Virgil and the Aeneid
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Recent papers in Virgil and the Aeneid
An(other) acrostic in Virgil? (Aeneid 10, 693-697)
https://bibliotecavirtual.unl.edu.ar/publicaciones/index.php/argos/article/view/10265
https://bibliotecavirtual.unl.edu.ar/publicaciones/index.php/argos/article/view/10265
An exploration of Venus' place in the Roman religious pantheon; this is then applied to her usage by Lucretius and Virgil in their respective works.
my theory about the trip of Aeneas in Scandinavia
- by Valentina Nasi
- Homer, Aeneid, Iliad, Troas
My MLitt dissertation: This dissertation investigates the translations of Latin poems by Charles Hubert Sisson (1914-2013), focusing primarily on how Sisson explores English national identity through his translations of Aeneid 6,... more
"When the bullets start flying, I hope the first one gets you." The man in the crosshairs was the author's father. It was an era of seismic social change in the American South. Four decades later, his son visited the National September 11... more
The exodus of Euripides' Phoenissae: philological analysis.
Saint Augustine's Confessions might at first read like a straightforward autobiography, but upon closer look it would appear that the young Augustine's life story, including his eventual conversion and baptism, are supposed to be... more
In the same way that there is a hidden crime in Latium 2 concerning Amata and Turnus, Virgil also hid another mystery, which is this: who was the person who wounded the protégé of Jupiter, Aeneas? The words that expose this other mystery... more
Abstract. In Virgil’s Aeneid tears are always a manifestation of human weakness respect with the inexorable path of destiny. Even Aeneas, an ambiguous character, because of his fundamental pietas, which makes him a submissive instrument... more
Abstract. On the subject of tears Virgil shares the attitude of the intellectuals, who criticize the exasperated and public manifestations of pain, but on the other hand he gives dignity to the suffering of his characters. In the Aeneid,... more
This paper will examine two kinds of death found in Virgil's Aeneid through the characters of Dido and Aeneas. I will suggest that both are self-inflicted deaths. The term for self-inflicted death is suicide, which typically refers to a... more
ABSTRACT: In Vergil’s Aen. VI 806 some manuscripts transmit virtutem extendere factis, some others virtute extendere vires, but the similar expression famam extendere factis in Aen. X 468 seems to suggest the revival of a meaningful... more