neapolitan conservatory of Music Conservatories of Naples. He composed extensively in the early 1700s....
  • 1740 : Didone abbandonata by Baldassare Galuppi
  • 1747 : Didone abbandonata by Niccolò Jommelli
    Niccolò Jommelli

    Niccol? Jommelli was an Italy composer. He was born in Aversa and died in Naples. Along with other composers mainly in the Holy Roman Empire and France, he made important changes to opera and reduced the importance of star singers....
  • 1762 : Didone abbandonata
    Didone abbandonata (Sarti)

    Didone abbandonata is an opera, or dramma per musica, by Giuseppe Sarti, set to a libretto by the renowned poet Metastasio. The opera was first performed in the winter of 1762 in Copenhagen, and was composed especially for the Danish court of the time....
     by Giuseppe Sarti
    Giuseppe Sarti

    Giuseppe Sarti , was an Italy opera composer....
  • 1770 : Didone abbandonata by Niccolò Piccinni
    Niccolò Piccinni

    Niccol? Piccinni was an Italy composer of symphonies, sacred music, chamber music, and opera. Although he is somewhat obscure, even to music lovers today, Piccinni was one of the most popular composers of opera ? particularly the Neapolitan opera buffa ? of his day....
  • 1783 : Didon
    Didon

    Didon is a trag?die lyrique in three acts by the composer Niccol? Piccinni with a French-language libretto by Jean-Fran?ois Marmontel. The opera is based on the story of Dido and Aeneas from Virgil's Aeneid as well as Metastasio's libretto Didone abbandonata ....
     by Niccolò Piccinni
  • 1823 : Didone abbandonata by Saverio Mercadante
    Saverio Mercadante

    File:Saverio Mercadante by Cefaly.jpgGiuseppe Saverio Raffaele Mercadante was an Italy composer, particularly of operas....
  • 1860 : Les Troyens
    Les Troyens

    Les Troyens is a France opera in five acts by Hector Berlioz. The libretto was written by Berlioz himself, based on Virgil's epic poem The Aeneid....
     by Hector Berlioz
    Hector Berlioz

    Louis Hector Berlioz was a French Romantic music composer and guitarist, best known for his compositions Symphonie fantastique and Requiem . Berlioz made great contributions to the modern orchestra with his Treatise on Instrumentation and by utilizing huge orchestral forces for his works; as a conductor, he performed several c...


This legend also inspired the drama Dido, Queen of Carthage
Dido, Queen of Carthage

Dido, Queen of Carthage is a short play written by the English playwright Christopher Marlowe, with possible contributions by Thomas Nashe....
 by Christopher Marlowe
Christopher Marlowe

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
. Even today, Dido appears in Sid Meier
Sid Meier

Sidney K. Meier is a Canadian game programmer and game designer of several popular video game strategy games who has won accolades for his contributions to the video game industry....
's strategy game Civilization II
Civilization II

Sid Meier's Civilization II, a.k.a. Civ II, is a turn-based strategy computer game designed by Brian Reynolds, Douglas Caspian-Kaufman and Jeff Briggs....
, as the female leader of the Carthaginian tribe.

Remembrance of the story of the bull's hide and the foundation of Carthage is preserved in mathematics in connection with the Isoperimetric problem
Isoperimetry

The isoperimetric inequality is a geometry inequality involving the square of the circumference of a closed curve in the plane and the area of a plane region it encloses, as well as its various generalizations....
 which is sometimes called Dido's Problem (and similarly the Isoperimetric theorem is sometimes called Dido's Theorem). It is sometimes stated in such discussion that Dido caused her thong to be placed as a half circle touching the sea coast at each end (which would add greatly to the perimeter) but the sources mention the thong only and say nothing about the sea.

Carthage was the Roman Republic
Roman Republic

The Roman Republic was the phase of the Ancient Rome characterized by a republican form of government; a period which began with the overthrow of the Roman Roman Kingdom, c....
's greatest rival and enemy, and Virgil's Dido in part symbolises this. Even though no Rome existed in her day, Virgil's Dido curses the future progeny of the Trojans. In Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
 under the Fascist regime, her figure was demonized, perhaps not only as an anti-Roman figure but because she represented together at least three other unpleasant qualities: feminine virtue, Semitic
Semitic

In linguistics and ethnology, Semitic was first used to refer to a language family of largely Middle Eastern origin, now called the Semitic languages....
 ethnic origin, and Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
n civilization. As an innocuous example: when Mussolini
Benito Mussolini

Benito Amilcare Andrea Mussolini, Order of the Bath Sovereign Military Order of Malta Order of the Tower and Sword was an Italy politician who led the National Fascist Party and is credited with being one of the key figures in the creation of Fascism....
's regime named the streets of new quarters in Rome with the characters of Virgil's Aeneid, only the name Dido did not appear.

