Virgil's Tomb in Scholarly and Popular Culture
Publication date
2018
Editors
Goldschmidt, Nora
Graziosi, Barbara
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Part of book
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taverne
Abstract
This chapter focuses on the ‘rediscovery’ of Virgil’s tomb in the Renaissance, exploring its position in the cultures of scholarship, travel, and leisure. Clusters of poets’ graves sprang up around the so-called ‘tomb of Virgil’ in Piedigrotta near Naples, re-establishing it as a site of literary succession and inspiration; the tomb played a central role in the construction of Neapolitan urban identity and was a popular site for early modern travel and leisure, a role it still retains today. Generations of visitors to the tomb have felt a strong personal connection to the poet, a connection they have chosen to mark by leaving graffiti or notes at the tomb, by taking away laurel leaves, and by reciting and producing poetry at the site
Keywords
Classics, Tombs, Virgil, Popular Culture, Naples, Memorials, Taverne
Citation
Hendrix, H A 2018, Virgil's Tomb in Scholarly and Popular Culture. in N Goldschmidt & B Graziosi (eds), Tombs of the Poets : Between Text and Material Culture. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 280-297. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198826477.003.0015