Around 20 B.C.E., the Roman poet Virgil was deep into the most ambitious literary project of his age — a 12-book epic poem tracing the mythic journey of a Trojan hero named Aeneas from the smoking ruins of Troy to the shores of Italy, where he would become the legendary ancestor of Rome itself. Virgil worked on the Aeneid for roughly a decade, and when he died in 19 B.C.E., about 60 lines were still left unfinished. He reportedly asked for the manuscript to be destroyed. His literary executors ignored him, and one of the greatest poems in human history survived.
Key facts
- Aeneid composition: Virgil began writing the poem around 30 B.C.E. and worked on it until his death in 19 B.C.E., leaving the text nearly — but not entirely — complete.
- Epic poem structure: The work is divided into 12 books of hexameter verse, modeled deliberately on Homer — the first six books echo the Odyssey, the last six the Iliad.
- Trojan hero Aeneas: The poem weaves together existing Roman and Greek legends to cast Aeneas as the divinely fated founder of Lavinium, ancestor of the Roman people, and carrier of Troy’s legacy into a new civilization.
A journey built from older stories
The Aeneid did not emerge from nothing. Virgil drew consciously and extensively from Homer — lifting whole passages, translating lines directly, and building scenes that openly echo the Iliad and the Odyssey. This was not plagiarism by ancient standards. It was dialogue across centuries, a Roman poet in conversation with the Greek tradition that had long shadowed his culture.
But Virgil also reached into Rome’s own soil. Scholars have noted how the war episodes in the poem’s second half reflect Rome’s native legend of the conflict between Romulus and the Sabines — itself rooted in much older Indo-European mythology about rival divine forces, sovereignty and war on one side, fertility and community on the other, eventually unified into a single people. Virgil layered all of this together, making the Aeneid simultaneously Roman, Greek, and something older still.
The poem also reflects the specific political moment of its creation. Virgil wrote under the patronage of Augustus Caesar, Rome’s first emperor, who was actively constructing a new political identity for Rome after decades of civil war. The Aeneid‘s vision of Roman destiny — a civilization chosen by fate to bring order and peace to the world — was precisely what Augustus wanted his subjects to believe. Whether Virgil shared that vision wholeheartedly, or was more ambivalent, remains one of the enduring debates in classical scholarship.
What the poem actually tells
The story follows Aeneas from the fall of Troy, through a harrowing sea journey, to a fateful stay in Carthage where the widowed queen Dido falls in love with him. When the gods command Aeneas to leave, Dido kills herself. The weight of that scene — a man choosing destiny over love, and a woman destroyed by the choice — has unsettled readers for two millennia.
In Book VI, Aeneas descends into the underworld, where the ghost of his father Anchises reveals to him the full sweep of Rome’s future greatness. It is the emotional and thematic center of the poem — a civilization’s destiny glimpsed before it has been built. The final six books shift to war in Italy, where Aeneas must fight to claim the land and the marriage alliance that fate has promised him. The poem ends abruptly with Aeneas killing his enemy Turnus — not in triumph, but in grief and rage. It is one of the most debated endings in all of Western literature.
Lasting impact
The Aeneid became the foundational text of Roman education almost immediately. For centuries, Roman schoolchildren memorized it. It shaped how Rome understood itself — and how Europe, in turn, understood Rome.
Its influence stretched far beyond antiquity. Dante chose Virgil as his guide through The Divine Comedy — a 14th-century C.E. tribute to the poem’s moral authority. Virgil’s reputation as a kind of pre-Christian sage, almost a prophet, endured through the medieval period. The Aeneid directly shaped John Milton’s approach to Paradise Lost. It gave later empires — Spanish, British, French — a template for how to narrate conquest as destiny. That template has been used, and misused, ever since.
Beyond politics, the poem gave Western literature some of its most durable emotional vocabulary: the weight of duty against desire, the cost of building something that outlasts you, the grief of people erased by history. Dido, in particular, has inspired operas, novels, and retellings for more than 2,000 years — often by writers more interested in her perspective than in Aeneas’s.
The poem also preserved and synthesized a vast body of mythological and historical tradition. Virgil’s version of Aeneas became the version — shaping how subsequent centuries imagined the Trojan War’s aftermath, the founding of Rome, and the relationship between Greek and Roman culture. The text itself survived through monastic copying in the medieval period, a transmission process that involved hundreds of anonymous scribes across the European continent — people whose names are lost but whose careful hands kept the poem alive.
Blindspots and limits
The Aeneid‘s vision of Roman destiny was also a justification of Roman imperialism — Aeneas’s fated mission to subdue and civilize conveniently authorized what Rome was already doing with armies. The peoples Aeneas defeats, the Rutuli and others, appear in the poem largely as obstacles. Dido and Carthage, meanwhile, represent North Africa framed as a beautiful danger — a reading that later European empires were happy to borrow.
The poem’s survival also depended entirely on Roman and European manuscript traditions. Works from other civilizations equally complex and equally worthy — Mesopotamian, Indian, Chinese — did not always survive, or did not enter the Western canon in the same way, not because they were lesser but because survival is partly a matter of whose libraries got preserved. The Aeneid‘s canonical status reflects those accidents of history as much as its intrinsic quality.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Britannica — Aeneid
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
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- The Good News for Humankind archive on antiquity
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