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prophecy, advised him to seek the
land of his ancestors. Aeneas
therefore sailed to Crete, home of
the Trojan ancestor Teucrus, but
he was directed by the gods in a
vision to instead go to Italy, home
of his ancestor Dardanus.
Next, Aeneas met the Harpies,
fierce female-faced bird creatures.
One cursed Aeneas, prophesying
that he would reach his goal only
when dire hunger forced the group
to eat their tables. They sailed to
Sicily, where Aeneas’s elderly father
died, and then set off for Italy, but
the wind god Aeolus—by order of
Juno, who hated the Trojans—sent
their ships wildly off course.
Taking shelter in the north
African city of Carthage, Aeneas
met the queen, Dido; it was to her
that he told the story of his flight

from Troy. Encouraged by Venus,
Aeneas and Dido fell in love and
consummated their passion in a
cave during a storm. When Jupiter
heard of this, he sent his messenger
Mercury to remind Aeneas to leave
Carthage to found a new city.

The tragic queen
On hearing of her lover’s departure,
Dido asked her sister Anna to build
a sacrificial pyre, and she threw
herself upon it. From the flames,
she could see Aeneas’s ships
leaving, so she thrust his sword
through her body. To end her agony,

Juno sent Iris, the rainbow, down to
earth, to release her soul by
snipping a lock of Dido’s hair as an
offering to Dis, ruler of the
underworld. As Aeneas sailed away
from Carthage, he looked back and
saw the smoke of the funeral pyre.
He did not learn of Dido’s suicide
until later, when he met her shade
in the Underworld.

Aeneas seeks his father
Returning to Sicily, Aeneas held
funeral games to commemorate his
dead father, Anchises. Meanwhile,
Juno, still bearing her ancient
grudge and anxious to delay
Aeneas’s quest, inspired the
Trojan women to set fire to the
ships. Jupiter sent down torrential
rain to extinguish the flames and,
in a vision, Anchises urged Aeneas
to pursue his quest and to meet
him in the Underworld. Aeneas
sailed on and—despite the loss of
his helmsman, Palinurus, who fell
overboard—finally reached Italy.
Anxious to see his dead father
again, Aeneas was advised by the
Sibyl of Cumae to pluck a golden ❯❯

See also: Hades and the Underworld 48–49 ■ The quest of Odysseus 66–71 ■ The labors of Herakles 72–75 ■
The founding of Rome 102–03 ■ The Sibyl of Cumae 110–11

ANCIENT ROME



  1. Dido condemns
    Rome and Carthage
    to eternal enmity
    after Aeneas
    abandons her.


Dido stabs herself as Aeneas and
his followers set sail from Carthage,
bound for Italy. This miniature is from
a vellum copy of the Aeneid made in
France in 1469.


  1. Hector comes
    to Aeneas in a dream
    and tells him to flee
    Troy and found
    Lavinium.

  2. Creusa’s ghost
    tells Aeneas that he
    is destined to found
    a city in Italy.

  3. A harpy
    prophesies that
    the Trojans will face
    starvation and eat
    their own tables.

  4. Jupiter tells
    Venus that Aeneas
    will wage war in Italy
    and crush
    his enemies.


Prophecies about Aeneas


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