Aeneas and the Roman Hero
By (Author) Dr R. Deryck Williams
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bristol Classical Press
1st February 1998
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
Paperback
72
Width 137mm, Height 215mm, Spine 5mm
100g
In Aeneas and the Roman Hero, the author explains and illustrates the ideals of the newly-created Roman empire under Augustus as they are reflected in Virgils Aeneid. National hopes were high; Rome had emerged from the bloodshed of internecine civil wars; her renewed civilisation was set to rule the known world. Virgils Aeneid explores and symbolises those aspirations in epic narrative through the myth of the Trojan hero Aeneas. The poem remains one of the most significant literary landmarks of our own civilisation; in this book, its story and its poetic magnificence are outlined for the student coming to the poem for the first time. This well-established series, Inside the Ancient World, presents elected aspects of the ancient world in such a way as to help students gain an understanding of the attitudes of the Greeks and Romans, and to allow them to form their own judgement on the issues raised. Designed to meet the need for material suited to Classical Studies / Classical Civilization courses, it will be found particularly useful by candidates taking examinations. It is also intended as a helpful ancillary to the study of Greek and Latin at these levels. Much of the information is given by way of translated quotations from ancient authors. the books are illustrated throughout and diagrams and maps are linked closely to the text.
R. Deryck Williams was Professor of Latin in the University of Reading, UK, and the foremost Virgilian scholar of his generation. His editions of Aeneid III and V and Aeneid 1-VI, VII-XII are the most widely used by students of Virgil. He also wrote the first of the New Surveys in the Classics (1967).