Autocrat- A Roman History Podcast

84- Aeneid Part IV: War Unleashed, Destiny Forged


Listen Later

Now in Italy, Aeneas gets a new wife called Lavinia- and rivalry for her hand starts a war against the king of the Rutilians. Join us for more prophecies and visions of Rome than you can shake a stick at, Venus magicking shields into Aeneas' tent, and just whether Aeneas is an introvert.

Catch Tsar Power wherever you get your podcasts, and thanks to Roberto and Aurora for collaborating with us!


Sources for this episode:

  • Drummond, A. 2015), Evander. Oxford Classical Dictionary (online) (Accessed 19/10/2025).
  • Graves, R. (1981), Greek Myths: Illustrated Edition. London: Cassell Ltd.
  • Moorton, R. (1988), The Genealogy of Latinus in Vergil's Aeneid. Transactions of the American Philological Association 118: 253-259.
  • Papaioannou, S. (2003), Founder, Civilizer and Leader: Vergil's Evander and His Role in the Origins of Rome. Mnemnosyne Fourth Series 56(6): 680-702.
  • Rosivach, V. J. (1980), Latinus' Genealogy and the Palace of Picus (Aeneid 7, 45-9, 170-91. The Classical Quarterly 30(1): 140-152.
  • Virgil (1976), The Aeneid. Translated by W. F. J. Knight. London: Penguin Books Ltd.
  • Wilkinson, P., Carroll, G., Faulkner, M., Field, J. F., Haywood, J., Kerrigan, M., Philip, N., Pumphrey, N. and Tocino-Smith, J. (2018), The Mythology Book. London: Dorling Kindersley Ltd.
  • Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Battle of Actium (online) (Accessed 18/10/2025).
  • Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Evander of Pallantium (online) (Accessed 18/10/2025 and 19/10/2025).
  • Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Latinus (online) (Accessed 18/10/2025).
  • Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Janus (online) (Accessed 18/10/2025).
  • Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Shield of Aeneas (online) (Accessed 18/10/2025).
  • Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Temple of Janus (online) (Accessed 18/10/2025).


Incidentally, Aphrodite's Wikipedia informs me that the story of her cheating with Ares comes from Book VIII of the Odyssey. So, the reference for the Odyssey is:

  • Homer (1983), The Odyssey. Translated by E. V. Rieu. London: Penguin Books Ltd.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Autocrat- A Roman History PodcastBy Vince and Cassie