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			At its core, the
			Aeneid is a tale of travel 
			and adventure, and the land- and seascape become just as important 
			as the peoples whom the exiled Trojans encounter. Many 
			cartographical and geographical
			topoi emerge from reading 
			this great epic within the context of Graeco-Roman scientific 
			geography. The Aeneid, in 
			fact, reflects the best cartographic advances of the day and is 
			presented in the same way as other “maps” from ancient Greece and 
			Rome – not in the modern pictural sense but, rather, verbally. 
			Vergil, furthermore, seamlessly incorporates many of the key aspects 
			of ancient geography (topography, climatology, ethnography) to 
			enhance overarching themes of his masterpiece. 
			  7:30 P.M. 
			
			Monday, March 4, 2013 
			Wells Theatre 
			Monmouth CollegeMonmouth, Illinois
 
			About Bernice L. Fox /
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