In tragic compensation (in a sadly curious way), the Royal Navy
Royal Navy

The Royal Navy of the United Kingdom is the oldest of the British Armed Forces . From the mid-18th century until well into the 20th century, it was the most powerful navy in the world, playing a key part in establishing the British Empire as the dominant world power from 1815 until the early 1940s....
 employed Dido-class cruisers
Dido class cruiser

The Dido class was a ship class of sixteen light cruisers built for the Royal Navy. The design was influenced by the Arethusa class cruiser light cruisers....
 against Italian objectives during the Second World War
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
, seemingly a devastating justification of Fascist fears.

An alternative viewpoint

An alternative viewpoint, based on Gerhard Herm’s interpretation (Die Phönizier 1974), supported by selected classic sources (Virgil, Ovid, Silius Italicus), but rejecting much of Timaeus’ account, leads to a slightly different historiographical outline (main changes in italic, followed by references):

Dido, or Elisha/Elissa, was a Phoenician Queen, founder of Carthage. First-born from King of Tyre, her succession was disputed by her younger brother, Pumayyaton/Pygmalion, who murdered her husband and imposed his rule. At this point she left Tyre with a large following, starting a long voyage; main stages were Cyprus and, possibly, Malta [Ovid, Fasti 3.567f].

Landing on Libyan coasts, about 814 BC (Timaeus' date), she chose a place to found a new capital city for her Phoenician followers: Carthage. She peacefully obtained the land by an ingenious agreement with the local lord, today known as the "Theorem of Dido". During her widowhood, she was consistently sought in marriage by local kings; but if we accept Silius Italicus, she married again, probably with a Tyrian follower, from the Barca family [Punica 1.71f, 2.239].

Dido promoted a significant religious reform and after a long and prosperous reign, she favored the formation of a Republic [Virgil, Aeneid 1.426]; After her death, she was deified by her people with the name of Tanit and assimilated to the Great Goddess Astarte (Roman Juno) [Virgil, Aeneid 1.446f, Silius Italicus, Punica 1.81f].

The cult of Tanit
Tanit

Tanit was a Phoenician lunar goddess, worshiped as the patron goddess at Carthage where from the fifth century BCE onwards her name is associated with that of Baal and she is given the epithet pene baal and the title rabat, the female form of rab ....
 survived Carthage's destruction by the Romans; it was introduced to Rome itself by Emperor Septimius Severus
Septimius Severus

Lucius Septimius Severus was a Roman Empire general, and Roman Emperor from April 14 193 to 211. He was born in what is now the Libyan part of Rome's historic Africa Province, making him the first emperor to be born in the Roman province of Africa Province....
, himself born in North Africa. It was extinguished completely with the Theodosian decrees
Theodosius I

Flavius Theodosius , also called Theodosius I and Theodosius the Great , was Roman Emperor from 379 to 395. Reuniting the eastern and western portions of the empire, Theodosius was the last emperor of both the Eastern Roman Empire and Western Roman Empire....
 of the late 4th century.

See Also

  • Pygmalion
    Pygmalion

    Pygmalion is a Greek name. Pygmalion—or Pygmaion according to Hesychios of Alexandria—is probably a Cyprus form of Adonis, a Levant vegetation-god....
  • Aeneid
    Aeneid

    The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
  • Hiram I
    Hiram I

    Hiram I , according to the Bible, was the Phoenician king of Tyre, Lebanon. He reigned from 980 BC to 947 BC, succeeding his father, Abibaal. Hiram was succeeded as king of Tyre by his son Baal-Eser I....
     for discussion of dates assigned to Dido


