Online Encyclopedia

DIDO, or ELISSA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 206 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DIDO, or ELISSA  , the reputed founder of Carthage (q.v.), in Africa, daughter of the Tyrian king Metten (Mutto, Methres, Belus), wife of Acerbas (more correctly Sicharbas; Sychaeus in Virgil), a priest of Hercules . Her
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husband having been slain by her
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brother
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Pygmalion, Dido fled to Cyprus, and thence to the coast of Africa, where she
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purchased from a
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local chieftain Iarbas a piece of
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land on which she built Carthage . The city soon began to prosper and larbas sought Dido's hand in
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marriage, threatening her with war in case of refusal . To escape from him, Dido constructed a funeral
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pile, on which she stabbed herself before the
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people (Justin xviii . 4-7) . Virgil, in
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defiance of the usually accepted chronology, makes Dido a contemporary of
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Aeneas, with whom she fell in love after his landing in Africa, and attributes her suicide to her abandonment by him at the command of
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Jupiter (Aeneid, iv.) . Dido was worshipped at Carthage as a divinity under the name of Caelestis, the
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Roman counterpart of Tanit, the tutelary goddess of Carthage . According to Timaeus, the
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oldest authority for the story, her name was Theiosso, in Phoenician Helissa, and she was called Dido from her wanderings, Dido being the Phoenician
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equivalent of rrXavijatr (Etymologicum Magnum, s.v.); some
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modern scholars, however, translate the name by " beloved." Timaeus makes no mention of Aeneas, who seems to have been introduced by Naevius'in his Bellum Poenicum, followed by Ennius in his Annales . For the variations of the legend in earlier and later Latin authors, see O .
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Rossbach in Pauly-Wissowa's Realencyclopddie, v. pt . I (1905) ; O . Meltzer's Geschichte der Karthager, i .

(1879), and his

article in Roscher's Lexikon der Mythologie .

End of Article: DIDO, or ELISSA
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