The document discusses major writers of early Roman literature. It focuses on Virgil, considered the greatest Roman writer, and his epic poem The Aeneid. The Aeneid tells the story of Aeneas, a Trojan hero who travels to Italy after the fall of Troy to found Rome and become the progenitor of the Roman people.
The document discusses major writers of early Roman literature. It focuses on Virgil, considered the greatest Roman writer, and his epic poem The Aeneid. The Aeneid tells the story of Aeneas, a Trojan hero who travels to Italy after the fall of Troy to found Rome and become the progenitor of the Roman people.
The document discusses major writers of early Roman literature. It focuses on Virgil, considered the greatest Roman writer, and his epic poem The Aeneid. The Aeneid tells the story of Aeneas, a Trojan hero who travels to Italy after the fall of Troy to found Rome and become the progenitor of the Roman people.
The document discusses major writers of early Roman literature. It focuses on Virgil, considered the greatest Roman writer, and his epic poem The Aeneid. The Aeneid tells the story of Aeneas, a Trojan hero who travels to Italy after the fall of Troy to found Rome and become the progenitor of the Roman people.
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Early Roman Literature
Major Writers of Rome
The literature of Rome holds a secondary position in the classic literature of antiquity; probably because the Roman was less a thinker and creator and more a doer than the Greek. The early Romans made little progress in literary composition until they conquered and enslaved the Greeks. When this historical event happened, the Romans were so impressed by the artistic attainments of the Greeks that they set about imitating Greek literature resulting in the unique situation of the conquered becoming the conquerors and the conquerors becoming the conquered.” Roman children were taught by Greek teachers. Roman literature was greatly imitative of Greek models. Greek literature was translated into Latin, and it provided the models that the Roman youths studied and learned by heart. There is predominance of satire in Roman literature. The satire as a literary type is supposed to have been invented by the Romans. The purpose of satire is to attack evils in society. It flourished in Rome when social conditions were poor and Roman morals were low. 1. Virgil (70-19 B.C.) Virgil was the greatest writer that Rome produced. What Homer was to Greeks Virgil was to the Romans. He was born in woods springs and pools. This close familiarity with, and love of, nature is clearly evident in his works. Virgil had an excellent education 70 B.C. in Mantua, one of the loveliest country sides in Italy. His children hood was spent among the fields and in philosophy, and a love for this discipline remained with him all his life. He learned one of the great laws of art: that its greatness is in direct proportion to the worth of its philosophy and theology. His works are therefore an ideal combination of content and form. He began as a lyric poet of great passion and melody but his masterpiece is the Aeneid, the great epic of Rome, the subject matter of which is set way back in the Greek legendary age. He selected for his epic the character Aeneas, a Trojan prince and the bravest men who fought for Troy. In this epic, Virgil makes Aeneas the founder of Rome and the progenitor of the Romans. the idea and plan of the Aeneid are derived from Homer, Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey are stories of war and adventure, respectively Virgil’s Aeneid inverts this order; it begins with the adventures of Aeneas and ends with the battle for possession of Latium. Both parts closely follow the structure of Homer’s epics. Episodes in Homer are duplicated and many characters found in Iliad are also found in the Aeneid. Aeneid: A Summary Aeneas son of Venus, the goddess of beauty is a Trojan hero and a cousin of Hector’s, and like Hector, he is a brave warrior. the story begins with the burning of Troy and the massacre of the men while the women and the children are carried off into slavery. Aeneas is saved by his mother and together with his father Anchises and his son Ascanius and a few other Trojans, he sails away from burning Troy. Their destination is Latium, where they intend to found a Trojan colony. But their ships are driven from their course by Athena, who is angry with Aeneas. They land in Carthage, in North Africa, where they are welcomed by Queen Dido. The queen falls in love with Aeneas and makes him co-ruler of Carthage. But A Aeneas has a great destiny—to be the founder of Rome—and much as he would like to stay with Dido, he is commanded by Zeus to leave for Latium. Dido, broken-hearted, commits suicide as Aeneas sails away. He passes through dangers paralleling some of the adventures of Odysseus. After Aeneas finally reaches Italy, he goes down to the Underworld and learns about his future descendants, the Romans. He celebrated the anniversary of his father’s death with funeral games in the Underworld. He reaches Latium and gains the friendship of King Latinus the ruler of Latium. Oracles have foretold that the only daughter of the king, Lavinia, would marry a foreigner and become the mother of an imperial line. Aeneas has a rival for the hand of Lavinia in the brave and powerful Turnus. A battle begins between the Trojans and the Latiums and after many pitched encounters, Aeneas defeats Turnus in single combat and gains the hand of Lavinia. He becomes king, and in ceremonial rites required by the gods, a new nation is formed and the Trojans are named Latins.