Selected bibliography

  • H. Akbar Khan, "Doctissima Dido": Etymology, Hospitality and the Construction of a Civilized Identity, 2002.
  • Elmer Bagby Atwood, Two Alterations of Virgil in Chaucer’s Dido, 1938.
  • S. Conte, Dido sine veste, 2005.
  • R. S. Conway, The Place of Dido in History, 1920.
  • F. Della Corte, La Iuno-Astarte virgiliana, 1983.
  • G. De Sanctis, Storia dei Romani, 1916.
  • R.J. Edgeworth, "The Death of Dido." The Classical Journal 72.2 (1977) 129-33.
  • M. Fantar, Carthage, la prestigieuse cité d'Elissa, 1970.
  • L. Foucher, Les Phéniciens à Carthage ou la geste d'Elissa, 1978.
  • Michael Grant, Roman Myths, 1973.
  • M. Gras/P. Rouillard/J. Teixidor, L'univers phénicien, 1995.
  • H.D. Gray, Did Shakespeare write a tragedy of Dido?, 1920.
  • G. Herm, Die Phönizier, 1974.
  • T. Kailuweit, Dido - Didon - Didone. Eine kommentierte Bibliographie zum Dido-Mythos in Literatur und Musik, 2005.
  • R.C. Ketterer, The perils of Dido: sorcery and melodrama in Vergil’s Aeneid IV and Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, 1992.
  • R.H. Klausen, Aeneas und die Penaten, 1839.
  • G. Kowalski, , 1929.
  • F.N. Lees, Dido Queen of Carthage and The Tempest, 1964.
  • J.-Y. Maleuvre, Contre-Enquête sur la mort de Didon, 2003.
  • J.-Y. Maleuvre, La mort de Virgile d’après Horace et Ovide, 1993;
  • L. Mangiacapre, Didone non è morta, 1990.
  • P.E. McLane, The Death of a Queen: Spencer's Dido as Elizabeth, 1954.
  • O. Meltzer, Geschichte der Karthager, 1879.
  • A. Michel, Virgile et la politique impériale: un courtisan ou un philosophe?, 1971.
  • R.C. Monti, The Dido Episode and the Aeneid: Roman Social and Political Values in the Epic, 1981.
  • S. Moscati, Chi furono i Fenici. Identità storica e culturale di un popolo protagonista dell'antico mondo mediterraneo, 1992.
  • R. Neuse, Book VI as Conclusion to The Faerie Queene, 1968.
  • A. Parry, The Two Voices of Virgil's Aeneid, 1963.
  • G.K. Paster, Montaigne, Dido and The Tempest: “How Came That Widow In?, 1984.
  • B. Schmitz, Ovide, In Ibin: un oiseau impérial, 2004;
  • E. Stampini, Alcune osservazioni sulla leggenda di Enea e Didone nella letteratura romana, 1893.


Primary sources

  • Virgil, Aeneis i.338-368
  • Justinus, Epitome Historiarum philippicarum Pompei Trogi xviii.4.1-6, 8


External links

  • Selected English texts (Alternate links found in Wikipedia entries for the respective authors.)
    • (Contains Justin
      Junianus Justinus

      'Justin' was a Latin historian who lived under the Roman Empire. His name is mentioned only in the title of his own history, and there it is in the genitive, which would be M....
       (18.3–6) relating the early story of Elissa in full.)
    • by A. S. Kline
      A. S. Kline

      A. S. Kline, known as Tony Kline is a British poet and translator, living in England.He graduated with a degree in Mathematics from the University of Manchester, and was Chief Information Officer of a large UK Company before dedicating himself to his literary work and interests....
       (See also Virgil
      Virgil

      Publius Vergilius Maro was a classical Roman poet, best known for three major works?the Bucolics , the Georgics and the Aeneid?although several Appendix Vergiliana are also attributed to him....
       and Aeneid
      Aeneid

      The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
      .)
    • (See also Ovid
      Ovid

      Publius Ovidius Naso was a Roman Empire poet known as Ovid to the English language-speaking world, who wrote about love, seduction, and Roman mythology transformation....
      .)
    • (See also Appian
      Appian

      Appianus , of Alexandria was a Ancient Rome historian who flourished during the reigns of Trajan, Hadrian and Antoninus Pius. He is commonly referred to by the anglicised form of his name, Appian....
      .)
    • , original text, modernization, and discussion of Chaucer's Legend of Dido
    • . (See also Christopher Marlowe
      Christopher Marlowe

      Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
      .)
  • Commentary
    • (Mostly about a new four-act play by Salvatore Conte; it contains also a confutation of the well-known suicide into a subjective vision of Aeneas and his "comites" - 4.664, followed by Dido's catabasis)
------