The Loss of Innocence: Catullan Intertexts in Vergil’s Eclogue 8 and the Camilla Episode of the Aeneid

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Péter Somfai

Abstract

In ancient Rome, some elements of the wedding ritual (e.g. the raptio or the defloration) could be associated with aggression and death. In Catullus 62 and 66 – two poems dealing with the topic of marriage –, these connotations get a special emphasis, in part due to the motif of cutting symbolizing violence and changing. In this paper, I examine the way the above mentioned poems constitute the background for the allusion to Medea in Vergil’s Eclogue 8 and the depiction of Camilla in Book 11 of the Aeneid. It will be of fundamental importance to observe the way aggressiveness – being a traditional characteristic of men – gets transferred to women, by means of intertextual connections.

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How to Cite
Somfai, P. (2020). The Loss of Innocence: Catullan Intertexts in Vergil’s Eclogue 8 and the Camilla Episode of the Aeneid. Sapiens Ubique Civis, 1, 121–139. https://doi.org/10.14232/suc.2020.1.121-139
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Author Biography

Péter Somfai, Eötvös Loránd University of Science in Budapest

Péter Somfai studied History and Latin at the Eötvös Loránd University of Science in Budapest. After finishing his studies he works as a teacher at a high school. Since 2016, he is a PhD-student at the Latin Department of Eötvös Loránd University of Science in Budapest, as well as a member of the research project “The Margins of Ancient Lyric Poetry”.