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Virgil’s Aeneid

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  • About
  • Transcript
  • Cite

About the lecture

In this lecture we provide an introduction to Virgil’s Aeneid as an epic poem, focusing in particular on: (i) the poem’s length, metre and content; (ii) Virgil’s interest in both the distant and recent past; (iii) the extent to which Virgil attempts to ‘take on’ Homer; and (iv) the ‘greatness’ of epic: of the characters, of the language.

About the lecturer

Llewelyn Morgan is a Classicist, a Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford. The focus of most of his research is Roman literature and culture, and he is the author of the well-received study of Roman poetic form, Musa Pedestris: Metre and Meaning in Roman Verse (Oxford, 2010).

But he also has a longstanding fascination for Afghanistan, contemporary and historical, which he traces to his discovery, at an impressionable age, of a Russian samovar inscribed “Candahar 1881”. He has made several visits to Afghanistan in recent years, and his most recent book, The Buddhas of Bamiyan (Profile Books and Harvard University Press, 2012), traces the history of these remarkable monuments from their Buddhist origins 1,400 years ago, through their celebrity in Islamic wonder literature and European travel writing, up until their destruction in 2001.

Morgan is a regular public speaker, on many aspects of Classics and Afghanistan, appears occasionally on BBC Radio 4, and writes slightly less occasionally for the Times Literary Supplement.

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Morgan, L. (2024, July 31). Set Text - Virgil’s Aeneid [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/set-text-6fc31539-095a-4325-88bd-5976cbd7a084?auth=0&lesson=17130&option=13845&type=lesson

MLA style

Morgan, L. "Set Text – Virgil’s Aeneid." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 31 Jul 2024, https://massolit.io/options/set-text-6fc31539-095a-4325-88bd-5976cbd7a084?auth=0&lesson=17130&option=13845&type=lesson