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LATINUS , in See also: Roman See also: legend, See also: king of the
See also: aborigines in See also: Latium, and See also: eponymous See also: hero of the Latin See also: race
.
In See also: Hesiod (Tlteogony, 1013) he is the son of Odysseus and See also: Circe, and ruler of the Tyrsenians; in Virgil, the son of Faunus and the nymph Marica, a See also: national genealogy being substituted for the Hesiodic, which probably originated from a See also: Greek source
.
Latinus was a shadowy See also: personality, invented to explain the origin of See also: Rome and its relations with Latium, and only obtained importance in later times through his legendary connexion with See also: Aeneas and the foundation of Rome
.
According to Virgil (Aeneid, vii.-xii.), Aeneas, on landing at the mouth of the See also: Tiber, was welcomed by Latinus, the peaceful ruler whose seat of See also: government was Laurentum, and ultimately married his daughter Lavinia
.
Other accounts of Latinus, differing considerably in detail, are to be found in the fragments of See also: Cato's Origines (in Servius's commentary on Virgil) and in See also: Dionysius of See also: Halicarnassus; see further authorities in the article by J
.
A
.
Hild, in Daremberg and Saglio, Dictionnaire See also: des antiquites
.
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