Track | Section | Reader | Length |
1 | 01 - Book 1: A Fateful Haven pt 1 | Justin Brett | 28:05 |
2 | 02 - Book 1: A Fateful Haven part 2 | D. S. Harvey | 34:18 |
3 | 03 - Book 2: How They Took the City pt 1 | ontheroad | 30:48 |
4 | 04 - Book 2: How They Took the City pt 2 | ontheroad | 28:01 |
5 | 05 - Book 3: Sea Wanderings and Strange Meetings pt 1 | Lars Rolander | 32:09 |
6 | 06 - Book 3: Sea Wanderings and Strange Meetings pt 2 | Lars Rolander | 29:05 |
7 | 07 - Book 4: The Passion of the Queen pt 1 | Philippa | 28:09 |
8 | 08 - Book 4: The Passion of the Queen pt 2 | Philippa | 31:19 |
9 | 09 - Book 5: Games and a Conflagration part 1 | D. S. Harvey | 26:08 |
10 | 10 - Book 5: Games and a Conflagration part 2 | D. S. Harvey | 35:23 |
11 | 11 - Book 6: The World Below pt 1 | Joshua B. Christensen | 31:25 |
12 | 12 - Book 6: The World Below pt 2 | Joshua B. Christensen | 34:00 |
13 | 13 - Book 7: Juno Served by a Fury pt 1 | Alan Brown | 36:55 |
14 | 14 - Book 7: Juno Served by a Fury pt 2 | Alan Brown | 35:07 |
15 | 15 - Book 8: Arcadian Allies pt 1 | Lars Rolander | 27:43 |
16 | 16 - Book 8: Arcadian Allies pt 2 | Lars Rolander | 33:21 |
17 | 17 - Book 9: Night Sortie a Day Assault Pt 1 | Lars Rolander | 29:01 |
18 | 18 - Book 9: Night Sortie a Day Assault pt 2 | Lars Rolander | 37:26 |
19 | 19 - Book 10: The Death of Princes pt 1 | Philippa | 34:39 |
20 | 20 - Book 10: The Death of Princes pt 2 | Philippa | 41:14 |
21 | 21 - Book 11: Debaters and a Warrior Girl part 1 | D. S. Harvey | 31:48 |
22 | 22 - Book 11: Debaters and a Warrior Girl pt 2 | Anna Simon | 39:49 |
23 | 23 - Book 12: The Fortunes of War part 1 | D. S. Harvey | 38:26 |
24 | 24 - Book 12: The Fortunes of War part 2 | D. S. Harvey | 39:20 |
Notes
Running Time: 13 hours 29 minutes
Read by: Multiple readers
Book Coordinator: Kirsten Ferreri
Meta Coordinator: Kirsten Ferreri
Proof Listener: Karen Merline
Artwork
Cover: The Apotheosis of Aeneas as described in Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book 14. Peter Candid (circa 1548–1628)
Upper DVD inset: “Virgil Reading the Aeneid to Augustus, Octavia, and Livia” 1790-93 by Jean-Baptiste Wicar (1762–1834)
Lower DVd inset: Photo of bust of Virgil in Vergiliano Park, Naples, by Armando Mancini
DVD Insert: Virgil Reading the Aeneid to Augustus, Octavia, and Livia (1790-93) by Jean-Baptiste Wicar (1762–1834)
Recordings
These recordings were made using the author’s original published work, which is in the public domain. The readings were recorded by members and volunteers of Librivox.org, which has generously made the recordings available to the public domain. The audio files have been lightly edited and have been engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. While Librivox condones the sale and distribution of these recordings, it is not associated with the management or operations of MP3 Audiobook Classics.
The Roman poet, Virgil wrote The Aeneid between 29 and 19 B.C. It recounts the travels of Aeneas, a Trojan and minor character in Homer’s Iliad as he travels from Troy to Italy. In Italy Aeneas founds the city-state that is destined to become the Roman Empire. In composing the Aeneid, Virgil availed himself of a mythic, though summarily drawn character, without firmly drawn characteristics, as the protagonist of his epic poem, comprised of 9,896 lines in dactylic hexameter. The purpose of Virgil’s effort was to compose Rome’s national epic, its founding myth. By 19 B.C. Rome dominated the world. The empire encompassed all of the civilized world and much of the world that had yet to be tamed under Roman law. The empire was so grand it called out for a history and mythology equal to its sheer size, as well as its military and commercial status. Myths, like great rivers, tend to originate in the trickle of a spring in some far-off, never-to-known place, their all-pervasive importance realized in hindsight when a culture looks back on its humble beginnings. Virgil did not have the benefit of anonymity attendant to less-than-prepossessing beginnings, though he chose a hero who was a vague presence on the far edge of Roman consciousness. Ultimately the Aeneid did several things: it tied Rome to the legends of Troy, it explained the Punic Wars, it honored Roman virtues, and it helped to legitimize the Julio-Claudian dynasty. (Summary by Michael Hogan)
Play sample:
Download a PDF datasheet
Item Info | |
EAN - DVD case | 0683422134807 |
EAN - CD jacket | 0687700170808 |
Media | MP3 CD |
Package | DVD box |
Author | Publius Vergilius Maro (70 BC – 19 BC) Translated by John Dryden |
Year | Written between 29 and 19 B.C. |
Recording | |
Read by | Multiple readers |
Length | 13 hours 29 minutes |
Type of Reading | Solo |
The Aeneid
- Author: Virgil
- Product Code: DB-1081
- Availability: In Stock
-
$11.99